Rebel Code: Linux And The Open Source Revolution
From Miiu.org
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| Author | Glyn Moody |
| Overview or Summary | The open source saga has many fascinating chapters. It is partly the story of Linus Torvalds, the master hacker who would become chief architect of the Linux operating system. It is also the story of thousands of devoted programmers around the world who spontaneously worked in tandem to complete the race to shape Linux into the ultimate killer app. Rebel Code traces the remarkable roots of this unplanned revolution. It echoes the twists and turns of Linux's improbable development, as it grew through an almost biological process of accretion and finally took its place at the heart of a jigsaw puzzle that would become the centerpiece of open source. With unprecedented access to the principal players, Moody has written a powerful tale of individual innovation versus big business. Rebel Code provides a from-the-trenches perspective and looks ahead to how open source is challenging long-held conceptions of technology, commerce, and culture. |
| Availability | From Amazon here |
Open Source Ventures & Wealth Creation
- The Cathedral & the Bazaar: Musings on Linux and Open Source by an Accidental Revolutionary by Eric S. Raymond
- Organization in Open Source Communities: At the Crossroads of the Gift and Market Economies (Routledge Studies in Innovations, Organization and Technology) by Evangelia Berdou
- Gene Patents and Collaborative Licensing Models: Patent Pools, Clearinghouses, Open Source Models and Liability Regimes (Cambridge Intellectual Property and Information Law) by Geertrui Van Overwalle
- The IT / Digital Legal Companion: A Comprehensive Business Guide to Software, IT, Internet, Media and IP Law by Gene K. Landy
- Web 2.0 and Beyond: Understanding the New Online Business Models, Trends, and Technologies by Tom Funk
- The Wealth of Knowledge: Intellectual Capital and the Twenty-first Century Organization by Thomas A. Stewart
- The Knowledge-Creating Company: How Japanese Companies Create the Dynamics of Innovation by Ikujiro Nonaka
- Professional DotNetNuke 4: Open Source Web Application Framework for ASP.NET 2.0 (Programmer to Programmer) by Shaun Walker
- Peer Participation and Software: What Mozilla Has to Teach Government (The John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation Reports on Digital Media and Learning) by David Booth
- Rebel Code: Linux And The Open Source Revolution by Glyn Moody