GNU Project
The GNU Project was announced in 1983 by Richard Stallman. It initiated the GNU operating system, software development for which began in January 1984.
The founding goal of the project was, in the words of its initial announcement, to develop "a sufficient body of free software [...] to get along without any software that is not free." That goal was achieved in 1992 when the last gap in the GNU system, a kernel, was filled by a third-party Unix-style kernel called "Linux" being released as free software.
Contents |
Philosophy
Although its most visible output is technical, the GNU Project was launched as a social, ethical, and political initiative. As well as producing software and licenses, the GNU Project has published a large number of philosophical writings, the majority of which were penned by Stallman.
Website and publications
The GNU project website is translated into many languages by volunteers. Most pages are available in 15 to 20 languages, while some are available in more than 30.
Speakers
The following are official speakers for the GNU Project [1]:
- Robert J. Chassell
- Loïc Dachary
- Ricardo Galli
- Georg Greve
- Federico Heinz
- Bradley Kuhn
- Eben Moglen
- Richard Stallman
Recognition
External links
- GNU Website
- The initial announcement
- The GNU philosophy pages
- The GNU Manifesto
- A detailed essay about the GNU Project
- A brief history of the GNU Project
v • • e</div>
GNU ProjectHistory: GNU Manifesto • GNU Project • Free Software Foundation (FSF)
GNU licenses: GNU General Public License (GPL) • GNU Lesser General Public License (LGPL) • GNU Free Documentation License (FDL)
Software: GNU operating system • bash • GNU Compiler Collection • GNU Emacs • Ghostscript • other GNU packages and programs
Advocates and activists: Richard Stallman (RMS) • Robert J. Chassell • Prof. Masayuki Ida • Geoffery Knauth • Lawrence Lessig • Eben Moglen • Henri Poole • Peter Salus • Gerald Sussman • FSF's Past Directors • other FSF's Staff and Employees
Software developers: Richard Stallman (RMS) • Jim Blandy • Michael (now Thomas) Bushnell • Ulrich Drepper • Brian Fox • Tom Lord • Roland McGrath • other FSF's Programmers
Software documentors: Richard Stallman (RMS) • Robert J. Chassell • Roland McGrath • other FSF's Documentors
Categories
Articles to be merged | GNU project | Copyleft media | Free Software Foundation
