Michael Meeks (software developer)

Michael Meeks

Michael Meeks at the OpenOffice.org conference 2007 in Barcelona, Spain
Nationality British
Occupation Software developer for Collabora
Home town Cambridge, United Kingdom
Call-sign mmeeks
Website http://www.gnome.org/~michael/

Michael Meeks is a British software developer. He is primarily known for his work on GNOME, OpenOffice.org and now LibreOffice. He has been a major contributor to the GNOME project for a long time working on its infrastructure and associated applications, particularly CORBA, Bonobo, Nautilus and GNOME accessibility.[1] He was hired as a Ximian developer by Nat Friedman and Miguel de Icaza in mid-2000 , continuing at Novell, SuSE and then Collabora.[2]

Meeks is a free software hacker who has contributed a lot of time to decreasing program load time. He created the direct binding, hashvals, and dynsort implementations for GNU Binutils and glibc . Most of this work was focused at making OpenOffice.org and now its fork LibreOffice start faster , and was later subsumed into the "-hash-style=gnu" linking optimization . His work on iogrind also allows applications to be profiled and optimized to first-time (or 'cold') start far more rapidly .

He supports LibreOffice and Evolution as the free software solutions for document editing and groupware.[3]

Previously he worked for Quantel gaining expertise in real time AV editing and playback achieved with high performance focused hardware/software solutions.

Meeks is a Christian, which he says made him think about the moral aspects of his own illegal use of non-free software and converted him finally to free software.[1]

References

  1. 1 2 James, Daniel (2007-05-07). "Meek not geek — Interview with Michael Meeks of OpenOffice.org". Tux Deluxe. Frank Pohlmann. Archived from the original on 2011-01-04.
  2. Meeks, Michael (3 September 2013). "Collabora and LibreOffice". Stuff Michael Meeks is doing (blog). Retrieved 1 October 2013.
  3. Kwang, Kevin (2010-12-23). "OSS recommended picks for business users". ZDNet. CBS Interactive. Archived from the original on 2011-01-04.


External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Wednesday, March 30, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.