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Open Source

Open Source Year 2008 in Review: More Adoption, Success, Innovation, and Alternatives
Veröffentlicht 21 Dec 2008 von Optaros Tags: Acquia, Acquisition, Ajax, Alfresco, CIO, Community, Content Management, CRM, Customer Relationship Management, DiSo, Django, Drupal, ECM, Ecommerce, Enterprise 2.0, Enterprise Open Source Directory, EOS, Europe, iPhone, IT Strategy, Java, JBoss, Liferay, Magento, MySQL, Open, Open Source, Open Source Katalog, OpenID, Portal, RIA, Spring, SpringSource, Sugar CRM, Yahoo!

2008 was an important year for Open Source and a successful one in addition. We have seen more adoption, more commercial success, more innovation, more collaboration and more options for the IT buyer. And it’s not the end, more success is still to come. The following paragraphs are summarizing what we have seen in the last 12 months.Accelerated Adoption of Open Source + Read more

Social Networking Identity Mapping, and Open Source
Veröffentlicht 10 Apr 2008 von John EckmanTags: Community, Corporate Websites, Ecommerce, ecommerce Strategy, Enterprise 2.0, Facebook, Media and Publishing, Open Innovation, Open Source, OpenID, PHP, Platform, Retail, Social Networking, User Generated Content, Web 2.0

Although social network platforms have been increasingly open to application development, spurred by Facebook's API and reinforced by the Open Social foundation, the approach has always been to enourage the development of applications inside the walls of the social network. + Read more

Yahoo! Announces OpenID Support
Veröffentlicht 17 Jan 2008 von John EckmanTags: OpenID, Yahoo!

After a number of folks noticed code referring to OpenID showing up in Flickr pages (I think this was first noted at Mashable), there's been much speculation about Yahoo! becoming an OpenID provider. + Read more

Social Networking Inside Out
Veröffentlicht 01 Jan 2008 von John EckmanTags: Blogs, DiSo, Open Source, OpenID, PHP, Platform, Social Networking, Web 2.0, WordPress

One of the major challenges in the world of Social Networking is social network fatigue: the idea that there is a relatively tight limit to the number of social networking applications in which any user can participate, because it quickly gets rather exhausting to keep track of multiple logins, post news to multiple streams, reply to comments in multiple different contexts, and monitor friends' activities in parallel silos. The existing social network sites and platforms, however, don't make it easy to coordinate and distribute activity among multiple networks. + Read more