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So the first attempt to translate open source to, analog things has brought us...
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Open Source BEER. I'm not kidding: | QUOTE (CNN) | COPENHAGEN, Denmark -- A free pint of beer may be a far-fetched dream for pint lovers, but a group of Danish technology students have come up with the next best thing -- a free recipe for people to make their own brew.
Using the open sourcing philosophy, the students have published a recipe for beer on the Internet, available without charge and open to improvements. Open sourcing is the concept whereby people from all over the world collaborate voluntarily to produce computer programs in a market normally dominated by big corporations. It became popular in the 1990s, and the best known examples is the Linux operating system for personal computers, which mimics Microsoft's Windows. The 15 students, who are studying at Information Technology University in Copenhagen, produced approximately 100 liters (26 gallons) of "Vores Oel (Our Beer), version 1.0," and then made the recipe available to everyone on the Internet without charge. "The idea was to translate the concept of open source to an analog product," Taw Klitgaard, a 26-year old student, told The Associated Press. As with open source software, other brewers are free to tinker with the students' recipe. But anybody who wants to sell a batch should reveal their changes and credit the students for the idea. The students said the choice to make beer was inspired by a quote from Richard Stallman, founder of the open-source GNU software project, who said: "'Free software' is a matter of liberty, not price. To understand the concept, you should think of 'free' as in 'free speech,' not as in 'free beer'." The students concocted their beer in the university cafeteria in December as part of a workshop on intellectual property rights. The recipe was based on classic ale brewing traditions but added guarana, which contains a small amount of caffeine, for a little extra kick. The students drank the first batch, and have received praise from Internet users around the world for the recipe. |
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