Open source software: Difference between revisions

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imported>Eric M Gearhart
(Added Netcraft name to citation)
imported>Eric M Gearhart
(Stole Netcaft reference from Apache HTTP Server)
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The term usually describes software that is also free of charge, but this is not a must.  
The term usually describes software that is also free of charge, but this is not a must.  


An Open Source project can be tested and used by thousands of users, for example the [[Apache HTTP Server]] is the most wiedly used [[World Wide Web]] [[server]] on the [[internet]].<ref name=Netcraft>{{cite web
An Open Source project can be tested and used by thousands of users, for example the [[Apache HTTP Server]] is the most wiedly used [[World Wide Web]] [[server]] on the [[internet]].<ref name=netcraft>{{cite web|url=http://news.netcraft.com/archives/2007/02/23/march_2007_web_server_survey.html|title=March 2007 Web Server Survey|publisher=Netcraft|date=2007-03}}</ref>
| url=http://news.netcraft.com/archives/2007/04/02/april_2007_web_server_survey.html
| title="Netcraft April 2007 Web Server Survey"
}}</ref>


===Well Known Organizations===
===Well Known Organizations===

Revision as of 08:40, 5 April 2007

Open source software broadly speaking is software that is licensed in such a way that the source code (which is the language that computer programs are written in) is freely accessible.

The term usually describes software that is also free of charge, but this is not a must.

An Open Source project can be tested and used by thousands of users, for example the Apache HTTP Server is the most wiedly used World Wide Web server on the internet.[1]

Well Known Organizations

Several professional organizations support the Open Source community, in a moral sense as well as in Legal matters (e.g. enforcing the licensing of Open Source software). Here is a short list:

References

  1. March 2007 Web Server Survey. Netcraft (2007-03).

See also