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Open-source software - Participants in OSS development projects |  | Open-source software - Participants in OSS development projects: Encyclopedia II - Open-source software - Participants in OSS development projects |  | Participants in OSS development projects fall broadly into two categories. There are the Core and the Peripheral.
The Core or Inner Circle are developers who modify codes that constitute the project.
The Peripheral are usually made up of users who use the software. They report bugs, and suggest fixes.
The participants may then be further divided into the following.
Project leaders who have the overall responsibility (Core). Most of them might have been involved in coding the first release of the software. Th ...
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|  |  | Open-source software: Encyclopedia II - Open-source software - Participants in OSS development projects
Open-source software - Participants in OSS development projects
Participants in OSS development projects fall broadly into two categories. There are the Core and the Peripheral.
The Core or Inner Circle are developers who modify codes that constitute the project.
The Peripheral are usually made up of users who use the software. They report bugs, and suggest fixes.
The participants may then be further divided into the following.
- Project leaders who have the overall responsibility (Core). Most of them might have been involved in coding the first release of the software. They control the overall direction of individual projects.
- Volunteer developers (Core / Periphery) who do actual coding for the project. These include:
- Senior members with broader overall authority
- Peripheral developers producing and submitting code fixes
- Occasional contributors
- Maintainers who maintain different aspects of the project
- Everyday users who perform testing, identify bugs, deliver bug reports, etc. (Periphery)
- Posters (Periphery) who participate frequently in newsgroups and discussions, but do not do any coding.
Other related archives11 September, 19 September, 1969, 1985, 1998, 20 April, 2000, 2000s, 2001, 2004, 2005, Alan Cox, Antitrust, Apache, Apache License, Apache Software Foundation, BSD, BSD license, Brian Behlendorf, Bruce Perens, Bugtracker, Bugzilla, Chandler (PIM), Concurrent Versions System, Debian, Eben Moglen, Eclipse Foundation, Eclipse Public License, Embrace, extend and extinguish, English, Eric Raymond, Eric S. Raymond, FLOSS, FOSS, Foresight Institute, Free Software Foundation, Free as in Freedom: Richard Stallman's Crusade for Free Software, Free/Libre/Open-Source Software, FreeBSD, Freshmeat, GIMP, GNU, GNU Compiler Collection, GNU General Public License, GNU Lesser General Public License, GNU Mailman, GNU Savannah, Gift economy, Halloween documents, Homesteading the Noosphere, Internet, JBoss, Jimbo Wales, Linus Torvalds, Linus's law, Linux, List of open source software packages, MIT License, Microsoft, Mitch Kapor, Mozilla, Mozilla Foundation, Mozilla Public License, Navigator, NetBSD, Netscape, Network effect, ObjectWeb, Open Design, Open Source Applications Foundation, Open Source Definition, Open Source Development Labs, Open Source Initiative, Open access, Open content, Open format, Open publishing, Open source advocacy, Open source advocates, Open source movement, Open source vs. closed source, Open source vs. free software, Open standard, Open system, Open-source license, OpenBSD, OpenOffice.org, Opendocument, Openness, Palo Alto, Paul Vixie, Perl, Python, Revision control, Richard Stallman, SourceForge, StarOffice, The Cathedral and the Bazaar, The Mythical Man-Month, The Subversion revision control system, Tim O'Reilly, Tinderbox, Vendor lock-in, X Window System, closed source, computer software, free software, free software movement, hacker culture, instant messengers, mailing lists, open source, open source advocates, open source license, open-source evangelist, open-source software license, proprietary, proprietary software, public domain, service mark, source code, trademark
 Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Participants in OSS development projects", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki |
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