Free/open Source Software DevelopmentStefan Koch Idea Group Inc (IGI), 2005. gada 1. janv. - 309 lappuses Free/Open Source Software Development gives an overview of the current research streams in the field of free and open source software development. A multitude of research approaches are used to explore free and open source software development processes, attributes of their products and the workings within the development communities. This book offers a glimpse beyond 'classical' free and open source software development, and analyzes chances and risks for cooperations with traditional organizations and the implications of this new model for areas other than software development. |
No grāmatas satura
1.–5. rezultāts no 45.
1. lappuse
... individual contributions and production releases, the importance of the development branch, and control of developers' prioritization of work tasks and availability. The results show that the two projects, even though they produce very ...
... individual contributions and production releases, the importance of the development branch, and control of developers' prioritization of work tasks and availability. The results show that the two projects, even though they produce very ...
2. lappuse
... individual autonomy, tacit norms, and self-organization rather than commands, control, and explicit rules. This is ... individuals and groups” rather than “a state of lawlessness or political disorder due to the absence of governmental ...
... individual autonomy, tacit norms, and self-organization rather than commands, control, and explicit rules. This is ... individuals and groups” rather than “a state of lawlessness or political disorder due to the absence of governmental ...
11. lappuse
... individual developers working on bug-fixes or improvements to the source code in the repositories. In effect, anyone can contribute to the projects with bug reports or suggestions for changes; they can do this just once or on a regular ...
... individual developers working on bug-fixes or improvements to the source code in the repositories. In effect, anyone can contribute to the projects with bug reports or suggestions for changes; they can do this just once or on a regular ...
15. lappuse
... individual developers. The contribution level model, in contrast, is the rather sketchy model for the development process leading to a new contribution to the software repository. We will first look at the process models for the ...
... individual developers. The contribution level model, in contrast, is the rather sketchy model for the development process leading to a new contribution to the software repository. We will first look at the process models for the ...
20. lappuse
... individual change there is typically no design document. Thirty-one of the 72 committers surveyed in FreeBSD responded that they had never distributed a design document (defined as a separate document, distinct from a source file) ...
... individual change there is typically no design document. Thirty-one of the 72 committers surveyed in FreeBSD responded that they had never distributed a design document (defined as a separate document, distinct from a source file) ...
Saturs
FOSS Development and Software Engineering Practices Extensive Analysis | 83 |
FOSS Projects as Social Constructs | 124 |
Simulating FOSS Development Dynamic Swarms | 173 |
FOSS Development Interacting with Commercial and Public Organizations | 221 |
Implications of the FOSS Development Model The Broad Picture | 258 |
About the Editor | 296 |
About the Authors | 297 |
Index | 306 |
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active analysis Apache application approach authors changes chapter commits companies complex Computer considered contributions contributors Copying or distributing Copyright core create culture Debian design patterns discussion distributing in print documentation effort electronic forms ethical evolution example existing F/OSS development F/OSS projects fact Figure forms without written free software FreeBSD GNUe Idea Group Inc important individual intellectual property interest languages lines Linux means modularity module Mozilla open source software organization packages participation permis person possible practices present print or electronic problems programming release reported requirements Retrieved role Science shows simulation SLOC social software development software engineering source code structure task technical testing tion University users values written permission