Book Details

INTERNET SUCCESS : A STUDY OF OPEN-SOURCE SOFTWARE COMMONS
The use of open-source software (OSS)--readable software source code that can be copied, modified, and distributed freely--has expanded dramatically in recent years. The number of OSS projects hosted on SourceForge.net (the largest hosting Web site for OSS), for example, grew from just over 100,000 in 2006 to more than 250,000 at the beginning of 2011. But why are some projects successful--that is, able to produce usable software and sustain ongoing development over time--while others are abandoned?
In this book, the product of the first large-scale empirical study to look at social, technical, and institutional aspects of OSS, Charles Schweik and Robert English examine factors that lead to success in OSS projects and work toward a better understanding of Internet-based collaboration. Drawing on literature from many disciplines and using a theoretical framework developed for the study of environmental commons, Schweik and English examine stages of OSS development, presenting multivariate statistical models of success and abandonment. Schweik and English argue that analyzing the conditions of OSS successes may also inform Internet collaborations in fields beyond software engineering, particularly those that aim to solve complex technical, social, and political problems.
Charles M. Schweik is Associate Professor with a joint appointment in the Department of Environmental Conservation and the Center for Public Policy and Administration at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst, and is Associate Director of the National Center for Digital Government (NCDG.org).
.Preface
I The Power of Openness and Internet-Based Collaboration
1 The Importance of Open-Source Software Commons
II What We Know about Open-Source Software Commons: Academic Research and Theory
2 The Ecosystem
3 The Developer
4 Technological and Community Attributes
5 Institutional Attributes
III Our Empirical Studies of Open-Source Software Commons
6 The OSGeo Case: An Example of the Evolving OSS Ecosystem
7 Defining Open-Source Software Success and Abandonment
8 What Can SourceForge.net Data Alone Tell Us about Open-Source Software Commons?
9 Filling Gaps in Our Data with the Survey on Free/Libre and Open-Source Success
10 Answering the Questions Raised in Part II
11 Putting It All Together in Multivariate Models of Success and Abandonment
12 Thinking about Part III: A Review of Our Empirical Research
IV Conclusions
13 Our Study in Perspective
Notes
References
Index

Access Controlled : The Shaping of Power, Rights, and Rule in Cyberspace

BEYOND THE DOT.COMS : THE ECONOMIC PROMISE OF THE INTERNET

Access Contested : Security, Identity, and Resistance in Asian Cyberspace

INTERNET-BASED WORKPLACE COMMUNICATION : INDUSTRY AND ACADEMIC APPLICATIONS (SC)
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