News
It's been 10 years since O'Reilly held the first OSCON. At the latest edition of O'Reilly's open source convention, Tim O'Reilly sat down with O'Reilly News to talk about the anniversary. He also reflected on how open source has changed in that period, whether Web 2.0 (a term he helped coin) has met his expectations, and how the nature of technical book publishing has changed.
Jim Zemlin, the executive director of the Linux Foundation, talked with O'Reilly News at OSCON, the O'Reilly open source convention. He demystifies the role that the Linux Foundation plays in helping to promote Linux use, provide legal defense, and broker cooperative work between Linux related projects.
Pia Waugh, President of Software Freedom International sat down at O'Reilly's open source convention, OSCON, to talk about some of her interests. These include how women are entering the computer field worldwide and her work getting laptops into the hands of children across Australia and the Pacific islands.

OSCON 2008 -- O'Reilly's annual open source conference -- is going on now. O'Reilly News interviews Allison Randal, co-chair of OSCON, for a quick survey of what's new and interesting in the world of open source. Here's what to see and do and what to watch for in the world of free software for the next year.
Social Networks have been around since the inception of bulleting board systems in the mid 1980s, and each one of them seems, for a time at least, to be the radical new paradigm that establishes how people will interact with one another over the web. Certainly, this seems to be the case to those investors (whether individual or corporate) who pay surprisingly stiff premiums in order to be a part of the next big wave, yet in truth social networking sites have a surprisingly consistent "life-cycle" that seems to play out regardless of the "angle" that the sites have.
Student Success Story: Last time the O'Reilly School of Technology highlighted Ingrid as Student of the Month, she was in the midst of taking our Web Programming Certificate Series. At this point, she has now completed fifteen courses, five Certificate Series, and is currently working on her sixth — the new PHP/SQL Programming Certificate Series.
Here's what she has to say:
"I truly enjoy my work more now that I have a better understanding and grasp of programming. I also get much more interesting work assignments and get more out of my work. [OST] courses are a challenge and so much fun to do!" —Ingrid Mifflin, Systems Librarian
During the month of July, enroll to get certified and SAVE 15%!
Here's what she has to say:
"I truly enjoy my work more now that I have a better understanding and grasp of programming. I also get much more interesting work assignments and get more out of my work. [OST] courses are a challenge and so much fun to do!" —Ingrid Mifflin, Systems Librarian
During the month of July, enroll to get certified and SAVE 15%!
Why are these people so scared of openness? This may seem a strange and provocative thing to say. Surely ODF is the open technology and OOXML is the proprietary technology? Surely we know this because "ISO" is the organization which is just the puppet of MicroSoft while OASIS is a bastion of community openness!
O'Reilly has released 30 titles as DRM-free downloadable ebook bundles. The bundles include three ebook formats (EPUB, PDF, and Kindle-compatible Mobipocket) for a single price -- at or below the book's cover price.Ebooks are certainly nothing new for us at O'Reilly. We've offered PDFs of hundreds of our titles for some time now, and until quite recently Safari Books Online, our online-publishing joint venture with Pearson, generated more revenue than was typically associated with the entire downloadable ebook business. But it's clear that things are changing...
There has been an on again off again discussion behind the scenes at Radar about the nature of the enterprise vs. the web and how they are defined not just by their technologies, but by their frames of reference. For my part, I think the enterprise view is defined implicitly by a planning mindset and a perceived scope of control that ends at the enterprise boundary. Whereas the web is too large for effective control so it tends to be an environment more conducive to serendipity and emergent behaviors. The web and the enterprise also differ in obvious cultural ways. Web culture tends toward speed and "good enough" while enterprise culture is informed by enterprise concerns...
David Pogue returns with a thoroughly updated edition of iPhone: The Missing Manual. Pre-order the print book/electronic bundle now and save 70% on the book. Electronic includes EPUB, PDF, and Kindle-compatible Mobipocket formats.
Whether you're taking the plunge on July 11 or are thinking about upgrading, this is the book to read!
Whether you're taking the plunge on July 11 or are thinking about upgrading, this is the book to read!
Behind the competing technologies for Internet application development--which impinge directly on the plans of Internet providers and dot-com businesses--lie some basic problems with Internet standards and protocols. Each technical problem is also a metaphor for difficulties in the way people interact, both online and off-line: we don't know how to handle many-to-many connections, we don't know what will happen next in time, and it's hard to split tasks between systems.
Website Optimization — Is your site easy to find, simple to navigate, and enticing enough to convert prospects into buyers? Website Optimization shows you how. It reveals a comprehensive set of techniques to improve your site's performance by boosting search engine visibility for more traffic, increasing conversion rates to maximize leads and profits, revving up site speed to retain users, and measuring your site's effectiveness (before and after these changes) with best-practice metrics and tools. Learn more.
What people are saying about this book:
"Andy King has drawn attention to the inherent synergy between search engine marketing and web page performance. Andy is a thought leader and genuinely understands the complexity of website optimization. The depth of research and experience in this book is astonishing. This book is a must-have for best practices to optimize your website and maximize profit." — Tenni Theurer, Engineering Manager, Yahoo! Exceptional Performance
What people are saying about this book:
"Andy King has drawn attention to the inherent synergy between search engine marketing and web page performance. Andy is a thought leader and genuinely understands the complexity of website optimization. The depth of research and experience in this book is astonishing. This book is a must-have for best practices to optimize your website and maximize profit." — Tenni Theurer, Engineering Manager, Yahoo! Exceptional Performance
New Books
- FBML Essentials
- JavaScript: The Missing Manual
- Learning the vi and Vim Editors, Seventh Edition
- Intellectual Property and Open Source
- Website Optimization
- iPhone Forensics: Rough Cuts Version
- The Productive Programmer
- Learning Perl, Fifth Edition
Now Available in PDF
- Programming Perl, 3rd Edition
- JavaScript: The Good Parts
- Flex 3 Cookbook
- Programming Visual Basic 2008
- Windows Vista: The Missing Manual
New Ebook Bundles
O'Reilly books now available as Ebook bundle:- Web 2.0: A Strategy Guide
- Subject to Change
- Making Things Happen
- Wikipedia: The Missing Manual
- Facebook: The Missing Manual
New Rough Cuts
- iPhone Forensics: Rough Cuts Version
- The Art of Capacity Planning: Rough Cuts Version
- Programming Flex 3 Rough Cut
- Programming .NET 3.5 Rough Cuts Version
Upcoming Books
- Take Your Best Shot
- Statistics in a Nutshell
- Learning ASP.NET 3.5, Second Edition
- slide:ology
- iPhone: The Missing Manual, Second Edition
- Head First Physics
- The Best of Instructables Volume I
- Building Embedded Linux Systems, Second Edition
New on Safari
- JavaScript: The Missing Manual
- FBML Essentials
- Learning the vi and Vim Editors
- Take Your Best Shot
- Intellectual Property and Open Source








