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After selling his company to [[Red Hat]], Fleury became Senior Vice President and General Manager of the JBoss Division. However, Fleury went on a "paternity leave" in January 2007, supposedly until 15 March 2007 but was widely rumored to be leaving Red Hat. On 9 February 2007, his departure from Red Hat was made public, saying Fleury "has decided to leave Red Hat to pursue other personal interests, such as teaching, research in physics, music and his family."<ref>[http://www.eweek.com/article2/0,1895,2093145,00.asp]</ref>
After selling his company to [[Red Hat]], Fleury became Senior Vice President and General Manager of the JBoss Division. However, Fleury went on a "paternity leave" in January 2007, supposedly until 15 March 2007 but was widely rumored to be leaving Red Hat. On 9 February 2007, his departure from Red Hat was made public, saying Fleury "has decided to leave Red Hat to pursue other personal interests, such as teaching, research in physics, music and his family."<ref>[http://www.eweek.com/article2/0,1895,2093145,00.asp]</ref>

During his tenure as CEO of JBoss, Fleury published research on [[Aspect-oriented programming|Aspect Oriented Software]] Architectures.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Fleury |first=Marc |last2=Reverbel |first2=Francisco |year=2003 |editor-last=Endler |editor-first=Markus |editor2-last=Schmidt |editor2-first=Douglas |title=The JBoss Extensible Server |url=https://doi.org/10.1007/3-540-44892-6\_18 |journal=Middleware 2003, {ACM/IFIP/USENIX} International Middleware Conference, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, June 16–20, 2003, ProceedingsLecture Notes in Computer Science |series=Lecture Notes in Computer Science |publisher=Springer |volume=2672 |pages=344–373 |doi=10.1007/3-540-44892-6\_18}}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal |last=Tilevich |first=E. |last2=Urbanski |first2=S. |last3=Smaragdakis |first3=Y. |last4=Fleury |first4=Marc J.J. |date=2004 |title=Aspectizing Server-Side Distribution |journal=18th IEEE International Conference on Automated Software Engineering.}}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal |last=Reverbel |first=Francisco |last2=Burke |first2=Bill |last3=Fleury |first3=Marc |date=2004 |title=Dynamic Deployment of IIOP-Enabled Components in the JBoss Server. |journal=Lecture Notes in Computer Science |pages=52–62 |doi=10.1007/978-3-540-24848-4_5}}</ref> He co-authored books on the use of Java Management Extensions in J2EE servers <ref>{{Cite book |last=Lindfors |first=Juha |title=JMX Managing J2EE With Java Management Extensions |last2=Fleury |first2=Marc |publisher=SAMS publishing |year=2004}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book |last=Fleury |first=Marc J.J. |title=JBoss 4.0, the Official Guide |last2=Richards |first2=Norman |last3=Stark |first3=Scott |publisher=SAMS Publishing |year=2006}}</ref> and keynoted at academic software conferences <ref>{{Cite journal |last=Fleury |first=Marc J.J. |date=2004 |title=Professional Open Source and the Future of JBoss |url=https://dblp.org/rec/conf/cmg/Fleury04.html?view=bibtex |journal=30th International Computer Measurement Group Conference, December 5–10, 2004, Las Vegas, Nevada, USA, Proceedings |pages=765–774}}</ref> including a keynote at [[CERN]] on the topic of internet software architectures and open source.


== Technology Investments ==
== Technology Investments ==

Revision as of 02:39, 11 January 2023

Marc Fleury
Born1968
EducationPhysics
Known forJBoss

Marc Fleury is a Franco-American computer scientist, physicist, musician and businessperson. He is a pioneer of the Open Source movement and the creator of JBoss, an open-source Java application server.

Early life and education

Fleury was born in Paris, France, to a French father and Spanish mother, and came to the US in the early nineties to work on his doctoral thesis as a visiting scientist at MIT. He earned his Ph.D.from the École Polytechnique, in Paris, France in 1997. He holds a Masters in Theoretical Physics from the École Normale Supérieure.[1] rue d'Ulm (1993). His undergraduate degree was in Mathematics from the Ecole Polytechnique, Palaiseau (1992).  While at École Polytechnique, Fleury studied Bell Inequalities under the tutoring of Alain Aspect. He served in the military, as a paratrooper, with the rank of lieutenant in the 17th Parachute Engineer Regiment.[2]

Software Entrepreneur: JBoss

Fleury worked in France for Sun Microsystems before moving to the United States where he has worked on various Java projects.[3] Fleury's research interest focused on middleware, and he started the JBoss project in 1999. JBoss Group, LLC was incorporated in 2001 in Atlanta, Georgia. JBoss became a corporation under the name JBoss, Inc. in 2004. Fleury pioneered business models of Open Source known as Professional Open Source.

After selling his company to Red Hat, Fleury became Senior Vice President and General Manager of the JBoss Division. However, Fleury went on a "paternity leave" in January 2007, supposedly until 15 March 2007 but was widely rumored to be leaving Red Hat. On 9 February 2007, his departure from Red Hat was made public, saying Fleury "has decided to leave Red Hat to pursue other personal interests, such as teaching, research in physics, music and his family."[4]

Technology Investments

In 2008, Fleury started a new open source project called OpenRemote, to build home automation systems.[5]

He is one of the initial investors in CloudBees, a provider of continuous delivery software services.[6]

In February 2019, Fleury joined the advisory board of the Swiss blockchain banking Fintech company Mt Pelerin.

Fleury is co-founder and serves as General Partner at digital assets management firm TwoPrime.

The Church of Space and Poèmes Électroniques

Fleury co-founded the theater and electronic music act known as "The Church of Space" or "Poèmes Électroniques" (The CoS). The CoS served a 3 years residency (2016, 2017, 2019) at MoogfesMusic and Arts festival]~. Poèmes Électroniques was featured on NPR public radio for its premiere in Atlanta in 2015.[7] Since 2018 Poèmes Électroniques has been co-headed with Prof. Stuart Gerber of the Georgia State music dept.[8][9]

References

  1. ^ "InformIT Author Bio".
  2. ^ "Marc Fleury puts his Red Hat on". 19 May 2006.
  3. ^ "An Open-Source Lightning Rod". Bloomberg News.
  4. ^ [1]
  5. ^ "OpenRemote: Community will drive home automation".
  6. ^ "Cloudbees lands $10.5M to move Java development into the cloud". 26 July 2011.
  7. ^ [2]
  8. ^ [3]
  9. ^ [4]