Top Ten Open Source Projects
Posted by
Hemos
on Mon Jan 09, 2006 07:30 AM
from the what-makes-you-happy dept.
from the what-makes-you-happy dept.
arclightfire writes "We recently wrote an article for The Independent listing the top ten open source projects. It was hard getting the list down to ten, but we did; here's the top ten - Wikipedia, Firefox, Open Office, Bittorrent, MediaWiki, Xvid, pbb, Outfoxed, dyne:bolic, GIMP, Apache and SourceForge." What would you call your favorite projects? Obviously, this list isn't strictly software projects, so be creative.
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Erm (Score:3, Funny)
(http://www.crazysquirrel.com/index.jspx)
Slashdot of course :o)
Re:Erm (Score:4, Funny)
(http://nerds.palmdrive.net/)
It was hard getting the list down to ten, but we did; here's the top ten: *enumerating 12 items*
It was indeed pretty hard, so hard that the editor couldn't resist the temptation to slip 12 in there!
lol
--
George Herriman's Krazy Kat [ignatzmouse.net]
Ummmmmmm.....? (Score:5, Insightful)
(http://redjacket.ws/)
Re:Ummmmmmm.....? (Score:5, Informative)
(http://www.annoying.org/)
Re:Ummmmmmm.....? (Score:4, Insightful)
(http://www.webcommons.biz/)
Re:Ummmmmmm.....? (Score:5, Insightful)
"this list isn't strictly software projects" (Score:3, Insightful)
(http://ghazan.hazara.org/)
How about All classical music? (not just western)
How about the SI metric standards?
Or the Human genome?
Re:"this list isn't strictly software projects" (Score:5, Funny)
(http://www.vanderlee.com/)
Hm yes, let's change some of the texts in those books. I'm sure it'll go down well with the readers.
Re:"this list isn't strictly software projects" (Score:5, Interesting)
(http://www.bmo-web.com/ | Last Journal: Wednesday August 18 2004, @08:37PM)
The Bible was not written in any one language originally, nor was it written by a single person. Anyone who makes that type of claim is severely deluded.
The Old Testament (Genesis through Malachi) was written in Hebrew, but not modern Hebrew. Some parts were written in a form of Hebrew that did not make use of vowels. Talk to an expert about this--my Hebrew is limited to recognizing the script and few historical notes.
The New Testament, before the Catholics compiled it, was written in a variety of languages, including both Greek and Aramaic (which is probably what Christ spoke). At some point the Catholic Church (Roman), decided that everything should be in Latin, and only distributed the scripture in that language. Various editions have been translated from both the Latin or from more ancient documents. Many of the documents that are out there are so far from the "original" that there is little, if any, hope of knowing exactly how they read.
Additionally, remember that even the oldest versions in existence today are both ancient and very likely copies (especially with the Old Testament), which means that they have been both translated and transscribed numerous times. So while I believe that the Bible is scripture, and that much of it (not all) was inspired by God, there is a strong need to be very careful in how one interprets the meanings.
Being a member of the LDS church, I have my own beliefs about what should be done to properly understand the Bible, but that opinion is even less popular than even believing in God in the first place (which in these parts can be a dangerous viewpoint).
As for being open source, that is out of the question. Public domain != open source. In the case of the Bible, the license (from the Man Himself) allows anyone to publish or distribute the work, but prohibits one from changing the source to help prevent bugs from creeping in. A lot folks have ignored this restriction, resulting in much chaos, but that's another story.
Hope this helped.
Best projects (Score:4, Informative)
(http://www.crazysquirrel.com/index.jspx)
Some that aren't in the list but I use regularly.
I suppose the kernel has got to feature in the list because without it a lot of other projects are fairly pointless. I like NetBeans (although it's giving me grief today). Amarok is pretty good (but is let down by the poor state of sound on Linux). KMail is very nice especially as part of Kontact. Synaptic is a very nice project that seems to be coming along well.
dyne:bolic? (Score:5, Insightful)
(http://www.marengo-ltd.com/)
"Dyne:bolic is a multimedia studio on a CD that you simply pop into any computer and start it up, instantly turning it into a Linux/GNU [sic] system"
Why not Knoppix??? Granted, this is more specialised towards creative people, but it never figures on my top ten, whereas Knoppix would do.
Eclipse (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Eclipse (Score:4, Informative)
Eclipse runs very nicely with GCJ thank you very much.
GNU/Linux Foundation? (Score:4, Insightful)
BTW: Where the hell is LAMP in the top 10? Apache would be nothing without Perl, PHP, Phyton, MySQL or PostGresSQL.
Re:GNU/Linux Foundation? (Score:4, Insightful)
(http://www.gemstate.net/friends | Last Journal: Tuesday September 11, @10:32AM)
As to Apache being nothing without Perl, PHP, Python,... Apache was a good webserver long before LAMP took off. CGI doesn't have to be done in Perl or Python. Ruby, c, and even lisp have been used.
I think that list is pretty much worthless but to bash one project or an other is pretty pointless.
My list would inlcude.
gcc
bind
sendmail
apache
perl
Linux
MySql
BSD
OpenOffice
Firefox
gcc because so many open source programs use it.
Bind, sendmail. apache, perl Linux, and MySql because they really where the foundation of most of the Internet.
If you wanted a server back in the good old days and couldn't spend the money for a Sun or a VAX your choices where pretty much Linux or one of the BSDs. Did you know Yahoo used BSD for all it's servers. I don't know if they have moved to Linux or not. Microsoft used BSD code for the TCP/IP stack in Windows.
OpenOffice and Firefox because they are bringing open source to the masses.
There are many great OSS projects I did not put on my list. I use PostgresSQL everyday and I like it better than MySQL but it isn't as popular. Python, Ruby, and PHP are also great projects. GIMP and it GTK foundation are very important. Any of these could be somebody's top ten list. Bit Torrent is going to cause more grief for media companies than just about anything we can imagine. It isn't about the piracy. It is the lack of control. Somebody going to combine a good writer, good actors, BitTorrent, and a good business person and create a direct to internet runaway show. TiVO, Replay, or Apple will add it to it's listings and it will take off. No network or media company required. BitTorrent levels the playing field. Distribution becomes more or less free.
Outfoxed? Never heard of it before now but then documentaries about what I am actually doing are of little interest to me. I would rather live it than watch it.
What to know what I think may be the next huge open source project? GAIM. More people may end up using GAIM than OpenOffice.
Linux huh? (Score:4, Insightful)
Oth, I didn't even recognize dyne:bolic without reading the description. And including Outfoxed, while they even admit it is not an OS project per se, shows they were just scrambling to find any 10 points to fill the list and space on their site. Clueless.
GCC (Score:4, Insightful)
Strictly software... (Score:5, Informative)
(http://www.slack-fr.org/ | Last Journal: Tuesday November 13, @08:51AM)
Of course, number 11 is Google [google.com], Google [google.com], and Google [google.com]. But that's neither software nor open-source.
industry, economic, and cultural impact list: (Score:4, Insightful)
(http://www.thenorth.com/apblog | Last Journal: Monday February 13 2006, @07:48AM)
Linux. Duh. How much of everything else is built on this fantastic platform for the back end? I'm not personally in support of rolling out desktops to users, but as a server platform its amazing and flexible. More important, it empowers developers to build EVERYTHING.
Asterisk. If you use an IP phone service, you already have a small hint at how this changes things. If you've developed software that uses SIP or IAX2 to connect things and move streaming traffic you're starting to get the hint. IMO, this is a paradigm shifting technology just at the start of a giant curve up in its attention by the industry.
Sourceforce. For obvious reasons, this has empowered so many projects.
Apache, and the things its led to -- like Tomcat, etc.
Eclipse -- Wow, an open sourced (even if originally sponsored, driven, and to some extent built by IBM) rich user context framework and complete IDE for development that's absolutely a rival to Visual Studio.
I know I'm forgetting a ton -- but these in particular are real industry driving tools that changed or are about to change (in the case of Asterisk) large segments of the tech world.
Asterisk (Score:3, Insightful)
(http://slashdot.org/)
KDE (Score:5, Interesting)
(http://www.sdonag.plus.com/ | Last Journal: Wednesday June 07 2006, @04:05AM)
Freshmeat's Top Goodies Stats. (Score:3, Interesting)
(http://aqfl.net/ | Last Journal: Wednesday July 09 2003, @01:16AM)
Software worth paying for (Score:3, Interesting)
(http://arc.nucapt.northwestern.edu/F/OSS)
Re:RTFA (Score:5, Informative)