The commercial Haskell group is a special interest group for companies and individuals interested in commercial usage of Haskell. It is composed primarily of three different things:
- A mailing list for discussions
- A wiki to write down more concrete ideas after discussing them on the mailing list
- A Github organization for sharing and collaborating on code
The primary purpose here is to foster discussion and encourage collaboration. This group is currently just starting, and many aspects of its purpose and workflows are yet to be decided. We strongly encourage everyone interested to get involved now and be part of making this group a success. Some concrete goals for this group include:
- Improve the quality of open source Haskell tooling and libraries to meet commercial requirements.
- Broaden the library coverage provided by the open source Haskell world.
- Increase documentation in the Haskell ecosystem, including both API docs (Haddocks) and tutorials/cookbooks.
- Identify obstacles to Haskell adoption and devise strategies and roadmaps to overcome them.
- Share information on requirements so that open-source contributors can focus their contributions in areas of greatest need or opportunity
- Publicize Haskell successes (and available tools/solutions) both inside and outside the Haskell community
- Question: How is this different from the Industrial Haskell User Group (IHG)?
- Answer: To join the IHG you pay and that's joining into a pool of work which gets done. This model is good because it guarantees that things will get accomplished, but it also has its limitations. Commercial Haskell is free and has no paid for pool of work. Companies must figure out how they want to collaborate to accomplish common interests. The two groups are largely complementary, and companies are encouraged to join both.
The following is a list of members of the group. Everyone is welcome to be part of the mailing list and participate in the Wiki. If you'd like to join more officially, please send a pull request adding yourself or your company in the list below. There are no requirements - financial or otherwise - on members of the group. But you should be using Haskell in a commercial/industrial setting, interested in doing so, or interested in helping those who are.
(Please try to keep the lists in alphabetical order.)
- Anchor
- Applikativ
- Borders
- Chordify
- CircuitHub
- FP Complete
- Front Row Education
- Hooky, Inc
- Infinipool
- Iris Connect
- Keera Studios
- Kite & Lightning
- Least Fixed
- LexisNexis Risk Solutions
- Lumi Guide
- Microsoft
- Picus Security
- Pivot Cloud
- Rheo Systems
- Silk
- Soostone
- Standard Chartered
- Systor Vest
- thoughtbot
- Tsuru Capital
- VaryWell
- Wagon
- Wellposed
- Well-Typed
- Adam Bergmark
- Adam Foltzer
- Adam Gundry
- Aistis Raulinaitis
- Alex Lang
- Alexandr Kurilin
- Alfredo Di Napoli
- Alp Mestanogullari
- Andres Löh
- Andy Gill
- Aycan iRiCAN
- Bas de Haas
- Bas van Dijk
- Ben Ford
- Ben Moseley
- Ben Sherman
- Bert Añasco
- Blake Rain
- Carter Schonwald
- Chris Allen
- Chris Done
- Chris Dornan
- Christopher Reichert
- David Johnson
- Dennis J. McWherter, Jr.
- Duncan Coutts
- Edward Kmett
- Eric Fode
- Erik Hesselink
- Finn Espen Gundersen
- Flavio Villanustre
- Fuzz Leonard
- Greg Weber
- Ian Graves
- Ilya Zubkov
- Ivan Perez
- Jason Hickner
- Jasper Van der Jeugt
- Jesus Gonzalez
- Jon Sterling
- José Pedro Magalhães
- Junji Hashimoto
- Jürgen Keck
- JP Smith
- Kyle Marek-Spartz
- Liyang HU
- Luke Hoersten
- Manuel Chakravarty
- Mark Daly
- Mathieu Boespflug
- Matt DeLand
- Mattias Lundell
- Michael Baikov
- Michael Snoyman
- Michael Steele
- Miëtek Bak
- Mike Craig
- Mikkel Christiansen
- Moritz Angermann
- Neil Bartlett
- Neil Mitchell
- Ozgun Ataman
- Pat Brisbin
- Patrick Flor
- Patrick Mylund Nielsen
- Pawel Stasiak
- Philipp Kant
- Rehno Lindeque
- Rémi Vion
- Remy Goldschmidt
- Renzo Carbonara
- Roel van Dijk
- Ryan Booker
- Sharif Olorin
- Simon Marlow
- Theunis Kotze
- Toby Goodwin
- Tristan Webb
- Vincent Hanquez