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Description

We discuss all things open-source, leaving Michael and Joe to hold down the fort while Allen is away, while Joe's impersonations are spot on and Michael is on a first name basis, assuming he can pronounce it.

This episode of the Coding Blocks podcast is about the people and organizations behind open-source software. We talk about the different incentives behind projects, and their governance to see if we can understand our ecosystem better.

This episode's show notes can be found at https://www.codingblocks.net/episode150, if you're reading this via your podcast player.

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You Thought You Knew OSS

Q: What do most developers think about when they think of "open-source" software?

Q: Is the formal definition more important than the general perception?

Formal Definitions of Open-Source

Pop Quiz, who created…?

Q: It seems like most newer projects (with the exception of Vue) are associated with corporations or foundations. When and why did that change?

GitHub Star Distribution

Q: What are the most popular projects? Who were they made for, and why?

Who uses open-source software?

Individuals

Q: Why do individuals create open source? What do they get out of it?

Corporations

Let's look at some of the most prominent projects that were started by corporations. Note: many of these projects came in through acquisitions, and many have since been donated to foundations.

Microsoft
Google
Facebook
Amazon
Oracle
Focused Corporations

Sometimes a company will either outright own, or otherwise build a business centered around a technology. These companies will typically offer services and support around open-source projects.

Q: Why do corporations publish open-source software? What do they get out of releasing projects?

Foundations

Apache (1999)
Cloud Native Computing Foundation

Linux Foundation

Q: Why do corporations donate projects, why do individuals? Who really owns open-source code?

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