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The Cathedral & the Bazaar (paperback)
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Author: Eric S. Raymond List Price: $16.95 Our Price: Click to see the latest and low price ISBN: 0596001088 Publisher: O'Reilly & Associates (15 January, 2001) Edition: Paperback Sales Rank: 6,996 Average Customer Rating: 4.07 out of 5
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Customer ReviewsRating: 3 out of 5 OSS Business Model The major problem with this book is that ER NEVER really discusses the "business model" used by the "software" industry which is more of a form racketeering and money laundering than any legitimate model. Since he does not do this and does not offer a viable alternative business model - he doomed open source to a quick death. Had he taken this issue more seriously,Enron,WorldCom,Auther Andersen and Perigrine debacles might have been avoided. Rating: 5 out of 5 The Anthropology of Hackerdom Eric Raymond is the Margaret Mead of the Open Source movement. His analysis of the gift culture as a model for explaining why hackers write software without recieving direct financial compensation is original, and as far as I know, unique. The economic implications are vast: if programmers write programs as a hobby, and do not stand in need of income for doing so (assume that they have day jobs), with rewards being in the form of status and reputation, then why buy the equivalent of what they're giving away? Linux is the focus of this branch of the hacker-programming movement, which can also be seen at work in Apache and Java. The nature of the movement - everyone agreeing to play by Open Source rules, a leader (Linus Torvalds) who sets goals but does not exert formal authority, and a market (the Bazaar) where knowledge is dispersed throughout, reminds one of the Austrian Economists, who believed that a system operating as a spontaneous order would show greater productivity than a command economy, because of the exponentially greater amount of brain power in use. Raymond makes much the same point, when he argues that, "With enough eyes, all bugs are shallow." For Microsoft, this is a deadly threat. Proprietary software and operating systems are expensive, to develop and to buy. If Open Source products are seen as being of like kind and quality, them software becomes a commodity, and branded, proprietary products, and the businesses that sell them, are facing inevitible decline in their core market. If Raymond's thesis is correct (I believe, as a layman, that it is), then by 2010, Windows may have gone the way of the British Empire - living in memore (digital or otherwise) only. -LLoyd A. Conway Rating: 1 out of 5 Lazy journalism The author proposes some interesting ideas. However it's difficult to evaluate them, because he simply makes claims and doesn't bother to back up his ideas with research and evidence. Most first-year college students can write better than this.
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