Bill Hilf

Bill Hilf was formerly the Senior Vice President and General Manager at Hewlett Packard Enterprise for the HPE Helion Cloud organization, overseeing Engineering, Product Management and Product Marketing.[1] Bill was an original board member of the Cloud Foundry Foundation. Previously, Hilf was General Manager of product management for Microsoft's cloud computing platform, Microsoft Azure. Before Azure, he was General Manager of the Technical Computing [2] group at Microsoft, which focused on High Performance Computing, Parallel Computing, and cloud computing. He was formerly head of Windows Server Marketing and Platform Strategy at Microsoft, and the creator of Microsoft's strategy and work with open-source projects. Hilf previously worked at IBM[3] where he led their Linux technical strategy.

Hilf made a number of controversial statements in his Open Source role at Microsoft, claiming that "The Free Software movement is dead...Even Linus has a job today...",[4] implying that free software is equivalent to freeware.[5] Hilf's role at the time focused heavily on business and enterprise users, as noted in his statement about OSS and philosophy, "Most CIOs don't really want to make decisions based on philosophy. There is no discussion that 'all software must be free because I believe in the movement.' So, it is to the betterment of the open source community that it has matured".[6] Albeit a controversial position, during his time in this role, Hilf was recognized as one of the 25 most influential people at Microsoft.[7]

He is the founder and president of a sports-based non-profit organization called High Five Hope,[8] which focuses on homeless and street children in developing countries. Additionally, he has worked with the UNHCR to help build computer labs [9] in refugee camps.

References

  1. The Man Who Introduced Microsoft to Open Source Leaves For HP
  2. Microsoft Technical Computing Archived February 2, 2011, at the Wayback Machine.
  3. IBM Developerworks.
  4. Microsoft Executive Out to Debunk Linux Myths'
  5. Clarifications, Bill Hilf blog
  6. Microsoft + Open Source: Too good to be true?
  7. The 25 Most Influential People at Microsoft
  8. High Five Hope
  9. Hilf talking about UNHCR Community Technology Access programs

External links

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