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         Stallman Richard M:     more books (46)
  1. GNU Make: A Program for Directing Recompilation, Edition 0.43, for Version 3.68 by Richard M. Stallman, Roland McGrath, 1993-06
  2. Debugging with GDB, Edition 4.03 for GDB Version 4.3, January 1992 by Richard M. / Pesch, Roland H. Stallman, 1992-01-01
  3. Using and Porting GNU CC for Version 2.8 by Richard M. Stallman, Richard Stallman, 1998-03
  4. GNU Emacs Manual: -- Thirteenth 13th Edition, Updated for Emacs Version 20.1 by Richard M. Stallman, 1997
  5. Using & Porting Gnu Cc, Version 2.3 by Richard M. Stallman, 1993-12
  6. Termcap Manual by Richard M. Stallman, 1993-06
  7. Texinfo: The GNU Documentation Format Edition 2.19 by Robert J, Stallman, Richard M. Chassell, 1993
  8. GNU Make: A Program for Directing Recompilation, for version 3.81 by Richard M. Stallman, Roland McGrath, et all 2004-06-30
  9. Texinfo: The Gnu Documentation Format for Texinfo Version 3.11 by Richard M. Stallman, Robert J. Chassell, 1997-08
  10. The Termcap Manual: The Termcap Library and Data Base by Richard M. Stallman, 2000-10
  11. Gnu Emacs Manual: Version 18 by Richard M. Stallman, 1992-09
  12. Debugging with Gdb, Edition 4.09, for Gdb Version 4.9 by Richard M. Stallman, 1993-01-01
  13. Using & Porting Gnu CC for Version 2.7.2 by Richard M. Stallman, 1998-08
  14. Debugging with GDB: The GNU Source-Level Debugger for GDB by Richard M. Stallman, Cygnus Solutions, 2000-07

21. OfB.biz: Open For Business
The Independent Open Source Migration Journal announcement would eventually catapult its author, Richard M. Stallman, into someone known and respected around the your thoughts on this? Richard M. Stallman I have not thought
http://www.ofb.biz/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=260

22. Richard Stallman - Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia
Gay, Joshua (ed) (2002) Free Software, Free Society Selected Essaysof Richard M. Stallman. Boston GNU Press. ISBN 1882114981
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard_Stallman
Richard Stallman
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Richard Matthew Stallman RMS ; born March 16 ) is the founder of the Free Software movement , the GNU project, the Free Software Foundation , and the League for Programming Freedom . He invented the concept of copyleft to protect the ideals of this movement, and enshrined this concept in the widely-used GPL (General Public License) for software. An image of Richard Matthew Stallman taken from the cover of the O'Reilly book Free as in Freedom by Sam Williams , published in March He is also a notable programmer whose major accomplishments include GNU Emacs , the GNU C Compiler , and the GNU Debugger . Since the mid 1990s Stallman has relinquished most of his software engineering duties in order to focus on the advocacy of free software. His remaining development time is devoted to GNU Emacs. He is currently supported by various fellowships, maintaining a modest standard of living while discharging his duties as an itinerant evangelist and "philosopher" of free software. Table of contents 1 Biography
1.1 Decline of the hacker culture

23. We Can Put An End To Word Attachments - GNU Project - Free Software Foundation (
Richard Stallman's arguments against the use of proprietary formats in document exchange.
http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/no-word-attachments.html
Translations of this page
We Can Put an End to Word Attachments
by Richard M. Stallman, Jan 2002 Don't you just hate receiving Word documents in email messages? Word attachments are annoying, but worse than that, they impede people from switching to free software. Maybe we can stop this practice with a simple collective effort. All we have to do is ask each person who sends us a Word file to reconsider that way of doing things. Most computer users use Microsoft Word. That is unfortunate for them, since Word is proprietary software, denying its users the freedom to study, change, copy, and redistribute it. And because Microsoft changes the Word file format with each release, its users are locked into a system that compels them to buy each upgrade whether they want a change or not. They may even find, several years from now, that the Word documents they are writing this year can no longer be read with the version of Word they use then. But it hurts us, too, when they assume we use Word and send us (or demand that we send them) documents in Word format. Some people publish or post documents in Word format. Some organizations will only accept files in Word format: someone I know was unable to apply for a job because resumes had to be Word files. Even governments sometimes impose Word format on the public, which is truly outrageous. For us users of free operating systems, receiving Word documents is an inconvenience. But the worst impact of sending Word format is on people who might switch to free systems: they hesitate because they feel they must have Word available to read the Word files they receive. The practice of using the secret Word format for interchange impedes the growth of our community and the spread of freedom. While we notice the occasional annoyance of receiving a Word document, this steady and persistent harm to our community usually doesn't come to our attention. But it is happening all the time.

24. Richard Stallman - Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia
Richard Stallman. (Redirected from Richard M. Stallman). Enlarge Gay, Joshua (ed)(2002) Free Software, Free Society Selected Essays of Richard M. Stallman.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard_M._Stallman
Richard Stallman
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
(Redirected from Richard M. Stallman Richard Matthew Stallman RMS ; born March 16 ) is the founder of the Free Software movement , the GNU project, the Free Software Foundation , and the League for Programming Freedom . He invented the concept of copyleft to protect the ideals of this movement, and enshrined this concept in the widely-used GPL (General Public License) for software. An image of Richard Matthew Stallman taken from the cover of the O'Reilly book Free as in Freedom by Sam Williams , published in March He is also a notable programmer whose major accomplishments include GNU Emacs , the GNU C Compiler , and the GNU Debugger . Since the mid 1990s Stallman has relinquished most of his software engineering duties in order to focus on the advocacy of free software. His remaining development time is devoted to GNU Emacs. He is currently supported by various fellowships, maintaining a modest standard of living while discharging his duties as an itinerant evangelist and "philosopher" of free software. Table of contents 1 Biography
1.1 Decline of the hacker culture

25. The Right To Read - GNU Project - Free Software Foundation (FSF)
Richard Stallman's famous parable about the Right to Read, and what will happen if intellectual monopoly laws continue to grow.
http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/right-to-read.html
Translations of this page
The Right to Read
by Richard Stallman
Table of Contents
This article appeared in the February 1997 issue of Communications of the ACM (Volume 40, Number 2). (from "The Road To Tycho", a collection of articles about the antecedents of the Lunarian Revolution, published in Luna City in 2096) For Dan Halbert, the road to Tycho began in collegewhen Lissa Lenz asked to borrow his computer. Hers had broken down, and unless she could borrow another, she would fail her midterm project. There was no one she dared ask, except Dan. This put Dan in a dilemma. He had to help herbut if he lent her his computer, she might read his books. Aside from the fact that you could go to prison for many years for letting someone else read your books, the very idea shocked him at first. Like everyone, he had been taught since elementary school that sharing books was nasty and wrongsomething that only pirates would do. Of course, Lissa did not necessarily intend to read his books. She might want the computer only to write her midterm. But Dan knew she came from a middle-class family and could hardly afford the tuition, let alone her reading fees. Reading his books might be the only way she could graduate. He understood this situation; he himself had had to borrow to pay for all the research papers he read. (10% of those fees went to the researchers who wrote the papers; since Dan aimed for an academic career, he could hope that his own research papers, if frequently referenced, would bring in enough to repay this loan.)

26. About The GNU Project - GNU Project - Free Software Foundation (FSF)
by Richard Stallman. originally published in the book "Open Sources" Nowadays, often I'm not the only one
http://www.gnu.org/gnu/thegnuproject.html
Translations of this page
The GNU Project
by Richard Stallman originally published in the book "Open Sources"
The first software-sharing community
When I started working at the MIT Artificial Intelligence Lab in 1971, I became part of a software-sharing community that had existed for many years. Sharing of software was not limited to our particular community; it is as old as computers, just as sharing of recipes is as old as cooking. But we did it more than most. The AI Lab used a timesharing operating system called ITS (the Incompatible Timesharing System) that the lab's staff hackers (1) had designed and written in assembler language for the Digital PDP-10, one of the large computers of the era. As a member of this community, an AI lab staff system hacker, my job was to improve this system. We did not call our software "free software", because that term did not yet exist; but that is what it was. Whenever people from another university or a company wanted to port and use a program, we gladly let them. If you saw someone using an unfamiliar and interesting program, you could always ask to see the source code, so that you could read it, change it, or cannibalize parts of it to make a new program. (1) The use of "hacker" to mean "security breaker" is a confusion on the part of the mass media. We hackers refuse to recognize that meaning, and continue using the word to mean, "Someone who loves to program and enjoys being clever about it."

27. Linux Today - Richard Stallman -- On "Free Hardware"
Richard Stallman's thoughts on free hardware.
http://features.linuxtoday.com/stories/6993.html

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28. Oreilly.com -- Online Catalog: Free As In Freedom
Free as in Freedom interweaves biographical snapshots of GNU project founder Richard Stallman with the political, social and economic history of the free software movement. It examines Stallman's
http://www.oreilly.com/catalog/freedom

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Free as in Freedom
Richard Stallman's Crusade for Free Software
By  Sam Williams
March 2002
ISBN: 0-596-00287-4 240 pages, $22.95 US, $34.95 CA Buy from O'Reilly: Buy Online at: select a store O'Reilly Amazon.com Amazon.co.uk Amazon.ca BN.com Bookpool Borders Chapters.indigo.ca Digital Guru Foyles PC Bookshop (UK) Powell's Quantum Readme.doc

29. Stallman, Richard M. Definition Of Stallman, Richard M. In Computing. What Is St
Computer term of Stallman, Richard M. in the Computing Dictionary andThesaurus. Provides search by definition of Stallman, Richard M..
http://computing-dictionary.thefreedictionary.com/Stallman, Richard M.
Dictionaries: General Computing Medical Legal Encyclopedia
Stallman, Richard M.
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30. Por Qué El Software No Debe Tener Propietarios
El Proyecto GNU y la Free Software Foundation (FSF). Texto de Richard Stallman.
http://www.sindominio.net/biblioweb/telematica/why-free.es.html
Por qué el software no debe tener propietarios
Richard Stallman Las tecnologías digitales de la información contribuyen al mundo haciendo que sea más fácil copiar y modificar información. Los ordenadores prometen hacer esto más fácil para todos. Consideremos estas cuatro prácticas de la SPA
  • Propaganda masiva afirmando que está mal desobedecer a los propietarios para ayudar a un amigo. Pedir a la gente que se conviertan en chivatos para delatar a sus colegas y compañeros de trabajo. Redadas (con ayuda policial) en oficinas y escuelas, en las que la gente debe probar que son inocentes de hacer copias ilegales. El proceso judicial por parte del gobierno de los EE.UU., a petición de la SPA, de personas como David LaMacchia, del MIT, no por copiar software (no se le acusa de copiar nada), sino sencillamente por dejar sin vigilancia equipos de copia y no censurar su uso.
Cada una de estas cuatro prácticas se asemeja a las usadas en la antigua Unión Soviética, donde todas las copiadoras tenían un vigilante para prevenir copias prohibidas, y donde las personas tenían que copiar información en secreto y pasarla de mano a mano en forma de ``samizdat''. Por supuesto hay una diferencia: el motivo para el control de información en la Unión Soviética era político; en los EE.UU. el motivo es el beneficio económico. Pero son las acciones las que nos afectan, no el motivo. Cualquier intento de bloquear el compartir información, no importa la causa, lleva a los mismos métodos y a la misma dureza.

31. Stallman, Richard M.
LinuxGuruz Foldoc. Stallman, Richard M. Richard Stallman. person Richard M. Stallman. Founder of the GNU project
http://www.linuxguruz.org/foldoc/foldoc.php?Stallman, Richard M.

32. Richard Stallman Interview
tlug.gr. jp Interview with RMS by Hiroo Yamagata. Better Society throughFree Software Richard M. Stallman Interview by Hiroo Yamagata.
http://www.tlug.jp/docs/rms.html
tlug.gr. jp Interview with RMS by Hiroo Yamagata Better Society through Free Software:
Richard M. Stallman Interview by Hiroo Yamagata HY: With your OS kernel HURD coming into the beta stage, it has finally become possible to create a complete system based on the GNU product lineup. Now how does GNU development work? RMS: Umm, first, please be careful with that word "product". Product implies that something is made to be sold. Now, software companies develop software to sell copies. So that's a product. Whereas the aim of the GNU project is to create a better community. We sell copies to develop software. So there is a fundamental difference. FSF has four full time programmers, and they write the software. However, there are many volunteers involved. By the way, I'm a volunteer, too. I don*t get paid from FSF. As the president of FSF, I want to encourage people to donate and volunteer, so I want to set an example myself. HY: So this HURD, do you feel that it is as advanced as you aimed to be in the first place? RMS: Having said that, in the case of HURD, there is quite a technical advance in it. The underlying design is more clean and powerful, and that hasn't been surpassed by any other existing system.

33. Linux Today - Richard Stallman -- The Problems Of The Plan Nine License
2000.07.02
http://linuxtoday.com/news_story.php3?ltsn=2000-07-02-007-04-OP-LF-SW

34. OfB.biz: Open For Business - GNU Questions: RMS On SCO, Distributions, DRM
That announcement would eventually catapult its author, Richard M. Stallman, intosomeone known and respected around the world and, perhaps more amazingly, a
http://www.ofb.biz/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=260

35. The Tcl War
Archive of notable replies to Richard Stallman's Why you should not use Tcl article he posted to Usenet.
http://www.vanderburg.org/Tcl/war/
The Tcl War
In late September, 1994, Richard Stallman of the Free Software Foundation posted an article to comp.lang.tcl and several other newsgroups titled Why you should not use Tcl . Predictably, a flamewar ensued, which lasted in one form or another for almost a month (until it was pre-empted by the GNU project's announcement of plans for its own extension language , later dubbed GUILE Like most flamewars, there was much heat and little light. However, there was some light, and as the maintainer of the Tcl bibliography (which attempts to be very thorough), I took it upon myself to archive the interesting posts, partly to give the bibliography entry something to point at, and also to provide a balanced perspective: it seemed likely, even at the beginning, that the GNU project would archive Stallman's original article and redistribute it without the many reasonable rebuttals which appeared. Although I tried to take a neutral perspective, and saved articles espousing diverse points of view, this selection unavoidably reflects my own prejudices. Included are a few articles which contain nothing but a snappy comeback. I missed a few important articles, such as one by Bill Janssen which started an entire lengthy subthread. And naturally, all of my own posts are included. Starting: Sun 25 Sep 1994 - 06:14:14 CST
Ending: Tue, 18 Oct 1994 01:02:03 GMT

36. Hache: Le Manifeste GNU (The GNU Manifesto)
Traduction fran§aise du « Manifeste GNU » de Richard Stallman.
http://www.dtext.com/hache/manifeste-GNU.html
Le manifeste GNU
(The GNU Manifesto)
Richard Stallman
Texte original : http://www.gnu.org/gnu/manifesto.html
Traduction française : Jacques Du Pasquier
La distribution sous une forme modifiée n'est pas autorisée.
Le manifeste GNU
Le manifeste GNU (donné ci-dessous) a été écrit par Richard Stallman au commencement du projet GNU, pour appeler à la participation et au soutien. Pendant les années qui ont suivi, des petites mises à jour ont été effectuées pour rendre compte des progrès réalisés, mais il semble maintenant préférable de le laisser tel quel, dans la forme sous laquelle la plupart des gens l'ont vu. Depuis la publication initiale, nous avons observé certains malentendus qu'une formulation différente pourrait contribuer à éviter. Des notes de bas de page ajoutées en 1993 aident à clarifier ces points. [Le traducteur a de son côté inséré dans le texte, entre crochets, quelques notes destinées au lecteur francophone.] Pour une information à jour sur les logiciels GNU disponibles, reportez-vous à notre site web , et notamment à notre Répertoire des logiciels libres
Qu'est-ce que GNU ? GNU N'est pas Unix !

37. Hacker Ethics
Richard Stallmans Interview.
http://mbhs.bergtraum.k12.ny.us/cybereng/ebooks/stallman.htm
meme: (pron. 'meem') A contagious idea that replicates like a virus, passed on from mind to mind. Memes function the same way genes and viruses do, propagating through communication networks and face-to-face contact between people. Derived from the word "memetics," a field of study which postulates that the meme is the basic unit of cultural evolution. Examples of memes include melodies, icons, fashion statements and phrases.
MEME 2.04 "In 1971 when I joined the staff of the MIT Artificial Intelligence lab, all of us who helped develop the operating system software, we called ourselves hackers. We were not breaking any laws, at least not in doing the hacking we were paid to do. We were developing software and we were having fun. Hacking refers to the spirit of fun in which we were developing software. The hacker ethic refers to the feelings of right and wrong, to the ethical ideas this community of people had that knowledge should be shared with other people who can benefit from it, and that important resources should be utilized rather than wasted."
Richard Stallman, in MEME 2.04

38. News: Open Source Leaders Duke It Out
In ZDNet interview, Caldera chief Ransom Love hits back at Free Software Foundation founder Richard Stallman, denies he is greedy capitalist or parasite. CNET ZDNet
http://zdnet.com.com/2100-11-530155.html

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June 24, 2001, 5:00 PM PT
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In an interview with ZDNet Germany, Caldera chief Ransom Love hits back at free software founder Richard Stallman, denying that he is a 'greedy capitalist' or a 'parasite.' "I am not a greedy capitalist. I am only a businessman. I just do my job. I'm not quite sure whether you can call this parasitic. I am not a parasite," Caldera chief executive Ransom Love told ZDNet in Munich, Germany over the weekend. Love was defending himself and the open source movement against reproaches by Richard Stallman, the chairman of the Free Software Foundation. Back in May, Stallman was quoted as saying of Love: "He's only a parasite." But according to Love, Richard Stallman's point of view is "very... narrow" and it is wrong to call the business model of companies such as Caldera parasitic. "You can't call our business model parasitic," said Love. "We add value to Linux, so it can become successful. We integrate Linux in the Back Office. And we do all the marketing that's necessary. Did Richard Stallman ever invest £50m in Linux? We did. I have been involved in the Linux community since my time at Novell in 1994. With 'Lizard' we developed the first installation service for Linux ever." Lizard Unattended Install was released in 1999.

39. Stallman, Richard M.
is edited by Denis Howe dbh@doc.ic.ac.uk . Previous stale pointerbug Next standalone. Stallman, Richard M. Richard Stallman.
http://burks.brighton.ac.uk/burks/foldoc/12/111.htm
The Free Online Dictionary of Computing ( http://foldoc.doc.ic.ac.uk/ dbh@doc.ic.ac.uk Previous: stale pointer bug Next: stand-alone
Stallman, Richard M.
Richard Stallman

40. REVOLUTION OS
Movie featuring interviews with Linus Torvalds, Richard Stallman, and others.
http://www.revolution-os.com/
REVOLUTION OS is now on DVD!
REVOLUTION OS tells the inside story of the hackers who rebelled against the proprietary software model and Microsoft to create GNU/Linux and the Open Source movement. On June 1, 2001, Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer said "Linux is a cancer that attaches itself in an intellectual property sense to everything it touches." REVOLUTION OS features interviews with Linus Torvalds, Richard Stallman, Bruce Perens, Eric Raymond, Brian Behlendorf, Michael Tiemann, Larry Augustin, Frank Hecker, and Rob Malda. To view the trailer or the first eight minutes go to the ifilm website for REVOLUTION OS. REVOLUTION OS is available in the 35 mm motion picture format and runs 85 minutes.
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