GForge AS v6.0 Released!

First and foremost we at the GForge Group want to apologize for the long delay in getting version 6.0 out.  For those who don’t know, we lost our leader Tim Perdue after a long battle with cancer. As a growing business, we at GForge struggled a bit in adjusting to this newa and it delayed the release of version 6.0.  But that that is no longer the case.

We are happy to announce GForge AS 6.0 is ready and it sports several fixes and new features. Some of the most interesting are:

  • Git over HTTP: Prior to v6.0 you could only use GForge with Git over SSH.
  • CentOS6 Support: GForge AS is the first version to support CentOS6.
  • User Calendars: Project members can see assigned tasks and add their own events. You can even integrate it with other calendar application via iCal.
  • Blogs: GForge projects and users now get their own blog.  Please note this plugin is disabled of at the project level for customers upgrading. Also, in implementing the project blog we’ve removed the antiquated “news” system with a full fledge project blog.
  • Message Walls: Gforge gets social with the addition of project and user level message walls.

You can download GForge AS 6.0 from the download page.

On Losing A Pioneer

Last Friday, September 16th GForge Group said goodbye to Tim Perdue who passed away peacefully in a Des Moines area hospice with his family by his side. At 37, Tim’s passing came too soon and was, frankly, unfair leaving all of us who have crossed his path feeling pain and hatred for the cancer that took him. Tim is survived by his wife, Lisa; two children Anna and Alex; his mother, Ramona; sister, Shannon Perdue; grandparents Duard and Sylvia Perdue; along with many nieces and nephews. That said, we want to make it clear it shouldn’t be just his family, this company or the other geeks in the Des Moines metro remembering him. Tim was generations ahead of his time and his impact, though unknown to many, has touched nearly everybody in software development, particularly those developing open source software.

To those of you who didn’t have the pleasure of knowing Tim, it is best to talk about some of the sites he worked on. He was a part of the original four person team at VA Linux that built SourceForge and before that he ran PHPBuilder.com and Geocrawler.com which were sold to Internet.com and VA Linux respectively. For you younger PHP’ers out there, PHPBuilder was the number one resource for PHP development and Tim had gambled on PHP in the enterprise well before the likes of Facebook, Wikipedia and Digg.

Getting back to SourceForge, let’s face it. If you have been around the Internet and open source development you know the name SourceForge. Back in the day it hosted some of the most popular open source projects and had companies screaming for enterprise support for the product. Tim left VA Linux after the first big dotcom implosion and, after a short hiatus, picked up the open source version of the codebase turning it into GForge, his crowning professional achievement. Under Tim, GForge has grown to hundreds of customers including some very impressive names. Amtrak, BAE Systems, Cisco Systems, Texas Instruments, Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) and John Hopkins University are just some of the organizations using GForge.

Tim accomplished all this coming from modest, Midwest roots. Born in Minnesota, he grew up in Swea City, Iowa and armed with an MIS degree from the University of Northern Iowa he became nothing short of a modern day myth buster. Tim proved that to succeed you don’t need an Ivy League degree, that you don’t have to live in Silicon Valley to have a successful tech company, and that you don’t need VC money to get a company off the ground. More importantly, he showed that you can create a successful business and still be a great family man.

Rest assured that we at the GForge Group are committed to continuing Tim’s vision for the company which includes top-notch customer service, continued innovation and never losing sight of good, old fashion, Midwest values.

In taking a moment to reflect on Tim’s life and his accomplishments, if you agree, as we do, that Tim was a pioneer of his time please consider making a donation to the John Stoddard Cancer Center’s Care Coordinator program.

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