called Bazaar-NG (the present Bazaar) was announced as Baz's successor. Baz is now unmaintained and Canonical considers it deprecated. The last release of Baz was version 1.4.3, released October 2005. A planned 1.5 release of Baz was abandoned in 2006.
Bazaar
In February 2005, Martin Pool, a developer who had previously described and reviewed a number of revision control systems in talks and in his weblog, announced that he had been hired by Canonical and tasked with "build a distributed version-control system that open-source hackers will love to use."
A public website and mailing list were established in March 2005 and the first numbered pre-release, 0.0.1, was released on March 26, 2005.
Bazaar was conceived from the start as a different piece of software from both GNU arch and Baz. It has a different command set and is a completely different codebase and design.
It was designed to build on the best ideas from a variety of other open source revision control systems under development at the time, without some of their historical decisions.
Bazaar was originally intended as a test-bed for features to be later integrated into Baz, but by mid-2005 many of the major Baz developers had begun working primarily on Bazaar directly, so Baz was abandoned instead.
Version 1.0 of Bazaar was released in December 2007. In February 2008, Bazaar became a GNU project.
A bazaar (Persian: ?????, Turkish: pazar, Greek: ?????? (pazari), Cypriot Greek: pantopoula) is a permanent merchandising area, marketplace, or street of shops where goods and services are exchanged or sold.
The word derives from the Persian word b?z?r, the etymology of which goes back to the Middle Persian word baha-char (??????), meaning "the place of prices".
Although the current meaning of the word is believed to have originated in Persia, its use has spread and now has been accepted into the vernacular in countries around the world.
In North America, the term can be used as a synonym for a "rummage sale", to describe charity fundraising events held by churches or other community organizations, in which donated, used goods, such as books, clothes, and household items are sold for low prices, or else the goods may be new and handcrafted (or home-baked), as at a church's Christmas bazaar.
The bazaar has been the subject of many books, including: The Persian Bazaar: Veiled Space of Desire (Mage Publications) by Mehdi Khansari and The Morphology of the Persian Bazaar (Agah Publications) by Azita Rajabi.
Bazaar
In February 2005, Martin Pool, a developer who had previously described and reviewed a number of revision control systems in talks and in his weblog, announced that he had been hired by Canonical and tasked with "build a distributed version-control system that open-source hackers will love to use."
A public website and mailing list were established in March 2005 and the first numbered pre-release, 0.0.1, was released on March 26, 2005.
Bazaar was conceived from the start as a different piece of software from both GNU arch and Baz. It has a different command set and is a completely different codebase and design.
It was designed to build on the best ideas from a variety of other open source revision control systems under development at the time, without some of their historical decisions.
Bazaar was originally intended as a test-bed for features to be later integrated into Baz, but by mid-2005 many of the major Baz developers had begun working primarily on Bazaar directly, so Baz was abandoned instead.
Version 1.0 of Bazaar was released in December 2007. In February 2008, Bazaar became a GNU project.
About Bazaar ?
A bazaar (Persian: ?????, Turkish: pazar, Greek: ?????? (pazari), Cypriot Greek: pantopoula) is a permanent merchandising area, marketplace, or street of shops where goods and services are exchanged or sold.
The word derives from the Persian word b?z?r, the etymology of which goes back to the Middle Persian word baha-char (??????), meaning "the place of prices".
Although the current meaning of the word is believed to have originated in Persia, its use has spread and now has been accepted into the vernacular in countries around the world.
In North America, the term can be used as a synonym for a "rummage sale", to describe charity fundraising events held by churches or other community organizations, in which donated, used goods, such as books, clothes, and household items are sold for low prices, or else the goods may be new and handcrafted (or home-baked), as at a church's Christmas bazaar.
The bazaar has been the subject of many books, including: The Persian Bazaar: Veiled Space of Desire (Mage Publications) by Mehdi Khansari and The Morphology of the Persian Bazaar (Agah Publications) by Azita Rajabi.
Creative destruction
Creative destruction is an economic theory of innovation and progress, introduced by German sociologist Werner Sombart and elaborated and popularized by the Austrian economist Joseph Schumpeter.In Capitalism, Socialism and Democracy, Schumpeter popularized and used the term to describe the process of transformation that accompanies radical innovation. In Schumpeter's vision of capitalism, inno...
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