Xen Community:
If you don’t already know Todd Deshane and the work he and his colleagues have done at Clarkson University for the Xen project, take the time to check out his profile at http://www.xen.org/community/spotlight/deshane.html. Todd is very active in the community and has submitted assistance on the Xen mailing lists for over 665 questions. He has also been a leader in the community in building and teaching Xen for USENIX Xen training classes.
Todd has also presented at Xen Summit’s with his last presentation at Xen Summit Boston in June last year; http://www.xen.org/files/xensummitboston08/Deshane-XenSummit08-Slides.pdf.
Make sure you get in touch with Todd to learn even more about his virtualization PhD research and get answers to your most sophisticated Xen hypervisor questions.
Read more
The Xen Project is back from Open Source Summit Japan and Automotive Linux Summit 2025. This year’s event felt like a true watershed moment for the automotive industry and for open source. Across talks, demos, and hallway conversations, one thing was clear: open source is now a foundational pillar
In safety-critical industries like automotive and industrial systems, trust is non-negotiable. When building software that controls critical hardware, like braking systems or factory automation, you need confidence. The software must behave exactly as intended. Every time. On the actual device. That's why the Xen Project is investing in
The annual Xen Summit is right around the corner, and there has never been a more exciting time to be part of the Xen Project. As enterprise and industrial needs shift and proprietary vendors rethink their licensing, the industry is ready for strong, open alternatives. Xen stands out not only
Xen is open, secure, and built for the future. As the new Community Manager, I’m focused on growing the Xen community, welcoming new contributors, and ensuring a thriving ecosystem. Let’s build the future of virtualization together!