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  1. Website. www .catb .org /esr /, esr .ibiblio .org. Eric Steven Raymond (born December 4, 1957), often referred to as ESR, is an American software developer, open-source software advocate, and author of the 1997 essay and 1999 book The Cathedral and the Bazaar. He wrote a guidebook for the Roguelike game NetHack. [1]

  2. The Cathedral and the Bazaar: Musings on Linux and Open Source by an Accidental Revolutionary (abbreviated CatB) is an essay, and later a book, by Eric S. Raymond on software engineering methods, based on his observations of the Linux kernel development process and his experiences managing an open source project, fetchmail.

    • Eric S. Raymond, Tim O'Reilly
    • 241
    • 1999
    • 1999
  3. Eric S. Raymond's Home Page. Welcome to my piece of the Web. I maintain quite a lot of open-source software, FAQs, and HTML documents, so this site is rather complex. It's mostly validated HTML and light on the graphics, though. You won't have to wait an eon for any of the pages to load. If the software and FAQs I maintain are valuable to you ...

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  5. Eric S. Raymond's Home Page. 2022-07-13. ESR's home page. Email me. This is catb.org, named after (the) Cathedral and the Bazaar. Most of it, under directory esr, is my personal site. In theory other people could shelter here as well, but this has yet to occur. Site header page.

  6. Jan 1, 2008 · Interview with Eric S. Raymond. Community. by Glyn Moody. on January 1, 2008. Eric Raymond has played a key role in the history of open source. In 1997, he published The Cathedral and the Bazaar ( CatB ), his seminal analysis of why the open-source development approach works so well. He was one of a group who came up with the term open source ...

  7. Genre. Computers & Internet, Social Sciences. edit data. Eric S. Raymond is an observer-participant anthropologist in the Internet hacker culture. His research has helped explain the decentralized open-source model of software development that has proven so effective in the evolution of the Internet. Mr.

  8. Interview with Eric S. Raymond: January 2008. My ten-years-on retrospective on how far we've come since 1998. The JUG interview. An Ask Me Anything in which I divagate about languages, sanity in software architecture, my first hardware design, and many other topics. The Setup interview They wanted to know what I use to get work done. I told them.

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