industryterm:open source software

  • Why translation platforms matter (https://opensource.com/article/19...
    https://diasp.eu/p/9145604

    Why translation platforms matter

    Language translation enables open source software to be used by people all over the world, and it’s a great way for non-developers to get involved in their favorite projects. There are many translation tools available that you can evaluate according to how well they handle the main functional areas involved in translations: technical interaction capabilities, teamwork support capabilities, and translation support capabilities.

    Technical interaction considerations include:

    read more

  • 10 Open Source #ai Project Ideas For Startups
    https://hackernoon.com/10-open-source-ai-project-ideas-for-startups-1afda6fb0aa8?source=rss----

    The open source AI projects particularly pay attention to deep learning, machine learning, neural network and other applications that are extending the use of AI.Those involved in deep researches have always had the goal of building machines capable of thinking like human beings.For the last few years, computer scientists have made unbelievable progress in Artificial Intelligence (AI) to this extent that the interest in AI project ideas keeps increasing among technology enthusiasts.As per Gartner’s prediction, Artificial Intelligence technologies going to be virtually prevalent in nearly all new software products and services.The contribution of open source software development to the rise of Artificial Intelligence is immeasurable. And, innumerable top machine learning, deep learning, (...)

    #startup #business #open-source #machine-learning

  • #blockchain as the Next Evolutionary Step of the Open Source Movement
    https://hackernoon.com/blockchain-as-the-next-evolutionary-step-of-the-open-source-movement-12e

    There’s little argument that open source has transformed our world. As a developer, I cannot recall a single day in the last few years where I did not rely on open source software. I’m not the exception. The majority of software engineers today rely on open source daily in their professional lives.For one, open source is dominating developer infrastructure. From operating systems (Linux in the cloud) to databases (MySQL, MongoDB, Redis) to programming languages themselves (JavaScript, Python, Java, C, PHP). It’s not just developers, it’s consumers as well. From what they run on their phones (Android) to how they access the web (Chrome, Firefox).The motivation is clear. Open source is good for humanity. It is making technology more accessible and open — anyone can build anything.Open source (...)

    #bitcoin #open-source #ethereum #cryptocurrency

  • What comes after “open source”
    https://words.steveklabnik.com/what-comes-after-open-source

    In a previous post, I discussed the history of open source, and ended with this claim:

    Today’s developers have never learned about this history, or don’t care about it, or actively think it’s irrelevant. … For the same reasons that “open source” came up with a new name, I think the movement that will arise from today’s developers will also need a new name.

    We talked about the ideological history of open source, but that’s not what developers object to, really. I don’t think developers are moving back towards a world of making source code private. Instead, it’s something related to a very old discussion in free software. To quote the FSF:

    “Free software” means software that respects users’ freedom and community. Roughly, it means that the users have the freedom to run, copy, distribute, study, change and improve the software. Thus, “free software” is a matter of liberty, not price. To understand the concept, you should think of “free” as in “free speech,” not as in “free beer”. We sometimes call it “libre software,” borrowing the French or Spanish word for “free” as in freedom, to show we do not mean the software is gratis.

    In a similar fashion, I don’t think that developers are turning against the concept of “free as in free speech”. I think that they don’t believe that the current definitions of free software and open source actually produce software that is “free as in speech.”

    (…)

    t’s that the aims and goals of both of these movements are about distribution and therefore consumption, but what people care about most today is about the production of software. Software licences regulate distribution, but cannot regulate production. (technically they can, but practically, they can’t. I get into this below.) This is also the main challenge of whatever comes after open source; they cannot rely on the legal tactics of the last generation.

    (…)
    When developers talk about problems they see in open source, it’s often that there are production problems. Companies don’t “give back” money or developer hours. Programmers today don’t seem to be upset that, if they’ve developed any proprietary extensions to their open source software, that those extensions are not shared back with the community. They care that the production process is impeded by additional pressure, without providing resources. If a company were to add a proprietary feature to an open source project, yet pays five employees to develop the open source part further, the FSF sees this as a tragedy. The commons has not been enriched. The new generation of open source developers sees this as a responsible company that thankfully is contributing to the development of something they use and care about.

    Software licenses can only restrict what people can do when they distribute the source code, and that’s it. It cannot force someone to have a bug tracker, or a code of conduct, or accept your patch. Copyleft can force an absolute minimal “contribution” back to your project, but it can’t force a good-faith one. This makes it an inadequate tool towards building something with the kinds of values that many developers care about.

    (…)

    This image on a product is part of a process called “certification.” The image itself is referred to as a “certification mark.” In order to use this image on your product, you apply to a “certification body”, in this case, the USDA. This body has set up some kind of tests, and if your product passes them, you gain the ability to say that you’ve passed the certification. I chose organic food on purpose here; most aspects of this certification are about the process by which the food is produced.

    Technology is no stranger to these kinds of processes:

    So in theory, one could imagine an organization that produces a different kind of document. Instead of a license for the source code, they would provide a way to say uh, let’s go with “Open Development Certified.” Projects could then submit for certification, they’d get accepted or rejected.

    #free_software #logiciel_libre #open_source

    • Résumé très rapide : autant la FSF que l’OSI décrivent les logiciels libre/OS en terme de licence uniquement. Comme c’est distribuer donc.

      Mais les devs (et là je ne suis pas d’accord : pas que les devs, TOUTE personne contributrice et/ou utilisatrice) se préoccupent de plus en plus de comment c’est fabriqué.

      Dans le réseau Libre-Entreprise, et aux RMLL, on a régulièrement parlé de ce problème : un vrai logiciel libre devrait être plus que la licence. C’est aussi avoir une bonne documentation, construire une communauté inclusive, qui permet à des nouvelles personnes de s’intégrer et modifier autant le noyau que les extensions, etc.

      Semi HS : Après il y en a même qui vont encore plus loin hein : qu’est-ce que fait le logiciel ? Peut-on considérer qu’un logiciel en licence libre qui permet de guider un missile, ou qui est un ERP très pyramidale qui permet de contrôler ses salariés, et qui impose un management et des méthodes de travail pas cool, c’est un logiciel libérateur ?

    • cf. https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-01137521

      Les deux critiques du capitalisme numérique par Sébastien Broca

      L’hypothèse de l’article est ainsi que la critique de la propriétarisation de l’information, portée par les acteurs du logiciel libre, des Creative Commons ou de l’open access, a été largement incorporée par l’économie numérique, comme le montre le succès actuel de business models reposant moins sur l’appropriation privative des ressources informationnelles que sur la participation gracieuse des utilisateurs à la création de valeur. Cette « incorporation » a ouvert la voix à un deuxième type de critique, celle du digital labour, qui ne porte plus sur les entraves à la circulation de l’information et du savoir, mais sur les formes de travail et les modalités de répartition de la valeur qui sont au cœur du (nouveau) capitalisme numérique. L’article analyse les ressorts (et certaines limites) de cette deuxième critique d’inspiration marxiste, qui substitue à un discours axé sur les libertés individuelles et le droit un discours centré sur le travail et les structures économiques.

      La troisième critique est bien sur celle de la valeur elle-même (avant de discuter de sa répartition) et du lien intrinsèque qu’elle entretient avec le numérique... :)

  • How to get into #android Development, Step by Step Approach
    https://hackernoon.com/how-to-get-into-android-development-step-by-step-approach-5b2bdfefa000?s

    Start #learning Android Development, with easy step by step approach.android wallpaperAre you an android enthusiast?Do you like android apps and cool libraries or GitHub repositories that help make android development fun and amazing?Are you passionate about android development and want to learn how to get into this, with a step by step approach?Or,Are you looking to expand your programming knowledge and want to try android development?If yes, then you’re at the perfect place.Let’s start with absolute basic questions.What is Android?Android is a mobile operating system developed by Google. It is based on a modified version of the Linux kernel and other open source software, and is designed primarily for touchscreen mobile devices such as smartphones and tablets.But, why learn android?There (...)

    #androiddev #learning-and-development #android-app-development

  • #reciprocity in Open Source
    https://hackernoon.com/reciprocity-in-open-source-e60fb98ee1cc?source=rss----3a8144eabfe3---4

    “Treat open source as open source treats you.”The Golden Rule is the principle of treating others as one’s self would wish to be treated. It is a maxim that is found in many religions and cultures and it is considered an ethic of reciprocity. It is expressed usually in the form: “One should treat others as one would like others to treat oneself.” If you think of open source as a business model, or culture, or religion, you will see that the Golden Rule applies here as well. If I were to phrase the Golden Rule of open source, I’d say: “Treat open source as open source treats you”.Image by Internet Archive Book ImagesReciprocity is behavior in which two people or groups of people give each other help and advantages. If you are using open source software, you are getting advantage from it. Here I (...)

    #open-source #open-source-reciprocity #sustainability #golden-rule

  • Making Money on a #blockchain
    https://hackernoon.com/making-money-on-a-blockchain-9f53526f78c9?source=rss----3a8144eabfe3---4

    This is to open a discussion about how companies can make money using blockchain technology which is, in essence, open source software and/or protocols. As an analogy, think going back to the early 1990s to discuss how companies could make money from TCP/IP.BlockchainInstead of discussing what the blockchain technology is, let’s focus on what this tech enables, on its key functionality: the ability to record cryptographic proof of any piece of information (a document, a transaction, an account balance) into an immutable, shared database. This is only useful in the context of more than one entity needing the information; when there’s an interaction between two or more parties. In such context, the blockchain technology enables verification of information that does not need a trusted third (...)

    #startup #cryptocurrency-investment #cryptocurrency #blockchain-startup

  • 29 Tools and Resources for the #bootstrapping Entrepreneur
    https://hackernoon.com/29-tools-and-resources-for-the-bootstrapping-entrepreneur-65c01a81fefb?s

    Starting a business is already expensive and time-consuming enough. The young internet entrepreneur can use some of the following tools and resources to help get started on their journey (while they’re still working in a basement, parents home or shared apartment) before they can afford to pay for every piece of software they need or to hire someone who knows the tricks of the trade.1. 7 Zip: http://7-zip.org (free download) An open source, free alternative to WinZip.2. Audacity: http://audacity.sourceforge.net (free download) An open source software used for recording & editing audio files.3. AVG: http://free.avg.com (free download) Anti-virus and anti-spyware protection.4. BrowserShots: http://browsershots.org (free online tool) Use this site to view how your website look in various (...)

    #bootstrapped-entrepreneur #entrepreneurship-tools #entrepreneur-tools #design

  • IBM Just Bought Red Hat for $34 Billion
    https://www.omgubuntu.co.uk/2018/10/ibm-just-bought-red-hat-for-34-billion

    IBM is to buy open source software company Red Hat in a $34 billion deal — the biggest in Linux and open-source history. And both companies are already talking up the major cloud computing benefits the partnership will provide. IBM is currently one of the biggest providers of cloud services, siting third behind market leaders Microsoft […] This post, IBM Just Bought Red Hat for $34 Billion, was written by Joey Sneddon and first appeared on OMG! Ubuntu!.

  • The Culture War Comes to Linux - Motherboard
    https://motherboard.vice.com/en_us/article/yw43kj/what-happens-if-linux-developers-remove-their-code

    After #Linux adopted a new Code of Conduct, a small group of programmers threatened to rescind their code from the project. Lead Linux developers say the threat is “hollow.”

    A small group of programmers are calling for the rescission of code contributed to Linux, the most popular open source operating system in the world, following changes made to the group’s code of conduct. These programmers, many of whom don’t contribute to the Linux kernel, see the new Code of Conduct as an attack on meritocracy—the belief that people should mainly be judged by their abilities rather than their beliefs—which is one of the core pillars of open source software development. Other developers describe these attacks on the Code of Conduct as thinly veiled misogyny.

    It’s a familiar aspect of the culture war that many online and IRL communities are already dealing with, but it has been simmering in the Linux community for years. The controversy came to the surface less than two weeks after Linus Torvalds, the creator of Linux, announced he would temporarily be stepping away from the project to work on “understanding emotions.” Torvalds was heavily involved with day to day decisions about Linux development, so his departure effectively left the community as a body without a head. In Torvalds’ absence, certain developers seem committed to tearing the limbs from this body for what they perceive as an attack on the core values of Linux development.

    So far, these threats haven’t actually resulted in developers pulling code from the Linux kernel, but some Linux contributors fear that this controversy could snowball to the point where significant chunks of the Linux kernel are revoked from use. This would have huge ramifications for anyone online, given that most internet services used on a day to day basis run on Linux. I spoke with a number of Linux developers about the source of the controversy, what could be done to improve the Code of Conduct, and why they think these threats to implement a Linux “killswitch” are totally overblown.

    Voir aussi : https://seenthis.net/messages/723091 et https://seenthis.net/messages/724176

    #sexisme #code #développement #domination #Torvalds #méritocratie

  • The ’New Open Source Licensing’ : Why the GPL’s Heyday Is Over
    http://www.itprotoday.com/web-development/open-source-licensing-why-gpls-heyday-over
    http://www.itprotoday.com/sites/itprotoday.com/files/Screen+Shot%202018-07-22%20at%208.37.04%20PM_0.png

    J’ai malheureusement peur que cet auteur ait raison sur la distinction entre l’ouverture du code et la participation à un mouvement des communs. Toutefois, il convient de peser également le changement du logiciel vers le service. Peut être faut-il inventer une licence pour la confiance dans les services. Une licence que Facebook et compagnie ne pourraient pas signer ;-)

    The GNU GPL is the software license that helped bring free and open source software to the mainstream. In recent years, however, the GPL’s prominence has waned as more permissive licenses, like Apache, have taken its place. That begs the question: Does the GPL have a future, or is it a relic of free software’s past? And how did the open source community come to this pass, anyway?

    What accounts for this state of affairs? Why is the GPL no longer the go-to software license for open source projects, despite its storied history?

    That’s a complex question and the answer surely involves several factors. One might be that today’s developers don’t remember how important the GPL was in making open source possible, and so it does not feature as prominently on their radar. Another might be a perception, fair or not, that the GPL actually stifles the creativity it was designed to protect because it places strict limits on the conditions under which software can be redistributed. Specifically, it requires that developers share the source code of any GPL-licensed application or a derivative of that application; being held to this standard may feel like the opposite of freedom for some developers.

    Yet the most important reason for the decline of the GPL, I think, is simply that we’re living in a new age of open source. Today, open source has become the “default” approach to software development, according to one study. For a developer or company, choosing to make your source code open source no longer signals a brave commitment to an innovative, ideologically driven mode of software distribution. Instead, open-sourcing your code (or some of it, at least), is just the thing you do. After all, even Microsoft is now riding the open source bandwagon.

    For these companies, permissive open source licenses like Apache provide an easy out. They’re a way to brand yourself as an open source company without having to take as strong a stance about open source software as GPL adoption implies.

    Sure, choosing the Apache license or most other permissive licenses requires that companies make the source code of their products publicly available, and that counts for something. But it doesn’t signal ideological commitment to the ethos of the free and open source software movement. Nor does it place many restrictions on what partners or third-party developers can do with your code.

    #Logiciel_libre #Open_source

  • SUSE Linux Sold in $2.5 Billion Deal
    https://www.omgubuntu.co.uk/2018/07/suse-linux-sold-in-2-5-billion-deal

    SUSE, the open source software company, has been sold to a Swedish private equity firm. EQT Partners will acquire SUSE from current owners Micro Focus in a deal worth $2.5 billion USD and is expected to close in early 2019. EQT is described as “a development-focused investor with extensive experience in the software industry”. One of the oldest Linux […] This post, SUSE Linux Sold in $2.5 Billion Deal, was written by Joey Sneddon and first appeared on OMG! Ubuntu!.

  • CppCon 2017: Fuzz or lose…—Kostya Serebryany
    http://isocpp.org/feeder/?FeederAction=clicked&feed=All+Posts&seed=http%3A%2F%2Fisocpp.org%2Fblog%2F2

    Have you registered for CppCon 2018 in September? Early bird registration is open now.

    While we wait for this year’s event, we’re featuring videos of some of the 100+ talks from CppCon 2017 for you to enjoy. Here is today’s feature:

    Fuzz or lose... by Kostya Serebryany (watch on YouTube) (watch on Channel 9)

    Summary of the talk:

    Fuzzing is a family of testing techniques in which test inputs are generated semi-randomly. The memory unsafety of C++ has made fuzzing a popular tool among security researchers. Fuzzing also helps with stability, performance, and equivalence testing; and it’s a great addition to everyone’s CI. Our team has launched OSS-Fuzz, the Google’s continuous fuzzing service for open source software, and a similar service for our internal C++ (...)

    #News,Video&_On-Demand,

  • FrameTrail - Create, Annotate & Remix Interactive Videos
    http://frametrail.org

    FrameTrail is an open source software that let’s you experience, manage and edit interactive video directly in your web browser.

    It enables you to hyperlink filmic contents, include additional multimedia documents (e.g. text overlays, images or interactive maps) and to add supplementing materials (annotations) at specific points.

    #nouvelles_narrations_outils

  • A n3wb13 trying to cheat on #games
    https://hackernoon.com/a-n3wb13-trying-to-cheat-on-games-6ec049f18cc8?source=rss----3a8144eabfe

    That n3wb13 is me, and that post is a transcription of the talk I gave at #roadsec SP[ Posted on 21 Nov 16 @ 18:59 ]All started with my girlfriend waving her phone at me and shouting “LOOK HOW I AM SOOOO GOOOD AT THIS”. “THIS” == 2048 , a puzzle game that became really famous a year and a half back.And so I grabbed my macbook and started to play, being sure that I was going to OWN her. And so I’ve failed miserably :’( Now I just want to fuck the game and get the highest score possible.Memory editingThe first thing that came to my mind was that the score was in some place of the memory of the game, and probably I could overwrite it. Doing some research (googling arround) I stumbled upon a really wonderfull piece of open source software: Bit Slicer. It sells it self as “Universal game trainer for (...)

    #cheating #javascript #hacking

  • How to Set Up Multi-Camera Streaming to Facebook Live With Free Software
    https://hackernoon.com/how-to-set-up-multi-camera-streaming-to-facebook-live-with-free-software

    Note: This guide assumes you’re living in the walled garden of Apple and are using Mac OS and iOS devices, but the principles are the same for Windows and Linux.If you’re like my amazing friend Sarah Kassel and hosting your own Facebook Live comedy show — sometimes a single smartphone camera setup for Facebook Live isn’t enough. Want if you want to show different camera angles, cut to the audience, or overlay graphics? Using open source software, you can create a studio level experience and increase the production value of your Facebook Live streams.Stream to Facebook Live from OBS StudioOBS Studio is free and open source software for video recording and live streaming. We can use it to take different input sources and pipe them into a Facebook Live stream.1. Grab a copy of OBS Studio from (...)

    #social-media-marketing #nginx #facebook-live #social-media #live-streaming

  • The Pentagon is set to make a big push toward open source software next year - The Verge
    https://www.theverge.com/2017/11/14/16649042/pentagon-department-of-defense-open-source-software

    Besides cost, there are two other compelling explanations for why the military might want to go open source. One is that technology outside the Pentagon simply advances faster than technology within it, and by availing itself to open-source tools, the Pentagon can adopt those advances almost as soon as the new code hits the web, without going through the extra steps of a procurement process.

    Open-source software is also more secure than closed-source software, by its very nature: the code is perpetually scrutinized by countless users across the planet, and any weaknesses are shared immediately.

    “How would the Trojans have reacted if the Horse statue the Greeks gave them was made of glass and they could see right through it? They would have seen the malicious implants and removed them before letting the statue into their enterprise,” says Bob Gourley, co-founder of the security consultancy firm Cognitio and former chief technology officer of the Defense Intelligence Agency. “That is my key thought about open-source software. Everyone can examine the code and look for and remove vulnerabilities before they are brought into the enterprise.”

    #Logiciels_libres #Ministère_Défense #USA

  • Linux Foundation Debuts Community Data License Agreement
    https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/linux-foundation-debuts-community-data-license-agreement-300540881.html

    Inspired by the collaborative software development models of open source software, the CDLA licenses are designed to enable individuals and organizations of all types to share data as easily as they currently share open source software code. Soundly drafted licensing models can help people form communities to assemble, curate and maintain vast amounts of data, measured in petabytes and exabytes, to bring new value to communities of all types, to build new business opportunities and to power new applications that promise to enhance safety and services.

    The growth of big data analytics, machine learning and artificial intelligence (AI) technologies has allowed people to extract unprecedented levels of insight from data. Now the challenge is to assemble the critical mass of data for those tools to analyze. The CDLA licenses are designed to help governments, academic institutions, businesses and other organizations open up and share data, with the goal of creating communities that curate and share data openly.

    Bon, j’ai toujours un problème avec les relations « frictionless », qui semble un objectif qui ne tient pas compte de l’histoire humaine. Je préfère l’insistance sur les méthodes souples de résolutions des conflits (ce qui est au coeur de la pratique des communs). Mais on voit l’objectif ici :

    “An open data license is essential for the frictionless sharing of the data that powers both critical technologies and societal benefits,” said Jim Zemlin, Executive Director of The Linux Foundation. “The success of open source software provides a powerful example of what can be accomplished when people come together around a resource and advance it for the common good. The CDLA licenses are a key step in that direction and will encourage the continued growth of applications and infrastructure.”

    L’idée ressemble beaucoup à ce qui avait été proposé il y a quelques années autour de Creative Commons Healt Licence.

    There are two CDLA licenses: a Sharing license that encourages contributions of data back to the data community and a Permissive license that puts no additional sharing requirements on recipients or contributors of open data. Both encourage and facilitate the productive use of data. A few commercial and community implications of the licenses include:

    Data producers can share with greater clarity about what recipients may do with it. Data producers can also choose between Sharing and Permissive licenses and select the model that best aligns with their interests. In either case, data producers should enjoy the clarity of recognized terms and disclaimers of liabilities and warranties.

    Data communities can standardize on a license or set of licenses that provide the ability to share data on known, equal terms that balance the needs of data producers and data users. Data communities have a high degree of flexibility to add their own governance and requirements for curating data as a community, particularly around areas such as personally identifiable information.

    Data users who are looking for datasets to help kick off training an AI system or for any other use will have the ability to find data shared under a known license model with terms that clearly state their rights and responsibilities.

    The CDLA is data privacy agnostic and relies on the publisher and curators of the data to create their own governance structure around what data they curate and how. Each producer or curator of data will have to work through various jurisdictional requirements and legal issues.

    #Open_data #Intelligence_artificielle #Open_source #Licence

  • Monitoring in the time of Cloud Native
    https://medium.com/@copyconstruct/monitoring-in-the-time-of-cloud-native-c87c7a5bfa3e

    While we’re still at the stage of early adoption, with the failure modes of these new paradigms still being very nebulous and not widely advertised, these tools are only going to get increasingly better with time. Soon enough, if not already, we’ll be at that point where the network and underlying hardware failures have been robustly abstracted away from us, leaving us with the sole responsibility to ensure our application is good enough to piggy bank on top of the latest and greatest in networking and scheduling abstractions.
    No amount of GIFEE (Google Infrastructure for Everyone Else) or industrial-grade service mesh is going to fix the software we write. Better resilience and failure-tolerant paradigms from off-the-shelf components now means that — assuming said off-the-shelf components have been configured correctly — most failures will arise from the application layer or from the complex interactions between different applications. Trusting Kubernetes and friends to do their job makes it more important than ever for us to focus on the vagaries of the performance characteristics of our application and business logic. Application developers now have one job. We’re at a time when it has never been easier for application developers to focus on just making their service more robust and trust that if they do so, then the open source software they are building on top of will pay the concomitant dividends.

  • Microsoft Makes it Official : Becomes Sponsor of Open Source Initiative | Open Source Initiative
    https://opensource.org/node/901

    Ya-t-il quelqu’un ici qui se rappelle des « Halloween documents ». Même si c’est de la "récupération", le déplacement de Microsoft vers le libre (enfin, vers l’open source, ce qui est quand même bien plus limité) est la sanction d’une victoire : le libre est un moteur du développement de l’informatique, fut-il partagé (communs) ou commercial. A moins que ce ne soit le baiser du serpent...

    The Open Source Initiative ® (OSI) the global non-profit dedicated to promoting and protecting open source software through education, collaboration, and infrastructure, announced today that Microsoft has joined the organization as a Premium Sponsor.

    Microsoft’s history with the OSI dates back to 2005 with the submission of the Microsoft Community License, then again in August of 2007 with the submission of the Microsoft Permissive License. For many in the open source software community, it was Microsoft’s release of .NET in 2014 under an open source license that may fave first caught their attention. Microsoft has increasingly participated in open source projects and communities as users, contributors, and creators, and has released even more open source products like Visual Studio Code and Typescript.

    The company is a leading contributor to open source software projects on GitHub (also an OSI Corporate Sponsor); brought Bash/Linux to Windows 10; expanded its support for Linux and open source workloads on Azure; worked with OSI Affiliate Member FreeBSD Foundation to support the operating system on Azure; joined OSI Affiliate Member Linux Foundation and many of its foundations and projects. In addition, Microsoft works with companies like Canonical, Red Hat, SUSE, and open source can now be found throughout Microsoft products.

    #Microsoft #Logiciel_libre #Open_source

  • FREEWAT | Free Open Source Softwatr Tools for Water Resource Managment
    http://www.freewat.eu

    FREEWAT (FREE and open source software tools for WATer resource management) is an HORIZON 2020 project financed by the EU Commission under the call WATER INNOVATION: BOOSTING ITS VALUE FOR EUROPE.

    FREEWAT main result is an open source and public domain GIS integrated modelling environment (the FREEWAT platform) for the simulation of water quantity and quality in surface water and groundwater with an integrated water management and planning module.

    [....]
    Source code : https://gitlab.com/iaborsi/freewat