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== Bio ==
== Bio ==


Warren Togami founded the original Fedora Project as a school project during 2002 while studying Computer Science at the University of Hawaii. That project has since merged with Red Hat to become the Fedora Project of today, which can be considered the Research & Development engine of Red Hat.
Warren Togami founded the original Fedora Project as a school project during 2002 while studying Computer Science at the University of Hawaii. The original Fedora aimed to expand the availability and quality of packages available for Red Hat Linux by developing packages in a central repository by the collaboration of community volunteers.  That project has since merged with Red Hat's development process and evolved to become the Fedora Project of today, which can be considered the Research & Development engine of Red Hat.


Currently Warren continues work on Fedora as a software engineer at Red Hat, Inc. He works on building communities and fixing bugs within various Fedora projects.  His main focus today is educational and diskless workstation technologiesHe also works on Asian language software issues.
Currently Warren continues work on Fedora as a software engineer at Red Hat, Inc. He works on building communities and fixing bugs within various Fedora components.  His main focus today is on Desktop management and Apache SpamAssassinIn the past he worked on educational software, thin clients, and Asian language software issues.


http://wtogami.livejournal.com/11305.html
http://wtogami.livejournal.com/11305.html

Revision as of 03:11, 10 February 2010

Warren Togami

Email: [[MailTo(wtogami AT redhat DOT com)]

Bio

Warren Togami founded the original Fedora Project as a school project during 2002 while studying Computer Science at the University of Hawaii. The original Fedora aimed to expand the availability and quality of packages available for Red Hat Linux by developing packages in a central repository by the collaboration of community volunteers. That project has since merged with Red Hat's development process and evolved to become the Fedora Project of today, which can be considered the Research & Development engine of Red Hat.

Currently Warren continues work on Fedora as a software engineer at Red Hat, Inc. He works on building communities and fixing bugs within various Fedora components. His main focus today is on Desktop management and Apache SpamAssassin. In the past he worked on educational software, thin clients, and Asian language software issues.

http://wtogami.livejournal.com/11305.html 2006 propaganda explaining why Fedora is important to Free & Open Source Software

http://www.linux.com/feature/31767 2003 Linux.com article about Fedora merging with Red Hat