Re: OSS Projects WAS: Call from Info World - Mailing list pgsql-advocacy
From | Bruce Momjian |
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Subject | Re: OSS Projects WAS: Call from Info World |
Date | |
Msg-id | 200311271615.hARGFqm09994@candle.pha.pa.us Whole thread Raw |
In response to | Re: OSS Projects WAS: Call from Info World (Josh Berkus <josh@agliodbs.com>) |
Responses |
Re: OSS Projects WAS: Call from Info World
|
List | pgsql-advocacy |
Josh, may I use these ideas in a talk I am working on? Can I put your name at the bottom of the slide as attribution? --------------------------------------------------------------------------- Josh Berkus wrote: > Bruce, > > > Not like: > > > > * Not Linux - no single gatekeeper, project is usable without > > enhancement * Not Mozilla - no company history like AOL/Netscape > > * Not Open Office - no controlling company like Sun > > * Not Gnome - no controlling companies > > * Not PHP - no Zend steering development > > * Not Sendmail - no control by Sendmail, Inc. > > * Not MySQL - no MySQL AB that does all server development > > Some of these examples are redundant. Really, there's only 6 models for OSS > projects: > > (please note that the projects cited are NOT based on in-depth research and > may be wrongly classified) > 1) Ours: a diffuse leadership structure with a variety of individuals and > companies, but the only participants with clearly "louder voices" are > individuals with seniority & responsibility. Examples: Us, LTSP, Samba, > FreeBSD. > 2) Heirarchical: large "volunteer" distributed network of contributors, but > tightly controlled heirarchy at the top (usually a single "high priest"). > Model shared by Linux, Perl, Python, OpenBSD. Very common for projects that > started as a single person's work. > 3) Corporate-Council: projects which, due to their commercial value to several > companies, are run by a group of company-appointed representatives, with > independant developers largely excluded. Examples Gnome, XFree86. > 4) Corporate-Sponsored: projects which either recently or historically have > been financially sponsored by a single company, foundation, or university. > As a result, leadership is hybrid of developer seniority and > company/foundation influence. Examples: Apache, PHP, Slashcode > 5) Corporate-owned: Open Source software which is really part of a single > company's project line, and is often offered alongside proprietary offerings > or accessories based on the same code. The company's paid development team > and the project's leadership are identical. Examples: MySQL, OpenOffice.org, > Eclipse, Sendmail, Sourceforge. > 6) Single-developer: By far the numerical majority of OSS projects, these > projects seldom have more than one or two serious developers and a few dozen > users submitting bugs. Examples: Flexbackup, XCDRoast, and SQLite up until > 6 months ago. > > -- > Josh Berkus > Aglio Database Solutions > San Francisco > -- Bruce Momjian | http://candle.pha.pa.us pgman@candle.pha.pa.us | (610) 359-1001 + If your life is a hard drive, | 13 Roberts Road + Christ can be your backup. | Newtown Square, Pennsylvania 19073
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