GNU Manifesto
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The GNU Manifesto was written by Richard Stallman and published in March 1985 in Dr. Dobb's Journal of Software Tools 10(3) as an explanation and definition of the goals of the GNU Project, and to call for participation and support. It is regarded by many in the free software movement as a fundamental philosophical source. The full text is included with GNU software such as Emacs, and is available on the web. For the first few years, it was updated in minor ways to account for developments, but since 1993 it has been left unchanged.
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History: 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
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