Author: JT Smith
release a whole suite for GNOME 2.0. This will be lots of work. So
start.”
Category:
- Open Source
Author: JT Smith
Category:
Author: JT Smith
Category:
Author: JT Smith
Category:
Author: JT Smith
Author: JT Smith
Category:
Author: JT Smith
Guest Editors: Eric von Hippel, Sloan School of Management, MIT and and Georg von Krogh , Institute of Management, University of St.Gallen. Submission deadline: December 31, 2001.
Both empirical and theoretical submissions are invited.
Examples of topics include:
We encourage authors rooted in disciplines including sociology, economics,
social psychology, as well as technology, innovation and strategic
management, to consider a submission of their OSS related work. We welcome
conceptual contributions, quantitative data analyses using a variety of
methodological designs (e.g. simulations, field studies, archival studies,
laboratory experiments), as well as case studies, participant-observations,
ethnographies, and other research strategies that help shed light on OSS
development.
Submission details
Authors should submit their papers to: Professor Georg von Krogh, Institute
of Management, University of St.Gallen, Dufourstrasse 48, CH-9000 St.Gallen,
Switzerland. E-mail: georg.vonkrogh@unisg.ch. Authors should prepare their
manuscripts according to Research Policy’s instructions to authors. Please
find these instructions at Research Policy’s homepage at
http://www.elsevier.nl/homepage/sae/econbase/respol/menu.sht. Every
submission will be reviewed according to the double-blind review process of
Research Policy.
A special issue conference will be held at MIT or in St.Gallen in September
2002. Updates and additional information on the special issue, suggested
topics and the special issue conference might be found at
http://opensource.mit.edu.
Category:
Author: JT Smith
Today IBM is well on its way with those plans, yet says it still has some ground to cover.”
Category:
Author: JT Smith
Category:
Author: JT Smith
Author: JT Smith
Let me state up front that I carry no water for Red Hat, which I think has done some pretty silly things, or for VA Linux,
with whom I’ve had few contacts, or for any other Linux company, most of whom have yet to provide any rational
explanation of how they plan to make money on free software. Let me further note that the wider variety of plaintiff’s
lawyers would look mighty good to me covered with honey and staked over an ant hill.”
Category: