Open source AI tooling is proving essential in ensuring that developers and organisations retain control, adaptability, and transparency as they integrate AI into software workflows. Projects like Theia AI demonstrate the potential of open tooling with rapid model integration, full prompt visibility, and support for the Model Context Protocol. Meanwhile, Eclipse LMOS is building the foundations for agent-based computing, enabling scalable, privacy-compliant AI systems and advancing the vision of a sovereign “Internet of Agents.” I encourage all members to consider bringing your AI-related projects to Eclipse and join our growing AI community.
In the Java ecosystem, I’m pleased to highlight that we have launched the Eclipse Temurin Sustainer Program. This program is the first of its kind at Eclipse, and offers a new path for those downstream organisations that rely heavily on Eclipse Temurin to directly aid financially in ensuring the long-term vitality of Eclipse Temurin and the broader Adoptium projects. This program enables companies and individuals to invest directly in sustaining the most widely adopted open source JDK for mission-critical workloads.
Looking ahead, I’d also like to draw your attention to several important events on the horizon:
Your engagement, whether through participation, contribution, or sponsorship, makes our ecosystem stronger.
Our membership remains strong. As of 31 May, we have 390 Organisational Members and 2,061 Committers. The 2025 budget includes further growth for the Foundation, once again driven by our working groups and new initiatives.
Financially, we are solidly on track with our 2025 budget, and consistent with our plans for managing our consistent year over year growth. As always, I thank you for your continued trust and support.
See the chart below for a year over year comparison: