Attribute or characteristics of a software package; such attributes often relate to performing a particular function and the degree of success users experience when using that software to perform that function.
Published in Chapter:
Dependencies, Networks, and Priorities in an Open Source Project
Juha Järvensivu (Tampere University of Technology, Finland)
Copyright: © 2007
|Pages: 10
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-59140-999-1.ch010
Abstract
Dependencies between modern software projects are common. Jointly, such dependencies form a project network, where changes in one project cause changes to the others belonging to the same project network. This chapter discusses the issues of dependencies, distances, and priorities in open source project networks, from the standpoint of both technological and social networks. Thus, a multidisciplinary approach to the phenomenon of open source software (OSS) development is offered. There is a strong empirical focus maintained, since the aim of the chapter is to analyze OSS network characteristics through an in-depth, qualitative case study of one specifi c open source community: the Open Source Eclipse plug-in project Laika. In our analysis, we will introduce both internal and external networks associated with Laika, together with a discussion of how tightly they are intertwined. We will analyze both the internal and the external networks through the elements of mutuality, interdependence, distance, priorities, different power relations, and investments made in the relationships—elements chosen on the basis of analysis of the network studies literature.