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SpringSource is springing forward
Jan. 29, 2008

Chances are that most of you haven't heard of SpringSource. Even in open-source developer circles, it's not that well-known a name. That's about to change.

First, if you do any serious development or management of Apache Web servers, you have heard of the Spring Framework, aka Spring, a lightweight enterprise Java development framework that's often used with Apache. SpringSource is the new name for Interface21, the company behind Spring.

SpringSource has been making waves. Big ones. Armed with $10 million of venture capital, the company has just acquired Covalent Technologies, an open-source services provider that specializes in supporting Apache software stacks.

Now I see some eyes opening up. Covalent is the go-to company for Apache, Tomcat and Geronimo commercial support. Put Spring together with some of the top Apache developers, and you get a very interesting open-source company indeed in the days of Web 2.0 and SOA (service-oriented architecture).

Charlie Purdom, Covalent's vice president of marketing, assures the community that it will continue to support Apache Software Foundation open-source projects. Combine this with SpringSource's support for Eclipse, Linux's favorite development environment, and I see big things ahead for Linux and Java developers who want to build online, Web-based applications.

Steven J. Vaughan-Nichols


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