O'Reilly 'Open-Sources' OpenSources: Voices From the Revolution.SEBASTOPOL Sebastopol: see Sevastopol, Ukraine. , Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--May 18, 1999-- O'Reilly & Associates announced today that they are making the entire new book, "OpenSources: Voices From the Open Source Revolution" freely available (or "open-sourced") on their web site: http://www.oreilly.com/catalog/opensources/book/toc.html "Open Sources" is a collection of essays that offer insight into how the Open Source movement works, why it succeeds, and where it is going. "OpenSources," published in January January: see month. 1999, has earned considerable critical acclaim. In "OpenSources," Open Source pioneers such as Brian The name Brian (sometimes spelled Bryan) comes from an Irish backround. It is of Celtic origin and its meaning may be "hill" or "strong, noble, and high"[1]. Belendorf (Apache Apache (əpăch`ē), Native North Americans of the Southwest composed of six culturally related groups. They speak a language that has various dialects and belongs to the Athabascan branch of the Nadene linguistic stock (see Native American ), Scott Bradner (Internet Engineering Task Force (c/o Corporation for National Research Initiatives (CNRI), Reston, VA, www.ietf.org) Founded in 1986, the IETF is a non-membership, open, voluntary standards organization dedicated to identifying problems and opportunities in IP data networks and proposing technical solutions to the ), Jim Hamerly (Netscape), Kirk McKusick (Berkeley Unix Berkeley Unix - Berkeley Software Distribution ), Tim O'Reilly This article is about the founder of O'Reilly Media. For the musician, see Tim O'Reilly (musician). Tim O'Reilly (Irish: Tadhg Ó Raghallaigh, 1954-) was born in Cork, Ireland. (O'Reilly & Associates), Tom Paquin (mozilla.org.), Bruce Bruce, Scottish royal family descended from an 11th-century Norman duke, Robert de Brus. He aided William I in his conquest of England (1066) and was given lands in England. Peren (Open Source Initiative), Eric Raymond (Open Source Initiative), Richard Stallman (person) Richard Stallman - Richard M. Stallman. Founder of the GNU project. He resigned from the AI lab at MIT so he would be free to produce free software which he could then distribute on his own terms. (Free Software Foundation), Michael Tiemann Michael Tiemann is Vice President of Open Source Affairs at Red Hat Inc, as well as President of the Open Source Initiative. He previously was the Chief Technical Officer of Red Hat. (Cygnus Solutions Cygnus Solutions, originally Cygnus Support, was founded in 1989 by John Gilmore, Michael Tiemann and David Henkel-Wallace to provide commercial support for free software. Its tagline was: Making free software affordable. ), Linus Torvalds Linus Benedict Torvalds (born December 28 1969 in Helsinki, Finland) is a Finnish software engineer best known for initiating the development of the Linux kernel. (Linux), Paul Vixie Paul Vixie is the author of several RFCs and well known UNIX system programs, among them SENDS, proxynet, rtty and Vixie cron. While he was employed by DEC, in 1988 he started working on the popular internet domain name server BIND, of which he was the primary author and (Bind), Larry Wall (person) Larry Wall - A demigod, the author of Perl, patch, and rn. In the Perl README, he says, "I want you to know that I create nice things like this because it pleases the Author of my story. If this bothers you, then your notion of Authorship needs some revision. (Perl), and Bob Young (Red Hat) share their vision of the Open Source movement. "Of course, the hardcopy of the book will still be available for sale at bookstores," said Tim O'Reilly, president of O'Reilly & Associates, "But we felt that especially now, these are voices that must be heard. A key part of the success of Open Source depends on the easy dissemination dissemination Medtalk The spread of a pernicious process–eg, CA, acute infection Oncology Metastasis, see there of information over the Internet Internet Publicly accessible computer network connecting many smaller networks from around the world. It grew out of a U.S. Defense Department program called ARPANET (Advanced Research Projects Agency Network), established in 1969 with connections between computers at the , so making it possible for people to freely redistribute re·dis·trib·ute tr.v. re·dis·trib·ut·ed, re·dis·trib·ut·ing, re·dis·trib·utes To distribute again in a different way; reallocate. these essays will help to spread the good word. "Still, unlike computer source code, you don't want people changing the primary source material, so the license allows redistribution re·dis·tri·bu·tion n. 1. The act or process of redistributing. 2. An economic theory or policy that advocates reducing inequalities in the distribution of wealth. only without modification." Each of the fourteen co-authors contributed a chapter to "OpenSources." Not surprisingly within this community, all chose to allow their work to be freely re-distributable, as long as it wasn't modified. "The more people understand Open Source, the more they will demand it in their commercial environments," said co-author co·au·thor or co-au·thor n. A collaborating or joint author. tr.v. co·au·thored, co·au·thor·ing, co·au·thors To be a collaborating or joint author of: "He and a colleague . . . Michael Tiemann, "We are pleased that O'Reilly has made the bold move to promote the Open Sources book with an open source distribution policy. I have little doubt that such a move will increase the sales volume of this already popular book." Co-author Eric Raymond agreed: "'OpenSources' is important as a primary historical source. It is front-line reporting from the people who were there when the wave broke." Even within the Open Source movement, there is a rich mosaic of philosophies -- one of the things that makes the collection of voices in the book "OpenSources" so fascinating. "O'Reilly Associates and the other authors have joined to do the right thing -- to permit redistribution of the rest of this book. Next I hope that ORA ora (o´rah) pl. o´rae [L.] an edge or margin. ora serra´ta re´tinae the zigzag margin of the retina of the eye. and authors will join to permit redistribution and modification of some of their manuals describing free software packages -- to help fill the great gaps in documentation that remain in our free operating systems Operating systems can be categorized by technology, ownership, licensing, working state, usage, and by many other characteristics. In practice, many of these groupings may overlap. ," said co-author, Richard Stallman. On the other hand, Eric Raymond stated: "Unlike some, I don't think it's an ethical requirement that this book be freely redistributable; books are different from programs, they don't need peer review and rapid evolution in the same way. Still, I may have been the first person to do simultaneous paper and on-line publication of a book aimed at the mass market (the New Hacker's Dictionary back in 1991). If that experience is any guide, publishing this book on line will actually 'increase' its sales." -0-
What the Critics Have Said About
"OpenSources: Voices From the Open Source Revolution"
"What you can't find on the Web, apart from all the fragments, is
a really comprehensive account of the (Open Source) movement. For
that you need Open Sources: Voices from the Open Source
Revolution from O'Reilly."
-- David Warsh, Boston Globe, February 28, 1999
"Maybe because I read it in one sitting in a hotel on the edge of
San Francisco's Mission district, where many of the Net's
architects still live and work and where Hotwired, the first
website I wrote for is located, I was blown away by Open Sources:
Voices from the Open Source Revolution, published by O'Reilly
($24.95).
"I've been struggling to learn about OS and free software and to
acquire and learn Linux on my new box. I'm not there yet, but I'm
not inclined to quit, and the voices in the book explain why. The
programmers, hackers, and others developing OS are freedom
fighters, guerillas of the Information Age; the Open Source and
Free Software movements are both radical and unprecedented.
"There's a lot at stake in whether or not they succeed; whether
the Internet remains the freest culture in the world or suffers
the fate of off-line media becoming corporatized, homogenized,
mass-marketed and pervasively censored. Open Sources is an
important document, and this is the first of several columns
about it. Every significant movement seems to have a book that
sparks or defines it, from environmentalism's Silent Spring to
Mao's little red book.
"Open Sources is that kind of ideological book... When I began
reading the voices in Open Sources -- including Richard Stallman
of the Free Software Foundation, Tim O'Reilly of O'Reilly &
Associates, Bruce Perens and Eric Raymond of the Open Source
Initiative, and Linus Torvalds (Linux) -- I expected to hear a
description of a new kind of technology. But what's captured is
the birth of a movement."
-- Jon Katz, slashdot.org, March 1999
"O'Reilly & Associates continues to impress me as a publisher.
This week I received Open Sources: Voices from the Open Source
Revolution, which I'm about a third through now, and find
informative and fascinating."
-- Mark Hall, Performance Computing, February 1999
"Open Sources is a book of readings and one of the best reads
I've had in years... If you are just being introduced to Free
Software, you will find no better introduction to the thinking
behind it than Open Sources. If you have been into Free Software
for a year or two, Open Sources will give you a deeper and more
comprehensive understanding of it.
"If you are an old Free Software hacker, Open Sources will give
you fresh and fascinating glimpses into the minds of its
creators, movers and shakers... In the end, there is absolutely
nothing bad to say about Open Sources except that if you can't
afford to buy a copy you might just have to steal one."
--Dwight Johnson, Linux Today, February 25, 1999
"If you develop software, or run a company that does, Open
Sources is a must-read. This is Hackers (Steven Levy's classic
portrayal of early microcomputer software renegades) for the next
generation. It may also be a manifesto for software development
and marketing in the next century.
"Open Sources brings together 14 of the brightest, most
influential visionaries in the dynamic open-source movement to
discuss the past and future of open-source software. Their
fascinating first-person insider accounts range from the story of
Linux by Linus Torvalds and a free-software manifesto by Richard
Stallman to an essay on how to make money selling free software
by RedHat Software, Inc. President Robert Young... This is one of
those rare books that define a new paradigm. Highly recommended."
--Amara D. Angelica, TechWeek, March 8, 1999
"Looking for a really good book about the Open Source concept?
Then get a copy of the book entitled OpenSources: Voices From the
Open Source Revolution...both entertaining and educational, and
exposes the reader to some very creative minds who are destined
to shape the future of our industry."
-- John Black, Real-Time Engineering, Spring 1999
"an excellent and fascinating look...well written and readable
account with some genuinely interesting insights."
-- Nick Merritt, PC Answers, May 1999
"a valuable and unique snapshot of the Open Source processes and
developments as they currently exist."
-- Elizabeth Zinkann, Sys Admin, June 1999
-0- "OpenSources: Voices From the Open Source Revolution" is available online at: http://www.oreilly.com/catalog/opensources/book/toc.html or from your local bookstore (O'Reilly & Associates, $24.95) Note to Editors: Open Source is a trademark of the Open Source Initiative. For more information, a review copy, cover art, or interview with the authors, contact: Lisa Mann at 707/829-0515 ext. 230 or lisam@oreilly.com |
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