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RE: Please don't refer to Emacs as "open source"
From: |
opensourcesurvey |
Subject: |
RE: Please don't refer to Emacs as "open source" |
Date: |
Tue, 14 Jun 2011 11:00:25 -0500 |
Richard,
Thank you for the comments. Our apologies for not clearly differentiating the
two types of software. In analyzing the results and reporting the data, we will
make sure to take this into account. For you information, we have sent the
survey to other projects that would fall into the category of Free Software.
-- Jeff
Assistant Professor
University of Alabama
(v) 205-348-9829 (f) 205-348-0219
http://www.cs.ua.edu/~carver
-----Original Message-----
From: Stephen J. Turnbull [mailto:address@hidden
Sent: Monday, June 13, 2011 10:24 PM
To: address@hidden
Cc: opensourcesurvey; address@hidden
Subject: Please don't refer to Emacs as "open source"
Richard Stallman writes:
> If you would like our participation in this study, please agree to > give
> the free software movement equal mention in the study's > report.
Dr. Carver,
I hope that neither participation in the survey by Emacs developers, nor what
you write in your academic reports will be influenced by inappropriate pressure
of the sort quoted above. Nevertheless, as a social scientist myself, I hope
that you will give consideration to the influence of the free software movement
as such on the tools and best practices of distributed software development.
While my academic work is on other topics, in over twenty years of
participation in free, libre, and open source software (FLOSS) projects, my
observation has been that both the *philosophy* and the
*fact* of freedom in FLOSS development have strongly influenced distributed
development practice. This is true of both extremes of "open" free software
projects like Emacs and in "closed" commercial products (I can't be more
specific about the product, but the company is Amazon.com), as well as many
projects of hybrid nature. This influence has several channels, including
tools, workflows, and attitudes of developers toward their work. I hope your
survey is designed to capture this influence where present, and if not, I
suggest you take care not to overlook it when it is present in the responses to
open-ended questions.
Just-one-Dismal-Scientist's-opinion-ly y'rs,
- Participation Requested: Survey about Open-Source Software Development, Jeffrey Carver, 2011/06/13
- Please don't refer to Emacs as "open source", Richard Stallman, 2011/06/13
- Please don't refer to Emacs as "open source", Stephen J. Turnbull, 2011/06/13
- RE: Please don't refer to Emacs as "open source",
opensourcesurvey <=
- Re: Please don't refer to Emacs as "open source", Karl Fogel, 2011/06/14
- Re: Please don't refer to Emacs as "open source", Richard Stallman, 2011/06/15
- Re: Please don't refer to Emacs as "open source", Richard Stallman, 2011/06/14
- Re: Please don't refer to Emacs as "open source", Stephen J. Turnbull, 2011/06/15
- Re: Please don't refer to Emacs as "open source", David Kastrup, 2011/06/15
- Re: Please don't refer to Emacs as "open source", Lennart Borgman, 2011/06/15
- Re: Please don't refer to Emacs as "open source", David Kastrup, 2011/06/15
- Re: Please don't refer to Emacs as "open source", Stephen J. Turnbull, 2011/06/15
- Re: Please don't refer to Emacs as "open source", Jambunathan K, 2011/06/15
- Re: Please don't refer to Emacs as "open source", Juanma Barranquero, 2011/06/15