友情提示:如果本网页打开太慢或显示不完整,请尝试鼠标右键“刷新”本网页!
读书室 返回本书目录 加入书签 我的书架 我的书签 TXT全本下载 『收藏到我的浏览器』

the.world.is.flat-第24部分

快捷操作: 按键盘上方向键 ← 或 → 可快速上下翻页 按键盘上的 Enter 键可回到本书目录页 按键盘上方向键 ↑ 可回到本页顶部! 如果本书没有阅读完,想下次继续接着阅读,可使用上方 "收藏到我的浏览器" 功能 和 "加入书签" 功能!

collection。 The site became a runaway success in the first year and gained a loyal 
following; generating over 20;000 articles and spawning over a dozen language 
translations。 After two years; it had 100;000 articles; and in April 2004; it exceeded 
250;000 articles in English and 600;000 articles in 50 other languages。And according 
to Website rankings at Alexa。com; it has become more popular than traditional online 
encyclopedias such as Britannica。com。〃 
How; you might ask; does one produce a credible; balanced encyclopedia by way of an 
ad hoc open…source; open…editing movement? After all; every article in the Wikipedia 
has an 〃Edit this page〃 button; allowing anyone who surfs along to add or delete 
content on that page。 
It starts with the fact; Lih explained; that 〃because wikis provide the 

ability to track the status of articles; review individual changes; and discuss issues; 
they function as social software。 Wiki Websites also track and store every 
modification made to an article; so no operation is ever permanently destructive。 
Wikipedia works by consensus; with users adding and modifying content while trying 
to reach common ground along the way。 
〃However; the technology is not enough on its own;〃 wrote Lih。 〃Wales created an 
editorial policy of maintaining a neutral point of view (NPOV) as the guiding 
principle 。 。 。 According to Wikipedia's guidelines; The neutral point of view 
attempts to present ideas and facts in such a fashion that both supporters and 
opponents can agree 。 。 。' As a result; articles on contentious issues such as 
globalization have benefited from the cooperative and global nature of Wikipedia。 
Over the last two years; the entry has had more than 90 edits by contributors from 
the Netherlands; Belgium; Sweden; United Kingdom; Australia; Brazil; United States; 
Malaysia; Japan and China。 It provides a manifold view of issues from the World Trade 
Organization and multinational corporations to the anti…globalization movement and 
threats to cultural diversity。 At the same time malicious contributors are kept in 
check because vandalism is easily undone。 Users dedicated to fixing vandalism watch 
the list of recent changes; fixing problems within minutes; if not seconds。 A defaced 
article can quickly be returned to an acceptable version with just one click of a 
button。 This crucial asymmetry tipsthe balance in favor of productive and cooperative 
members of the wiki community; allowing quality content to prevail。〃 A Newsweek piece 
on Wikipedia (November 1; 2004) quoted Angela Beesley; a volunteer contributor from 
Essex; England; and self…confessed Wikipedia addict who monitors the accuracy of more 
than one thousand entries: 〃A collaborative encyclopedia sounds like a crazy idea; 
but it naturally controls itself。〃 
Meanwhile; Jimmy Wales is just getting started。 He told Newsweek that he is expanding 
into Wiktionary; a dictionary and thesaurus; Wikibooks; textbooks and manuals; and 
Wikiquote; a book of quotations。 He said he has one simple goal: to give 〃every single 


person free access to the sum of all human knowledge。〃 
96 
Wales's ethic that everyone should have free access to all human knowledge is 
undoubtedly heartfelt; but it also brings usto the controversial side of open…source: 
If everyone contributes his or her intellectual capital for free; where will the 
resources for new innovation come from? And won't we end up in endless legal wrangles 
over which part of any innovation was made by the community for free; and meant to 
stay that way; and which part was added on by some company for profit and has to be 
paid for so that the company can make money to drive further innovation? These 
questions are all triggered by the other increasingly popular form of self…organized 
collaboration…the free software movement。 According to the openknowledge。org Web 
site; 〃The free/open source software movement began in the 'hacker' culture of U。S。 
computer science laboratories (Stanford; Berkeley; Carnegie Mellon; and MIT) in the 
1960's and 1970's。 The community ofprogrammers was small; and close…knit。 Codepassed 
back and forth between the members of the community…if you made an improvement you 
were expected to submit your code to the community of developers。 To withhold code 
was considered gauche…after all; you benefited from the work of your friends; you 
should return the favor。〃 
The free software movement; however; was and remains inspired by the ethical ideal 
that software should be free and available to all; and it relies on open…source 
collaboration to help produce the best software possible to be distributed for free。 
This a bit different from the approach of the intellectual commons folks; like Apache。 
They saw open…sourcing as a technically superior means of creating software and other 
innovations; and while Apache was made available to all for free; it had no problem 
with commercial software being built on top of it。 The Apache group allowed anyone 
who created a derivative work to own it himself; provided he acknowledge the Apache 
contribution。 
The primary goal of the free software movement; however; is to get as many people 
as possible writing; improving; and distributing software for free; out of a 
conviction that this will empower everyone and free individuals from the grip of 
global corporations。 Generally speaking; the free 
97 
software movement structures its licenses so that if your commercial software draws 
directly from their free software copyright; they want your software to be free too。 
In 1984; according to Wikipedia; an MIT researcher and one of these ex…hackers; 
Richard Stallman; launched the 〃free software movement〃 along with an effort to build 
a free operating system called GNU。 To promote free software; and to ensure that its 
code would always be freely modifiable and available to all; Stallman founded the 
Free Software Foundation and something called the GNU General Public License (GPL)。 
The GPL specified that users of the source code could copy; change; or upgrade the 
code; provided that they made their changes available under the same license as the 
original code。 In 1991; a student at the University of Helsinki named Linus Torvalds; 
building off of Stallman's initiative; posted his Linux operating system to compete 
with the Microsoft Windows operating system and invited other engineers and geeks 


online to try to improve it…for free。 Since Torvalds's initial post; programmers all 
over the world have manipulated; added to; expanded; patched; and improved the 
GNU/Linux operating system; whose license says anyone can download the source code 
and improve upon it but then must make the upgraded version freely available to 
everybody else。 Torvalds insists that Linux must always be free。 Companies that sell 
software improvements that enhance Linux or adapt it to certain functions have to 
be very careful not to touch its copyright in their commercial products。 
Much like Microsoft Windows; Linux offers a family of operating systems that can be 
adapted to run on the smallest desktop computers; laptops; PalmPilots; and even 
wristwatches; all the way up to the largest supercomputers and mainframes。 So a kid 
in India with a cheap PC can learn the inner workings of the same operating system 
that is running in some of the largest data centers of corporate America。 Linux has 
an army of developers across the globe working to make it better。 As I was working 
on this segment of the book; I went to a picnic one afternoon at the Virginia country 
home of Pamela and Malcolm Baldwin; whom my wife came to know through her membership 
on the board of World Learning; an educational NGO。 I mentioned in the course of lunch 
that I was 

thinking of going to Mali to see just how flat the world looked from its outermost 
edge…the town of Timbuktu。 The Baldwins' son Peter happened to be working in Mali 
as part of something called the GeekCorps; which helps to bring technology to 
developing countries。 A few days after the lunch; I received an e…mail from Pamela 
telling me that she had consulted with Peter about accompanying me to Timbuktu; and 
then she added the following; which told me everything I needed to know and saved 
me the whole trip: 〃Peter says that his project is creating wireless networks via 
satellite; making antennas out of plastic soda bottles and mesh from window screens! 
Apparently everyone in Mali uses Linux。 。 。〃 
〃Everyone in Mali uses Linux。〃 That is no doubt a bit of an exaggeration; but it's 
a phrase that you'd hear only in a flat world。 
The free software movement has become a serious challenge to Microsoft and some other 
big global software players。 As Fortune magazine reported on February 23; 2004; 〃The 
availability of this basic; powerful software; which works on Intel's ubiquitous 
microprocessors; coincided with the explosive growth of the Internet。 Linux soon 
began to gain a global following among programmers and business users 。 。 。 The 
revolution goes far beyond little Linux 。 。 。 Just about any kind of software 'now' 
can be found in open…source form。 The SourceForge website; 
返回目录 上一页 下一页 回到顶部 0 0
快捷操作: 按键盘上方向键 ← 或 → 可快速上下翻页 按键盘上的 Enter 键可回到本书目录页 按键盘上方向键 ↑ 可回到本页顶部!
温馨提示: 温看小说的同时发表评论,说出自己的看法和其它小伙伴们分享也不错哦!发表书评还可以获得积分和经验奖励,认真写原创书评 被采纳为精评可以获得大量金币、积分和经验奖励哦!