<p>An introduction to free software development, for those
interested in participating.</p>
- <p><tt><a href="free-sw-devel.html">http://www.hungry.com/~pere/.../free-sw-devel.html</a></tt></p>
+ <p><tt><a href="free-sw-devel.html">http://www.hungry.com/~pere/mypapers/free-sw-devel/free-sw-devel.html</a></tt></p>
<div class="presenter">Petter Reinholdtsen
<br>pere@hungry.com
<li>initiater and current tech coordinator in skolelinux</li>
+ <li>currently employed at USIT, UiO</li>
+
</ul>
- <h2>What is free software</h2>
+ <h2>Free Software - user freedom</h2>
+
+ <ul>
- - user freedom
- - freedom to use
- - freedom to modify
- - freedom to distribute
+ <li>freedom to run the program as you wish for any purpose</li>
+ <li>freedom to study and change the source code as you wish</li>
+ <li>freedom to make and redistribute copies</li>
+ <li>freedom to publish modified versions</li>
+
+ </ul>
- freedom to run the program as you wish for any purpose, freedom
-to study and change the source code as you wish, freedom to make and
-redistribute copies, and freedom to publish modified versions.
+ <p><em>Richard M. Stallmann, FSF</em></p>
+
<h2>Getting involved and helping out</h2>
- use mailing lists
+ - irc, wiki
+
+ <h2>Reporting bugs</h2>
<h2>Joining a free software project</h2>
- painful
- <h2>Making your own project</h2>
+ <h2>Starting a free software project</h2>
<ul>
possible.
- <h2>Reporting bugs</h2>
- <h2>Starting a free software project</h2>
- public review (anonymous CVS, commit emails)
- bug tracking systems