Ganglia “Project in Residence” at GroundWork Open Source

Thursday, March 6th, 2008

We held the first in-person meeting of the Ganglia Project Team at our offices last week: the team was able to accomplish things they couldn't with email or instant messaging: it was great watching them code sprint to Ganglia 3.1, the next major release; a lot of major architectural proposals ...

Inaugural Ganglia Gathering 2007-12-5

Wednesday, December 5th, 2007

GroundWork Open Source hosted the inaugural Ganglia Developers Gathering at our offices. We had take out Thai food and discussed issues around releasing Ganglia 3.1. We have plans for a multi-day Ganglia Developers meeting, hopefully in February 2008: check the Ganglia-developers mailing list for further details on that ...

Which Version of GroundWork Monitor Open Source for me?

Tuesday, February 27th, 2007

Now that GroundWork has a full complement of GroundWork Monitor Open Source (GWMOS) versions to download from SourceForge, the question becomes: "Which version of GroundWork for me?" This document reviews the various incarnations of GWMOS and how choose among them. ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- GroundWork Monitor Open Source is available four ways: 1) Bootable ISO 2) ...

Notes from 4th Monitoring SIG (Ganglia, January 2007)

Friday, January 12th, 2007

Jennifer Davis at BayLISA has posted these to the BayLISA site at: http://www.baylisa.info/?q=node/110 Is this a good place for them to be? Do people think they can comment on and interact with them, or does the resource have to be more dynamic? In the meantime, here they are here too: ============================== Thomas Stocking's SIG ...

The Business Case for Open Source Management Tools

Thursday, March 16th, 2006

Originally posted in InfoWorld, http://weblog.infoworld.com/openresource/archives/2006/03/the_business_ca.html: The Business Case for Open Source Management Tools Guest Editorial by Ranga Rangachari, CEO, Groundwork Vendor overshot is as bad today as it ever was -- particularly with management tools. On the one hand, chances are you're paying through the teeth for a lot of functionality that you'll ...