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OSD Database Downloadable As XML

After taking some heat a few months ago for not having many products listed, the Open Source Directory has been plugging away. Steve Mallett writes: "We made the product database of Open-Source Directory downloadable in XML today. Announcement here at newsforge. We're hoping that people begin to use the data like google uses dmoz. More people see the data, which increases awareness of open-source which increases the database which gets more people to display the data etc, etc ... You get the point."

Providing a list of applications stable enough to recommend to non-gurus is a worthy endeavor, so it's great to see this project slowly becoming more useful. There are gaps to plug going forward, though. The default text strings can be ambiguous, and the information provided on individual projects doesn't always give much to go on. For instance, look at the Mosix page, where you'll find that "This product has no Latest version yet," "This product doesn't fix anything," and "This product is not like any other," but no email contact information for Mosix authors. Similarly ambiguous pages are provided for Gnucleus and OpenOffice.

I exchanged some email with Steve on the state of the entries in the database, and asked about how the missing information could be filled in. He told me that while project maintairers (and site administrators) are the only ones who can update entries, users can contact the administrators of individual projects directly through the OSD site to suggest changes or clarification.

"We're trying to make things easier for the maintainers. ... I think there is a serious lack of product maintainers to help authors," he said. To that end, Mallet may soon provide example projects for software authors to emulate, and is in the early stages of a unified project-listing tool which would update listings on various web sites. Given the number of sites that offer downloads or simply track various software projects, that could be a boon to developers.

Hopefully, this will turn into the sort of tool that you can show a boss or teacher to answer the bugaboo of Free / Open Source being unready for prime time (or just overwhelming and undifferentiated).

3 of 46 comments (clear)

  1. embedding ODP (& OSD) content in your web site... by VValdo · · Score: 4
    What is the consensus on the best way to include Open Directory Project (ODP/dmoz) content in your web site, say for a mini-portal (or in the case of OSD, for a mini software directory)? I dont' want to simply download/display dmoz's RDF/XML file on a weekly basis because (1) I'm only interested in a tiny portion of the ODP which relates to my web site and (2) I'd like to encourage people to be uploading new content back to dmoz, so I'm looking for a way to pull "live" content from dmoz and let my visitors send links back to dmoz.

    Is there a PHP class or something that everyone's using for this? I saw a couple offerings at freshmeat that relates to ODP and some some tools and code are here, but I'm curious what most people are using.

    W
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    This is my SIG. There are many like it, but this one is mine.
  2. Re:How do they validate the entries? by blab · · Score: 4
    It is really a product's admin to be truthful. However; our Social Contract outlines that while it is their responsibility (we can't test them all) the interest of the directory are primary. If it sucks & there is no way its stable, write to the admin & tell him so.

    Ultimately the info is open for catching bugs like this one. If it is a bug it will get weeded out.

    -Steve Mallett of OSD

  3. unified project-listing tool by blab · · Score: 5
    The "unified project-listing tool" refered too above is at: http://sourceforge.net/projects/trovesendtwo/ The idea is: you put the information for your product in a client & it updates SF/FM and or OSD at the same time without having to login & change all those listings. This is possible because, all these sites anyway, are based on loosely the same interface, data & category map. And yes, we could use some assistance with it!

    -Steve Mallett of OSD