O'Reilly Media (formerly O'Reilly & Associates) is an American media company established by Tim O'Reilly that publishes books and web sites and produces conferences on computer technology topics. They have achieved distinctive branding by featuring a woodcut of an animal on many of their book covers.
Company
The company began in
1978 as a private consulting firm doing
technical writing, based in the
Cambridge, Massachusetts area. In
1984, it began to retain publishing rights on manuals created for
Unix vendors. A few 70-page "Nutshell Handbooks" were well-received, but the focus remained on the consulting business until in
1988, when the company was practically mobbed at a conference for its preliminary
Xlib manuals, an event which indicated there was an under-served audience for their kind of books.
O'Reilly Media published the first book about the web, with Tim devoting a whole chapter to it in 1992 when there were only 200 web sites in Ed Krol's groundbreaking Whole Internet User's Guide and Catalog (1992). O'Reilly Media also created the first web portal (and the first internet site to do advertising), the Global Network Navigator, or GNN, in 1993. GNN was sold to AOL in 1995 in one of the first big transactions of the dot com boom.
In 1997, Programming Perl was one of the top 100 books in any category at Borders during all of 1996 despite a lack of mainstream computer industry recognition. O'Reilly launched a Perl Conference to raise the profile of Perl. Many of the company's other software bestsellers were also on topics that were off the radar of the commercial software industry. So in 1998, O'Reilly invited many of the leaders of these software projects to a meeting. Originally called the freeware summit, the meeting became known as the Open Source Summit because it was at this gathering that the group formally got behind a new term to tell their combined story. The O'Reilly Open Source Convention (which includes the Perl conference) is now one of O'Reilly's flagship events. Other key events include the Emerging Technology Conference and FOO Camp.
The company describes itself as "thought by many to be the best computer book publisher in the world," and on many topics, computer programmers consider an O'Reilly title to be the definitive book on the topic. While many think of O'Reilly in terms of their popular guides that feature an animal woodcut design on the cover, this is only one of several lines that they publish.
Besides publishing, the company hosts many annual conferences, and provides online services for the open source community. Among such conferences are O'Reilly Emerging Technology Conference in California and O'Reilly Open Source Convention in Portland, Oregon.
O'Reilly has also adopted Creative Commons's Founders Copyright, which limits the maximum term of copyright protection to 28 years; it is much shorter than the current default duration of the copyright monopoly in copyright law.
Books
Animal books
For many years the most typical O'Reilly books, the "animal books" are meant as a basic but thorough guide to working with a given technology.
There are also subdivisions within the line of "animal" books; for example, O'Reilly recently released a series of Cookbooks that provide prescriptive "recipes" for accomplishing specific tasks with a heavy emphasis on automation and scripting. Examples include the Perl Cookbook (ISBN 1-56592-243-3) and the Exchange Server Cookbook (ISBN 0-596-00717-5).
Head First
The "Head First" series stresses a reader-involving combination of
puzzles,
jokes, attractive layout and direct-address to immerse the reader in a given topic.
Hacks
The "Hacks" series says it "reclaims the term 'hacking' for the good guys--innovators who explore and experiment, unearth shortcuts, create useful tools, and come up with fun things to try on their own."
Internet
In a Nutshell
The "In a Nutshell" series offers compact reference coverage of a technology. Often, a Nutshell book will contain all the commands available for a given technology, or a complete listing of an
API of some language or framework, and compress the description of the topics to a more high-level overview.
Developer's Notebook
The "Developer's Notebook" series aims to mimic the lab notebooks of high school and college science classes, complete with scribbled marginal notes of important thoughts, points, and "gotchas". Describing itself as "all lab, no lecture", books in this series usually show specific tasks in detail, illuminating how they work, but not attempting to provide a complete overview of design, theory, and implementation of a given technology.
Missing Manual
The "Missing Manual" series, produced with
David Pogue's
Pogue Press, claims to be "the book that should have been in the box", providing a broad overview of the functionality of consumer technology.
Cookbook
The "Cookbook" series aims to produce book that contain a general set of recipes for a particular technology. Each recipe contains a specific problem, a specific solution, and a discussion about how to apply the solution in a general sense.
Other books
O'Reilly sometimes produces books that are not in any particular series, especially when the title is of a
manifesto nature.
The company also launched a travel book series, "Traveler's Tales," and spun it out into a separate company. They also published books on health care under the "Patient-Centered Guides" brand, but this series is currently inactive.
Magazines
Since
2005, O'Reilly has published a quarterly magazine known as
Make: technology on your time. The magazine contains articles on
hardware hacking, as well as several technology-related
do-it-yourself instructions for
hobbyists.
Former ventures
Over the years O'Reilly tried many other types of products. In 1993, they launched one of the first web-based resources,
Global Network Navigator, which was later sold to
AOL.
Around that time, they started two short-lived book lines: one of travel books (including
Travelers' Tales Mexico) and one of general business books (including
Love Your Job! and
Building a Successful Software Business).
They produceded a line of audio tapes version of the interview show
Geek of the Week by
Internet Talk Radio. They sold Windows based software for six years, including the first commercially available web server, Web Site.
Online resources
O'Reilly's "Safari Bookshelf" makes the complete text of over 3,000 technical books available for online preview or subscription reading. It includes books from
Adobe Press,
Alpha Books,
Cisco Press,
Financial Times Prentice Hall,
Microsoft Press,
New Riders Publishing, O'Reilly,
Peachpit Press,
Prentice Hall,
Prentice Hall PTR,
Que and
Sams Publishing. The "
SafariU" service lets educators compile custom textbooks from individual chapters of books in the Safari Bookshelf, and from their own uploaded materials. There is also a "Safari Affiliates" program that lets other web pages link into Safari Bookshelf books, embed Safari search results in web pages or blogs, and gives web services access to the books.
The O'Reilly Network is a collection of sites with articles, blogs, and other items of interest to developer and expert user communities. The sites are:
The company also produces dev2dev (a WebLogic-oriented site) in association with BEA, java.net (an open-source community for Java programmers) in association with Sun Microsystems and CollabNet, and O'Reilly Connection with participation from Greenplum.
See also
External links
Online accessible books
Media companies of the United States
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