Recognizing the contributions of your peers to the success in delivering ONAP Beijing.
Nominations: Close 6 PM Pacific time, June 14 - Voting will take place June 15 -- 19
IF YOU CAN USE GOOGLE – Please, please, please submit your nomination(s) HERE
IF YOU CANNOT USE GOOGLE – Please click here to send me a private email with the Category, the name of the person you are nominating and why you think they deserve the nomination.
Categories:
Top Achievement Award
Citizenship Award
Code Contribution Award
Project Achievement Award
Innovation Award
Marketing Award
Top Achievement Award
Presented to the individual who has demonstrated unparalleled dedication in the formation and prosperity of ONAP, whose exemplar behavior and actions as a champion for an atmosphere of equal cooperation between member companies, individuals and geographies, played a pivotal role in our successful merger of multiple code bases, a timely delivery of the Beijing release and a thriving global community.
Nominees:
Citizenship Award
Presented to the individual who provided the most assistance to others outside of their own project, in the form of education, guidance, code reviews, debugging, bug fixes or similar support, whose behavior also help to impart a culture equal cooperation between member companies, individuals and geographies
Nominees:
(alphabetical by first name)
FREEMAN, BRIAN D | Simply, Brian was awesome helping to get the robot VNF demos running using OOM during the integration testing crunch. The demos touch various different projects. |
cl664y@att.com | One of the busiest people on ONAP, participating on multiple project teams and subcommittees, working closely with release manager, Gildas, to ensure success of projects and meeting of milestones, and going the extra mile to ensure a successful release. She has taken on tasks such as release notes herself, opening up Jira to individual teams to help them get things completed or corrected, and was on day and night to support teams across time zones and countries. |
Eric Debeau | Eric is very active to progress the community in an open way. Eric was behind the creation of openlab with 70+ users from 20 companies (vendor, operators and academic). |
Helen Chen has been continuously and tirelessly pulling the cords together to help projects and use case teams successfully deliver the Beijing Release. To make this reality happen, Helen spent her energy around the clock to connect into various labs and help teams investigate issues, reports defects, integrate solutions and reporting to the community, with a great deal of humor, the progress made. | |
Manoop Talasila | Manoop as a Portal Project PTL supported other ONAP PTLs regarding the Portal's SDK. Mostly, the SDK support is provided to VID, Policy, AAI, SDC, MSB and CLI. Besides SDK support, he provided help for the pairwise integration with all the on-boarded applications on Portal which ensure the success of end to end integration test for ONAP Beijing release. He coordinated all the efforts required to integrate Portal's SDK with AAF and MUSIC, so that the VID, Policy and AAI applications using SDK can take advantage of the access management, resiliency and scalability features. He also collaborated with OOM team to resolve the deployment and ONAP access issues for a general ONAP user. In support of these activities he performed code reviews under MUSIC and OOM repos. To me he certainly represents the core value of what an open community should be |
Marco Platania | Marco was leading and performing both change management and scale out testing in parallel those last few months. Previously he was ensuring that the ONAP deployment (Heat) was stable so the different project teams could perform their pair-wise testing activities. He was one of our ONAP champions at the ONS North America event, performing live demos, demonstrating ONAP capabilities. Eager to help anybody, his availability and his team spirit have been unwavering. |
Marcus Williams | Marcus spearheaded the HPA functional requirement testing efforts and was critical to getting HPA functional requirement delivered in the Beijing Release. Marcus spent endless hours and several sleepless nights testing and debugging HPA functionality across five separate ONAP projects. In order to get HPA tested, Marcus first had to ensure that the affected projects were working correctly in general. This entailed endless permutations of pairwise/integration testing and debugging across SO, Policy, AAI and Multi-Cloud projects. Marcus also stepped up and helped test a brand new ONAP project – OOF – that was key to making HPA real. If it were not for Marcus’s efforts, we would not have OOF and HPA as part of the Beijing release. |
Michael O'Brien | Michael Presented being a lead of ONAP Logging project is also a true evangelist of DevOps and ONAP deployment on Kubernetes and as cloud native. Michael is the individual who provide much assistance to others outside other projects, in the form of education, guidance, bug fixes. Michael's behavior help to promote cooperation between members of other projects: (Portal, OOM, Integration and many others) is exemplary. |
Mike Elliott | During the Beijing release OOM introduced new Helm models of every ONAP component comprising thousands of files. Not only did Mike define the generic model used for all of the ONAP components but he held multiple training sessions for the community and countless numbers of project-to-project eduction and debugging sessions to ensure that the Helm models faithfully represented the intentions of the project teams. In many cases Mike created the models for the project teams. In other cases Mike guided the teams and then helped debug the Helm models - often on Kubernetes systems that he created for the teams to use. During all of this Mike remained helpful and cheerful even under the stress of overwhelming number of requests well past project deadlines. During the integration phase Mike attended a large number of Integration team sessions and was always available on RocketChat to help. Mike is a shining example of how an open-source community can come together across company and geographic boundaries to achieve a common goal. |
Pamela Dragosh | Pam has consistently worked to expand communications among Project teams. In addition, Pam regularly vbolunteers to tak on new tasks which benefit the community in general, provides well thought out input during ONAP calls whether it is on PTL or TSC meetings and shares her thoughts on process improvements and lessons learned in a positive and constructive way. |
Rich Bennett | Rich has provided unparalleled Documentation support from the very beginning of ONAP (even pre-Amsterdam). Though much of his work has been ‚behind the scenes, Rich has been instrumental in insuring the success of ONAP through his work in developing, testing and implementing the tool chain and technical support needed to ensure accurate documentation. Among his many contributions during Beijing: Troubleshooting a myriad of project level issues and questions related to the wiki, readthedocs, tool chain, etc. Analyzing terminology errors and developing strategy for project teams to detect and correct without impacting code development or releases Analyzing and developing methodologies for correcting ReStructred text warnings as well as linkcheck errors Cleaning up / restructuring existing content to make it more consistent and accurate Assisting the Release Manager (Gildas) and Project manager (Kenny) with many issues surrounding wiki and release content Coordinating the entire Beijing documentation branching process, including cherry picking project level documentation even on vacation to insure everything was correctly mapped Rich has gone well above and beyond to ensure the success and effectiveness of ONAP documentation for Beijing. |
Seshu Kumar Mudiganti | Seshu has exhibited tremendous dedication and commitment in making the ONAP Beijing success by providing contributions across different projects. Besides the role of a PTL, Seshu is a member of the architecture, architecture tiger team and security sub committee. He has helped to SDC in correcting the security vulnerabilities. OOF team to have passed the pair wise testing milestone criteria on time. Participated and helped the design and implementation of the functional requirements. Volunteered SO as a pilot project to the security code scan and OOM (for the runtime) integration project. Mentored and supported newbees of ONAP, as a result, under his leadership, SO team has code contributions from 14 companies and passed all the Milestones on time. |
Yan Yang | As the VF-C PTL, Yang Yan managed the VF-C project very carefully and attentively, leading the project team to complete every milestones of the community on time. She is very attentive in helping others with community-related questions and solving issues with the team members. During Beijing Release, in the integrated testing and test phase, she took the sole responsibility for the VF-C code joint debugging and bug fixing alone, as the other core team members were not able to participate in community activities, and she was also responsible for coordinating and participating in the various testing work of CMCC Integration Lab for both VoLTE and vCPE verification testing, which set the basis for the timely delivery of Beijing and the continued success of the community. |
Project Achievement Award
Presented to the Project which made the most significant technical progress while delivering all milestones on time, serving as a model for other projects to follow.
Nominees:
Project Innovation Award
Presented to the Project which delivered a new compelling feature or capability in ONAP (not originally delivered in Amsterdam, Open-O or Ecomp) that has significantly impacted ONAP in one or more areas including but not limited to architecture, integration, SDOs or security.
Marketing Award
Presented to the individual who provided the most support to various Marketing and PR teams, and generated and/or supported development of documentation, videos, tutorials, press/analyst interviews, webinars, etc.
Nominees:
Chris Donley | Chris assists in the ONAP public relations and marketing efforts on an almost constant basis. In addition to helping ensuirte that ONAP is always shown in the best light, he also assists on-boarding to new LFN Member companies to help get them up to speed on ONAP. |
Together as a team, Martial and Christophe represented ONAP in EMEA by participating to the 2018 FOSDEM - Free and open source software developers' European meeting. They have also developed several webinars, videos, tutorials to demonstrate closed loops capabilities and the CLAMP dashboard (With One or Two clicks, Operators should be able to get the most critical KPIs and reports of Running Control Loops). | |
jamil.chawki | He is very active to promote ONAP within the projet in the marketing committee and during various events (various presentations during ONS Summit). He also proposed the first LFN case study with Orange: https://www.linuxfoundation.org/lfn-resource/case-study-lf-networking-lfn-projects-power-next-generation-orange-networks/. |
Marco deserves to be recgonoized for representing ONAP so well at the ONS conference in Los Angeles. Marco has a broad understanding of the ONAP platform and helps where ever he can. | |
May Chen | May has been great about helping to organize the China PR/Marketing working group and in to getting things translated and disseminated in-region. She has also assisted the Modeling team in coordinating events. |
Code Contribution Award
Nominees are automatically chosen from the Top-10 contributors of merged code. The Community will then vote for the individual they feel produced the highest quality code.
Top-10 Contributors alphabetical order by first name
Dan Timoney |
Fu Jinhua |
Gary Wu |
Kanagaraj Manickam |
Lusheng Ji |
Sébastien Determe |
Subhash Kumar Singh |
Venkata Harish Kajur |
Yun Huang |
Yunlong Ying |