Tim,
For the past 2 years my company has been working on a software project that we had hoped to eventually sell commercially. Due to fact that both of our programmers left for better positions and software development is not my companies main focus we quit working on the project. I have convinced my company to let me release it to the OSS community.
Maybe this question should be directed to Eric Raymond, he seems to have become the De Facto spokes person for the OSS community. Basically I would just like some advice on how to go about releasing the program in the most effective manner. Without having any programmers to back me up my plans are to set up a site with forums and source code and hope to get the attention of a few programmers on the net.
The program we developed is called ActiveGuardian. It is a filtering internet proxy based on linux. The server was coded in C and the admin scripts were coded in perl. AG filters web pages based on sitelist, wordlist, and PICS rating system. We have installed it at multiple schools in the area and it works great.
I look forward to your insight.
Thanks Tim,
John Storlie
InCommand Interactive
You raise an interesting issue, which is coming up across the board. There are several things to consider:
I'd hate to see companies concluding that the Open Source process doesn't work if they put some code out there and nobody comes.
As a result, it's really important to identify who cares about the topic in question. If a commercial program already has a base of technical users (developers, not end users), the target is simple: Open Source the program to its community of existing users. If it's an end-user program, you have to find someone who's working with the same problem space, and see if they want to take it over. Eric Raymond talks about this process (and this obligation) to find a new maintainer in The Cathedral and the Bazaar.
--Tim
Editor's Note: Simson Garfinkel is author and co-author of several O'Reilly books, including PGP: Pretty Good Privacy, Practical Unix Security and Stopping Spam.
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