@article {207, title = {Open Source and Open Standards: Working Together for Effective Software Development and Distribution}, journal = {Open Source Business Resource}, year = {2008}, month = {11/2008}, publisher = {Talent First Network}, type = {Articles}, address = {Ottawa}, abstract = {Many open source projects implement open standards. We interviewed five developers who implemented different open standards in open source projects to find out how much interplay there was between implementors and standards developers and how important this communication was as they programmed the details of the specifications. Our somewhat unexpected finding was that developers preferred to work from the printed specification, separate from the standards source. When asked for a reason, most reported that resource constraints prevented them from writing code and specifications at the same time; another factor was the satisfaction that comes from working independently. Most of the developers we spoke to were more than halfway through their development before they even considered reporting specification problems to the source organization. Although this speaks well for the overall quality of computer industry specifications, it also means that feedback from open source developers is not getting back to the specification{\textquoteright}s authors. }, issn = {1913-6102}, url = {http://timreview.ca/article/207}, author = {Jon Siegel and Richard Mark Soley} }