COSS Community 🌱

Cover image for OCS 2020 Keynote:  Mike Volpi, Justin Borgman, and Martin Traverso
Sam for COSS Community

Posted on

OCS 2020 Keynote: Mike Volpi, Justin Borgman, and Martin Traverso

Mike Volpi joined Index in 2009, to help establish the firm's San Francisco office with Danny Rimer. Mike invests primarily in infrastructure, open-source, and artificial intelligence companies. He's currently serving the boards of Aurora, Cockroach Labs, Confluent, Covariant.ai, Elastic, Kong, Sonos, Starburst, and Wealthfront. Mike was previously a director of Blue Bottle Coffee, Hortonworks, and Zuora, and he currently serves on the board for Fiat Chrysler Automotive.

Relevant Links
LinkedIn - Twitter - Wikipedia

Justin Borgman is a subject matter expert on all things big data & analytics. Prior to founding Starburst, he was Vice President & GM at Teradata (NYSE: TDC), where he was responsible for the company’s portfolio of Hadoop products. Justin joined Teradata in 2014 via the acquisition of his company Hadapt where he was co-founder and CEO. Hadapt created β€œSQL on Hadoop” turning Hadoop from a file system to an analytic database accessible by any BI tool.

Relevant Links
LinkedIn - Twitter

Martin Traverso is the co-creator of Presto and CTO at Starburst Data

Relevant Links
LinkedIn - Twitter

Mike Volpi is joined by Justin Borgman and Martin Traverso: the balance between community-driven and company-driven open source projects.

Introductions to speakers and session topic β€” 00:19

Martin, why has Presto has been so successful? β€” 1:17

Justin, Presto had been around for about 5 years before you started Starburst Data. How did that impact the early success your company has had? β€” 4:29

What is the best approach to engage with an OSS community? β€” 8:22

Justin, how do you turn engagement channels into customers? β€” 12:16

Justin, how do you balance customers being contributors? β€” 13:42

Martin, how do you decide whether new features belong in the open domain or closed source? β€” 15:09

Justin, can you talk about the relationship between the self-hosted, download-to-host, classic open-source model, and the cloud-SaaS model? Are they complimentary, do they cannibalize each other? How do you think about that as an open-source leader? β€” 18:35


Share your questions and comments below!

Oldest comments (0)