Jeff Waugh
Jeff Waugh | |
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Jeff Waugh speaking at GUADEC
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Nationality | Australian |
Other names | jdub |
Occupation | Principal consultant[1] |
Employer | Waugh Partners |
Known for | Prominence in Free Software community, especially GNOME and Ubuntu |
Website | Be the signal |
Jeff Waugh (also known as "jdub") is an Australian free software and open source software engineer. He is a consultant for Waugh Partners and is known for his past prominence in the GNOME and Ubuntu projects and communities.
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Career
In 2004, Waugh was hired by Mark Shuttleworth as an early employee of Canonical Ltd. and member of the Ubuntu project, where he worked in business development.[2][3] At OSCON in 2005, Waugh won "Best Evangelist" in the Google-O'Reilly Open Source Awards for his evangelism of Ubuntu and GNOME.[4][5] He announced his resignation from Canonical in July 2006 to focus more fully on his work in the GNOME project.[6]
From 2007 Waugh and then-wife Pia Waugh were co-directors of Waugh Partners, an Australian Open Source consultancy launched in 2006.[7] Waugh Partners won the 2007 NSW State Pearcey Award for Young Achievers for their work promoting Free Software to the Australian ICT industry.[8] In 2008 Waugh was a partner of the One Laptop Per Child Australia program.[9] From 2009–2011 Waugh was the sole director of Waugh Partners, following Pia Waugh's move to a new career. From 2011 onwards he has been employed by Bulletproof Networks.
Positions
Waugh has served in a number of formal and semi-formal positions in Free Software development and community projects:
- Director, Open Source Industry Australia, 2008[10]
- Director, the GNOME Foundation board, 2003–2004[11][12] and 2006–2008[13][14][15][16]
- Member of the linux.conf.au 2007 organising team[17]
- Chairman of the Annodex Foundation 2005–2006[18][19]
- GNOME release manager 2001–2005
- President of the Sydney Linux Users Group, 2002–2003[20]
- Member of the committee of the Sydney Linux Users Group, 2000–2002.[20]
- Member of the linux.conf.au 2001 organising team
Other development projects
Waugh is an author of the Python feed aggregator Planet.
Personal life
Waugh was married to fellow open-source advocate and community leader Pia Waugh née Smith until 2011.[21] He wrote on his blog in September 2011, on the occasion of RUOK? Day, that he had been struggling with depression since his late teens, and that it had been a contributing factor to the divorce, but that he felt he had overcome it.[22]
References
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External links
- "Software that 'just works'" – 2003 Sydney Morning Herald interview with Jeff Waugh