NetKernel Origins
NetKernel Origins

History

NetKernel was started at Hewlett-Packard Labs in 1999. It was conceived by Dr. Russ Perry, Dr. Royston Sellman and Dr. Peter Rodgers as a general purpose XML operating environment that could address the needs of the exploding interest in XML dialects for intra-industry XML messaging.

NetKernel was originally called Dexter which stands for Declarative XML Transform Engine. Its emphasis on a declarative approach to manipulating XML has remained strong throughout the life of the product.

In early 2002 HP rethought it's software strategy. We can't discuss the details, but Peter Rodgers, the leader of HP Lab's XML research program, negotiated with HP to acquire the rights to the project and established 1060 Research with co-founder Tony Butterfield, a member of the HP Labs team.

1060 Research has refined and fully implemented the original concepts. These are now realised in the 1060 Research NetKernel architecture which has gone way beyond the original ideas, and now provides a general model for scalable and adaptive software development.

Contributors

The 1060 NetKernel concept owes a great deal either directly, indirectly, or subliminally to the following individuals. Thank you.

Dr Russell PerryHP Labs
Dr Royston SellmanHP labs
Robin Gallimore - Director HPLBHP labs
Dr John "Rocketboy" EricksonHP labs
Steve LoughranHP labs/HP Corvallis
Senior Researchers: Dr Bill Wickes, Dave Banks, Dr Poorvi Vora, Dr Phil Stenton, Dr Dave Reynolds, Dr Stuart Williams, Dr Martin Merry, Nick WainwrightHP labs
Bruce Perens(ex)HP Opensource Guru
Bob Bickel(ex)HP Middleware Chief/ now senior exec at JBoss

Further Reading

A Hewlett Packard Research Report presents the Dexter Project, the project which seeded NetKernel.

1060 and NetKernel are respectively registered trademark and trademark of 1060 Research Limited
© 2002-2008, 1060 Research Limited