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10-Year Anniversary of Open Source
Posted by
kdawson
on Fri Feb 08, 2008 12:26 PM
from the corks-a-poppin dept.
from the corks-a-poppin dept.
Bruce Perens writes "Saturday is the 10-Year Anniversary of Open Source, the initiative to promote Free Software to business. Obviously, it's been incredibly successful. I've submitted a State of Open Source message discussing the anniversary of Open Source, its successes, and the challenges it will face in the upcoming decade."
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Surprised by Wealth! (Score:2)
Re:Surprised by Wealth! (Score:5, Informative)
Parent
Re: (Score:2)
By 2001?
I miss the old Technocrat. Thanks for that... Have you another, like project in the wings?
Re:Surprised by Wealth! (Score:5, Informative)
Technocrat.net has been back for a while. If you did know that and don't like its current editorial content, I could really use some better article submissions. I've got to take most anything people submit right now because it's slim pickings. But not over here at Slashdot, darn it.
New projects in the wings: a start-up company called Kiloboot. Product not announced yet. An American version of FFII.
Thanks
Bruce
Parent
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I wasn't aware the "new" Technocrat was still associated with you - after dropping the old slashcode. I have some pals there - and still drop a post occasionally.
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Bruce
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I think you mean "Open Source" (Score:3, Informative)
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I'll raise a glass to that! (Score:2, Interesting)
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Misleading use of capital letters (Score:5, Insightful)
While this may be the 10th anniversary of Open Source, it is not the 10th anniversary of open s.
Open-source computer code has been around about as long as computers, and the equivalent to open source in other areas such as blueprints have been around since time immemorial.
corrected (Score:3, Insightful)
While this may be the 10th anniversary of Open Source, it is not the 10th anniversary of open source.
Open-source computer code has been around about as long as computers, and the equivalent to open source in other areas such as blueprints have been around since time immemorial.
--
That'll teach me not to use Preview.
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(paraphrasing)
Of course we had free software back in the '60s. But back then it was called "software".
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As a matter of fact, WAY back in the day it was common to buy simple computer games not in disk form (those were hard to spread), but in the form of a magazine or book. They'd have a collection of simple games' source printed in t
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10 years - not hardly (Score:2, Informative)
Try to get over yourselves people.
Re:10 years - not hardly (Score:4, Funny)
Parent
Re:10 years - not hardly (Score:4, Informative)
Thanks
Bruce
Parent
Open Source has already changed the world... (Score:5, Interesting)
I've been using Open Source all the way since the start, heck...I've even contributed to it by writing Open Documents and Wikis to help guide the everyday user how to use the various applications.
I am proud of what we have achieved, I remember when people at work mocked us as "nerdy" or "hippie" for constantly advocating alternative solutions to software and hardware solutions, but after being known for solving issues that the commercial world just couldn't this is no longer the case.
Thanks to distributors like "Ubuntu" that puts community effort together in functional packages for the "everyday man" - Linux has become both friendly and usable for everyone, not to mention the efforts of the Wine team that has made it entirely possible to run your favorite apps. under Linux with ease and little "under-the-hood" work at all.
Fantastic efforts, and an even better future. Personally I think the future for OS have never looked this good.
Scarcity (Score:5, Insightful)
Parent
Correction: free software is the success (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Correction: free software is the success (Score:5, Insightful)
That said, I remember just how little buy-in we had with business people then, because Richard was the wrong guy to promote to them. He doesn't have any empathy with them, this rapidly becomes clear if you discuss it with him. Yes, if we didn't do it, someone else would have. The world really was ready for it, that was clear in how fast it caught on.
Thanks
Bruce
Parent
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Big deal (Score:5, Interesting)
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- Wikipedia.
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prior art (Score:2)
What? (Score:3, Interesting)
10 years, huh? I wonder what Bruce's friends from UC Berkeley [wikipedia.org] would say. Sure seems like they had open source long before Bruce decided to get his name in the papers. Parens' and Raymond's instance on taking credit for free software is disgusting.
Re:What? (Score:5, Insightful)
Yes, BSD had the source code and licensing, but no campaign to drive others to create such things. Stallman started that. I canonized the definition of what was, and what was not, Open Source. Raymond and I evangelized to business. Everybody in this picture is standing on other folks shoulders. I'd be the last to deny that.
Bruce
Parent
Not 10 years: thank ESR for the lies (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Not 10 years: thank ESR for the lies (Score:5, Informative)
Of course, the words "Open Source" could have been used that way before then, but we can't find any record. Since Open Source Definition only got done (as the Debian Free Software Guidelines) in July 1997, whatever was referred to before then wasn't quite what we know as Open Source today.
Thanks
Bruce
Parent
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Of course, the words "Open Source" could have been used that way before then, but we can't find any record
Not to rain on your parade, Bruce, but the comment that you're replying to shows documentation of the term being used in 1990. I know that this isn't news to you, but this "I own the term Open Source" game that you play really turns a lot of people (who would otherwise be very sympathetic) away from your message.
Re:Not 10 years: thank ESR for the lies (Score:5, Informative)
The references you point out refer to the presence of source code, not the presence of licensing that assures the right to redistribute, modify, and use. BSD did provide that sort of licensing, but it was just called BSD licensing. The only campaign for developers to provide those things at the time was called Free Software.
Actually, there was a regular use of the term open source at that time, to refer to a form of military intelligence.
But I really did invent the term "nojomofo" Bwahh haha ha! :-)
Parent
"10 years" - bogus. (Score:2)
"Open source" goes back to the 1960s. [wikipedia.org] The Free Software Foundation was established in 1985. The first major Linux release was in 1992. These new guys from the late 1990s are just mouthing off.
I'm so sick of "Open Source" it's bogus! (Score:5, Insightful)
I've been in the industry for about 25 years and RMS was a visionary. While we we focused on software and what it could do and how to do it, he also focused on the dangers that our own creativity would bring to us and how to protect us from it.
Make no mistake, RIAA, MPIAA, SCO, et. al. are *ALL* apparitions RMS saw over a decade or so ago. The Open Source movement is nothing more than a selfish group of little people with a narrow scope and no plan. RMS has had a plan all along, and while he may seem to be an extremist and might not have been right 100% of the time, in retrospect, he has been right pretty darn close and his extremism seems less and less unwarranted over time.
The truth is both a blessing and a curse. It takes a lot of work to realize the truth and most people will not challenge themselves. Once you learn the truth, however, you are cursed with trying to explain it to others.
Re:I'm so sick of "Open Source" it's bogus! (Score:5, Informative)
Now, obviously, I think that Open Source evangelists like me have a role in talking with business people that Richard can't fill. His brain wiring isn't built for it. The a priori arguments he makes are not the way to start selling these concepts to business people, but hopefully they will eventually come to appreciate Richard's arguments after they enter through Open Source. Obviously, I don't want to erode the goals of the Free Software campaign at all. I'm out to help people understand Free Software with a gentle introduction. I tried to make that clear in the article.
Thanks
Bruce
Parent
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I'm sorry, and while I greatly respect your individual contributions and I think you're probably a pretty honorable guy, history has shown repeatedly that expedience in the form of subjugating ideals for gain is always a long term error.
I don't think the the "Open Source" movement has done anything constructive. The whole ESR Cathedral blather is an embarrassment, in most professional circle
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It's obsolete. ESR wrote it before IBM stepped into the picture, etc. I invite you to read The Emerging Economic Paradigm of Open Source [perens.com]. At least one now-professional has based his thesis on this paper.
I think the major difference in objectives between Open Source and Free Software evangelists is that the Free Software folks say that proprietary software does not have a right to exist. Unfortunately,
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This is not so much about compromising ideals as it is about style of evangelism.
Thanks
Bruce
Re:I'm so sick of "Open Source" it's bogus! (Score:5, Insightful)
In my experience, Open Source people are mostly Free Software advocates who have modified their terminology in order to make their sales pitch more effective.
Their are typically very community-minded, and un-selfish (by the standards of most people).
They are more interested in driving adoption than RMS, who prefers to focus on promoting an understanding of the principles of Software Freedom.
Generally speaking, Open Source folks have the same goal as the Free Software community, but differ in their preferred means.
Parent
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SO it's a good time to remember (Score:2)
So when talking about Linux, look neat, don't stink, and don't talk like a raving maniac.
"Open Source" is a lame catch phrase (Score:2)
Wake me up in a year, when it's the 10th anniversary of Bruce Perens' mailing list post: It's Time to Talk About Free Software Again [debian.org].
The term "open source" was coined to avoid talking about freedom, under the rather stupid assumption that business people don't want to hear about it. Here's the thing: business owners are some of the most vehement seekers of their own freedom, so if you talk to a business owner who is frustrated with vendor lock-in [slashdot.org] and tell him that he can have the freedom to do away with
The inexorable progress of Free Software (Score:3, Interesting)
Remarks about Audacity and Ardour aside, it's come a hell of a long way in 10 years, when priorities were things like drivers, windowing systems and text editors.
Go Free Software!
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I think he gave up when, after explaining the importance of solar energy to life on earth, people started throwing chopping virgins to people to appease the Sun God.
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Otherwise, break the chain. You can do it. Tell others how. Set yourself free.
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