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Open Source cover

In recent years, the way open source software is developed has taken hold as a valid alternative to commercial proprietary methods, as have the products themselves, e.g., the Linux operating system, Apache web-server software, and Mozilla Firefox browser. But what is open source software? How is the open source community organized? What makes this new model successful? What effects has it had and might it have on the future of the IT industry, companies and government policies? These and many other questions are answered in this book.

The first chapter gives a brief history of the open source community and the second chapter takes a close look at the relationship between intellectual property rights and software, both open source and proprietary. The next three chapters consider the who, the open source community, the how, software development both within and outside the community, and the what, open source projects and product quality. Chapters 6 and 7 focus on the different users of open source software: companies and governments respectively. These are followed by two chapters that interpret the phenomenon, first from an organizational point of view in Chapter 8 and then using the theory of complex adaptive systems in Chapter 9. The last chapter explores the current and potential applications of the concept underlying open source software in other fields.

Sample Chapter(s)
Chapter 1: History of Open Source (189 KB)


Contents:
  • History of Open Source
  • Software and Intellectual Property Rights
  • The Organization of the Open Source Community
  • Software Development Models
  • Open Source Products and Software Quality
  • Strategies and Business Models
  • Government Policies Towards Open Source Software
  • New Trends in Work Organization
  • Open Source as a Complex Adaptive System
  • Developments

Readership: Postgraduate students, academicians and practitioners in the field of technology management.