It’s an open source thing …

One of the things I’ve always enjoyed most about heterodox cities like New York, San Francisco, Paris, London, Berlin, Jerusalem — several of which I’ve had the privilege of living in — is the mix of ethnic groups. They’re highly visible, irreducibly fixed in the social fabric, and at the same time somewhat opaque.

If you’re not a member of a particular ethnic community, there’s a lot of things that no amount of explaining will let you get your head around. And if you’re inside the community, you tire of those explanations — and might consider just wearing a tee-shirt like the one at the right.

Open source communities, of course, are no different than other communities in this respect. There are many nuances to the business and technology and collaboration models in open source completely lost on those not intimately involved in how things are done.

The folks at 451 Group have tackled this problem head on in their blog,  CAOS theory (Commercial Adoption of Open Source). And finally, for people who got stuck at the tee-shirt, Matt Aslett has developed a pretty good taxonomy for the moving parts of open source. It’s nominally about the business models, but the elements go a long way to clarifying other important dimensions of open source from both a community and marketplace perspective.

Read Matt’s full post here. And if anyone wants to have at it with the t-shirt design, it’s licensed here.
.

You Might Also Like

How an electronics giant meets engineers where they are, with 44 million products in catalog

Meet Mohammad Mahboob: A search platform director navigating 44 million products across...

Read More

Protected: From Search to Solutions: How AI Agents Can Power Digital Commerce in 2025

There is no excerpt because this is a protected post.

Read More

Build custom AI agents without writing a single line of code? Yep, we did that.

Finally, a low-code AI platform (really, no code) that lets the people...

Read More

Quick Links