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Microsoft commits another 60K to Apache

By Scott Clark
on November 5, 2009

Microsoft has contributed another $100,000 (60,000) to the Apache Software Foundation (ASF), following on from its surprise move last year to begin funding the open-source organisation.

Last year’s donation made Microsoft one of the ASF’s platinum sponsors, alongside Google and Yahoo, and the company said it would continue its sponsorship for another “couple of years”. The ASF is a non-profit organisation formed to support a number of projects, including the widely used Apache HTTP server.

“We’re happy to share another milestone in our work with open-source communities: renewing our commitment to the Apache Software Foundation,” Microsoft said in a statement. “Microsoft is recommitting $100,000 over the next couple of years to support the mission and work of the Apache Software Foundation.”

Microsoft has made some moves to accommodate itself to the open-source world over the past few years, including releasing its own open-source licences and putting some technology under the Open Specification Promise, which allows open-source programmers to use the technology.

The company has also begun working with Zend on Windows support of PHP, an open-source project that lets servers create web pages on-the-fly. In September, Microsoft announced it would support a Zend project to create an open-source application programming interface that would make it easier for organisations to switch cloud providers.

Read the whole story at http://news.zdnet.co.uk/software/0,1000000121,39860588,00.htm