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Welcome to the Digital Tipping Point’s new beta site. We are in the process of moving several years’ worth of data from our old site to this new location, but we wanted to give you a peak at our new digs right now! Keep your eyes on this site, because we are really excited about the new features we will be able to deliver here!

The Digital Tipping Point is a documentary film that will explore how the culture of sharing is spilling from the world of Free Open Source Software into the broader global culture. Our film is being put together the same way the Free Open Source Software is built, right now, right here, in real time in front of your eyes. The segments rolling in the box to your left are raw video segments that are streaming from the Internet Archive’s Digital Tipping Point Video Collection. You can be a part of our community! We need rough video editors, transcribers, animators, graphic artists, and compositors. If you would like to find out how you can help create this film, please email .


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Reflected in a Madrid Bus (slideshow)
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    160,000 new Android Linux phones each day
    Jun 26, 2010 at 04:26 PM

    It has been all over the news lately that 160,000 new Android Linux phones are being activated every day. If that pace continues, it means that about 58.4 Android phones will be sold in one year, which would make Linux phones the hottest selling handheld computers on the market! Click on the Read More button to find out what this means for consumers of desktop computers.

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    Linux-powered phones out-selling iPhones
    May 10, 2010 at 12:59 PM

    Linux-powered Android phones have outsold the iPhone during the first quarter of 2010 to become the second most widely-selling phones behind RIM phones. This is incredibly interesting, since smartphones are basically computers with radios attached. RIM phones constituted 36% of sales; Linux-powered Android phones reached 28% of the market; and iPhones came in third at 21% of sales. What's more important, Android phone sales grew 40%, while iPhone sales remained flat. Microsoft remains nowhere to be seen, and actually lost market share. Click on the Read More button to read the rest of the story.

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    San Francisco's quiet revolution
    Apr 08, 2010 at 09:20 AM

    When Munich decided to go to Free Open Source Software, it made a huge news splash. Recently, San Francisco, located just north of Silicon Valley, has decided to place Free Open Source Software on the same footing as commercial proprietary software. In announcing the decision, San Francisco Mayor Newsom said that he was making the announcement not only to save money for San Francisco, but also to because "Open source software is created by the people for the people and as such is ideal for government."

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    Mambo is Free Software released under the GNU/GPL License.