Damian Brasher wrote:
> I have just acquired 'The Art of Unix Programming' by Eric Steven Raymond.
> 
> Looks very good so far and the combination of the technical and
> philosophical is well presented. How the two are intrinsically linked is
> illustrated well. Old ideas are making sense in a modern context - Linux.
> I am dipping in and out of sections easily.
> 
> However and a big BUT:
> 
> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eric_Raymond
> 
> This account of Eric Raymod is challenging (I struggle with this) and a
> very good example of how personal politics and Linux philosophy (or Unix)
> are two *very* different things. I am glad that Linux is very much a
> collaborative effort.
> 
> Any thoughts...
I enjoyed "The Cathedral and the Bazaar" c 1998, but not "Homesteading 
the Noosphere" which parallels my feelings about "Open Sources" (the 
original) vs "open source 2.0".  23 chapters and maybe 1 and a half are 
worth reading IMOSHO.  But then how many of Bruce Perens 20 odd books 
are compelling?
esr's views on, non-open-source, "life the universe and everything", are 
not universally liked.  (Now there's an understatement) but even the 
central figure of the church of Linux, Torvalds, is allowed the 
occasional rant. (re: original GPL v3.0 draft)  Someone else express 
this as "Excellence in one field does not imply excellence in other 
(fields)".
> 
> Damian
> 
> --
> Damian Brasher
> www.interlinux.co.uk
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