Open Sources: Voices from the Open Source Revolution"O'Reilly Media, Inc.", 1999. gada 3. janv. - 284 lappuses Freely available source code, with contributions from thousands of programmers around the world: this is the spirit of the software revolution known as Open Source. Open Source has grabbed the computer industry's attention. Netscape has opened the source code to Mozilla; IBM supports Apache; major database vendors haved ported their products to Linux. As enterprises realize the power of the open-source development model, Open Source is becoming a viable mainstream alternative to commercial software.Now in Open Sources, leaders of Open Source come together for the first time to discuss the new vision of the software industry they have created. The essays in this volume offer insight into how the Open Source movement works, why it succeeds, and where it is going.For programmers who have labored on open-source projects, Open Sources is the new gospel: a powerful vision from the movement's spiritual leaders. For businesses integrating open-source software into their enterprise, Open Sources reveals the mysteries of how open development builds better software, and how businesses can leverage freely available software for a competitive business advantage.The contributors here have been the leaders in the open-source arena:
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No grāmatas satura
6.–10. rezultāts no 51.
... proprietary software vendors have already suffered a number of quiet casual- ties. Linux and Free BSD have really eliminated opportunities to successfully sell a proprietary Unix on PC hardware. One such company, Coherent, has already ...
... proprietary model , and seems determined to see that model through at least the release of Windows 2000 . Our guess is that Windows 2000 will ship in the latter part of 2000 or early 2001 to great fanfare . This will be the great ...
... proprietary for the sake of short - term financial gain . But as more and more of the development work in computer science has its origins in industry rather than academia , industry must take care to nourish computer science through ...
... Proprietary. Unix. Era. By 1984, when AT&T divested and Unix became a commercial product for the first time, the most important fault line in hackerdom was between a relatively cohesive “network nation” centered around the Internet and ...
... proprietary Unix was ending in failure. Unix's promise of cross-platform port- ability got lost in bickering among half a dozen proprietary Unix versions. The pro- prietary-Unix players proved so ponderous, so blind, and so inept at ...
Saturs
1 | |
19 | |
31 | |
47 | |
53 | |
An Entrepreneurs Account | 71 |
Software Engineering | 91 |
The Linux Edge | 101 |
Open Source as a Business Strategy | 149 |
The Open Source Definition | 171 |
Hardware Software and Infoware | 189 |
The Story of Mozilla | 197 |
The Revenge of the Hackers | 207 |
The TanenbaumTorvalds Debate | 221 |
The Open Source Definition Version 10 | 253 |
Contributors | 265 |
How Red Hat Software Stumbled Across a New Economic Model and Helped Improve an Industry | 113 |
Diligence Patience and Humility | 127 |
Citi izdevumi - Skatīt visu
Open Sources: Voices from the Open Source Revolution Chris DiBona,Sam Ockman,Mark Stone Fragmentu skats - 1999 |