About Salon's Free Software Project 
http://www.salon.com/tech/fsp/index.html

This Web site is a work in progress.

In the Web's early days, site builders would hastily plaster 
the phrase "Under Construction" on their home pages as their 
projects fell further and further behind schedule. The label 
became first a cliche, then a badge of cluelessness, and finally 
a source of amusement.

Nonetheless, we must report, in all seriousness, that the site 
you are reading is very much under construction. What we're 
doing is taking a book about the history, ideas and 
personalities behind the free-software/open-source movement -- a 
book that Andrew Leonard is in the process of writing -- and 
posting it, in pieces, here, as it's written. We're publishing 
the book as a work in progress and inviting readers -- Linux 
veterans and newbies alike -- to post their comments, criticisms 
and reactions. Leonard will in turn respond, and incorporate 
changes in the text as seems right. 

Our hope is that this format will subject the book to the same 
kind of online peer review that the open-source movement applies 
to its software code. Everybody benefits: We get to improve the 
editorial product we're creating, and visitors to the site get 
what we hope will be a unique informational resource -- a take 
on this story that you won't find anywhere else. 

Leonard, a senior technology writer with Salon and the author 
of "Bots: The Origin of New Species" (Wired, 1997), has been 
covering the free-software movement since 1997, and we think 
he's got a special talent for writing about this subject in a 
way that wins the respect of experts while remaining accessible 
to a wider readership. In addition to mixing it up with his 
readers and critics, Leonard will also keep a journal regularly 
updated online, detailing the state of his current research, 
enabling readers to jump in and suggest possible lines of 
inquiry.

We'd like to see the Free Software Project grow over time into 
a Web site that serves as a permanent reference for users 
seeking information about this phenomenon. In addition to the 
full text of Leonard's book chapters -- with new installments 
likely to be posted about once a month -- we will offer a 
growing library of resources for anyone interested in learning 
more about free and open-source software, including a complete 
set of links to Salon's extensive coverage of the field and 
regularly updated links to important news and information on 
other sites across the Web.

Mostly, we hope to use this project as an experiment in online 
journalism that gives us an opportunity to ask the kinds of 
questions that get lost in today's environment of bite-sized 
information and context-free news bursts. What does the rise of 
Linux mean for the global information economy, for Microsoft and 
the other proprietary software corporations and for the general 
public? How is the saga of free software also the story of how 
the Internet came to be? Where is it going, and where did it 
come from? 

We picked this site's title in homage to the free-software 
community's naming convention for long-term software development 
enterprises: the Apache Project, the GNU Project and so on. 
Though coding a program and writing a book are distinctly 
different processes, we're interested in seeing how well the 
open-source methodology translates from one to the other. We 
hope you'll enjoy the result, and join us in the discussions.

-- Scott Rosenberg 
managing editor

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