Descarcă gratuit „2015 Open Source Yearbook”
„2015 Open Source Yearbook” este o publicație anuală a opensource.com și reprezintă o colecție de articole despre diverse proiecte open source, aplicații relevante și povești din domeniul open source.
Community manager-ul opensource.com Rikki Endsley scrie:
„The open source label was created back in 1998, not long after I got my start in tech publishing. Fast forward to late 2014, when I was thinking about how much open source technologies, communities, and business models have changed since 1998. I realized that there was no easy way (like a yearbook) to thumb through tech history to get a feel for open source. Sure, you can flip through the virtual pages of a Google search and read the „Best of” lists collected by a variety of technical publications and writers, much like you can thumb through newspapers from the 1980s to see how big we wore our shoulder pads, neon clothing, and hair back then. But neither research method is particularly efficient, nor do they provide snapshots that show diversity within communities and moments of time. The idea behind the Open Source Yearbook is to collaborate with open source communities to collect a diverse range of stories from the year. We let the writers pick the criteria, which means the yearbook isn’t just full of the fastest, most popular, smartest, or best looking open source solutions. Instead, the yearbook offers a mix of open source solutions and projects, from a range of writers and communities, to offer a well-rounded (albeit incomplete) glimpse at what open source communities and projects looked like in 2015.”
„2015 Open Source Yearbook” este disponibil la descărcare de pe opensource.com
În cuprinsul publicației regăsim:
- 6 creative ways to use ownCloud—by Jos Poortvliet, ownCloud community manager
- 10 tools for visual effects in Linux with Kdenlive—by Seth Kenlon, independent multimedia artist, free culture advocate, and UNIX geek
- 6 useful LibreOffice extensions—by Italo Vignoli, founding member of The Document Foundation
- Top 5 open source community metrics to track—by Jesus M. Gonzalez-Barahona, co-founder of Bitergia
- 5 great Raspberry Pi projects for the classroom—by Ben Nuttall, education developer advocate for the Raspberry Pi Foundation
- 8 books to make you a more open leader—by Bryan Behrenshausen, for The Open Organization
- 5 handy Drupal modules—by Michael E. Meyers, the VP of Developer Relations at Acquia
- Best Couple of 2015: tar and ssh—by David Both, Linux expert and enthusiast
- 3 open hardware projects for beginners—by Alicia Gibb, CEO of Lunchbox Electronics
- 10 helpful tools for a sys admin’s toolbox—by Ben Cotton, support engineer group leader at Cycle Computing
- Top 10 open source projects of 2015—by Jen Wike Huger, an editor for Opensource.com
- 5 favorite 3D printing projects of 2015—by Harris Kenny, VP of Marketing at Aleph Objects
- Top 5 open source frameworks every application developer should know—by John Esposito, Editor-in-Chief at DZone
- Publisher’s picks: 29 open source books for 2015—by Rikki Endsley, Community Manager at Opensource.com
- Diversity in open source highlights from 2015—by Cindy Pallares-Quezada, an Outreachy alumni
- Adafruit’s best open source wearables of 2015—by Becky Stern, director of wearables at Adafruit
- 2015 was a good year for creating the world’s ‘missing maps’ with OpenStreetMap—by Drishtie Patel, GIS Analyst and Missing Maps Project Coordinator at the American Red Cross
- 5 favorite open source Django packages—by Jeff Triplett, Frank Wiles, and Jacob Kaplan-Moss, Django contributors
- Facebook’s top 5 open source projects of 2015—by Christine Abernathy, Developer Advocate on the Open Source team at Facebook
- 10 projects to fork in 2016—by Jason Baker, Opensource.com
- 10 cool tools from the Docker community—by Mano Marks, director of developer relations at Docker, Inc.
- 5 best open source games of 2015—by Robin Muilwijk, Internet and e-government advisor