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Raymond is an avowed libertarian. He is known to have a strong interest in science fiction, is an enthusiastic amateur musician, and has a black belt in taekwondo. His public advocacy of Second Amendment gun rights and strong support for the 2003 Iraq War has nettled some hackers, but he seems to enjoy the controversy this engenders.
Born in Boston, Massachusetts in 1957, Raymond lived on three continents and forgot two languages before settling in Pennsylvania in 19711971 is a common year starting on Friday (click for link to calendar). Events January January 1 British divorce Reform Act comes into force January 2 66 die in stairway crush at Rangers v Celtic football match, Glasgow, Scotland. See Ibrox disaster. Janua. His involvement with hacker culture began in 19761976 is a leap year starting on Thursday (link will take you to calendar). Events January January 12 UN Security Council votes 11-1 to admit the Palestinian Liberation Organization January 15 Would-be Gerald Ford presidential assassin Sara Jane Moore is s, and he wrote his first open source project in 1982Events January January 6 William Bonin is convicted of being the "freeway killer". January 8 AT&T agrees to divest itself of twenty-two subdivisions January 11 Mark Thatcher, son of the British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, disappears in the Sahara du.
He is the author of the fetchmailFetchmail is a utility found on many Unix-like systems used to retrieve e-mail from a remote POP mail server to the user's local system. Whilst widely used, it is perhaps more significant as the model its author, Eric S. Raymond, used to discuss his theor POP client. He has contributed many editing modes to the EMACS editor and co-wrote the GNUFor the African animal gnu see wildebeest. logo Believed to be the original artwork of Etienne Suvasa GNU is a recursive acronym for "GNU's Not Unix". The GNU project was launched in 1983 by Richard Stallman with the goal of creating a complete operating ncurses library. He has written a C implementation of the INTERCAL programming language parody.
Raymond coined the aphorism "Given enough eyeballs, all bugs are shallow." He credits Linus Torvalds with the inspiration for this quotation, which he dubs " Linus's law". The "mainstream" source for the quotation is his 1999 book The Cathedral and the Bazaar: Musings on Linux and Open Source by an Accidental Revolutionary, Sebastopol, California: O'Reilly & Associates; but [1] archives the earliest source ( 1997), originally distributed freely on the Internet. In addition to this, he maintains a dozen FAQs and writes lots of essays.
After 1997 Raymond became a principal theorist in the open source movement and one of the founders of the Open Source Initiative. He also took on the role of ambassador of open source to the press, business and mainstream culture. He is a gifted speaker with the delivery (and, perhaps, ego) of a stand-up comic, and has taken his road show to more than fifteen countries on six continents. He is routinely quoted in the mainstream press, and as of 2003 has probably achieved more public visibility than almost any other hacker.
Raymond's tactics have scored a number of remarkable successes, beginning with the release of the Mozilla source code in 1998, and he is widely credited by both hackers and mainstream observers with having taken the open source mission to Wall Street more effectively than anyone before him.