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Welcome to the Bazaar

Bridging the CathedralThe Bazaar is a community portal for people who want to use, exchange and share Open Source Software and resources to support learning.

Exchanging materials, networking with others and testing all kinds of Open Source Software tools and applications can be done through the forum, the wikis and the blogsystem, but also via the Stalls which are put on to the Bazaar website. Register yourself to the Bazaar and request your own Stall for a project, tool or application.

For instance: anything which is helping you as a teacher to better your learning materials might be of some help to others as well. 

Click here to go to the Bazaar project Stall, including our Blogs and bi-weekly podcasts.

 

Movie on Open Source PDF Print E-mail
Written by Graham Attwell   
Monday, 08 May 2006
There are all kind of groups/communities: family, basketball team, corporation, country/society. This movie is about capturing the "actuality" of open source communities/groups and establishing a link between Open Source communities and "communities/groups" of our daily life. This movie shall encourage people to ask themselves questions like why do communities exist at all, what makes them work, what keeps them stable. What are the incentives for an individual to colaborate and what are the emotions an individual is living through. How does one become a citizen respectively commiter/member. How do the laws of groups depend on human nature and vice versa. How do the laws depend on the environment we are living in. How can a democracy become a dictatorship. And what if the dictatorship is friendly. And why are surpreme beings respectively gods being created or invented. The fundamental questions of colaboration of people within groups are being elaborated in relation to Open Source communities, but with a link to other groups/communities/societies. The movie does not want to explain, but capture the moment (Years 2004/2005). The Open Source/Free Software Movement is changing rapidly. In about 10 to 20 years people will have forgotton what the fuzz was all about.
Last Updated ( Monday, 08 May 2006 )
 
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