@@ -18,49 +18,49 @@ mission.</p>
<p>Currently, the directors of Conservancy are:</p>
<h2>Jeremy Allison</h2>
<p>Jeremy Allison is one of the lead developers on the Samba Team, a
group of programmers developing an Open Source Windows compatible file
and print server product for UNIX systems. Developed over the Internet
in a distributed manner similar to the Linux system, Samba is used by
all Linux distributions as well as many thousands of corporations and
products worldwide. Jeremy handles the co-ordination of Samba
development efforts and acts as a corporate liaison to companies using
the Samba code commercially.</p>
<p>He works for Google, Inc. who fund him to work on improving Samba and
solving the problems of Windows and Linux interoperability.</p>
<h2>Peter Brown</h2>
<p>Peter Brown has worked in non-profit management and finance for more
than twenty years. He served as the Executive Director of the Free
Software Foundation from 2005 until 2011, and previously as its
Financial Controller and GPL Compliance Lab Manager. Peter has also
been a Director of New Internationalist Publications Cooperative, and
worked in London*for BBC Network Radio.</p>
worked in London for BBC Network Radio.</p>
<h2>Loïc Dachary</h2>
<p>Loïc Dachary has been involved with Free Software since 1987 when he
started distributing GNU tapes to the general public in France. His first
contact was with GNU Emacs and in 1989 with GCC which he used to port a
Unix System V kernel to a embeded motorola 68030 motherboard. He
currently works as a developer
for <a href="http://outflop.me/">OutFlop</a>, a company providing services
and software to operate poker rooms. He
created <a href="http://savannah.gnu.org/">Savannah</a>, the GNU forge, in
2001 to provide a Free alternative to proprietary forges. As a president
of FSF France, he provides technical and legal resources to French Free
Software developers. Loic Dachary is also a honorary member
of <a href="http://april.org/">APRIL</a> since 1996, a French non-profit
dedicated to Free Software with over 5,500 members.</p>
<h2>Mark Galassi</h2>
<p>Mark Galassi has been involved in the GNU project since 1984. He
currently works as a researcher in the International, Space, and Response
division at Los Alamos National Laboratory, where he has worked on the
HETE-2 satellite, ISIS/Genie, the Raptor telescope, the Swift satellite,
and the muon tomography project. In 1997 Mark took a couple of years off