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The Cathedral & the Bazaar
 
 
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The Cathedral & the Bazaar [Paperback]

Eric S. Raymond
4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (11 customer reviews)
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The Cathedral & the Bazaar + Open Sources: Voices from the Open Source Revolution + Open Sources 2.0: The Continuing Evolution
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Product details

  • Paperback: 256 pages
  • Publisher: O'Reilly Media; 1 edition (8 Feb 2001)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 0596001088
  • ISBN-13: 978-0596001087
  • Product Dimensions: 21.6 x 14 x 1.4 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (11 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 158,062 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
  • See Complete Table of Contents

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Eric S. Raymond
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Product Description

Amazon.co.uk Review

It may be foolish to consider Eric Raymond's recent collection of essays,The Cathedral and the Bazaar, the most important computer programming thinking to follow the Internet revolution. And yet it would be more unfortunate to overlook the implications and long-term benefits of Raymond's fastidious description of Open Source software development considering the growing dependence businesses and economies have on emerging computer technologies.

The Cathedral and the Bazaar takes its title from an essay of the same name which Raymond read at the 1997 Linux Congress and that was previously available only online. The essay documents Raymond's acquisition, re-creation and numerous revisions of an email utility known as fetchmail. Raymond engagingly narrates the fetchmail development process while at the same time elaborating upon the on- going bazaar development method he employs with the assistance of numerous volunteer programmers who participate in the writing and debugging of the code. The essay smartly spares the reader from the technical morass that could easily detract from the text's goal of demonstrating the efficacy of the Open Source, or bazaar, method in creating robust, usable software.

Once Raymond has established the components and players necessary for an optimally running Open Source model, he sets out to counter the conventional wisdom of private, closed source software development. Like superbly written code, the author's arguments systematically anticipate their rebuttals. For those programmers who "worry that the transition to open source will abolish or devalue their jobs", Raymond adeptly and factually counters that "most developer's salaries don't depend on software sale value." Raymond's uncanny ability to convince is as unrestrained as his capacity for extrapolating upon the promise of Open Source development.

In addition to outlining the Open Source methodology and its benefits, Raymond also sets out to salvage the hacker moniker from the nefarious connotations typically associated with it in his essay "A Brief History of Hackerdom" (not surprisingly he is also the compiler of The New Hacker's Dictionary). Recasting "hackerdom" in a more positive light may be a heroic undertaking in itself, but considering the Herculean efforts and perfectionist motivations of Raymond and his fellow Open Source developers, that light is going to shine bright. - -Ryan Kuykendall, amazon.com --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Rose Lynn User Group, PC Alamode March 2002

I recommend this book to anyone who wants to keep up with the rapidly changing technological world.

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Customer Reviews

11 Reviews
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9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars "Given Enough Eyeballs, All Bugs Are Shallow", 19 May 2004
By 
Donald Mitchell "Jesus Loves You!" (Thanks for Providing My Reviews over 110,000 Helpful Votes Globally) - See all my reviews
(TOP 100 REVIEWER)    (VINE VOICE)    (HALL OF FAME REVIEWER)   
This statement above is the fundamental premise for open source software development. Basically, open communications work better than closed, limited ones. So why is this book worth reading? Essentially, because it explains why people are willing to volunteer their time and talents to improve open source code. That characteristic of the open source movement will be the main puzzlement to nondevelopers. But beyond that, this book also provides the basis of an important paradigm for accelerating and improving knolwedge development generally that will be its more lasting and important contribution.

Mr. Raymond is a very good thinker from an economic, sociologial, and anthropological level, and applies these perspectives well in the essays in this book.

Because he assumes you may not know about the development of the open source movement, his essay, A Brief History of Hackerdom, fills in the gaps. By the way, he defines a hacker as a capable software developer who loves his or her work rather than someone who breaks into other peoples' computer systems.

The centerpiece of the book is the essay with the book's title. This essay describes his own experiences in developing an open source e-mail utility, draws lessons from that experience, and compares it to the development of Linux (the primary open source operating system). I knew the Linux story well (if you don't, you should, and this essay will be valuable to you), so I was primarily drawn to the discussion of the author's own experiences. Clearly, the appeal of open software is a chance to work in depth on something that has compelling interest to the free source developer, receive help in getting a better result, get to use the improved software oneself, and recognition for the effort from highly talented people you respect. In other words, assuming your day job still pays the bills, your open source software work will provide for most of your psychic needs. That's pretty neat! I couldn't help but think about the analogies to people writing book reviews on Amazon.com as I read this section. As a result of reading this essay, Netscape chose to open up its software and escaped oblivion in the process while undergoing the assault from Microsoft's Explorer program.

The key limitation of open software is noted on page 57, 'It's fairly clear that one cannot code from the ground up in bazaar style.' This sentence refers to the theme of the essay. A bazaar is an open market where everyone is free to evaluate software and decide to use or improve it. A cathedral refers to closed, proprietary programming where the software is kept pure of outside influences and is developed in a small team, usually with a hierarchical organizational structure. The choice of comparisons is interesting, because the internalized rewards of working on open software are more akin to building a cathedral than to bustling in a bazaar. In a sense, Mr. Raymond's bazaar is also very cathedral-like in the best sense of that concept.

The next essay, Homesteading the Noosphere, looks at the motivations of the developers and why open source development works. His basic analogy is to 'gift cultures' where people compete for status by the size and value of the gifts they can give others. This has long been true of elites. Since software developers are and feel like they are part of an elite, this is not surprising. His test of the concept is that credit for the work done is jealousy respected. Although Mr. Raymond doesn't say much about it, I suspect that the academic tradition of scholarly papers to advance knowledge is a fundamental experience and construct familiar to many hackers. Naturally, much knowledge advancement has failed to have immediate economic consequences in the past, and knowledge development occurred anyway. Anyone who has read the creativity literature knows that creativity is primarily its own reward for the joy of the task. That research is not referenced here. Mr. Raymond is not an academic, even though he thinks like one in many ways.

The next essay, The Magic Cauldron, takes a look at the long-term economic consequences of the open software movement, and its implications for developing future software. His fundamental point is that 95 percent of all software has use value, rather than value as code that can be sold to someone else. Because of this, any software developer of code that has only use value would be foolish to give up the open source code benefits. He proceeds to provide very helpful examples, and posits future models for this. I suspect that in ten years, this essay will be considered the most important one in the book, while today the title one is. Share this essay with every executive and software development person you know!

The final essay, The Revenge of the Hackers, is a brief memoir about the author's experiences since publication of his essay, The Cathedral & The Bazaar, and helps put his ideas into better context for their impact on others.

If you are interested in becoming a top hacker, be sure to look in the appendix for the essay, How To Become a Hacker.

This book raises many other fundamental questions that the author is unprepared to address at this time. Perhaps one of the most obvious is that with embedded microprocessors headed for virtually every product, should the designers of the products that will employ these microprocessors also use the 'open design scheme' structure? I suspect that they should. It is natural to go from there to consider business model development as another place where this structure would work. I'm sure you will come up with your own, better examples.

Basically, what is described here is the paradigm for how to create better results by harnessing more minds. Normally, development results have been reduced and time to completion has been stretched out by increasing involvement. We seem now to have moved past that fundamental barrier . . . much like when we first passed the sound barrier with airplanes. Where can we go next? I think the answer is anywhere we want.

After you read this book, please ask yourself how you could apply this development model to important aspects of your working and personal lives. You will have to become more open about sharing your ideas and concerns, but the payoffs should be tremendous!

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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Well written & accessible, 13 July 2000
By A Customer
In this thoughtful & considered essay, ESR states the case that open-source software is beneficial to all concerned.

It is not an open-source rant, nor does it start from the proposition that MS is inherently evil, or any similar drivel that one increasingly seem to hear these days.

Instead, he states the case for open source in a reasoned & intelligent way, and while I may disagree with some of his assumptions, on balance I agree with his argument.

In addition, I showed it to some of my non-techie friends, who not only understood it - but agreed with much of it.

It's the book to read if you want to understand Open Source, Linux or any of the other things we seem to hear so much about these days & that are (alledgedly) going to change the face of IT/business etc. etc.

I have to say, though, I didn't enjoy it as much as "In The Beginning Was The Command Line". But that's my personal bias.

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7 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Open Source , Closed Minds, 14 May 2001
By 
ClubPit (Northampton, England) - See all my reviews
Having endured continual references to this book from the rabid contributors to the geek site slashdot , i decided to try and see what all the fuss was about. I'll confess that i came into this book with a very negative view of Open Source , its followers seem almost religous in their belief that it is the one and only path to follow.

I was pleasently suprised to see that the author has a much more balanced view than his followers. Not only does he put across the most reasoned argument for moving across to open source , but he also knows that there is a time and a place for open source. Some projects should be open source from the outset , some should start out closed and then move to open source when the time is right and some should even remain closed for their lifetime.

Now if only the open source crowd could actually read and understand this then their movement might actually work.

Highly recommended.
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