| Silviu Stahie |
The Linux community is not exactly happy with the comments
Via Gonzalo San Gil, PhD.
Get Started for FREE
Sign up with Facebook Sign up with X
I don't have a Facebook or a X account
Your new post is loading...
Your new post is loading...
Gonzalo San Gil, PhD.'s curator insight,
October 2, 2013 2:50 PM
[... Candidates might include the launches of the first Open Content licenses (1998[2]), Wikipedia (2001), and Creative Commons (2002). One reason may be that there is no free culture equivalent of a free operating system—an objective that is clearly necessary, and for at least some people, sufficient to fully achieve software freedom. ...]
Gonzalo San Gil, PhD.'s curator insight,
October 9, 2013 2:13 PM
[... Richard Stallman announced the GNU project (GNU’s Not Unix) to create a free operating system in 1983, making the free software movement at least 25 years old.[1] In a number of ways, free culture is harder to pin down than free software. No single event marks the obvious beginning of the free culture movement. Candidates might include the launches of the first Open Content licenses (1998[2]), Wikipedia (2001), and Creative Commons (2002). ...]
|
Sue Alexander's curator insight,
April 3, 2014 10:23 AM
eLearn or in the classroom, as we look for ways to engage with content, these events give us choices in the type of transfer we expect in a lesson. Valuable resource in my UbD journey.
David Baker's curator insight,
April 3, 2014 11:36 AM
The infographic is a good summary but the blog is even better as a description. |
# ! ... a whimsical naming controversy...?
# ! ... No. A way to real #knowledge.
# ! of the #opensource #freesoftware environment.
(# ! go with the #Hurd #kernel, go...)