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O'Reilly Media spreads the knowledge of innovators through its
books, online services, magazine, and conferences. Since 1978, O'Reilly
has been a chronicler and catalyst of leading-edge development, homing
in on the technology trends that really matter and spurring their
adoption by amplifying "faint signals" from the alpha geeks who are
creating the future. An active participant in the technology community,
the company has a long history of advocacy, meme-making, and
evangelism.
Publisher of the iconic "animal books" for software developers,
creator of the first commercial website (GNN), organizer of the summit
meeting that gave the open source software movement its name, and prime
instigator of the DIY revolution through its Make magazine,
O'Reilly continues to concoct new ways to connect people with the
information they need. O'Reilly conferences and summits bring alpha
geeks and forward-thinking business leaders together to shape the
revolutionary ideas that spark new industries. Long the information
source of choice for technologists, the company now also delivers the
knowledge of expert early adopters to everyday computer users. Whether
it's delivered in print, online, or in person, everything O'Reilly
produces reflects the company's unshakeable belief in the power of
information to spur innovation.
For ways to contact O'Reilly and more information about the services we
provide, see our
Contacts page.
History & Company Overview
By Tim O'Reilly
O'Reilly Media was originally a technical writing consulting company named
O'Reilly & Associates. In 1984, we started retaining rights to manuals we created for
Unix vendors. Our books were grounded in our hands-on experience with the technology,
and we wrote them in a straightforward, conversational voice. We weren't afraid to
say in print that a vendor's technology didn't work as advertised. While our
publishing program has expanded to include everything from digital photography to
desktop applications to software engineering, those early principles still guide our
editorial approach.
We were early users of the internet. After the publication of our first million-
copy bestseller, Ed Krol's The Whole Internet User's Guide & Catalog, we
developed our first online product, a version of the internet catalog from the book.
That product, the Global Network NavigatorTM (GNN), was the first web portal. In
addition to being the first exclusively web-based publication, GNN pioneered the
advertiser-supported model of online publishing. We sold GNN to America Online in
June 1995.
Today, our online offerings present technology information in a range of formats.
Our portal for developers, the O'Reilly Network (www.oreillynet.com), focuses on open and emerging
technologies, covering important new technologies in the trademark O'Reilly style--
independent and in-depth--and steeped in the experience of those on the "bleeding
edge." Our O'Reilly Radar blog (radar.oreilly.com), written by a team of
O'Reilly technologists, presents intelligence about emerging technology and
highlights the original research conducted by the O'Reilly Research group. CodeZoo
(www.codezoo.com) offers a repository of open
source components, plus a rich mix of related information from O'Reilly and the
developer community.
When we set out to get our books online, we exploded the notion of "book," and
built a web service that truly harnessed the power of the web to bring users exactly
the information they need. Our Safari Books Online is a web-based subscription
service that offers a searchable reference library of computer books from O'Reilly,
Addison Wesley, Microsoft Press, and other leading publishers, at safari.oreilly.com. Safari Books Online is a
joint venture with the Pearson Technology Group.
From the beginning, our editors, authors, and developers have been active members
of the technical communities whose work we chronicle in our books and websites. Over
the years, we've extended our support of those communities beyond our publishing
program through activism and conferences.
In April 1998, we hosted a meeting that became known as the Open Source Summit.
This event brought together leaders of many of the significant open source
communities, including Linux, Apache, Perl, Python, and Mozilla, who voted to adopt
the newly coined term "Open Source" to address ambiguities in the term "Free
Software." The Summit garnered national publicity for open source, bringing it to the
attention of the business world. In the years since, we've held summits on peer-to-
peer technology, web services, geek volunteerism, and Ajax. The summits we've hosted
have forged new ties between industry leaders, raised awareness of technology issues
we think are interesting and important, and crystallized the critical issues around
emerging technologies.
As part of our campaign to support the Perl community, we produced the first-
ever conference on "the duct tape of the internet" in 1997. A few years later, we
added conferences on several other important open source technologies, and the Open
Source Convention (OSCON) was born. We realized that the people who read our books
also want to connect with and learn from each other, so we moved full bore into the
conference business. As with our publishing program, our conferences focus on
practical, in-depth information taught by those who've mastered (and in many cases,
created) important technologies. In addition to OSCON, our current conference
offerings include the O'Reilly Emerging Technology Conference (ETech), Web 2.0
(produced in partnership with MediaLive and John Battelle), Where 2.0, EuroOSCON, and
the MySQL Users Conference (with MySQL AB).
When we develop information products and services, we look for the right vehicle
for the particular information we're covering. In February 2005, we launched Make,
the first magazine devoted to do-it-yourself technology projects. An instant hit, it
tapped into users' desire to tweak, hack, and customize their technology.
At the core, we create products that we want to use. Whatever form it takes--
book, conference, online product--we want anything produced with the O'Reilly name to
be useful, interesting, and truthful. And we believe that there are plenty of
intelligent, discriminating people in the world who value those qualities as deeply
as we do.
[Tim's Bio]
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