Web-based development of complex information products
Communications of the ACM
Distributed cooperative Apache web server
Proceedings of the 10th international conference on World Wide Web
Guest Editors' Introduction: Software Engineering in the Internet Age
IEEE Internet Computing
Differentiated Caching Services; A Control-Theoretical Approach
ICDCS '01 Proceedings of the The 21st International Conference on Distributed Computing Systems
Design, Implementation, and Evaluation of Differentiated Caching Services
IEEE Transactions on Parallel and Distributed Systems
Advanced resource connector middleware for lightweight computational Grids
Future Generation Computer Systems - Special section: Information engineering and enterprise architecture in distributed computing environments
WebDAV: a network protocol for remote collaborative authoring on the Web
ECSCW'99 Proceedings of the sixth conference on European Conference on Computer Supported Cooperative Work
Open source software peer review practices: a case study of the apache server
Proceedings of the 30th international conference on Software engineering
Multi-Tiered On-Demand Resource Scheduling for VM-Based Data Center
CCGRID '09 Proceedings of the 2009 9th IEEE/ACM International Symposium on Cluster Computing and the Grid
SpringSim '09 Proceedings of the 2009 Spring Simulation Multiconference
PARA'06 Proceedings of the 8th international conference on Applied parallel computing: state of the art in scientific computing
A service-oriented priority-based resource scheduling scheme for virtualized utility computing
HiPC'08 Proceedings of the 15th international conference on High performance computing
A case for scaling applications to many-core with OS clustering
Proceedings of the sixth conference on Computer systems
Rhythm: harnessing data parallel hardware for server workloads
Proceedings of the 19th international conference on Architectural support for programming languages and operating systems
Proceedings of the 2013 ACM workshop on Mobile development lifecycle
Hi-index | 0.02 |
Most reports of Internet collaboration refer to small scale operations among a few authors or designers. However, several projects have shown that the Internet can also be the locus for large scale collaboration. In these projects, contributors from around the world combine their individual forces and develop a product that rivals those of multibillion dollar corporations. The Apache HTTP Server Project is a case in point. This collaborative software development effort has created a robust, feature-rich HTTP server software package that currently dominates the public Internet market (46 percent compared with 16 percent for Microsoft and 12 percent for Netscape, according to a June 1997 survey published by Netcraft). The software and its source code are free, but Apache's popularity is more often attributed to performance than price. The project is managed by the Apache Group, a geographically distributed group of volunteers who use the Internet and Web to communicate, develop, and distribute the server and its related documentation. In addition, hundreds of users have contributed ideas, code, and documentation to the project