GNOME Community Celebrates 10 Years of Software Freedom, Innovation and Industry Adoption

Boston MA, USA -- August 15, 2007 -- A one month, world-wide celebration of GNOME's tenth anniversary begins this week, culminating in mid-September with Software Freedom Day and the release of GNOME 2.20. During the celebration month, GNOME contributors will create a scrapbook wiki recording their ten year history, and a commemorative cookery book with "Open Source" recipes contributed by GNOME community members from around the world.

History and Achievements

Since 1997, the GNOME project has grown from a handful of developers to a contributor base of coders, documentors, translators, interface designers, accessibility specialists, artists and testers numbering in the thousands.

As the leading user experience platform for Open Source and Free Software operating systems, GNOME has received massive commercial adoption and support among distributors such as Novell, Red Hat, Sun Microsystems and Ubuntu, and software vendors targeting those platforms such as Eclipse, Google, Mozilla and VMWare.

In early 2007, the project launched the GNOME Mobile initiative, reflecting growing interest in the GNOME platform for mobile and embedded systems such as the OLPC XO, Nokia N800, OpenMoko Neo1973, the ACCESS Linux Platform and numerous single-purpose mobile and embedded devices.

With such an immense community of individual and corporate contributors, GNOME has become the driving force of Open Source and Free Software user experience innovation, internationalisation, usability and accessibility, bringing the benefits of Open Source and Free Software to users around the world.

Words from our Founders

"In the last 10 years the GNOME community has not only reached our goal of creating a superb desktop, the applications and developer tools that go with it: Our software is now a core component of every Free Software operating system available, and we are growing into increasingly important areas such as mobile and embedded devices", said Miguel de Icaza, founder of the GNOME Project. "The GNOME community continues to thrive, innovate and come up with new ideas to improve the Free Software user experience for everyone. I hope that the next ten years will be as fun and fascinating as the first."

In August 1997, Miguel de Icaza founded the "GNOME Desktop project" as a "free and complete set of user friendly applications and desktop tools [...] based entirely on free software."

"Ten years ago, using only Free Software, you could not do graphic design and illustration, you could not balance your checkbook, you could not download pictures from your camera to the computer, you could not do phone calls over the Internet, you could not create a spreadsheet with pie charts, and you could not plug a printer or hard drive into your computer and expect it to just work", recalled Federico Mena Quintero, an active GNOME developer throughout its ten year history. "Today, I am happy to say that we have reached and greatly exceeded GNOME's original goal. Thank you to all the contributors who made the GNOME vision a reality. You have given us freedom, good jobs -- and a priceless group of friends."

Last month, during GNOME's annual user and developer conference (GUADEC), Federico Mena Quintero was the recipient of the GNOME Thank You Pants, an annual award for Outstanding Service to the GNOME community. The audience gave him a five minute standing ovation.

Words from our Advisory Board Partners

About the GNOME Foundation

Comprised of hundreds of volunteer developers and industry-leading companies, the GNOME Foundation is an organization committed to supporting the advancement of GNOME. The Foundation is a member directed, non-profit organization that provides financial, organizational and legal support to the GNOME project and helps determine its vision and roadmap. More information on the GNOME Foundation can be found at foundation.gnome.org.

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