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Index
The Cathedral & the Bazaar
SPECIAL OFFER: Upgrade this ebook with O’Reilly Dedication Foreword Preface: Why You Should Care
Revision Notes for the Second Edition
1. A Brief History of Hackerdom
Prologue: The Real Programmers The Early Hackers The Rise of Unix The End of Elder Days The Proprietary-Unix Era The Early Free Unixes The Great Web Explosion
2. The Cathedral and the Bazaar
The Cathedral and the Bazaar The Mail Must Get Through The Importance of Having Users Release Early, Release Often How Many Eyeballs Tame Complexity When Is a Rose Not a Rose? Popclient becomes Fetchmail Fetchmail Grows Up A Few More Lessons from Fetchmail Necessary Preconditions for the Bazaar Style The Social Context of Open-Source Software On Management and the Maginot Line Epilog: Netscape Embraces the Bazaar
3. Homesteading the Noosphere
An Introductory Contradiction The Varieties of Hacker Ideology Promiscuous Theory, Puritan Practice Ownership and Open Source Locke and Land Title The Hacker Milieu as Gift Culture The Joy of Hacking The Many Faces of Reputation Ownership Rights and Reputation Incentives The Problem of Ego The Value of Humility Global Implications of the Reputation-Game Model How Fine a Gift? Noospheric Property and the Ethology of Territory Causes of Conflict Project Structures and Ownership Conflict and Conflict Resolution Acculturation Mechanisms and the Link to Academia Gift Outcompetes Exchange Conclusion: From Custom to Customary Law Questions for Further Research
4. The Magic Cauldron
Indistinguishable From Magic Beyond Geeks Bearing Gifts The Manufacturing Delusion The Information Wants to be Free Myth The Inverse Commons Reasons for Closing Source Use-Value Funding Models
The Apache Case: Cost-Sharing The Cisco Case: Risk-Spreading
Why Sale Value is Problematic Indirect Sale-Value Models
Loss-Leader/Market Positioner Widget Frosting Give Away the Recipe, Open a Restaurant Accessorizing Free the Future, Sell the Present Free the Software, Sell the Brand Free the Software, Sell the Content
When to be Open, When to be Closed
What Are the Payoffs? How Do They Interact? Doom: A Case Study Knowing When to Let Go
Open Source as a Strategic Weapon
Cost-sharing as a competitive weapon Resetting the competition Growing the pond Preventing a choke hold
Open Source and Strategic Business Risk The Business Ecology of Open Source Coping with Success Open R&D and the Reinvention of Patronage Getting There From Here Conclusion: Life after the Revolution Afterword: Why Closing a Drivers Loses Its Vendor Money
5. Revenge of the Hackers
Revenge of the Hackers Beyond Brooks's Law Memes and Mythmaking The Road to Mountain View The Origins of Open Source
Forget Bottom-Up; Work on Top-Down Linux is Our Best Demonstration Case Capture the Fortune 500 Co-opt the Prestige Media that Serve the Fortune 500 Educate Hackers in Guerrilla Marketing Tactics Use the Open Source Certification Mark to Keep Things Pure
The Accidental Revolutionary Phases of the Campaign The Facts on the Ground Into the Future
6. Afterword: Beyond Software? A. How to Become a Hacker
Why This Document? What Is a Hacker? The Hacker Attitude Basic Hacking Skills Status in the Hacker Culture The Hacker/Nerd Connection Points For Style Other Resources Frequently Asked Questions
B. Statistical Trends in the Fetchmail Project's Growth C. Notes, Bibliography, and Acknowledgements
A Brief History of Hackerdom
Notes
Note 1 Note 2 Note 3
The Cathedral and the Bazaar
Notes
Note 4 Note 5 Note 6 Note 7 Note 8 Note 9 Note 10 Note 11 Note 12 Note 13
Bibliography Acknowledgements
Homesteading the Noosphere
Notes
Note 14 Note 15 Note 16 Note 17 Note 18 Note 19 Note 20 Note 21 Note 22 Note 23 Note 24 Note 25
Bibliography
Note 26 Note 27 Note 28 Note 29 Note 30
Acknowledgements
The Magic Cauldron
Notes
Note 31 Note 32 Note 33 Note 34 Note 35
Bibliography
Note 36 Note 37 Note 38
Acknowledgements
For Further Reading:
Index Colophon SPECIAL OFFER: Upgrade this ebook with O’Reilly
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