.
A L S O__T O D A Y
You've acquired sendmail
By Andrew Leonard
Eric Allman's no cost plan makes confident your e-mail will get by way of. Now it's heading business
The 21st Problem No. 16 Results
By Charlie Varon and Jim Rosenau
Mystery misdirected e-mail
- - - - - - - - - -
T A B L E__T A L K
Talk about the packages you can't perform with out and why in the Digital Culture location of Table Talk
- - - - - - - - - -
BROWSE THE
21ST Features ARCHIVES
- - - - - - - - - -
___The totally free software story
____A COMPLETE LISTING OF SALON 21ST
____COVERAGE OF LINUX AND THE No cost
____SOFTWARE/OPEN SOURCE MOVEMENT.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
M a j o r__S t o r i e s
Apache's free-software warriors By Andrew Leonard
How did Apache become the most popular software for serving Web pages? How did its developers, collaborating online, beat both Microsoft and Netscape in this market? Salon's first big look at the subject explains the nature of "free software" and open access to source code -- and explores why this approach is gaining adherents,
Office Standard 2007 Key, producing reliable and popular software and causing Microsoft and other software giants to take notice. (11/20/97)
The little operating system that could By Andrew
Leonard
What is Linux,
Office 2007 Key Sale planimeter, the flagship open-source operating system? Where did it come from,
Windows 7 Starter Sale, and how did it emerge as a cause? Can it really problem Microsoft's dominance of the desktop operating system market? Our thorough feature lays out the Linux landscape for a nontechnical audience. (06/26/98)
Let my software go! By Andrew Leonard
The no cost software approach received a major boost in spring 1998 when Netscape released the source code to its browser. The company said it was influenced by "The Cathedral and the Bazaar," an article by open-source advocate Eric Raymond. Our interview with Raymond covers the distinction between "open source" and "free software" and explores differences inside the movement between pragmatists like Raymond, who are interested in persuading businesses to adopt their ideas, and idealists like free-software pioneer Richard Stallman, who embrace totally free software for primarily moral and ethical reasons. (04/14/98)
The saint of free software By Andrew Leonard
Richard Stallman invented the open licensing scheme under which no cost software has flourished. Now the unkempt, brilliant programmer suggests he's being written out of history. In our profile of Stallman,
Office Ultimate 2007 Product Key, the No cost Software Foundation founder argues that "the freedom to cooperate" is "more important than convenience and reliability" -- and, on a visit to the Stanford campus to check his e-mail, gives Bill Gates the finger. (08/31/98)
PLUS: In a followup to this article, Eric Raymond and others respond to Stallman. (09/11/98)
Microsoft's Halloween scare By Scott Rosenberg
In a memo leaked to the Net on Halloween 1998,
Microsoft Office 2007 Standard Key, a Microsoft developer assessed the threat that open-source software poses to Windows -- and outlined a company strategy against Linux. Was Microsoft plotting to "copy and corrupt" free software standards -- or just building up the open-source problem to strengthen its antitrust case? (11/04/98)
The dumbing-down of programming By Ellen Ullman
The author of "Close to the Machine" installs Linux on one of her computers -- and realizes why so many engineers are embracing the joys of difficult computing. Ullman's two-part article considers why it is important for software developers to work closely with code -- and what they and we lose when their tools "protect" them from the inner workings of their products. (05/12/98)
The joy of Perl By Andrew Leonard
How a self-effacing programmer named Larry Wall invented a fuzzy, messy,
Office 2010 Standard 32 Bit, no cost software language -- and how that language, Perl, came to be viewed as the hacker's best friend, and the indispensable duct tape, or glue, that holds the entire Web together. (10/13/98)
You've obtained sendmail By Andrew Leonard
Eric Allman's no cost system sendmail makes certain your e-mail will get via. It helped make Internet e-mail the universal medium for electronic communication. Now it is going industrial. This piece examines sendmail's roots within the Berkeley hacker culture of the '70s and the implications of the new company's "hybrid" approach to no cost software development. (12/11/98)
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
O t h e r__S t o r i e s
Windows on the wane? By Scott Rosenberg
With open-source software satisfying the hands-on urges of ################ geeks and easy-to-use "information appliances" beginning to satisfy the "just get me online" needs of the mass audience, where does Microsoft's Windows fit into the computing future? A "big picture" analysis. (11/19/98)
The Transmeta enigma By Andrew Leonard
At a tantalizingly elusive Silicon Valley start-up company that just happens to employ Linus Torvalds, the creator of Linux, secrecy
spawns hopes of revolution -- and a raft of conspiracy theories. (05/22/98)
Martin Luther, meet Linus Torvalds By Thomas
Scoville
Linux and free of charge software challenge the Microsoft papacy: historical parallels between the Reformation and today's software industry. (11/12/98)
Geek central By Andrew Leonard
How a Web site called Slashdot became a teeming news and discussion community of "news for nerds" about open-source issues. (06/15/98)
Free the Windows source code? By Scott Rosenberg
An admittedly unlikely scenario -- but if Windows keeps getting more unwieldy and bug-ridden, sooner or later Microsoft may have to think the unthinkable. (04/22/98)
PLUS: Talkin' 'bout a revolution: Readers discuss back to the notion of totally free Windows source code. (05/27/98)
Consider the source By Laura Lemay
A look at the public release of Netscape's browser source code explores why it causes geeks to swoon. (04/13/98)
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
O t h e r__L i n k s
Key documents:
The Cathedral and the Bazaar: Eric Raymond's influential paper argues the case for the superiority of open-source software development.
The Halloween documents: Full text of the Microsoft memos on Linux and the open-source challenge to the company's dominance.