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Software United States

NASA Ames Gets OSI Certified 14

Lunchy writes "A long standing monument to the growth of research and development in Silicon Valley, the NASA Ames Research Center has done advanced research in the area since 1939. Originally, the center focused on aircraft (and dirigible) research but it is now a high-tech computer science center. The open source community may be interested to know that NASA Ames is now OSI Certified and is releasing some of their software under open source licenses."
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NASA Ames Gets OSI Certified

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  • Good news (Score:5, Interesting)

    by mwheeler01 ( 625017 ) <matthew.l.wheeler@NOsPam.gmail.com> on Wednesday June 09, 2004 @02:41PM (#9379979)
    I think this is pretty good news. The more big government agencies that work with open source the better the backing will be when something like software patents come center stage in the supreme court.
    • (IANAL) Patents give you the right to exclude others -- except the federal government. So, just because the government produces some code which exercises a patent, that doesn't necessarily protect the rest of us...
  • CFD codes, etc? (Score:4, Interesting)

    by 4of12 ( 97621 ) on Wednesday June 09, 2004 @04:16PM (#9381162) Homepage Journal

    Historically, a lot of interesting developements in computational fluid dynamics, particularly compressible aerodynamics, have come out of NASA Ames.

    I didn't see any of those codes showcased on the webpage, though:(

  • Correction (Score:3, Informative)

    by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday June 09, 2004 @08:25PM (#9383120)
    Please note that NASA Ames didn't get OSI certification. The NOSA ( NASA Open Source Agreement ) got OSI certification. Ames just happens to be the center that spearheaded the project and is the first Center to release Open Source Software.

    This is not a minor deal.
    Politically this means a researcher can open their project to the community and people like you and me will have access to things that only the likes of lockheed-martin and boeing could get their hands on before. Basically you are getting something back for your tax dollars, not simply paying to subsidize research for the aerospace industry.

    Educationally this may make it easier for NASA researchers to collaborate with researchers interested in the same domains without having to go through everybodies favorite buddy, government red tape.

    Lastly many there is a pretty strong currrent of Computer Science researcher flowing between places like NASA, Stanford, Carnigie-Mellon, UC Santa Cruz, and MIT. We can joke all we like about sending millions of dollars into space and missing MARS but the research done inside NASA is world class and the creation of an open source license is the first step in bringing some of the most bleeding edge code in the industry code to your finger tips.
  • by retiarius ( 72746 ) on Wednesday June 09, 2004 @11:33PM (#9383965)
    v.i.z. http://www.openchannelfoundation.org/

    when i was a young lad at nasa ames giving away things
    like free implementations of lempel-ziv compression,
    boyer-moore search grafted to 'egrep',
    thompson-style prefix coding for file search,
    and combinatorial anagram madness of all kinds, i.e.

    http://developers.slashdot.org/
    comments.pl?sid =64438&cid=5977419

    we were encouraged to donate to COSMIC if development
    costs exceeded ten kilodollars. natch, on govt. pay
    many of us worked cheap, so we just put stuff up on 'uucp'
    as public domain...
  • by jgardn ( 539054 ) <jgardn@alumni.washington.edu> on Thursday June 10, 2004 @03:08AM (#9384779) Homepage Journal
    With the funding of both manpower and pure intellect of the Ames research center, we are gaining a huge improvement to our resources as open source developers.

    I won't expect a drastic increase due to this particular news anytime soon. These scientists and many scientists like them have been contributing before Bill Gates learned to crawl. I do expect more research centers to begin actively endorsing open source and moving away from proprietary licenses.

    If all the major universities and research centers adopted an open source strategy, then all the corporate research centers would have to follow suite, or be cut off from their developments. If all the corporate research centers are doing open source, then all new software will be open source.

    This is another step towards total world domination.

    I think RMS is finally seeing his vision come true. Kudos to RMS! May Free Software live forever!

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