BerliOS

Not to be confused with Berlioz.
BerliOS
Type of site
Collaborative revision control and software development management system
Owner Fraunhofer Society
Created by FOKUS
Website www.berlios.de
Alexa rank Negative increase 40,078 (April 2014)[1]
Commercial No
Registration Optional (required for creating and joining projects)
Launched January 2000 (2000-01)
Current status Inactive

BerliOS (short for "Berlin Open Source") was a project founded by Fraunhofer FOKUS, the Fraunhofer Institute for Open Communication Systems located in Berlin, to coordinate the different interest groups in the field of open source software (OSS) and to assume a neutral coordinator function. The target groups of BerliOS were developers and users of open source software on the one side and OSS-related companies on the other.

BerliOS consisted of several subprojects:

Closure

The operators of the BerliOS project announced that BerliOS would close at the end of 2011 due to lack of sufficient funding and support.[2]

As the news of the pending closure spread, BerliOS received numerous rescue proposals. As a result, it was further announced that BerliOS would continue as a non-profit institute run by a combination of volunteers, donations and corporate sponsorship.[3]

On February 23, 2012 BerliOS announced on their blog,[4][5] that a cooperation agreement had been signed with SourceForge, which meant that all projects hosted on BerliOS' systems would be automatically mirrored in new and separate projects on SourceForge. On April 4, 2012 SourceForge reiterated this statement on their blog[6] and provided more specifics about the collaboration.

In January 2014 BerliOS announced that they would disable their hosting services on 30 April 2014.[7]

SourceForge mirror projects

The mirrored projects on SourceForge was named after the following template; http://sourceforge.net/projects/${name}.berlios/, where ${name} would be the BerliOS project name.

Project owner and creator was a specially crafted user named berliosrobot.[8] This way former BerliOS projects can be found using SourceForge's search engine, like this.

[9]

See also

References

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