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The Economics of Technology Sharing: Open Source and Beyond

The Economics of Technology Sharing: Open Source and Beyond

Lerner, Joshua and Tirole, Jean, "The Economics of Technology Sharing: Open Source and Beyond" (November 2004). Harvard NOM Working Paper No. 04-35.

Abstract:

    This paper reviews our understanding of the growing open source movement. We highlight how many aspects of open source software appear initially puzzling to an economist. As we have acknowledged, our ability to answer confidently many of the issues raised here questions is likely to increase as the open source movement itself grows and evolves. At the same time, it is heartening to us how much of open source activities can be understood within existing economic frameworks, despite the presence of claims to the contrary. The labor and industrial organization literatures provide lenses through which the structure of open source projects, the role of contributors, and the movement's ongoing evolution can be viewed.
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Facts on voip

  • Although few office environments and even fewer homes use a pure VoIP infrastructure, telecommunications providers routinely use IP telephony, often over a dedicated IP network, to connect switching stations, converting voice signals to IP packets and back.
  • Use in Amateur Radio Amateur radio has adopted VOIP by linking repeaters and users with Echolink, IRLP, Dstar and EQSO. By using VOIP Amateur Radio operators are able to create large repeater networks with repeaters all over the world where operators can access the system with actual ham radios.
  • Keeping packet latency acceptable can also be a problem, due to network routing time (buffering, switching) and transmission distances (more relevant under satellite links).

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