From 888028f64b957fb75f35d14e241d0809f8934153 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: "Bradley M. Kuhn" Date: Tue, 5 Oct 2010 10:09:09 -0400 Subject: [PATCH] Jeremy emailed me his bio to use for the Conservancy website: To: "Bradley M. Kuhn" Cc: jra@samba.org Message-ID: <20101005004226.GA27337@samba1> Date: Mon, 4 Oct 2010 17:42:26 -0700 From: Jeremy Allison Subject: Re: bio for Conservancy website --- www/conservancy/static/about/board/index.html | 20 ++++++++++--------- 1 file changed, 11 insertions(+), 9 deletions(-) diff --git a/www/conservancy/static/about/board/index.html b/www/conservancy/static/about/board/index.html index 86a3dd7f..d19f4861 100644 --- a/www/conservancy/static/about/board/index.html +++ b/www/conservancy/static/about/board/index.html @@ -20,15 +20,17 @@ mission.

Jeremy Allison

-

Jeremy Allison works for Google's Open Source Programs Office, as part -of a team helping Google work with and release Open Source software. He is -one of Google's representatives to the Open Source community and has been -writing Open Source software for over twenty years. Jeremy is also one of -the lead developers on the Samba Team, a group of programmers developing -an Open Source Windows (tm) compatible file and print server product for -UNIX (tm) systems. As well as writing code, Jeremy handles the -co-ordination of Samba development efforts and acts as a corporate liaison -to companies using the Samba code commercially.

+

Jeremy Allison is one of the lead developers on the Samba Team, a +group of programmers developing an Open Source Windows compatible file +and print server product for UNIX systems. Developed over the Internet +in a distributed manner similar to the Linux system, Samba is used by +all Linux distributions as well as many thousands of corporations and +products worldwide. Jeremy handles the co-ordination of Samba +development efforts and acts as a corporate liaison to companies using +the Samba code commercially.

+ +

He works for Google, Inc. who fund him to work on improving Samba and +solving the problems of Windows and Linux interoperability.

Loïc Dachary