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Open Source Software: The Challenge Ahead

The open source community has done amazingly well in terms of challenging the historical epicenter of computing - the supercomputer and data center - and driving change there. Linux now represents a healthy and growing share of infrastructure in large organisations globally. Apache and other infrast...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autor principal: Shuttleworth, Mark
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: 2007
Materias:
Acceso en línea:http://cds.cern.ch/record/1038220
Descripción
Sumario:The open source community has done amazingly well in terms of challenging the historical epicenter of computing - the supercomputer and data center - and driving change there. Linux now represents a healthy and growing share of infrastructure in large organisations globally. Apache and other infrastructural components have established the new de facto standard for software in the back office: freedom. It would be easy to declare victory. But the real challenge lies ahead - taking free software to the mass market, to your grandparents, to your nieces and nephews, to your friends. This is the next wave, and if we are to be successful we need to articulate the audacious goals clearly and loudly - because that's how the community process works best. Speaker Bio: Mark Shuttleworth founded the Ubuntu Project in early 2004. Ubuntu is an enterprise Linux distribution that is freely available worldwide and has both desktop and enterprise server editions. Mark studied finance and information technology at the University of Cape Town, and went on to found Thawte, a company specialising in digital certificates and internet privacy. He sold Thawte to US company VeriSign in 1999, and founded HBD Venture Capital and The Shuttleworth Foundation, which supports education initiatives in Africa. He moved to London in 2001, and began preparing for the First African in Space mission, training in Star City and Khazakstan. In April 2002 Mark flew in space, as a cosmonaut member of the crew of Soyuz mission TM34 to the International Space Station.