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The Cathedral and the Bazaar: Musings on Linux and Open Source by an Accidental Revolutionary por Eric S. Raymond
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The Cathedral & the Bazaar: Musings on Linux and Open Source by an…

por Eric S. Raymond

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O'Reilly Media, Inc. (2001), Edition: Revised & Expanded ed., Paperback, 241 pages

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Raymond's account of the growth of open source in the 1990's has some historical value, but beyond that I don't understand the appeal of this book. Raymond butchers the science, offers half-baked social theories, and aggrandizes the open source movement and himself. The major point of his main essay, about the cathedral/bazaar metaphor, is flawed based on his own data. His writing has the grandiose vacuity of a Wired editorial. ( )
  jorgearanda | Dec 5, 2009 |
A seminal work for the open source movement. I am not sure how accessible it would be to non programmers but still a book everyone should read. ( )
  sirfurboy | Apr 23, 2009 |
It's a very good book, and I would recommend it as an introduction to the "hacker"/open-source culture. It also cites a variety of sources for those interested in learning more. ( )
  aevaughn | Jan 6, 2008 |
  knol | Dec 21, 2007 |
Another one for the liberal reader, this book heralded a revolution towards the end of the last century. Yet, the revolution still hasn't quite made it.
  elmyra | Mar 26, 2006 |
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Descrição do livro

Amazon.com (ISBN 0596001088, Paperback)

It may be foolish to consider Eric Raymond's recent collection of essays, The Cathedral and the Bazaar, the most important computer programming thinking to follow the Internet revolution. But it would be more unfortunate to overlook the implications and long-term benefits of his fastidious description of open-source software development considering the growing dependence businesses and economies have on emerging computer technologies.

The Cathedral and the Bazaar takes its title from an essay Raymond read at the 1997 Linux Kongress. The essay documents Raymond's acquisition, re-creation, and numerous revisions of an e-mail utility known as fetchmail. Raymond engagingly narrates the fetchmail development process while elaborating on the ongoing bazaar development method he uses with the help of volunteer programmers. The essay smartly spares the reader from the technical morass that could easily detract from the text's goal of demonstrating the efficacy of the open-source, or bazaar, method in creating robust, usable software.

Once Raymond has established the components and players necessary for an optimally running open-source model, he sets out to counter the conventional wisdom of private, closed-source software development. Like superbly written code, the author's arguments systematically anticipate their rebuttals. For programmers who "worry that the transition to open source will abolish or devalue their jobs," Raymond adeptly and factually counters that "most developer's salaries don't depend on software sale value." Raymond's uncanny ability to convince is as unrestrained as his capacity for extrapolating upon the promise of open-source development.

In addition to outlining the open-source methodology and its benefits, Raymond also sets out to salvage the hacker moniker from the nefarious connotations typically associated with it in his essay, "A Brief History of Hackerdom" (not surprisingly, he is also the compiler of The New Hacker's Dictionary). Recasting hackerdom in a more positive light may be a heroic undertaking in itself, but considering the Herculean efforts and perfectionist motivations of Raymond and his fellow open-source developers, that light will shine brightly. --Ryan Kuykendall

(retirado da Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:57:52 -0400)

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