Open source and the Long Tail: An interview with Chris Anderson
The shift of software from the desktop to the Web will really be the making of open-source software. The Long Tail side of software will almost certainly be Web-based because the Web lowers the barriers to adoption of software. There will always be some software [...]
Posted January 10, 2008 by Casey
Categories: Blink. Tags: chris anderson, free software, interview, long tail, open source. Be the first one.
Open source software of the free as in free beer and free as in free speech variety has matured to the point that there are now strong contenders in nearly every category, though that doesn’t make them easy choices. It’s often revealing when people criticize OSS as being free as in free kittens, which is [...]
Posted November 21, 2007 by Casey
Categories: Libraries & Networked Information, Politics & Controversy, Technology. Tags: choices, commercial vs. open source, F/OSS, free software, Moodle, open source. One Comment.
Anybody who thinks Free Software is anti-copyright or disrespectful of intellectual property should take a look at Mark Jaquith’s post, What a GPL’d Movable Type means. Let’s be clear, Anil Dash takes issue with Jaquith’s interpretation, but the point is Jaquith’s offense at what appears to be Six Apart’s grabbiness for any code somebody might [...]
Posted September 25, 2007 by Casey
Categories: Copyrights & Intellectual Property, Dispatches, Technology. Tags: copyleft, copyright, F/OSS, free software, intellectual property, open source. One Comment.
I wish I’d seen this from WordPress maven Matt Mullenweg before I finished My LTR on open source software for libraries. Mullenweg is brushing off some of the mystique and praise the media has been giving him, and giving an honest sense of what makes open source software work:
the real story is more exciting than [...]
Posted September 24, 2007 by Casey
Categories: Politics & Controversy, Technology. Tags: free software, matt mullenweg, motivation, myth, open source, startup, wordpress. Be the first one.
Microsoft just won’t quit. Now they’re trying to make OOXML an ISO standard. Please help stop this.
Here’s how I explained it in Open Source Software for Libraries:
The state of Massachusetts in 2005 announced new IT standards that required its 80,000 employees and 173 agencies to adopt open file formats. The decision didn’t specify the applications [...]
Posted September 18, 2007 by Casey
Categories: Libraries & Networked Information, Politics & Controversy, Technology. Tags: document formats, free software, iso, microsoft, monopoly, ooxml, open formats, standards, tyranny. 2 Comments.
Sarah Houghton-Jan’s review of my LTR on open source software for libraries reminded me I wanted to blog this related piece I’d written for American Libraries.
Tim Spalding cocks his head a bit as he says it to emphasize the point: “LibraryThing.com is social software.” However we categorize it, Spalding’s baby has become a darling to [...]
Posted September 17, 2007 by Casey
Categories: Libraries & Networked Information, Technology. Tags: F/OSS, free software, lib20, libraries, library 2.0, open source. 2 Comments.
The most selfish thing about submitting a manuscript late is asking “When is it going to be out?” So I’ve been waiting quietly, rather than trouble Judi Lauber, who did an excellent job editing and managing the publication.
Ryan and Jessamyn each contributed a chapter, and I owe additional thank yous to the full chorus of [...]
Posted June 7, 2007 by Casey
Categories: Libraries & Networked Information, Technology. Tags: F/OSS, free software, freedom, lib20, libraries, library, library 2.0, Library Technology Reports, LTR, open source. 7 Comments.
Two fairly old papers on the economics of open source. The news recently has been that open source allows companies to bring in better, more innovative talent and saves marketing costs, but these papers are interesting nonetheless.
The Simple Economics of Open Source:
The nexus of open source development appears to have shifted to Europe over [...]
Posted April 5, 2007 by Casey
Categories: Technology. Tags: economics, free software, open source, oss, peer reviewed. Be the first one.
VA Linux founder Larry Augustin on OSS
In Augustin’s view open source development became a necessity in the 1990s when the cost of marketing a program came to exceed the cost of creating it. “My favorite is Salesforce.com. In 1995 they spent under $10 million in R&D and over $100 million in sales and marketing. That [...]
Posted March 15, 2007 by Casey
Categories: Technology. Tags: distribution, F/OSS, free software, GPL, Larry Augustin, marketing, open source, oss. One Comment.