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March 12, 2005

some anecdotal history

Open Source, and computing in general have a long, and sometimes forgotten history, but some of it can be quite interesting, and revealing for understanding where things are today.

For anyone trying to understand technological diversity I would heartily recommend Neal Stephenson's free In the Beginning was the Command Line.

Stephenson weaves the story so well, and so clearly, that it feels more clear than having watched it all happen then. A choice quote:

About twenty years ago Jobs and Wozniak, the founders of Apple, came up with the very strange idea of selling information processing machines for use in the home. The business took off, and its founders made a lot of money and received the credit they deserved for being daring visionaries. But around the same time, Bill Gates and Paul Allen came up with an idea even stranger and more fantastical: selling computer operating systems. This was much weirder than the idea of Jobs and Wozniak. A computer at least had some sort of physical reality to it. It came in a box, you could open it up and plug it in and watch lights blink. An operating system had no tangible incarnation at all. It arrived on a disk, of course, but the disk was, in effect, nothing more than the box that the OS came in. The product itself was a very long string of ones and zeroes that, when properly installed and coddled, gave you the ability to manipulate other very long strings of ones and zeroes. Even those few who actually understood what a computer operating system was were apt to think of it as a fantastically arcane engineering prodigy, like a breeder reactor or a U-2 spy plane, and not something that could ever be (in the parlance of high-tech) "productized."

I would also take a look at this page covering more specifically the history of Open Source beginning at various computer science labs, and universities.

Posted by admin at March 12, 2005 02:26 AM

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