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  1. The Cathedral and the Bazaar: Musings on Linux and Open Source by an Accidental Revolutionary (abbreviated CatB) is an essay, and later a book, by Eric S. Raymond on software engineering methods, based on his observations of the Linux kernel development process and his experiences managing an open source project, fetchmail.

  2. The Cathedral and the Bazaar define the computing infrastructure of the next century. For any-one who relies on computers, that makes it an important thing to understand. I just referred to the ‘‘open-source movement’’. That hints at other and perhaps more ultimately interesting reasons for the reader to care.

  3. I discuss these theories in terms of two fundamentally different development styles, the ``cathedral'' model of most of the commercial world versus the ``bazaar'' model of the Linux world. I show that these models derive from opposing assumptions about the nature of the software-debugging task.

  4. The Cathedral and the Bazaar is a collection of papers by Eric S. Raymond, a pioneer of the open-source software movement. It explores the history, culture, economics, and politics of hackerdom, and contrasts it with the traditional model of software development.

  5. Dec 31, 2014 · The groundbreaking work The Cathedral and the Bazaar was published Aug. 24, 2000, under the Open Publication License, version 2.0.

  6. No quiet, reverent cathedral-building here—rather , the Linux community seemed to resemble a great babbling bazaar of differing agendas and approaches (aptly symbolized by the Linux archive sites, who’d take submissions from anyoneanyone) out of which a coherent and stable system could

  7. My high level summary, key highlights and important quotes from The Cathedral and the Bazaar by Eric S. Raymond.