Open Sources 2.0 50
dpilgrim writes "O'Reilly has just released a successor volume to 1999's "Open Sources", entitled "Open Sources 2.0". The table of contents reveals contributions from a number of open source luminaries, including Mozilla's Mitchell Baker, Samba's Jeremy Allison, and Sleepycat's Michael Olson. There's also an essay co-authored by Slashdot's own Jeff Bates. The sample chapter is the introduction, and includes an entertaining riff on the parallels between the open source community and the Burning Man community. This volume is edited by two of the original three editors, Chris DiBona (former Slashdot editor) and Mark Stone, together with Danese Cooper. You might want to compare this with the original "Open Sources", whose entire text can be found online."
Re:heh, comparing oss to burning man (Score:2, Funny)
It takes a community... (Score:5, Interesting)
Tim O'Reilly has become a hypster himself (Score:1, Informative)
Re:Tim O'Reilly has become a hypster himself (Score:2)
Yes and everybody does this, and it's called Marketing. Technology itself is subject to fashion, trends, exactly the same way as any other culture or subcultrure; Ajax is an excellent example, hip and hype drive searchers and loboratories to new trends, now jargon, this is the way knowledge is structured. Eugene Garfield at the SCI (Science Citation Index) and people who have studied t
Let it be Known! (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Let it be Known! (Score:4, Informative)
I believe the claim about the "commercial server market" refers to business-operated web servers, not to commercial server software. If I'm correct, "almost amusing" would be the introduction making such a silly error.
In fact, reading the introduction -- the whole thing is idiotic. It opens with an anecdote from The Double Helix that not only misspells Max Delbruck's name repeatedly but ascribes a view to Jim Watson that's contradicted by the quote they use. In general, the notion of Watson as a non-competitive sharer is preposterous to anyone who has read the book.
Re:Let it be Known! (Score:2)
The real jewel in there, though, is:
Industry can have a negative
Re:Let it be Known! (Score:2)
Burning Man? (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Burning Man? (Score:2, Funny)
It's because all OSS programmers are socialist hippies.
Duh.
Naked bike race anyone?
Re:Burning Man? (Score:1)
Re:Burning Man? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Burning Man? (Score:2, Funny)
Pretty hippie-chick, not wearing a bra, carrying a bag of pot she wants to share, bathed this morning: LIKE
Greasy hippie with 5-day beard, bathed last month before his "soul-seeking journey", not wearing shoes: DISLIKE
Re:Burning Man? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Burning Man? (Score:2)
An absolutely NSFW link.
Re:Burning Man? (Score:4, Interesting)
To pretend that Burning Man is "like" any one particular thing is like unto converting first a long and intricate novel to a flash-bang Hollywood movie, that movie then to a trailer clip, and finally, that little clip to nothing but a simplistic sound-byte. Just like some data-stream lossily compressed into an inpoverished palimpsest of the original, this final sound-byte, so devoid of depth and detail, cannot help but be misleading, be deceptive--and ultimately, therefore, insulting.
For even a Burner who purports to represent Burning Man as "like" any single thing and then leaves it at that without elaboration is guilty of this sort of reductionist marketing (read: lying) crime. As for a non-Burner who does this, why, this is even worse, nothing but a foreigner speaking out of hearsay and ignorance.
Either go to the Burn, or don't even try to start to describe the experience. You have absolutely no clue.
This hippy thing is really quite curious. To be a "hippy" changed from a positive thing to a negative one, largely depending on one's birth year. Children born near the start of the 60's think of "hippies" as simple and kindly folk who have no trek with DDT, killing, or cruelty, with meaningless rules required by mindless, goose-stepping obediance to their fathers' fathers' fathers' notions of Victorian prudence and propriety, a people who can't always be bothered to shave precisely when and where they're told to.
Yet for those who were born sometime in the late 70's or beyond, a "hippy" seems in contrast to be more apt to conjure notions of unwashed beggars in ragged but colorful clothing who as before can't be bothered to shave when and where they're told to. They have no connection to the Beat Generation, just dirty spongers seeking a life without ties--of all sorts.
Personally, I do find it peculiar how often the latter-borns point out superficial cleanliness as some negative determining factor. What about the people? Perhaps these prudes, so quick to judge their fellow, need a sobering turn at Outward Bound with a backpack and a week in the wilderness--or a bit of time spent in 90+% of the world outside their fairytale bubble of extreme hygiene.
A couple weeks past this last Burn, The Economist had an article largely pooh-poohing the gift culture at Burning Man, much more so than that newspaper has ever decried the open source movement. One thing they got right, though, is seen here:
To be freed for even a brief spell from the constant crush of the unending, ubiquitous advertising and consequent grovelling and lying that plague our society really is a refreshing change, a respite from tyranny and deception. No one ever asks what "you do for living"; sometimes, though, they ask you what "you live for doing", which seems more important.
As for the cost, try renting a hotel for 8 days: you'll be spending more than the cost of a Burning Man ticket ($175 - 2x that last year) most anywhere and anywhen in the United States today.
The "gift culture" thing really is shared in common between the open source culture and Burner culture. If you don'
Re:Burning Man? (Score:1)
I have been, and I immediately got the reference. In fact in light of the recent hubub about Discovery Channel doing an on-playa episode of some new pseudo-reality-tv show and paying BM.Org an undisclosed amount of money had me comparing Burning Man to a child growing through the years - now at age 20 beginning to finally grow out into the world comfortably. Very much like open source with Linux taking many of the first hard steps for the larger communities to follow
The book has been slashdotted... (Score:5, Funny)
Does this mean it's full of typoos, dupes, articles with links that don't reference the actual article, and pictures of goatse?
And do you have to type the word in the image to read the book?
(mind reading capcha="bullocks")
Essay Draws Parallels to Knighthood (Score:3, Insightful)
I thought the parallels drawn between the open source movement and the feudal concept of knighthood were far more insightful and appropriate.
Re:Essay Draws Parallels to Knighthood (Score:1)
I have to sort of agree with this. But I think that the reason the knighthood analogy was more insightful is because it was actually explained and tied in. Had he explained the parallels between burningman and the open source community rather than leaving it up to the reader to understand, you all wouldnt be so confused. I did not spend much time trying to make it r
Wack (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Wack (Score:2)
So You Want to Be An Open Source Rockstar... (Score:2, Interesting)
Has it been written yet? AFAIK There is no glut of good books about Open Source, esp. for developers. (I don't mean books about specific OSS projects--of which there are plenty.)
Yes, I'm familiar with "Succeeding with Open Source" by Bernard Golden. But if I'm not mistaken that book is all about USING pre-existing OSS as one uses "off-the-shelf" components.
How about some DIY OSS? I'm sure it's "A Long Way To The Top," but if there were some good OSS do's and don'ts (send links if you got 'em!), mayb
FREE reading re: OSS (Score:3, Informative)
(answering my own question)
Credits:
I found the link to http://opensource.mit.edu/ [mit.edu] on this page:
Matthias Stürmer wrote a thesis available from his site,
http://stuermer.ch/Master_Thesis.html [stuermer.ch]
"Open Source Community Building" (PDF format)
http://stuermer.ch/dcs/users/1/OpenSourceCommunity Building_MStuermer.pdf [stuermer.ch] (1142.9 kB)
I'm sure his server can handle the attention, judging from the few replies I got to my post. : )
Re:So You Want to Be An Open Source Rockstar... (Score:2)
http://producingoss.com/ [producingoss.com]
There. Hope this helps!
-Karl Fogel
Re:So You Want to Be An Open Source Rockstar... (Score:2)
Re:So You Want to Be An Open Source Rockstar... (Score:1)
Burning Hippie Coders (Score:2)
[toke] Dude, you gotta try this DVDJon stuff! It's so open!
Sure, man, I...What?! $0.99 for a song? Ten bucks for a bottle of water? What are they smoking?!
[cough] [toke] Dude, maybe it's that bad [cough] Microsoft stuff that's goin' around. [toke] It's like, clooooooosed.
--Rob
So where can I download it? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:So where can I download it? (Score:1)
FYI, the entire original book Open Sources is available here online:
http://www.oreilly.com/catalog/opensources/book/to c.html [oreilly.com]
mod parent up (Score:2)
Open Sources 2.0 is released under the CC (Score:3, Informative)
Can't wait (Score:1)
chaostar! (Score:2)
clue free (Score:2)