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Korea Replacing 120,000 Windows with Linux

The Korean government has just signed a contract with Hancom to purchase 120,000 copies of HancomLinux Deluxe 2.0 (which is basically Red Hat OS + tweaks + korean language support + KDE localized) and HancomOffice 2.0. Thats quite a big achievement. Here is Hancom's Press Release about it.

459 comments

  1. Major achievement by Grishnakh · · Score: 3, Insightful

    This is a major achievement for the free software world. Let's hope that other enlightened governments will do the same, instead of helping support the American monopoly.

    1. Re:Major achievement by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      What's your problem?

      Are you a soft-skin like Chelsea Clinton and the justified international criticism is getting to you?

    2. Re:Major achievement by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Troll

      What's that supposed to mean? If you're insinuating that only communist governments support "free" software, then I suggest you open up a fucking map.

      Remember, there are 2 Korea's: North and South; and for ignorant ass people like you, the former being Communist and the latter being a Republic. Big fucking difference.

      Though I don't blame the editor as much for not being more specific about which government the article is referring to, I DO blame your ignorant ass for not reading the article where it actually states which one: South.

      Nice try at being witty, dumbass.

    3. Re:Major achievement by mooshoo · · Score: 1

      sure it's great news that this is happening, but I fear many people have forgotten something, It's because of companies such as Microsoft that the US economy is doing as well as it is. So many people hate MS and want them to die out of business but this destruction would only harm our economy.

      --
      .: Yes, I'm a geek. What's your point? :.
    4. Re:Major achievement by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      China and North Korea are republics too...

    5. Re:Major achievement by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yep. You should only be applauding if you live in Korea. Otherwise this means less jobs for you =) (Even if you dont live in the US. This is just a shifting of jobs from other parts of the world to Korea)

    6. Re:Major achievement by Waffle+Iron · · Score: 4, Funny

      OTOH, maybe Microsoft is just parasitically sucking capital out of the US economy and adding it to the $36Billion hoard of cash buried in its back yard. It's not like they have that many employees on the payroll to cut checks for; nor are they sending out dividends.

    7. Re:Major achievement by efgbr · · Score: 1

      Youre a fool to think like that. Microsofts monopoly only hurts the American economy, as it stops competition, which is the base in which the US Economy was founded.

      In the short term Microsoft brings money to the US, but it stops a lot of bussiness in the process, which would earn a lot more.

    8. Re:Major achievement by VAXman · · Score: 3, Interesting

      That's not strictly true. Sales of Windows is good for Microsoft and its suppliers (which, true, is a huge part of the economy). If a suitable replacement for Windows was available at a lower price, it would help Microsoft's customers (which are also a big part of the economy). It would lower the cost of the operating system software, which would increase the amount of money consumers will spend on other things (increasing production throughout the economy), and which would allow businesses to increase profits (or lower prices), since their costs would have lowered (either case would increase production).

    9. Re:Major achievement by Phil-14 · · Score: 4, Insightful
      sure it's great news that this is happening, but I fear many people have forgotten something, It's because of companies such as Microsoft that the US economy is doing as well as it is. So many people hate MS and want them to die out of business but this destruction would only harm our economy.



      And it's because of Hancom that South Korea
      actually has a word processor that handles
      their native language. About two years ago
      Microsoft tried to buy Hancom with the intent
      of taking their native-Korean-language office
      suite off the market and replace
      it with MS Office (which isn't nearly as
      functional in Korean). The sale was blocked
      by the Korean government. So you think M$
      should make decisions that make other people
      suffer for its own business gains, but you
      act suprised when people hate it? Microsoft
      has earned the hate of many people,
      both in Korea and the US.



      Do you think it's
      good for US business to have to keep spending
      billions of dollars fighting off the Outlook
      Virus Of The Week? I can't afford to take the
      time off of real work to keep trying to keep
      the work M$ computers virus free. Is it supposed
      to be a comfort to me and the millions of small
      business owners like me who have substantial
      productivity drains from Microsoft software that
      Bill Gates is making lots of money? To be blunt,
      if you think M$ is more important to the economy than ten thousand randomly chosen small businesses, you're making the same sorts of mistakes the Soviets did. Personally, I don't want the US to go the way of the Soviet Union.



      --
      (currently testing something about signatures here)
    10. Re:Major achievement by juuri · · Score: 5, Insightful

      For those that don't understand part of the above.

      Microsoft doesn't pay dividends on stock you own. Hence many critics complaints about their shifting of money to avoid paying any taxes at all. When you are buying msoft stock you are hoping it will be worth more in the future to sell. There is no revenue side for you as the investor other than this. Because of this msoft MUST continue to increase the dominance it has to push the stock price up and keep investors happy. The gist? msoft can't be a well behaved company and keep the stockholders happy.

      Gates gets richer and richer by year at an incredibly rapid pace because of the particular "loophole" in taxes on stock.

      --
      --- I do not moderate.
    11. Re:Major achievement by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If I had karma I'd mod you up, even though you posted as an AC, and it could have been worded alot better, you got the general point right.

    12. Re:Major achievement by Znork · · Score: 2

      Oh, yes, so lets have the government confiscate all buisnesses and replace them with monopolies. This pesky competition thing sure cant be the best thing for consumers and the economy.

      Face it, Microsoft is harming the US and world economy constantly, and the harm the company causes will only grow worse.

    13. Re:Major achievement by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting
      Your crazy.


      Gates took 10s of BILLIONS of dollars OUT of our economy by his extortionary pricing, something he could only have done by breaking the law in creating a monopoly.


      Think of the lost rollover that occurs when money is normally allowed to recycle through the economy... by most counts as many as 7 times.


      Think of all the smaller businesses he destroyed by stealing their code and rolling it into his OS.


      Think of all the REAL INNOVATION he (and other companies) stifled by agreggious patents and copyrights. The mind boggles at where operating systems and software could be right now if progress hadn't been held back.


      Gates took and took and took from the community, primarily through the BSD license and a lot by outright theft, and gave back only agreggious EULAs, higher "license" fees, and an army of lizard lawyers to intimidate the 'lower class' into submission.


      Think of the lost revenues, increased expenses and wages and lost productivity that occurs every time an OS made by Gates crashed. I would wage that sum to be well over a TRILLION dollars. A value reflected back into the price of computer software and equipment.


      THink of the BILLIONS that have been stolen because GATES was too (stupid, greedy, unconcerned) to publish an REAL OS, web server and browser than the imitation swiss cheese he calls software.


      Go troll someplace else. Your memory is too short to be useful at /.

    14. Re:Major achievement by SocietyoftheFist · · Score: 0

      Yes, they are communistic republics. The USA is a republic, there are no true democracies at the nation level on the planet.

    15. Re:Major achievement by ikickass · · Score: 1, Insightful

      hmmm..... I wonder who's doing accounting audit for MSFT. Recently they were caught red handed trying to rig an on-line poll in UK. I wonder if they try to rig something else.... World's largest s/w vendor and no dividend? I guess they don't want any regulation or govmint oversight. Am I the only one smelling rat here????

    16. Re:Major achievement by mojo-raisin · · Score: 1

      Microsoft doesn't pay dividends on stock you own. Hence many critics complaints about their shifting of money to avoid paying any taxes at all.

      huh? How would paying dividends cause MS to pay more in taxes?

    17. Re:Major achievement by Grishnakh · · Score: 2

      I shouldn't feed a troll, but you're a total moron. I knew the article was about South Korea, since Hancom is a South Korean company (which I knew about long before I saw this article). Reread my post and you'll notice I never made any references to communist countries at all. Duh...

      The other enlightened governments I was referring to are France, Germany, and Argentina, which have been considering adopting Linux for their government computing systems as well.

      Idiot. Guess that's why you post anonymously.

    18. Re:Major achievement by WolfWithoutAClause · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Actually I believe the issue is the executors that run MSFT (e.g. Bill) have large numbers of shares. Therefore if they start receiving dividends, they would be liable for tax. Presumably they are only liable for tax right now when they sell shares. (Roughly speaking- IANAA); and the money that the company is making gets siphoned off as much as possible to the board; and little of it is 'wasted' ending up as taxes.

      --

      -WolfWithoutAClause

      "Gravity is only a theory, not a fact!"
    19. Re:Major achievement by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Flash forward to 2043 when the last
      US expeditionary force suffers a
      major cyber defeat(resulting in a
      real defeat) when it's
      MSmainbattle coordinator is totally
      outclassed by the COAS's(confederation of
      asian states) state of the art
      Unix based BattleAI. Historians later
      point to US's misguided clinging to a single
      company's business concerns(MS) as
      causing the sun to set on American
      technical and military leadership.

      guns against cavalry
      phalanx against throng
      iron against bronze
      bronze against stone
      The drama continues.

    20. Re:Major achievement by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Unlike the British Govt.
      MS will not give any lage govt orgs meaningful 'discounts' simply because they are goverment. it is mere posturing - and MS knows they are weak and spineless. There is no 'competition', nor can they control future, price increases, or arbitary changes/forced upgrades.
      OTOH, Korea IS being credible and set a target. The ROW should start with samba and apache - to show that they mean it.

    21. Re:Major achievement by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ...and the money that the company is making gets siphoned off as much as possible to the board...

      How do they siphon it off?

    22. Re:Major achievement by WolfWithoutAClause · · Score: 2

      Dunno; I'm guessing, but it sounds plausible. They probably give themselves share bonuses or whatever is most tax efficient at the time.

      --

      -WolfWithoutAClause

      "Gravity is only a theory, not a fact!"
    23. Re:Major achievement by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So many people hate MS and want them to die out of business but this destruction would only harm our economy.

      MS Propaganda wants you to believe that. They've hinted what you just said, to the press, with the hope that someone in the press will convince gullable people who can't think for themselves that it's true.

      But truthfully, if MS loses money, it will go to a large number of smaller companies, whose combined revenues and stock values, far exceed that of MS.

      And it is quite possible that the new companies would be USA-based companies.

      The truth is that MS means almost nothing to the US economy in terms of long-term future. If MS went backrupt, there'd be an emotional effect on the industry but MS' revenues from imports from other countries is an absurdly tiny, tiny, tiny fraction of the income from imports from other countries, of all US companies excluding MS.

      (Don't reply to this if you are one of those gullable masses).

    24. Re:Major achievement by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Youre a fool to think like that. Microsofts monopoly only hurts the American economy, as it stops competition, which is the base in which the US Economy was founded.

      On the other hand, Microsoft sells a very real product while other companys like Red Hat give their products away for free. The recent dotcom disasters showed that it is absolute lunacy to market a product, give it away for free, and try to recoup the costs on services. It just never adds up because you have no stable source of revenue.

    25. Re:Major achievement by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're right. You shouldn't feed a troll. But since you DID, allow me to clarify for you that if YOU had read carefully, this reply was not intended for you, it was intended to the other guy, Reikk.

      Duh.

      Who's the moron?

    26. Re:Major achievement by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Since I'm not a member of gullable masses and I aggree with You I can reply.

      REPLY:-))

    27. Re:Major achievement by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      Whoops, sorry about that. I see reikk's comment now. Why does /. make it look like your reply was to my comment when I don't have -1 and 0 rated messages visible?

    28. Re:Major achievement by innocent_white_lamb · · Score: 1

      Capital gains (income from sale of shares) is also taxed at a much lower rate than dividend income.

      --
      If you're a zombie and you know it, bite your friend!
    29. Re:Major achievement by spectecjr · · Score: 1

      Actually I believe the issue is the executors that run MSFT (e.g. Bill) have large numbers of shares. Therefore if they start receiving dividends, they would be liable for tax. Presumably they are only liable for tax right now when they sell shares. (Roughly speaking- IANAA); and the money that the company is making gets siphoned off as much as possible to the board; and little of it is 'wasted' ending up as taxes.

      Hmmm... sounds odd to me:

      1. You get taxed when you sell the shares based on the delta in their price (your profit or loss).

      2. You get taxed on the dividends.

      These are two mutually exclusive concepts. No dividends doesn't automatically mean that they pay less taxes on their profits -- it means that they get LESS profits, and as a result, pay LESS taxes because they made LESS money.

      Si

      --
      Coming soon - pyrogyra
    30. Re:Major achievement by Overgrown1 · · Score: 1

      imprimis, I think you are on the money when you comapre the monolithic economic approach to pouring money at the M$ security issues. I am constantly amazed at the insidious and invidious drain on the US treasury for M$ support, products, etc. When I consider the costs of running the military in a non-war economy, and the use of computers to every aspect of government, I must ask myself this: Why do the powers that be not finance the development of a GPL OS, POSIX based, GUI'd, etc? It would be much cheaper, much more reliable, and infinitely more secure. In terms of the Big Brother Is Watching You Crowd, maybe they should leave M$ to the open market after all. That way they can sneak into your systems at night and search your hardware for criminal activity and traitorous evidence.

    31. Re:Major achievement by blonde+rser · · Score: 2, Informative

      The loophole deal is that the investor ends up with more money in the end because, although he still pays tax on the profit eventually, he gets the profit on the tax money in the mean time.

      Business Perspective Investing explains it like this: an entrepreneur comes to you saying if you pay to start up his company at the end of the year you will still own the company and you will get the initial investment returned to you. At the end of the year you're ecstatic because this actually happens so you go back to the entrepreneur and tell him to start up another company with the profit money; you will then have two companies returning your initial investment every year- and of course this pattern continues. The only problem is at the end of every year when you get your profit cheque you have to pay taxes and replace that amount out of your own pocket to buy the next company.

      But the entrepreneur being crafty has a plan. He suggests that, instead of paying you profit, the company keeps the money and uses it expand itself. This is just like you owning two companies except both companies end up having the same name. So even though this is the exact same situation you are now not paying taxes on your expanding investment. Sure if you decide to go liquid you'll have to pay taxes then but Epsilon taxes paid will be much less. This is the beauty of compound interest (in this case it is working backward but if you plug through the math you can see the concept of compound interest is still at play here.)

    32. Re:Major achievement by ScumBiker · · Score: 1

      Ya know, I've been thinking somewhat along those lines. Scares the hell out of me. Unfortunately, I uspect the spooks and generals will nuke the shit out of COAS before they would allow them to have a real superiority edge on us. All the while, of course, still clinging to the idiotic idea that a proprietary, closed, single source shitbag of an poor excuse for what some people claim to be an operating system.

      The worst part? As I write this, I'm install Win98SE into VMWare, just so I can get the binaries for RTCW, Tribes 2, and QuakeIII. FSCKING Winblows. . .

      --
      --- Think of it as evolution in action ---
    33. Re:Major achievement by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I agree.

      Americans, and the whole world, really, should be concerned about how political and economic power is being concentrated in the hands of just a few hundred of the world's largest companies. This will ultimately stifle competition and create an inefficient economy.

    34. Re:Major achievement by Melantha_Bacchae · · Score: 2

      mooshoo wrote:

      > It's because of companies such as Microsoft that the US economy is
      > doing as well as it is.

      In case you have forgotten recent history, and have no idea of the current shape of the US (and world) economy: we are in a recession. In the summer of 2000, things were great. In the fall of 2000, Apple (who was doing so fantastic that Wall Street people were going to upgrade it from dramatic recovery to outstanding growth) called out a serious earnings warning. The warning was due in part to a blunder or two, and part to Microsoft dumping all their Apple stock on the market, but it was a sign of things to come. The industry laughed and proclaimed the death of Apple. The laughter didn't last long as one by one, the PC makers called out their own earnings warnings, sending the industry into a downward spiral. The dot.com mess certainly didn't help. The conflict and uncertainity of the US Presidential election later in 2000 spread the IT problems to the rest of the economy, as people lost faith in their leadership. By spring of 2001, the recession was here. The terrorist attacks in 9/11 sent things spiraling further downward worldwide.

      > So many people hate MS and want them to die out of business but this
      > destruction would only harm our economy.

      No it wouldn't. Apple, the one desktop computer maker that does not use Windows as its OS, quickly recovered, and was making profits in the millions by the next quarter after their stumble. They have not laid off thousands of workers, they have opened 27 new stores. It's the Windows based PC makers that were and are suffering the most. If Microsoft disappeared tomorrow, the PC makers would simply hunt up another OS, the software makers would port to that OS, and life would go on. The PC makers would be free to better differentiate their products. The absence of Microsoft's much-abused monopoly would bring real competition, which would bring some healthy fresh air to the industry.

      After all, the PC industry can't get too much more unhealthy than it is now -- with Microsoft.

      OS X: the Apple of Mothra's Aqua eye.

    35. Re:Major achievement by Eric+E.+Coe · · Score: 1
      I agreee. The computer software industry (except for the OSS corner) is nearly dead compared to 10, 15 years ago. The M$ monopoly (and monotony) has completely stifled the lively innovation of those times.

      This will ultimately stifle competition and create an inefficient economy.

      It already has. This is one of the reasons for the rise of OSS software. Mind that the people that complain the OSS is no good because it is cheap or free ($) confuse market value (price) with use value. OSS has high use value.

      --
      An esoteric scratched itch:
      Homeworld Map Maker Tool
    36. Re:Major achievement by serbanp · · Score: 1

      Only if it's a Long-Term-Capital-Gain; then it is taxed at a fixed 20% rate. Otherwise it's taxed as regular income.

      Serban

    37. Re:Major achievement by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'd like to correct some of wrong information someone wrote.

      he/she worte>>>>sure it's great news that this is happening, but I fear many people have forgotten something, It's because of companies such as Microsoft that the US economy is doing as well as it is. So many people hate MS and want them to die out of business but this destruction would only harm our economy.

      1.duh, Please don't make this a fight between US vs. the world. Not many people who hates MS want them to die out acutally they want MS a bit to be fair and honest on business. Everybody knows MS has cheated on market, killing several good competitors with dirty way. Also, MS should be sued because the blue screen of Windows caused mental illness of people in the world even though they have paid thousands of dollars for upgrading nothing but the blue screen.

      he/she wrote>>>>And it's because of Hancom that South Korea actually has a word processor that handles their native language. About two years ago Microsoft tried to buy Hancom with the intent of taking their native-Korean-language office suite off the market and replace it with MS Office (which isn't nearly as functional in Korean). The sale was blocked by the Korean government. So you think M$
      should make decisions that make other people suffer for its own business gains, but you act suprised when people hate it? Microsoft has earned the hate of many people, both in Korea and the US.

      2. Korean government hasn't ever intercept selling Hamcom company years ago. The government would have persuaded it, if they could. Don't think Korean government still control everything. That's an era ago! Hancom survived by Korean people who knew MS' scheme (taking over Korean market greedily) and bought Hancom stock and software. Hancom is a sort of their proud so dirty MS money failed to buy it. There is another nonsence that MS office (Korean) still can't assemble some of Korean word otherwise Hancom can, it's like you type 'condescendence' in MS windows then it shows 'conde scend ence' and can't fix it. 'Unicode' caused this and it had blown out their right and proud already before MS tried taking over Hancom. Not so many people know this in the other world, eh? If it happened in your country, how would you react?

  2. Excellent, excellent news by whereiswaldo · · Score: 1

    What a great success story. I'm good to see someone using their head and making smart decisions.
    For one, I'm touting Linux to all my friends when the subject of computers comes up, just so they know it's not just another operating system: It's Freedom from the Dark Empire.

    1. Re:Excellent, excellent news by FFalcon · · Score: 1
      I'm touting Linux to all my friends when the subject of computers comes up, just so they know it's not just another operating system: It's Freedom from the Dark Empire.

      Instinctively, I agree with you on this. I am a (very) new user of Linux, and I'm trying to explain to family and friends why it's worth the trouble. We're all capable of learning to use the new environment and tools, but I have trouble articulating the moral and almost metaphysical imperative that people on slashdot have to not use Microsoft.

      Can someone post (or point to) an essay on this subject? i.e. Why it's worth the trouble to not use microsoft. The commentary should be accessible to a competent computer user, not neccessarily programmer.

    2. Re:Excellent, excellent news by nomadic · · Score: 2

      If they're not too far to the right, you can paint linux as being a move away from capitalism, leading us to a less money-driven culture.

    3. Re:Excellent, excellent news by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting
      Please post an essay on why [i]YOU[/i] are going to the trouble of using Linux? If it's not saving you time, effort, or somehow improving your life (vs. a Microsoft product), why are you bothering? Just to save money? Or, like most of the ubergeeks here, are you doing it just to show your geek prowess?

      Competition is a good thing, but many of the zealots here will go waaayyy out of their way to avoid Microsoft products, even if it costs them (and their employer) a significant amount due to wasted time, effort, poor maintainability, and incompatibility with what the rest of the world is doing. As an employer, I'd fire most of the jackasses I hear spouting this quasi-religious Linux crap. Want to use Linux? Do it on your own time. Don't spend the next 3 weeks, on my nickel, trying to figure out how you can avoid using Word and Excel, replacing them with 3rd rate buggy incompatible not-yet-ready-for-primetime facsimiles.

    4. Re:Excellent, excellent news by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      jeez...i cant read a single fickn story on slashdot without the commies pushing their agenda...
      You tried...you lost...get over it

    5. Re:Excellent, excellent news by nomadic · · Score: 1

      jeez...i cant read a single fickn story on slashdot without the commies pushing their agenda... You tried...you lost...get over it

      Yes, any suggestion that maybe money shouldn't dominate our culture and lives MUST be a call for Communist rebellion. Give me a break.

    6. Re:Excellent, excellent news by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No kidding. I agree with that 100%. I had several programmers spouting off their linux 'revolution' crap in my office one day - telling me what a great and wonderful thing it was. They didn't realize I grew up on Unix, use it where it's appropriate, and probably knew more about kernels that these 20 something pricks know combined. They once wasted my money writing a (big) c++ routine to write an excel biff binary file for our web server - a cgi program that created excel binaries for reports. I decided to fire them all - replaced their stuff with a win2k box, some asp, com, and now I need 1/2 the staff, everything works and we move on to more productive stuff that actually can make our company money instead of just sucking expense. These folks just don't understand. Here's a call to fire all linux dipshits - they are wasting our money.

    7. Re:Excellent, excellent news by Jerry · · Score: 1


      Do more than 'tout Linux'. Make copies of your favorite distro and give them one!

      --

      Running with Linux for over 20 years!

    8. Re:Excellent, excellent news by kz45 · · Score: 0

      If they're not too far to the right, you can paint linux as being a move away from capitalism, leading us to a less money-driven culture

      You are correct. You can direct them here

    9. Re:Excellent, excellent news by whereiswaldo · · Score: 1

      Good point. Most of my friends don't live in town, though... but I could always mail CDs I guess. :)

    10. Re:Excellent, excellent news by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And of course the software on windows (or windows itself) is ALWAYS stable and doesn't seem 3rd rate at all. Not to mention all that compatibility between the propriatary vendors (MS Word 97 to Word 2K for example, and god forbid you try to use a word processor from a different vendor).

      I can see why Linux doesn't quite cut it in the corporate environment, but to say that it has no benefits, is a bit of a stretch.

    11. Re:Excellent, excellent news by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      May I ask ... What hard stuff do you smoke?

    12. Re:Excellent, excellent news by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Windows sucks *nix rules j00

    13. Re:Excellent, excellent news by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "3rd rate buggy incompatible not-yet-ready-for-primetime facsimiles" perfectly describes MS Word 2002 and Excel 2002.

    14. Re:Excellent, excellent news by kevinank · · Score: 2
      As one of those zealot jackasses whom you would fire, I think I can safely guess that you won't need to bother. Most of us quasi-religious types seek employment more in tune with our ethics. ;)

      Seriously though, it reads to me like you have a bit of a chip on your shoulder. Those of us willing to work with a tenth rate OS have at least gotten it to the point of being third rate. Eventually it will get to first rate, just relax, and let us continue developing it.

      --
      LibBT: BitTorrent for C - small - fast - clean (Now Versio
    15. Re:Excellent, excellent news by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Most of us quasi-religious types seek employment more in tune with our ethics

      Please explain exactly what is unethical about using Microsoft products? Your implication is that your ethics prevent you from using Microsoft products. Do you understand what ethics are? Did you skip that class in college? Or maybe you're just spewing bullshit.

      You said it. Back it up.

    16. Re:Excellent, excellent news by kevinank · · Score: 1
      If you really want to know, ask nicely. On the other hand, if you must resort to ad-hominem then you already know you've lost, and I have nothing more to say to you.

      I'm not the anomymous coward here.

      --
      LibBT: BitTorrent for C - small - fast - clean (Now Versio
    17. Re:Excellent, excellent news by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      It's "ad hominem," and no, that wasn't an attack on your personality or character, and thus is not ad hominem. *whispers: he doesn't understand what ethics means and he doesn't understand what ad hominem means*

      So, instead of dancing around the issue, please answer the question: what is unethical about using Microsoft products?

      Without "attacking" your character, please formulate your response within the commonly accepted definition of "ethics."

      I expect you cannot adequately answer this, since, in the end, there is nothing unethical about using Microsoft products -- my original assertion. AC has nothing to do with it. Funny thing is -- you're on the record.

    18. Re:Excellent, excellent news by innocent_white_lamb · · Score: 1

      Microsoft is a criminal company, and has been proven to be such in a court of law.

      Microsoft has some extremely unsavory (to say the least) business practices and some of their actions can be legitimately compared to a type of computer Mafia.

      By using their products you are tacitly condoning their actions and doing business with a criminal.

      There, how's that for an "ethical" anti-Microsoft stand?

      --
      If you're a zombie and you know it, bite your friend!
    19. Re:Excellent, excellent news by Asic+Eng · · Score: 1
      Well, just because you do something for ethical reasons, doesn't mean that someone not doing that is unethical.

      For example I used to help paint public schools in NYC. I don't think that would give me a claim to call you unethical?

    20. Re:Excellent, excellent news by Asic+Eng · · Score: 1
      Well, the claim that it's *not* saving me time, effort or improves my life is a tall order. (If I interpret what you write, as making that claim.)

      Obviously it might depend on what your application is, but being able to script things, and to use perl/gawk etc helps me a lot at my work.

      On the other hand, the periodic virus outbreaks with Windows are rather a drain on productivity. I'm also fed up with Office continually changing it's file formats - documents I created some years ago in Excel, are almost completely unreadable with today's Excel. The embedded graphics have just disappeared onto seperate pages - great job really.

      As for features - the only time I run into limitations with StarOffice (like integrating large documents), MS Office doesn't do any better either. If it comes to that I'd be better of using FrameMaker. YMMV of course.

    21. Re:Excellent, excellent news by cduffy · · Score: 1

      I don't think using Microsoft products is unethical -- but I do think that using, supporting and contributing back to open source software is both productive and ethical. Of course, doing it only to be ethical would be unfair to the shareholders -- but in many lines of business it's productive as well. Consider: My employer needs to write an automated package testing system (true example!). We could either (a) buy one, (b) write a proprietary one, or (c) modify an OSS package to do what we need.

      (a) wouldn't work out -- there was no commercial product that did exactly what we needed. Even if there were, we would have been stuck on a single vendor for support, upgrades, and improvements, and nailed to their timetable for when these things would get done.

      (b) could have happened, but we went with...

      (c) -- we modified MandrakeSoft's rpmlint tool and made an internal version with product-specific checks, database logging and lots of other goodness. The nifty thing is that although this was two years ago that all the development was done, merging in an upstream version (to take advantage of the improvements Mandrake and all the other contributors have made) is trivial. Further, if Mandrake goes out of business, no big deal -- we, and/or some other users, can maintain this software without their help.

      Now, I gave this example referring to a testing system, but in embedded space (which is where our products are targeted), the same argument tends to apply to operating systems. Embedded OSes frequently require a great deal of customization; license terms (particularly royalties) are critical; and maintaining the OS core when you could (should?) be spending engineering time on your application layer is unacceptable (which is why less folks are doing embedded OSes in-house; see Cyclades for an example of a company that switched to Linux from their own proprietary OS, and is very glad of the change).

      Okay, I've covered productive. As for ethical, in such cases where it's of no detriment to me, I take the position that giving any intellectual property for use under liberal terms (the GPL being more liberal than any proprietary license, though admittedly much less liberal than such as the BSD licenses) is an inherently Good Thing to do.

      My present employer sees things the same way -- which is part of why I'm so happy to work with them.

  3. 120,000 copies? by Knobby · · Score: 1, Troll

    Why would anyone buy 120,000 copies of Linux? Does buying 120,000 copies entitle the users of each machine to a year or two of service? If that's the case, then maybe.. If not, then why not simply buy 1 copy and install it the 120,000 machines?..

    1. Re:120,000 copies? by Peyna · · Score: 1

      Go ahead, you buy 1 copy and install on 120,000 machines. I'm sure you have the time for it. Even if they bought 1 copy and burned many cds, it would still take a long time to install it on 120,000 machines.

      --
      What?
    2. Re:120,000 copies? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      If it takes 20 minutes to install Linux, and you're bottlenecked by having a single copy to install from, then it takes 40000 hours to install it 120000 machines.

      They probably ran a profiler on the process and found that it was spending all its time talking to that one CD. So they figured, "What if we parallelize it?" And they found out that if you have 120000 copies, you can install it on 120000 machines in 20 minutes.

      20 minutes is less time than 40000 hours. Now, here in a America, time means nothing (*cough*), but in Korea perhaps it is valued. Add to that that the copies of Linux are very inexpensive, and it's a good tradeoff.

    3. Re:120,000 copies? by Libor+Vanek · · Score: 1

      I think that main issue (technically and financialy) is the user training and support.

    4. Re:120,000 copies? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Dude, ever heard of network installs? you know, stuff like NFS shares, iso9660 mounted trough loop etc.

      There really is no need for 120'000 CDs...

    5. Re:120,000 copies? by JediTrainer · · Score: 2

      You haven't heard of imaging?

      I mean, besides the many ways you can script the installation process, there's certainly ways that you can image the completed installation and just copy that image to all machines with the same hardware configuration.

      And yes, it can be done easily and relatively cheaply. I used to work for a consulting firm that used this process to upgrade about 3000 machines at one company over just a few weekends. Basically identified the different hardware configurations (I think they had about 8), and we ran around with floppies that booted and imaged the machine from a central server (which had a copy made previously from an installation done by hand).

      Each floppy was configured to grab a different image from the server (identified by machine model). Each person in our team was responsible for upgrading all machines in one wing of one floor of one of their buildings. When done, a new wing was assigned to be done.

      Each machine took about 10-15 minutes to image, but we didn't sit there and wait until they were done. We just identified machine, inserted floppy, move on to next one, then come back later to retrieve the floppy.

      All of this was done with Norton Ghost to image a bunch of Windows installations, and it worked wonderfully. I'm sure it can be done just as easily with Linux installations too.

      --

      You can accomplish anything you set your mind to. The impossible just takes a little longer.
    6. Re:120,000 copies? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      HancomOffice is not for free.

    7. Re:120,000 copies? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      yes, and then you have to pay Symantec a s***load of money for each machine you have used it on. At least with their old licencing policy. :-/

    8. Re:120,000 copies? by shepd · · Score: 1

      >Go ahead, you buy 1 copy and install on 120,000 machines. I'm sure you have the time for it.

      Well, the answer to the question you inferred is very simple. Since digital data doesn't lose anything over generations, you can make copies from the copies. So, knowing this, let's see how many burning cycles it would take to make 120,000 CDs:


      2^x = 120000
      Log 120000 = 17 cycles.
      2


      With 24x burners this would take under 1 hour (17 * 3.3 minutes). Of course, one could read the entire CD to a massiver server and simply burn 120,000 copies at once in 3.3 minutes, but hey, why would we want to do that?

      Don't tell me they don't have that many burners to do the work, either. This is Korea... they make the things by the millions!

      --
      If you could be told what you can see or read, then it follows that you could be told what to say or think - BoC
    9. Re:120,000 copies? by shepd · · Score: 1

      Well, yeah, if you are sticking with windows and Messy-DOS, then yeah, you do have to pay out the ass.

      Now that they are going with a linux solution, they may as well use it throughout the process.

      Click Here for a GPL clone of Symantec's Ghost Cloning software. Works wonders with various non-free OSes, too. :)

      --
      If you could be told what you can see or read, then it follows that you could be told what to say or think - BoC
    10. Re:120,000 copies? by Jucius+Maximus · · Score: 2, Funny
      "And they found out that if you have 120000 copies, you can install it on 120000 machines in 20 minutes."

      You forgot to factor in the time necessary to open 120K software boxes worth of shrink wrap.

    11. Re:120,000 copies? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Better than that, you only need 16 generations, since you can use the copies from generation 15, 14, 13, etc. for your installation. Of course you need tens of thousands of burners the way you describe it... at the 100,000 range it is definitely cheaper to stamp CDs rather than to burn CD-Rs, due to cost of media, burners, and labor time.

    12. Re:120,000 copies? by Tony-A · · Score: 2

      Each user gets a nice looking box.
      Each user gets some kind of printed documentation.
      Each user gets some nice looking CDs.
      Each user gets a phone number with maybe a bit of handholding and support behind it.
      The vendor gets some funding.

      This is being bought for "users" not "hackers".

    13. Re:120,000 copies? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The Korean word processing software of the HancomLinux is not free.

    14. Re:120,000 copies? by aka-ed · · Score: 1

      It may not be 120,000 copies for 120,000 stations. Do we know how many PCs the Korean Gov maintains?

      --
      I survived the Dick Cheney Presidency 7 to 9 AM 7-21-07
    15. Re:120,000 copies? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Remember, they're getting that company's Office program too, which is proprietary.

  4. US by damiam · · Score: 1

    Now all we need is to get the US government to replace 23% of its machines with Linux boxes...

    --
    It's hard to be religious when certain people are never incinerated by bolts of lightning.
    1. Re:US by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, the US Government is bloated enough as it is.

  5. Stay out of Bill's way by blindbat · · Score: 1

    I wouldn't want to be at the managers meeting on Monday morning! Bill will be on a rampage!

    1. Re:Stay out of Bill's way by Yuioup · · Score: 1
      If I read the press release properly on the Hanscom website, it combines Linux and Windows stuff.

      "HancomLinux Deluxe 2.0" is the product that combines the MS compatible office suite and Linux OS. - press release

      So I don't know if Bill's going to be that pissed ;)

      Yuioup
    2. Re:Stay out of Bill's way by rking · · Score: 1

      "MS compatible office suite" I should think that's like an "IBM compatible PC". Probably Star Office. Doubt Microsoft are getting any money from this.

    3. Re:Stay out of Bill's way by hattig · · Score: 2
      As the Slashdot story, the press release and more said, the Office suite is "Hancom Office", Hancom's Linux office software that supports Korean excellently (apparently, I have not used it).

      The Korean government has decided to support a local company, and in the process cut its cost, cut import costs for the country, and set a precedent - maybe other Korean companies will do the same now, and thus cut imports even more whilst boosting the local economy.

      Yes, a political choice, but it wouldn't have been made if the software was not up to the task. The only certainty is that Microsoft have most likely lost 120,000 * ~$300 (XP + Office) = $48,000,000 in revenue because of this choice.

  6. sounds great but by fuzbuster · · Score: 0, Troll

    why not just download them all, and copy them thousands of times, thats what i would do, but i am not them looks like i got 5th post

    1. Re:sounds great but by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No tech support. For governments and companies and most home users this is a must. They like to have somebody to scream at when something doesn't work perfectly.

      Also, it doesn't look like Hancom allows you to download it for free.

  7. what's MS gonna do? by perdida · · Score: 0, Troll

    If more countries start doing this, MS is going to get mad.

    They will contact their friends in the American government, who will also get mad.

    They will be mad because of an infringement on their "sovereignty." Remember that the government considers its trade and communications channels part of its sovereign territory, even if it's outside the borders of the United States.

    The protection of the MS monopoly is definitely our sovereign right, when it's construed that way.

    Will there be an invasion of Korea? Not likely, but I could see some OS requirements being put into international trade regimes such as the W.T.O.

    1. Re:what's MS gonna do? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      http://images.google.com/images?q=horse+penis&hl=e n&btnG=Google+Search

    2. Re:what's MS gonna do? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      If more countries start doing this, MS is going to get mad.

      There already are other countries.

    3. Re:what's MS gonna do? by nomadic · · Score: 1

      Well, maybe (and I say this as an American) other countries would start standing up to the US government on trade matters that would be prevented...

    4. Re:what's MS gonna do? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Fucking idiot.
      Fucking idiots .. that is all I can say about "Americans" like you.

    5. Re:what's MS gonna do? by ArsSineArtificio · · Score: 3, Informative

      If more countries start doing this, MS is going to get mad.

      They will contact their friends in the American government, who will also get mad.

      They will be mad because of an infringement on their "sovereignty." Remember that the government considers its trade and communications channels part of its sovereign territory, even if it's outside the borders of the United States.

      The protection of the MS monopoly is definitely our sovereign right, when it's construed that way.

      Will there be an invasion of Korea? Not likely, but I could see some OS requirements being put into international trade regimes such as the W.T.O.


      This is too clumsy to be a troll, so I'm just going to guess that it's almost unbelievably silly. The federal government of the United States does not have any interest in protecting Microsoft's monopoly. The decision of the South Korean government to purchase a product produced by a South Korean company, instead of by an American company, infringes in no way on anybody's sovereignty, and there is nobody in either the United States government nor in Microsoft who considers it to be so.

      The United States government does consider its trade and communications part of its sovereignty. It would probably get upset if South Korea, say, banned the sale of American-made software products, because that is bad for trade. That is nowhere near the case here.

      This shows what you get when people who honestly believe that corporations directly run the United States government go off the deep end.

      --
      All employees must wash hands before seeking equitable relief.
    6. Re:what's MS gonna do? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How this got a mod of 2 for "Interesting" is beyond me. The poster is either profoundly ignorant, or a clever troll. C'mon, moderators! Do your job.

    7. Re:what's MS gonna do? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's funny how many images google finds that have absolutely nothing to do with either 'horse' nor 'penis'.

      In this day and age, I would have expected just about any word to match at least a dozen porn sites.. but for google to find some total porn free sites in that match is amazing.

      :)

    8. Re:what's MS gonna do? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      federal government of the United States does not have any interest in protecting Microsoft's

      Are you suggesting that the US Government does *not* participate as partners in almost all business inside && outside the country? I think you will find that it most certainly does... think the combat of Communist States, think about the situation w/ Cuba, think about North Korea, think about the Gulf War - I think you will find your government is a Plutocratic body which serves its leaders quite well.

      International politics of the US is exclusively based on bettering US corporate intersts.

      ...but im not telling anyone anything they didnt already know.

    9. Re:what's MS gonna do? by mother_superius · · Score: 3, Interesting
      ...The United States government does consider its trade and communications part of its sovereignty. ... This shows what you get when people who honestly believe that corporations directly run the United States government go off the deep end.


      Really? Why, then, did the CIA:
      overthrow the Iranian democracy and replace it with the shah when the president proposed to nationalize oil (1953)?
      overthrow the Guatamalan democracy when the leader nationalized the United Fruit Company's holdings?
      assinate Rafael Trujillo, the previously supported dictator of the Dominican Republic when his business interfered with American business?
      kill George Papandreous, who refused to bow down to American companies?
      assassinate Salvator Allende, democratically elected, and replace him with Pinochet?
      and don't give me that bullshit about defending democracy; most of these countries WERE democracies before the CIA got in there; and those who replaced the old governments were much worse than those they replaced in terms of running a police state.

      Why do we endorse the IMF and WTO, which, in exchange for much-needed economic aid, undermine democracy to replace it with wishes of the largest companies and richest people in America?

    10. Re:what's MS gonna do? by Eric+E.+Coe · · Score: 1

      Not that I am trying to get into the defence any of the above alleged events/interventions (there is not the time nor the space for all these tired items that are trotted out by leftists when they want to dis the US), but you know, nationalization (i.e. stealing the investments of foreign companies) and the threat of proxy attacks originating from the Soviet Bloc (i.e. communist takeovers via any means during the Cold War) is not the same as changing vendors (a business/public policy decision).

      --
      An esoteric scratched itch:
      Homeworld Map Maker Tool
    11. Re:what's MS gonna do? by mother_superius · · Score: 1
      threat of proxy attacks originating from the Soviet Bloc

      Just to clarify, most of those were not in contact with Moscow.

  8. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  9. OpenSource Korea by peripatetic_bum · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Just think about it,
    We know that India and China are battling it out to see who is going to be the powerhouse computer programming center and here Korea may have just pulled a coup by declaring openSource to be something that the gov't official supports. I dont know about you, but I would now look towards Korea as a contender for the place to where computer programming is acutaly done. Think of the costs savingd from using opensource

    (I know OpenSource still costs money to run, but just think of the savings Korea will experince)

    Thanks for reading

    --

    Sigs are dangerous coy things

    1. Re:OpenSource Korea by nomadic · · Score: 2

      Well the thing is China and India are both developing countries without a comprehensive technical infrastructure; they're trying to become programming powerhouses because they have very few options. South Korea's a fully modernized country with a diverse economy; they don't have the same impetus to do so. Plus, their higher standard of living would make them unable to offer the dirt-cheap contracting that India and China can offer.

    2. Re:OpenSource Korea by JamieF · · Score: 1

      Population is something strongly in China's favor. For example, for a university that will take 1000 CS students a year, if you get to pick 1000 from 1,000,000 applicants, those 1000 will probably be smarter (and more motivated) than if you get to pick from 10,000 applicants. Also, if you have 1000 Chinese firms competing for a US project, that would tend to give the US company more leverage to go cheap or go for the best firm out of 1000, than 100.

      That's the theory, anyway. Still, managing offshore development is tough, to say the least.

    3. Re:OpenSource Korea by nomadic · · Score: 2

      Not really; China only just edges out India population-wise. The former has about 1.27 billion, the latter about 1.02 billion. Plus India has a better higher education system, and slightly better technical resources.

    4. Re:OpenSource Korea by metlin · · Score: 5, Informative

      I'm sorry, but I'll have to disagree with you. There is one important point which you miss out -- India already has an existing user/customer base of Linux which is ever growing, except that it is not very well known.

      For example, some people from our own local LUG (http://www.chennailug.org) convinced the electricity board of some states here to use Linux.

      (Incidentally, the other developer besides Miguel working on Mono, Ravi Pratap, is from our LUG)

      The LUGs also take it upon themselves to spread Linux to colleges and schools. Lots of LUGs around the country have convinced schools, colleges and offices by conducting local Linux expos to showcase the prowess of Linux. The problem is, India being a relatively big country, you do not hear about these things. And offlate, we are really getting commercial queries to the LUG, and people are beginning to use it as a hiring ground for hunting good talent. Which I'd say, is a very good thing!

      Another point is that, there are a lot of LUGs in India which have convinced their respective state/local bodies to switch to Linux. Since it is a bunch of freelancers doing it, it is not known.

      But the truth is, India is beginning to see an evergrowing stream of companies switching to Linux. But because of the fact that other things are also going on, these are just not noticed. As an example, the number of people attending our LUG meets has literally tripled in the past couple of months!

      My point is this - just because some companies do not do it, and there is no monetary benifit involved does not mean it's not happening. Just that world domination is happening subtly but surely :-)

    5. Re:OpenSource Korea by bergeron76 · · Score: 1

      How is 250 million "just edging out" India? I think you need to look at the size of the #3 country put that into it's proper perspective.

      --
      Don't think that a small group of dedicated individuals can't change the world. It's the only thing that ever has.
    6. Re:OpenSource Korea by vchoy · · Score: 1
      Speaking of China: There's Redflag linux. (English version of the site). Check out this story. It even states: There is additional support in that Jiang Mianheng, the son of Chinese president Jiang Zemin, plays a prominent role in the management of Red Flag.

      The story was written a while ago, but the point is that China did support the concept of "open source" a while back (However I do not know about "officially support"). If you think about it make sense:

      The source is available (in China, this is the most important aspect - they [government] likes to know whats going on...)

      Getting the source is relatively inexpensive

      In RedFlag Linux case it has much going for it:
      -Developed by China (China Academy of Science),
      -Managed by China (Shanghai NewMargin Venture Capital)
      -To be used by China....

    7. Re:OpenSource Korea by luge · · Score: 1

      The other relevant factor is English. Having been a former colony, the English of the average technically educated Indian is excellent- slightly odd accent for us Americans to get used to but otherwise it's a native tongue. Not so for non-Hong Kong Asians- there are many who speak excellent English, but for every one of those there are many more whose English is a... work in progress :) That definitely makes a difference when trying to work with American companies and programmers, and it's a big strike against the Koreas when compared to India.

      --

      IAAL,BIANLY

    8. Re:OpenSource Korea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      God almighty, who would be so cruel to name their son "Ravi Pratap"?

      Fuck, people are strange.

    9. Re:OpenSource Korea by mlinksva · · Score: 2

      English is spoken by just about everyone in Singapore and very widely in Malaysia and the Philippines

    10. Re:OpenSource Korea by tavon79 · · Score: 1

      I really wish it was like you say... but reality is Korea will never be a open source computer programming center any time soon...

      The fact is South Korea is becoming the Gaming Mecca of the World. With PC Rooms(internet cafe's designed for lan parties and online gaming) on every corner(over 50,000), and Gaming Leagues, and Professional Gamers Leagues... today Computer Games is the most favorite past-time for Young Koreans.

      The reality is virtuall all games are developed for MS Windows and the Korean Public has no reason to switch their desktop to Linux... Unless games are ported to Linux, Linux stand no chance in the desktop arena in South Korea.

      So, Blizzard... Please port Warcraft 3 to Linux...

    11. Re:OpenSource Korea by luge · · Score: 1

      English is spoken widely just about everywhere in the world that has an educated class. But there is a world of difference between working with native speakers and with working with those who have it as a second language. Ask anyone who grew up in Miami- lots of people speak English that is perfectly passable in everyday life but doesn't fly for constant use in a working, technical environment. My girlfriend calls it a 'tourist' language- you can get by for things like asking directions, ordering meals, and having simple, formalistic interactions, but complex technical discussions are difficult at best. Literally hundreds of millions of Indians speak English as a native tongue, and it shows. [And I say this not just because I'm a big fan of Salman Rushdie ;)]

      --

      IAAL,BIANLY

    12. Re:OpenSource Korea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Each one to his own. Just as how you might find a Ravi Pratap or a Krishnaswami Iyengar strange, or a Jiung Si Ng or Won Chi Po kwyang strange, the people here find John, Joseph and Christina equally strange.

      We here have mastered your languages, I dare you to learn and master an Asian language.

      We do not crib about how sick your names are, do we?

      And secondly, your post is offtopic. The original poster was talking of something entirely different, and if you cannot contribute, shut up.

    13. Re:OpenSource Korea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      China has a better education system. There are not many Indians that even go to higher level schools when compared to China.

    14. Re:OpenSource Korea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A large part of China was a former British colony too dingus. The British conquered 1/4 of the world's land mass at the height of their empire and 1/2 of its population.

    15. Re:OpenSource Korea by luge · · Score: 1

      For a much, much shorter period of time than India, and it was never as well integrated into the Empire, particularly with regards to infrastructure- the British built tons and tons of (among other things) schools in India, rightly regarded as the crown jewel of the empire.

      --

      IAAL,BIANLY

    16. Re:OpenSource Korea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "I dare you to learn and master an Asian language"

      I do know three languages , all of them are of European origin.
      There is no need for me to learn Asian language.
      So far ( it could change I admit) we are the center of the progress and it is you who can benefit from mastering our language not the other way around.

    17. Re:OpenSource Korea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Having been a former colony


      I think it still is a former colony.

    18. Re:OpenSource Korea by luge · · Score: 1

      Doh. :)

      --

      IAAL,BIANLY

    19. Re:OpenSource Korea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ravi is one of the other paid developers working on Mono. There's 3 other paid developers not including him and Miguel, AFAIK. That doesn't include all the unpaid ones working on it.

    20. Re:OpenSource Korea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I agree with what you say, but then, it is not just because of the developmental factors that we learn your languages, it is more out of interest. In this age and time, it would be plain silly if such trivialities such as languages hinder our progress.

      And oh, btw, I know 8 languages, 2 European, 5 Asian and one Middle-eastern. So I guess I have a fair right to argue on this count.

      But on the other hand, there are Asians who refuse to learn other languages (a la Japan) as well as Europeans who learn Asian languages to their own ends.

      For example, every Singaporean/Indian knows his/her mothertongue, national language and some languages/dialects of other states, besides English. Also, a lot of us go through the pains of learning European languages because some day it may just come in handy.

      I know tons of French & German customers who were mighty impressed when we spoke in their native tongue (-: I agree you are on the leading edge of things, but is that an excuse not to learn a foreign language?

      I mean, an Indian and an American would both benefit by learning Japanese, since it would be of mutual interest. I'm sure it is the same way for quite a few Asian countries.

      I'd go as far to say that there are a lot of countries sympathetic towards European languages (eg: India, South Korea, Singapore) but there are also nations which do not like English (eg: China, Japan).

      And all these countries have something or the other to offer to everybody. In the true spirit of human progress, I'd go as far to say that it is neither inferior nor useless to learn a foreign language.

      You never know, there is such a thing called complacense (-:

  10. Hum... by The+Great+Wakka · · Score: 1

    Yay! But it is time for other governments to switch. Maybe one industrialized nation will help persuade the rest. But the HancomOffice choice puzzles me. They could use something like StarOffice (Korean Support) or KOffice. Unless, of course, HancomOffice is a clone of those too. And why are they "paying" for Linux? Is some bit propitary?

    --
    Everything is mainstream now.
    1. Re:Hum... by blackfam972 · · Score: 0

      Hancom Office is far better than Koffice and Much Much faster than Star Office 6 plus its Qt so it intragrates better with the desktop and has anti-aliased fonts. Its a far better choice and its Korean something the Korean govt I'm sure likes.

    2. Re:Hum... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      From the looks of it HancomOffice is proprietary. Or at least not available for free. Maybe they like HancomOffice because it has better Korean support or something (no clue whether it does or not, just speculating here).

    3. Re:Hum... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      because hancomoffice is more advanced than koffice right now and better localized than staroffice (after all, hancom is an korean company).

    4. Re:Hum... by damiam · · Score: 1

      Koffice is not really ready for widespread usage yet. I've never used HancomOffice, but I'm sure it probably compares pretty well to StarOffice (there's no way it could be any slower) and I hear it has great Korean language support, better than even MS Office. And IIRC StarOffice isn't free either, if you want to use it for anything other than personal stuff. I suppose they could use OpenOffice, but that's beta software and there's no real tech support available.

      --
      It's hard to be religious when certain people are never incinerated by bolts of lightning.
    5. Re:Hum... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The reason why Korean government chose Hancom
      Office is - because it's totally incompatible w/ M$ office. Korea is the only country that M$ cannot govern OS market, and Koreans are so much accustomed to Hancom office.

  11. Um, we need some details before by twilight30 · · Score: 4, Insightful
    ... breaking out the champagne. It is good news, but the devil's in the details. Over what time period will Hancom introduce these machines? Which departments are to use them? Are they moving over all previously-MS documentation to Linux as well? Are any of the MS-machines to be retained for doco reading?

    Sorry to be such a poopy-pants. (Has anyone heard any more about Mexico's initiatives?)

    --
    ========================================
    Death will come, and will have your eyes
    -- Pavese
  12. and for redhat? by digitalsushi · · Score: 3, Insightful

    i wonder if, when a redhat employee reads that, if they feel like they should get a piece of that pie.. or if they all genuinely think "yay, good for them!" i mean 120,000 copies is quite a shot in the arm. open source rules but this must make some people jealous. maybe its just commercialism's power of me :-D

    --
    slashdot: where everyone yells sarcastic metaphors to themselves to understand the issue
    1. Re:and for redhat? by haesu · · Score: 1

      well ya know, Linux is GNU OS. so even if redhat employees get jealous, too bad for them! :-D hehe

    2. Re:and for redhat? by _johnnyc · · Score: 1

      It's a pie that belongs to everyone and no one, and a victory for every open source developer, user, and company. Hancom have sold a linux support contract in an area of the world where Redhat has no sales presence, but the fact that Hancom linux is using Redhat will raise their profile.

      That said, Redhat have done a remarkable job with the distro post 7.0, and choosing Redhat as the base for a tailored package is a good choice for a large scale deployment. Redhat might even gain from this themselves, through a trickle-down effect.

      Anyway, this is a great victory for linux and open-source. Very happy to get good news for a change :-)

    3. Re:and for redhat? by re-geeked · · Score: 2

      In O'Reilly's "Open Sources" book, Tiemann says that RedHat decided a while ago that growing the Linux market was more important than growing RedHat's share of the market.

      So he's probably fine with it. Now he has 120,000 potential customers he didn't have before.

      --
      "You can't get something for nothing." - my grandfather, on the stock market and Reaganomics.
    4. Re:and for redhat? by Tony-A · · Score: 1

      Assuming that the Koreans have done a good job, it brings a good Asian Font desktop that much closer/better. RedHat 7.2 now has PRC Chinese desktop (from Red Flag Linux?). It's something like the interplay between KDE and Gnome, between Linux and *BSD. One improves, the others will not be far behind. I don't think RedHat wants to compete with the Koreans as to what it means to be Korean. Actually, RedHat is likely to sell more copies because of this.

    5. Re:and for redhat? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Redhat sells Hancom Office, called Do Office, in
      Japan.....

  13. Domino Theory by crumbz · · Score: 4, Interesting

    During the US-USSR cold war there was a notion espoused by the US think taks called, "Domino Theory". It postulated that once a country within a geographic region changed to a communist government, it's neighbors would be more likely to do so. Hence the US policy of containment that we have seen since WWII.

    Now, does this analogy apply to Free vs. Monopolistic Software ? We have recently seen the Chinese undertake a government program to promote free software over Microsoft. Now Korea. Is India next? Or Japan?

    Granted, geography is not necessarily a factor in this "war" but language certainly is. When can we expect this to spread to Europe or (better yet) the US?

    1. Re:Domino Theory by nomadic · · Score: 1

      Irrelevant. Monopolies are defined as dominating a specific market; Korea and the US represent two different markets.

    2. Re:Domino Theory by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So in the end the communists may win after all.

    3. Re:Domino Theory by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      from the grave?

    4. Re:Domino Theory by Malcontent · · Score: 2

      " How can you dare call MS software "monopolistic"?"

      IIRC the technical definition of a monopoly is a bit over 70%. I doubt losing a hundred thousand desktops will drop MS share of the desktop market below 70%.

      If somebody knows the actual number please post is so that people like danhaskett don't go around thinking that a monopoly is defined as a 100% market share.

      --

      War is necrophilia.

    5. Re:Domino Theory by Rob+Kaper · · Score: 4, Insightful
      Do you, the consumer have more or less choice in desktop OS's, applications, and so-called "middleware" (what a stupid term) then you did in 1995, when MS first bundled IE and Windows?


      Me the techie does. Me the consumer does not. In 1995, most major dummy computer stores (where regular consumers get their stuff) offered computers with either OS/2 Warp 3 or Windows 95 preinstalled. Now, it's just Windows.


      So while Microsoft has no monopoly in the techie market, they do have one in the thousand times larger real consumer market.

    6. Re:Domino Theory by lalleglad · · Score: 1

      However, Judge Jackson's finding of facts did find MS to be a monopoly.

      And until I can easily go to a mainstore or main producer of desktops and order a non-Windows based computer at a fair price, ie. without the MS tax, then I'd say myself that MS has a monopoly.

      Please explain to me why I am wrong?

    7. Re:Domino Theory by the+eric+conspiracy · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Monopoly isn't technically defined as any number. That is a persistent myth

      Not correct. There are a number of quantitative measures that are used in various legal arenas to test for the presence anti-competitve market concentrations.

      Example:

      HERFINDAHL-HIRSCHMAN INDEX (HHI)--A measure of market concentration that's used primarily in merger cases. See the Justice/FTC Horizontal Merger Guidelines of 1992, 1.5 (Antitrust Law & Economics Review, Vol. 23:2, at 68, 73, n. 17.) This concentration measure is calculated by summing the squares of the individual market shares of all competing firms there. Thus a market consisting of only 4 firms with shares of 30%, 30%, 20%, and 20% has an HHI of 2600 (30 x 30 + 30 x 30 + 20 x 20 + 20 x 20 = 900 + 900 + 400 + 400 = 2600). The HHI ranges from a high of 10,000 (a single-firm monopolist) to a number approaching zero (an atomistic market with, say, hundreds of very small firms). "Moderate" concentration is said to begin with an HHI of 1000 and "high" concentration at 1800. Id., pp. 69-70. The latter is roughly approximated by a top-4-firm share of around 50%.

      Thus Microsoft's 95% desktop market share gives an HHI index greater than 9025, which is WAY above the high market concentration expected to lead to constrained competition.

    8. Re:Domino Theory by LinuxGeek · · Score: 1

      Excellent explanation, thanks for pointing us to reference information too.

      Even with this mathmatical expression of a monopoly, I can imagine instances where a defined monopoly could co-exist with their competitors. If said monopoly dosen't use their market leverage to squash or to create artificial barriers to market entry then they are allowing competition and would most probably be relying on the strengths of their products to maintain market share.

      If you are Gulliver, then you must take care not to squash the Lilliputians. But if a dozen Lilliputians are found flattened in Gullivers footsteps, don't expect people to believe that a gust of wind flattened them. Being a giant comes with tremendous responsibilities that the midgets probably don't even have to consider.

      --

      Kindness is the language which the deaf can hear and the blind can see. - Mark Twain
    9. Re:Domino Theory by Rob+Kaper · · Score: 1
      There is no market difference between techies and consumers.


      Yes there is. Techies buy computer parts or at least computers without preinstalled OSes. Consumers do not. Two different products.

    10. Re:Domino Theory by fishebulb · · Score: 2, Insightful

      and at that staples, there dont seem to be any linux preloads, and in fact, that is impossible to get at staples, or at any large retailer (where most machines are bought).
      so i can get linux, but i have to pay for windows first on that new computer.
      and why cant i get it preloaded, because MS has the computer mfg's by the balls

      I can get a computer without windows, but it wont be at Best Buy, Compusa, Circut city, etc etc etc.

    11. Re:Domino Theory by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There is no distinction between selling operating systems in Korea, Alaska, Florida, or California.
      Who wud'av guessed? It was all the same, all the time, everywhere - no distinction there. Selling OSes... Bill thanks for the info?

    12. Re:Domino Theory by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Jackson is wrong and you are right. You know better. You are going to teach us all... Sheesh

    13. Re:Domino Theory by Tony-A · · Score: 1

      How can you dare call MS Software "monopolistic"?
      Real easy. "MS just lost 120,000 sales of Windows, Office, and other accompyning applications." No monopoly. Not news.

      How could a company that has a monopoly in a given market lose sales to a competitor.
      If that were so, then any monopoly once established could never be broken. That it can be broken does not disprove a monopoly.

      They haven't switched yet. But it looks like they are in the process of switching. :-)

    14. Re:Domino Theory by kevinank · · Score: 2
      First, this is a guideline. Any company with a "high" number is not automatically a monopoly, is it?

      Well, presumptively they are. Whether they are in fact a monopoly is what the court decides on the basis of evidence presented. MS contested the presumption, but lost in court, so now it is established as fact that they are a monopoly. (That is what courts do.)

      Since Microsoft also thinks that the court made an error in its finding of fact, they contested that conclusion in the court of appeals which upheld the basic conclusion. So as far as I can tell, Microsoft is a monopoly; while they and apologists for them may not wish to admit the truth, an impartial juror has concluded that they are, and has had his conclusion backed by the court of appeals.

      Not having followed all of the evidence at trial, I have no opinion on Microsoft market share. Presumably if Microsoft thought that some evidence was in error, they would have provided opposing evidence.

      --
      LibBT: BitTorrent for C - small - fast - clean (Now Versio
    15. Re:Domino Theory by Malcontent · · Score: 2

      " Second, 95% is incorrect. It was incorrect then, and no. I would suspect worldwide that the actual number of licensed, legal, Windows users is in the range of %60-%70."

      Do you have any numbers to back that up? What operating system the other 30 to 40% desktops running?

      " Finally, my original statement stands. Even if MS has 100% market share they wouldn't necessarily be a monopoly nor would they necessarily be restraining trade."

      This is your opinion. It has nothing to do with the facts or the law. Apparently you think the law is wrong but nevertheless it's the law. MS is a monopoly as defined by the law of the united states. Not only does the law say so but so does a federal court an an appeals court. Not only is MS a monopoly but according to two courts they have abused that monopoly and have harmed the consumers. The trial is in the penalty phase right now. Ms will be punished for harming the consumers it remains to be seen weather that punishment is substantial or a slap on the wrist.

      Burying your head in the sand and repeating "ms is not a monopoly" will not change the law, the federal court ruling, nor the appeals court ruling. All of the above state that MS is an abusive monopoly and will punish it for being one.

      --

      War is necrophilia.

    16. Re:Domino Theory by nomadic · · Score: 2

      There is no distinction between selling operating systems in Korea, Alaska, Florida, or California.

      Of course there is. They're in different languages, they're in different locations, they're being sold on a market that has different dynamics, different laws, a different base of consumers. Monopolies usually are restricted to a single country; besides Microsoft I can't think of any others off the top of my head. Or are you actually saying a company can't be a monopoly unless they totally and unfairly dominate the market for that product in the entire WORLD?

    17. Re:Domino Theory by edinho · · Score: 1

      1. 60-70% Did that number come out of your ass? In any case, if getting a computer without Windows means that I have to build my own, or I have to reduce my choice of vendors drastically, then that points in the direction of MS having a monopoly.

      2. How much is Apple's market share? Besides, it is your opinion that Jackson is wrong. I happen to think that Jackson is correct. And since you have been shown to pull number out of your ass, by default I am the better person, and so your opinion is dismissable. How do you like some of your arbitrarily subjective rationalization applied to you?

      3. ...stopped doing so because their was no consumer support... Maybe because MS has a monopoly?

      I don't think you have any capacity to clear anything up.

    18. Re:Domino Theory by markj02 · · Score: 2
      Second, 95% is incorrect. It was incorrect then, and no. I would suspect worldwide that the actual number of licensed, legal, Windows users is in the range of %60-%70.

      Oh? What, praytell, makes up the other 30-40% in your opinion? The simple fact is that 95% of all desktop operating systems people buy are Windows. And 95% of all desktop operating systems actually run (which includes unlicensed copies) are likely to be Windows, too.

      Finally, my original statement stands. Even if MS has 100% market share they wouldn't necessarily be a monopoly

      Economically, they would be a monopoly. Legally, US legislators have their panties in knots whenever it comes to limiting the power of big businesses, hence the US legal system has a rather oddball definition of "monopoly". But that's an issue with available legal remedies, not diagnosing the problem.

    19. Re:Domino Theory by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      RMS isn't dead yet.

    20. Re:Domino Theory by markj02 · · Score: 2
      I can imagine instances where a defined monopoly could co-exist with their competitors. If said monopoly dosen't use their market leverage to squash or to create artificial barriers to market entry then they are allowing competition and would most probably be relying on the strengths of their products to maintain market share.

      If companies knew how to, and were willing to, price products equitably and correctly in the absence of competition, we wouldn't need a free market for any goods. The fact is that no company knows the correct pricing of their products without competition, and, furthermore, they would be violating their fiduciary duty to their stockholders if they priced them as if there were competition. A market doesn't work efficiently unless it is divided among many comparable players.

    21. Re:Domino Theory by Malcontent · · Score: 2

      "Its very much a question of interpretation. "

      And in this case people who know much more about the law and the sherman acts decided that they were a monopoly and an abusive one at that.

      --

      War is necrophilia.

    22. Re:Domino Theory by Kanon · · Score: 1

      Bill said to let you know that the cheque is in the mail.

    23. Re:Domino Theory by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well actually they went to court for anti-competitive tactics (screwing other companies over at the expense of the consumer)- not simply for being "a monopoly" :)

    24. Re:Domino Theory by Spoing · · Score: 2
      ... In 1995, most major dummy computer stores (where regular consumers get their stuff) offered computers with either OS/2 Warp 3 or Windows 95 preinstalled. Now, it's just Windows.

      No, it was just Windows of Mac back then also.

      As an old OS/2 user, I did keep an eye out for pre-installed machines and they just didn't exist. IBM's PC division specifically did not pre-install OS/2 for a variety of reasons.

      Finding a Linux pre-install is still just as hard now as an OS/2 pre-install and for most of the same reasons.

      For software in general, Linux has a much better position in 'most major dummy computer stores' since you can actually expect to find some software and not be dissapointed. Not much software, but it exists and I've bought it.

      --
      A firewall can not protect you from yourself. Turn off what you do not need. Do not use the firewall to do your work.
    25. Re:Domino Theory by cduffy · · Score: 2

      If Jackson made that statement based on information exposed about that witness during the trial, as opposed to based on some previous impression, and didn't make it within earshot of the jury, I see nothing wrong with it.

      Now, I don't know if this is the case -- mind providing some sources?

      You're incorrect about there being no barrier to entry in the operating systems market -- if there were, people (and OEMs) could buy whatever OS they thought was technically superior, as opposed to whichever OS runs their apps or (in the latter case) whichever OS their contracts oblige them to buy. Establishing an application base and OEM contracts most certainly does qualify as a barrier to entry, and a high one.

      It's not a prohibitively high barrier for a sufficiently determined individual -- I use only free software professionally unless a client purchases something different and my only personal commercial software usage is strictly limited to gaming -- but it's more than enough to keep alternate operating systems out of widespread public usage, and restricting public choice is what monopolies are about.

    26. Re:Domino Theory by LinuxGeek · · Score: 2
      If companies knew how to, and were willing to, price products equitably and correctly in the absence of competition, we wouldn't need a free market for any goods. The fact is that no company knows the correct pricing of their products without competition, and, furthermore, they would be violating their fiduciary duty to their stockholders if they priced them as if there were competition.


      Companies know how to set prices based upon their cost to create products or provide services. They then add a reasonable profit and you suddenly have a price. Then that product will either sell or not sell at that price. Your definition seems to imply that a company needs competition to take care of determining the prices the market will tolerate. The consumer is the actual tarket. A company can provide excellent product/service directly to a consumer without any competition at all. The consumer decides if the company has provided a compelling reason to part with their money.

      Now, the willingness to do this is usually lacking, but it is indeed possible. During my time in this industry, I have seen MS on both sides of this issue. They have a strong faction at their core that always wants maximum profit/market leverage/power regardless of what may be best or reasonable at any given time. This may make a strong company but consumers will resent the dictator. The mentality cannot endure, they will have to find a balance or spend most of their time strengthening the dictatorship and ignoring or limiting the time needed to make the products and services that will keep the consumer happy and willing to pay them.

      MS actually used the free market to their advantage and grew their monopoly by carving it into a dictatorship. The largest consumer of their product are resellers. Dell and Gateway down to the small retail shop buy the MS product and resell it. MS played them against each other to strengthen themselves. The individual actually using the MS product didn't negotiate with MS to get what they wanted. Most of the windows users I have seen have always wanted stability above features. MS has had the ability to provide stability, but that would have limited the compulsion to upgrade once windows met the users computing needs.

      --

      Kindness is the language which the deaf can hear and the blind can see. - Mark Twain
    27. Re:Domino Theory by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Monopoly is about being able to control a market, being able to ignore market forces, and being able to raise or lower prices without regard to externalities.
      ...
      Do you, the consumer have more or less choice in desktop OS's, applications, and so-called "middleware" (what a stupid term) then you did in 1995, when MS first bundled IE and Windows?


      I'm not commenting on whether or not MS is a monopoly, but I think your test ignores your own definition.

    28. Re:Domino Theory by markj02 · · Score: 2
      Companies know how to set prices based upon their cost to create products or provide services. They then add a reasonable profit and you suddenly have a price. Then that product will either sell or not sell at that price. Your definition seems to imply that a company needs competition to take care of determining the prices the market will tolerate.

      Companies don't know whether the cost at which they are producing a widget is optimal, and therefore, the price they arrive at by adding a "reasonable" profit margin to their cost is not necessarily the correct price (even if they were to use such a silly pricing strategy). In fact, monopolies become famously complacent about their costs in the absence of competition. Bonuses, plush offices, and other perks all become "costs", when they are really just profit that is distributed to employees (who are often also owners).

      A company can provide excellent product/service directly to a consumer without any competition at all. The consumer decides if the company has provided a compelling reason to part with their money.

      Sorry, but that's incompatible with basic economics. There isn't some fixed price threshold above which people don't buy and below which everybody buys. Demand is elastic, and monopolies hire monopoly economists to set prices for them that optimize their profit. And those prices are usually above what you would pay in a competitive market. Except under unrealistic assumptions, unregulated monopolies don't operate efficiently and don't give you the lowest prices.

      And Microsoft, in particular, certainly does not operate efficiently, peddling 20 year old technology at completely inflated prices. You don't even have to look at their products or technology to reach that conclusion--just look at their profits and cash reserves.

  14. Great Win for Linux community... by Karza · · Score: 2, Insightful

    This is a great win for the Linux community. This does bring up an interesting point. What kind of internationalization packages are available for Linux? The main reason for asking is, with an ever growing intall base in Asia, there will be more and more applications developed and contributions made to open source software with a need to be ported from English to say Korean or Chinese and vise versa. How easy is this to do?

    --
    --I don't mind the school of hard knocks, it's those darned refresher courses I hate. =)
    1. Re:Great Win for Linux community... by lposeidon · · Score: 0

      lets just hope most of these people become registered linux users.

      --
      Lizard "Never let them set limits on your mind!"
    2. Re:Great Win for Linux community... by defMan · · Score: 1

      Isn't it more likely that we'll need porting from Asian languages to English. They have programmers there as well.

    3. Re:Great Win for Linux community... by tempfile · · Score: 1

      It will be very easy soon, with XFree, KDE2, Gnome2, console (with a few patches) all supporting Unicode and Gtk2's sophisticated text rendering, the "port" from English to a far-east language will merely be translation work, such as ports to Western languages always were.

    4. Re:Great Win for Linux community... by juhaz · · Score: 1

      "Merely" translation work? Well, it may be, that tech problems that totally prevent localizing are worse, but translating computer software is some damn tough job.

      I've seen some of the results of "merely translating" to another western language, and the results are sometimes rather horrible.

  15. The rest of the world by Techi · · Score: 1

    Hopefully this, along with the fact that China has recently completely cut Microsoft out of its picture, will help to persuade other governments to follow suit and adopt an open-source solution to their computing needs. If this kind of information begins to reach the right ears consistently, Linux will continue to grow in market share even more rapidly than before. In a way, this is almost better than cutting contracts with hardware manufacturers and OEMs...

    --
    "You think that's air you're breathing now?"
    1. Re:The rest of the world by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So, the communist world has started using linux - they want it because you are stupid enough to give it away for free. They would have just priated it if it cost something. Now sun and HP can't sell software/hardware there and a market has been destroyed. It will be funny when they start hacking your linux boxes and stealing your stuff.

  16. Hmmm by zachusaf · · Score: 4, Funny

    In a unrelated story, North Korea will still be running MS Windows as dictated by their leader, Kim Dae Gates, or "Bill" as he is affectionatley known by the loving people of his communist country...

    1. Re:Hmmm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wait a minute...didn't Microsoft claim that Linux and Open Source ideals were communism? Shouldn't the North Koreans be using Linux?

    2. Re:Hmmm by tavon79 · · Score: 1

      Well, I really wish you wouldn't mix North Korea's FUCKING dictator KIM JUNG IL with South Korea's President KIM DAE JUNG...

      What? KIM DAE GATES... heh that's really ignorant and simply wrong...

    3. Re:Hmmm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      North Koreans also have interests in Linux. In fact, the last news I read was something like they were developing North Korean version of Linux system (whatever that means) and their internet (well, it's hard to call it an internet since it's not connected to the outside world, but anyway it's a TCP/IP network) based on Linux systems.

    4. Re:Hmmm by zachusaf · · Score: 1

      In the grand scheme of things, does it matter? It was a joke, sorry to make you spill your tea and get your panties in a knot.....

  17. Wish I started out on *nix by Calle+Ballz · · Score: 4, Insightful

    When I got my first computer... it was a windows 95 machine (yes, I know, i'm a very late bloomer)... and I learned that thing inside and out to where I just *knew* windows intuitively. When I learned that the entire computer world was not windows... I took my first oppurtunity downloading the slackware disksets. It was more difficult I think, because I was so used to the windows point & click interface. Now I run a combination of BSD/SlackWare/Win2k all intuitively... but I would have rather been introduced to any of the unices as my primary introduction to computers.

    As for these Koreans, I think this is a major step in computer education for those new to computers. Those who are not familiar with computers whatsoever will have no problem adapting to Linux, since they know nothing else. When learning any non windows operating system... you get so much of a better feel on how computers actually work. I think it's a great tool to learn, and even as just a user... I've noticed RedHat is great for that purpose.

    1. Re:Wish I started out on *nix by zoftie · · Score: 1

      Go korea go!

      on second note, I think using windows/macintosh as a first OS is GOOD thing. Simply because you build yourself to be more versatile IT person. If you are to use windows second, you would be rather tortured while using it, as so few of my friends who were hacking BSD early days, found Windows unworkable and quite counterproductive. It is brain damaged, but by me using it first, I can still use it if I have to. I am feel not attached to any particular platform, as each has its own very cool things about it. Unix is rather unfriendly to average joe, just like chainsaw is.
      Windows like a house fridge has more 'known' interface, and one that was thought over by many people. Notwithstanding freezer catching fire most are more friendly to casual user then chainsaw is.

      And no you don't get to know how computers really work, as I know few windows coders that have really good grip on architecture of PC as compared to many linux coders.

      Linux is wonderful, because it is build on top of so many abstract ideas, so few of them are related to hardware... that does not mean many linux coders are familiar with ix86 arch, because they are linux coders...

      thats all IMO.

    2. Re:Wish I started out on *nix by wadetemp · · Score: 1

      you get so much of a better feel on how computers actually work

      I'm willing to be that 95% of people who are using computers don't care to get a better feel of how they work. I don't care how my DVD player works... it just works. If my DVD player had a command prompt rather than a remote, but the precense of a command prompt would allow me to monitor the bitrate and CPU usage on the DVD player, I would probably take return it and get one with a remote.

  18. Support by crow · · Score: 2, Informative

    Most likely, what they are really buying is some form of support contract for 120,000 linux installations (and possibly that many sets of CDs and manuals). The level of support provided would depend on the price paid.

    On the other hand, it is possible that some of the Korean-language stuff is proprietary, so they must buy per-seat licenses.

    Or it could be that the Korean beurocracy is in the habit of buying one copy per machine, even if they don't have to.

  19. Re-read the Articule Department by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    To quote 'HeUnique' ( "from the windows->-Linux dept."

    Literal Translation:
    => Windows is greater than Linux

    Nice to see you have stated your position right from the outset Mr 'HeUnique' ...

    Goof ;)

    1. Re:Re-read the Articule Department by lposeidon · · Score: 0

      as-have-nociced-all-the-subtitles-are-written-like -this.

      --
      Lizard "Never let them set limits on your mind!"
  20. Capitalism will pass by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Perhaps that's a wakeup call to your greedy industry.

    A happy society will not be based on capitalism. The rest of the world already knew that but I'm glad to see you're finally getting the message too.

    1. Re:Capitalism will pass by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Aye, Aye, Sir! Now, do you or dont you have any requests? The firing squad doesnt have all day, you know.

    2. Re:Capitalism will pass by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Most of the world isn't too happy in a dictatorship, though.

      Or were you confusing the two, dictatorship and communism? By definition, they are completely unrelated.

    3. Re:Capitalism will pass by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Most of the world isn't too happy in a dictatorship, though.

      Or were you confusing the two, dictatorship and communism? By definition, they are completely unrelated.

    4. Re:Capitalism will pass by humpback · · Score: 2, Interesting

      For most Americans Capitalism=Free and Comunism="Very bad thing that i dont really know what it is but have been taught to hate.... OO yes. and they eat little children for breackfast"

    5. Re:Capitalism will pass by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Most of the world isn't too happy in a dictatorship, though.

      Or were you confusing the two, dictatorship and communism? By definition, they are completely unrelated.


      Thus spaketh the 13year-old...

    6. Re:Capitalism will pass by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Very bad thing that i dont really know what it is but have been taught to hate"

      And you know better ??
      Fucking ignorant.

    7. Re:Capitalism will pass by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There is a small diff between freedom and free.

    8. Re:Capitalism will pass by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      at least we can SPELL breakfast

    9. Re:Capitalism will pass by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ...look at Argentina, perfect example of what the IMF, World Bank and Free-Markets will bring you. Canada, Britain, Italy beware!

    10. Re:Capitalism will pass by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No... Argentina is an example where rampant corruption, nepotism, cronyism will get you, on a relative scale I don't think Canada and Britain have much to worry about on that basis.

      There are no bounds in the free market if you vigorously compete, just look at the rapid progress of places like Singapore, Hong Kong and Japan (in spite of a decade of economic malaise in the latter case).

    11. Re:Capitalism will pass by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      By definition, dictatorship is a prerequisite for and a goal of communism.
      On the other hand, there has never existed a democracy that was not founded on capitalism.

      Now shoo! Go read a book or something. You will find that rewarding once you no longer are a teenager.

    12. Re:Capitalism will pass by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You've got to love 60 years of US anti-communist propaganda!

      "You can't hate somewhere you've never been. Thats what people in Russia do!"

    13. Re:Capitalism will pass by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nepotism, cronyism... it's sort of scary, but the first thing that popped into my mind was the Bush cabinet and how many of them had major dealings with Enron.

      It's a disturbing world out there.

  21. Figures by Yokaze · · Score: 2

    Not quite, you have to get the US goverment to adopt linux on 23% of the newly bought systems.

    >are equavalent to 23% of annual Windows based PC procurement

    Does anyone else has a problem with the figures in the little section called "About HancomLinux, Inc."

    >The company now has more than 90 employees and 4 locations worldwide.

    Let's assume that the 90 employees are located in the Republic of Korea and the "more than" are located in the other 3 locations worldwide.

    How will they take care for those 120k desktop computers?
    (Assuming, they aren't all tech-support, technicians and have other customers...
    The spelling at least suggest they have no secretary and spell checker (look who's talking :) ) )

    I smell a job-opportunity :)

    --
    "Between strong and weak, between rich and poor [...], it is freedom which oppresses and the law which sets free"
    1. Re:Figures by johnnyb · · Score: 2

      Getting Linux does not mean getting rid of your IT department, so I don't know why you think that Hancom will be taking care of all 120k computers.

    2. Re:Figures by spamkabuki · · Score: 1

      I smell a job opportunity

      Jobs at Hancom in English And these are only the current US listings. Korea anybody? The food is awesome!

    3. Re:Figures by crivens · · Score: 1

      Outsourcing?

    4. Re:Figures by tftp · · Score: 1
      How will they take care for those 120k desktop computers?

      They always can outsource some of the tech support. That should not be a big deal.

    5. Re:Figures by MasterBlaster · · Score: 1

      (Assuming, they aren't all tech-support, technicians and have other customers... The spelling at least suggest they have no secretary and spell checker (look who's talking :) ) ) Have you ever been to South Korea? Someone could have a full time job just correcting the English spellings on street signs. I don't think the English translation means much as an evaluation of the company.

  22. Bill has nothing to lose by js3 · · Score: 1

    Those licenses have already been paid for. Now that they have switched, they'll have to buy new licenses when they decide to come crawling back. Then bill will have his revenge

    --
    did you forget to take your meds?
  23. Good for Self-Sufficiency by Tadster · · Score: 4, Interesting
    It doesn't really matter what the incoming OS is, as long as it is open enough for the national IT infrastructure to develop self-sufficiency.

    Globally, IT dependence on Windows has been a blight on the evolution and advancement of computing tech by homogenizing platforms and marginalizing new, innovative, and/or different domestic manufacturers (eg Sharp's X68000, the NEC PC-980x platform).

    Good to see Korea join Mexico & China start working on self-sufficiency rather than the pernicious co-dependence of taking the easy route of being a MS shop.

    1. Re:Good for Self-Sufficiency by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Didn't Mexico cancel the whole "Linux in schools" thing?

      I think most people here are way too optimistic. Sure, 120,000 users is a great win, but given the past history of large Linux desktop deployements, I'd wait until the whole thing is actually done before cheering up

  24. 90 employees by jas79 · · Score: 1

    the press release says that they got more than 90 employees. how are the going to support 120000 computers?

    1. Re: 90 employees by tekniklr · · Score: 1

      Hopefully not eveyone has a problem at the same time. :)

      Maybe they ship helpful reference cards with enough information to help you get on the internet and get to a FAQ page...

    2. Re: 90 employees by BorgDrone · · Score: 1

      maybe by hiring and training new employees ?

    3. Re: 90 employees by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      Hancom is one of the first PC software companies in Korea. Before Microsoft Word, there was virtually one option; Hangul word processor. The first version supported Apple II. As PC became popular, they supported MS-DOS and Windows family. Then they supported Mac OS and Unix (X-Window).

      Almost any computer users in Korea have used their software at least once. They may not need any tech support cause they are too familiar with Hancom's software.

    4. Re: 90 employees by hidden · · Score: 1

      I can only imagine that a contract of this size would involve enough money they can probably hire some more people if they need to...

    5. Re: 90 employees by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      whats the big deal? they have MORE then 90 employees. We should be glad they dont have fewer!

      with that many computers, im sure they can make identical configurations and make them update every time they reboot to a single image or somthing. The hard part would be dealing with 120,000 users constantly asking if they need a floppy disk because the save button is a picture of a floppy disk

  25. And another damn thing by sparkyz · · Score: 1

    I wonder if this will slow down or speed up all the script kiddies (xcuse me e733t h4x0rz) taking pot shots at (fortunately non-running) rpc services via compromised Korean machines.And will they please please please ship the damn things without telnet.

    --
    Oops
  26. 120 000 copies by CatherineCornelius · · Score: 2

    ...and Michael Tiemann says the desktop market is dead...

  27. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1, Troll

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  28. Why 120,00 Copies? by puppy0341 · · Score: 1

    Why not buy only one copy and copy it?
    It's copyleft isn't it ?

    1. Re:Why 120,00 Copies? by ArsonPerBuilding · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Hmmm I see 2 scernario's here.

      1)Govt. official goes and buys one copy. Makes the required hundreds of copies(there is a huge chunk of time) and then team of people installs hundreds of copies, another huge chunk of time. Now who wants to be the company doing support for these 120000 suddenly gained users?

      2)Govt. buys contract for software/manuals/training/support.

      Which option is gonna be a pain in the neck, and which option won't?

      --
      1 tequila 2 tequila 3 tequila floor
    2. Re:Why 120,00 Copies? by Ig0r · · Score: 2, Informative

      Hancom Office isn't free, so I don't think that Hancom would appriciate the Korean government only buying one copy for 120000 systems.

      --
      Soma: because a gramme is better than a damn.
    3. Re:Why 120,00 Copies? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Funny how some linuxians love to see a Linux business suceed.

  29. Great! by BlackGriffen · · Score: 1

    If Linux and other Unices can continue to win big government contracts like this, it may be enough to wake up the corporate world, and even encourage adoption in order to be compatible with government systems...

    This is the best news I've heard all day.

    BlackGriffen

  30. Congrats to Hancom and Korea! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Wow. I have always previously thought of korea to be exceptionally annoying network wise (abuse, etc) but maybe this will help change things. It's certainly changed my view of Korea.

    Congratulations to Korea, and to Hancom Linux!

  31. my, what a lot of big words you know lunix luser by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    the former being Communist and the latter being a Republic. Big fucking difference.

    And the big fucking difference between extreme state capitalism and extreme state capitalism is what, exactly?

  32. China != Beijing by denespal · · Score: 1
    ...China has recently completely cut Microsoft out of its picture...
    What are you talking about?! I only heard about the Beijing municipal government not selecting Microsoft's bid. Or did I miss something...?
  33. OT MOD DOWN by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    pessamistic ***kers

  34. Linux distros are not free by nusuth · · Score: 2, Informative

    Most distro producers give away download editions but that does not mean that all distributions are free. On the contrary, it is IP of the producer and cannot be reproduced without their approval (for download or free editions, this approval exists.) GPL, LGPL, BSD and other licences found in a typical linux distro does not forbid commercial activity.

    --

    Gentlemen, you can't fight in here, this is the War Room!

    1. Re:Linux distros are not free by re-geeked · · Score: 2

      I believe some clarification is needed:

      All Linux distros contain Free Software (i.e. at least the Linux kernel), which licenses by definition do not allow the distributor to restrict the rights of users to make and even distribute as many copies of the Free Software in the distro as they wish.

      So the distro can charge for media, can forbid distribution of non-free portions of the distribution and can even arrange pricing on a per-seat basis (although I think this must imply support or implementation services -- they cannot forbid their customers from making copies or performing multiple installations), but every user of every distro can freely copy and redistribute all the GPL, LGPL, BSD, and other Free Software contained in it.

      Just remember the simple rule -- if you didn't write the software, you can't impose limits on its distribution. Since Free Software authors expressly remove the limits on copying and distribution, distros can't reimpose those limits.

      --
      "You can't get something for nothing." - my grandfather, on the stock market and Reaganomics.
    2. Re:Linux distros are not free by nusuth · · Score: 2
      but every user of every distro can freely copy and redistribute all the GPL, LGPL, BSD, and other Free Software contained in it.

      That only applies to GPL and LGPL because they, as you said, explictly limit imposable limits by their distributers. You can limit distribution of a derivative work of a BSD licenced, X licenced, public domain and perhaps other "free software" licenced software. In any case, many distos contain a lot of code which is not explicity GPLed (like install scripts.) That is enough to make them non-copyable freely.

      But this really is not the point, a distro can be made of all free components (but not all GPLed components) and still be copy restricted. Think of it as a novel, none of the words contained in it are commercial, but the novel is a new entity in by its wholeness. The confusion arises from GPL's being free and enforcing derivative work to be avaliable freely; these two things are not interchangeable. Your simple rule is wrong, a collection of things as a whole is not same thing as individual things lumped together.

      --

      Gentlemen, you can't fight in here, this is the War Room!

  35. Gamers by davechen · · Score: 1

    They probably decided to go to Linux to keep government workers from playing Starcraft on the job. They say that 1 in every 45 people in South Korea own a legal copy of it. Who knows how many pirated copies there are.

    1. Re:Gamers by dzym · · Score: 1

      Funny, because Starcraft appears to be one of the games Wine can run well.

    2. Re:Gamers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I was also going to bring up Diablo II, but it appears Wine runs that just peachily too ...

  36. HOAX!!! HOAX!!! HOAX!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is quite obviously a hoax.

    Who in their right minds would go out and buy 120K copies of a piece of software anyone can download for free and install from a network image?

    Oh, and that 120K support contract argument? The company has all of ~90 employees. Good luck to them, I say... they'll need it.

    1. Re:HOAX!!! HOAX!!! HOAX!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, its called corruption. Its a way for the government to get money in the hands of their friends.

    2. Re:HOAX!!! HOAX!!! HOAX!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Something like this?

      Interesting.

  37. You know nothing about korean politics by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Informative

    In Korea, a few big companies, called chaebol, control everything. I wouldn't be surprised if Hancom is owned by a chaebol.

    http://www.megastories.com/seasia/skorea/chaebol /c haebol.htm

    So please, don't talk about Korea unless you know what the @#$% you are talking about!!!

    There is no economic freedom in South Korea. Korea was a military dictatorship until just a few years ago. Granted it was better than North Korea but its was and still is not a free place to live.

    1. Re:You know nothing about korean politics by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'd believe you if you weren't an AC. Too bad because this post COULD'VE been informative.

    2. Re:You know nothing about korean politics by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My wife is Korean and I know enough about Koreans from having lived there to realize its best to stay anonymous when you say anything about Korea , especially on-line.

      AC

  38. What I'm looking forward to... by SpinyNorman · · Score: 3, Flamebait

    Is 120,000 South Koreans sending emails spreading the good word from commrade Stallman to any North Koreans who sends them .doc attachments. It'll probably start a war.

    1. Re:What I'm looking forward to... by Ezubaric · · Score: 1

      North Korea doesn't have computers, let alone MS Word. Heck, they're still probably still using carrier birds.

      Given these trends, however, perhaps S. Korea might be miffed that their friends in the North are using pidgeons instead of penguins.

      --

      ----------
      I am an expert in electricity. My father held the chair of applied electricity at the state prision.
  39. sfdisk and tar are your friends. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Honestly, the only thing you need to know about mass imaging a linux distribution onto a bunch of computers is scripting sfdisk and how to use tar. With a cd boot disk, a tar image available across your local network, and dhcp, you can mass install 1000 machines over a weekend. Of course the wussies will go kickstart, but I've found rpm based installs simply too prone to error.

  40. Re:Calculus by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Oh shit. I forgot how to integrate by parts! Help me!

  41. A big victory for Open-Source community! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Wow! What news! This is a big victory for open-source community and a lot of other governments will follow! It's time to celebrate!

  42. Re:my, what a lot of big words you know lunix luse by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How about standard of living for starters?

  43. SPAM by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    Does this mean they will use Linux instead of Windows as their mail spamming engine?
    I have blocked *.kr and many IP address blocks assigned to Korea long ago. it seems that all that comes out from it is spam and portscanning.

  44. Call the OED by underwhelm · · Score: 2

    A new sense for the word defenestrate.

    --

    I don't need large brains to have a good time.

    1. Re:Call the OED by spamkabuki · · Score: 1

      All those poor gov't worker cast out of windows...

      Makes you actually want defenestration.

      (chuckle)

  45. why modded down? by nusuth · · Score: 1
    If it is because you really didn't think this deserves 2, OK, go ahead, your call. But if you downmodded this because you think you can freely copy all distros, as long as they are composed of GPL and such licences, just fuck off and gimme my karma back.

    With all 100:1 compression ratios and XBox emulators, I wouldn't be surprised if most /.ers don't know how a distro can be a property of someone when individual packets in it are free.

    --

    Gentlemen, you can't fight in here, this is the War Room!

    1. Re:why modded down? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Shut your whiny little mouth, bitch

  46. it might not be so good by vvikram · · Score: 1

    think about it this way. if people using this in korea are going to get hassles in daily its a _BIG_ problem.

    i can think of two reasons at least:

    a) various problems in linux - new devices support, support for other OS features/documents [half the world will be sending word2k or using windows-only stuff....for which M$ will make sure to release half-assed format specs]. believe me i have seen this happen so many times.....i am not saying linux is bad more that its helpless to the vagaries of the M$-controlled market.

    b) problems administering, repairing or using linux systems. while the desktops have come a long way i do think average comrade user will need a lot of support still - hope Hancom is upto this. otherwise it will be a mess....

    if they get the wrong signals. the repurcussions will be worse than the advantages.

    true , the good things have to start somewhere - agreed this is a great win for open source and might start a cycle by which more hardware vendors support linux and then the ball gets rolling.....but lets first hope for a good start.

    vv

    1. Re:it might not be so good by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Gets the ball rolling towards what exactly. Destruction of the software industry? You fucking linux people are amazing. You should go fuck yourself.

    2. Re:it might not be so good by damiam · · Score: 2

      Governments and corperations tend to buy machines in bulk and upgrade them in bulk too. I'm sure they'll make sure that the few models of PC's they have are fully supported. If they aren't, I'm sure a userbase of 120000 would convince Hancom to write drivers.

      --
      It's hard to be religious when certain people are never incinerated by bolts of lightning.
    3. Re:it might not be so good by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The Koreans and Chinese, unhampered by pesky copyright laws, will probably be the source of some VERY useful driver ports, eh? :-)

    4. Re:it might not be so good by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Gets the ball rolling towards what exactly. Destruction of the software industry?
      Rebuilding of it! Actually...

    5. Re:it might not be so good by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Destruction of the software industry?

      already happened my friend. do you see any other products ( useful ones) that are NOT made by micorsoft?

      the software industry died long ago

  47. Re:my, what a lot of big words you know lunix luse by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    The difference between X and X is Y. Stop it, you're making to much sense.


    By the way, standard of living is a measure of success, not ideology. There are many capitalist states (eg, India) that do significantly worse for their population than, say, China or Cuba. In fact, capitalism is a dismal "failure" almost everywhere in the world (which is quite big, you know. Much bigger than what you're exposed to on slashdot and prime time television.)

  48. Re:Calculus by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    int(u*dv) = uv - int(v*du)

    hope this helps...

  49. You have to take a different approach. by Colin+Smith · · Score: 2

    http://www.infrastructures.org/

    Actually, it's worth all sysadmins taking a look at that site anyway.

    --
    Deleted
  50. I did not know they spoke greek in Korea. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Eureka!

    Another pipe at Redmond has burst under the pressure. Now a few Korean businesses should feel comfortable following suit. This is also the one country were MS Office is rather weak against the local software. 10% on the desktop would be all we need.

  51. Asian market by Giant+Robot · · Score: 2, Informative

    It appears that Hancom is going after the whole asian market, not just Korea. Versions of this office is being sold in Taiwan with localized chinese. Maybe because they have used the Qt toolkit, as it uses using unicode internally and provides very easy localization support (using the tr() ) function for those who know Qt).

    look here for a screenshot. [Big5 encoding]

    Running on a few megs, this might give MS a run for its money. I'm just wondering how it implements its input methods (Input methods in linux is still far behind Windows).

    1. Re:Asian market by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Dude, don't you ever post fucking pics like that.
      It was disgusting.

      PS.

      Kill every Korean and Chinese.

    2. Re:Asian market by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just kidding.

  52. License for Hancom Office? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Many have been asking why Korea is purchasing 120,000 copies. While I'm not certain, I think that may be because Hancom Office is not under a Free license, but is a proprietary product.

    If so, this is still good news. The platform is open, even if all of the applications aren't. In addition, any movement away from Windows and MS Word has to be good.

  53. China factor? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Could this this be the grand experiment? Either way, 120,000 rollout.
    Wow.

  54. This is how they got where they are by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Another example of how Korea and various other Asian countries industrialized quickly: Buy local, support local industry, avoid removal of trade and especially investment barriers. Then they dropped a lot of that to let in floods of hot investment money, and we got the Asian financial meltdown. Looks like they're going back to the way that worked.

    1. Re:This is how they got where they are by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Another example of how Korea and various other Asian countries industrialized quickly: Buy local, support local industry, avoid removal of trade and especially investment barriers.

      Right, that's why India is such a modern country. :-P

      Then they dropped a lot of that to let in floods of hot investment money, and we got the Asian financial meltdown.

      Which happened because the foreign investors managed to buy an expensive clue, that much of the money they dropped into Aisa was going into the pocket of somebody's brother-in-law.

      Looks like they're going back to the way that worked.

      Nope, moving forward. Linux is a product of the world.

      But they better wait a month or so until the new Star/OpenOffice is stable or they'll get burned.

  55. Koreans and Finns... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...share a history of having to fight hard, often succesfully, against big bullies (Korea vs. Japan for many centuries, and Finland vs. Soviet Union in the 20th). Does this matter? Sure it does, I would posit that peoples who have a collective memory of the need to stand firm against assimilation will be among the first to adopt Linux. In this regard, the sort of veiled threats and intimidation that is Microsoft's stock in trade actually makes people like the Finns even more determined to stand up and fight. I agree with the post that Germany and France are likely candidates now, for somewhat different reasons. Change is in the wind...

  56. Actually 90 can support thousands. by Colin+Smith · · Score: 2

    It's only Windows that requires a support person for every 5 desktops. Other OS's are designed to make good use of a network.

    http://www.infrastructures.org/

    --
    Deleted
    1. Re:Actually 90 can support thousands. by archen · · Score: 1

      well that's not entirely true. If the place that I worked suddenly switched to Linux, I'd get a call every 2 minutes asking how to do something.

      By contrast most people are already somewhat familiar with windows. When they call me, I tell them to keep rebooting until it works. After about 3 times they figure this out for themselves. Assuming that only one in 10 computers (totaly un-verifiable claim) has a critical problem that means windows can't boot anymore, or the program is corrupted - I can support around 30 desktops. =P

  57. Microsoft press release by javilon · · Score: 2

    I think this is big enough for a PC magazine to be able to call MS and ask what their opinion is.
    It will probably end up like... "At press time no MS official was available for comment." That will be enough for now.

    But within a year, when the Korean goverment decides to replace windows from ALL of their machines there are chances to see a leaked internal marketing memo or something similar. Just for fun lets imagine how would it start...

    "Why did we loose the South Korean market".

    I know that this is unlikely to happen, but it is possible and if it happens I will be cracking myself up!

    --


    When his defense asked, "Which computer has Jon Johansen trespassed upon?" the answer was: "His own."
    1. Re:Microsoft press release by frank_adrian314159 · · Score: 2
      "Why did we loose the South Korean market".

      Developers, developers, developers...

      --
      That is all.
  58. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 2, Troll

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  59. Ahh, it's probably upgrade time. by Colin+Smith · · Score: 2

    I suspect that they are switching because Bill is *already* trying to sting them for NNNmillion dollars in upgrade fees.

    --
    Deleted
  60. file formats? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Does HancomOffice have open file formats, so that other office suites (e.g. Star/Open Office, KOffice, GNOME Office) can easily create import/export filters? As a completely side note, it would be nice if the above office-suite projects would get together and form a unified file format spec. That way there would only be one format each suite would be targeting for word-processors, for example. Just a thought...

    1. Re:file formats? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, are they?
      Today it dawned on me why a file format should be open and published, and even standardised.
      Compare the state of the computer industry with the state of the television industry. There are some different specifications for sending video and audio, but if someone would have a television that is 40 years old, he would still be able to use this appliance today. What is more, these standards are truly open, so someone with a knowledge of electronics engineering is able to build a television if he wants to and new companies are able to enter the industry.
      I think that the Free Software and Open Source movements, together with all its supporters and other interested parties should try to make this clear to governments all around the world.
      I am of course now comparing what is called broadcast with what is basically person to person communication, but for both systems there is a sending end, a medium, the contents which are encoded on the medium and the receiving end.
      The way on which the contents are encoded on the medium should be standardised, and probably even standardised in layers (just like television, which starts from BW video + mono audio, and builds further on top of that). This standardisation should should be measurable and testable, so that already existing organisms which do gauging, stamping and verification, calibration and so on, are able to test and issue certificates on the programs which pass the standard.
      People who know Un*x/Linux know that this layer standardisation is possible, take e.g. the *roff programs. You can add tables, formulas, pictures and other things and these are all independent from each other.
      This should lead us to a format which could be used alike by users of vi and emacs or users of HancomOffice and StarOffice, meaning that they can read and change the text contents of the document without touching the rest of it.

  61. i am confused by BigBir3d · · Score: 1

    why is it that when you buy the office suite for that "low" introductory price of $49.95US that you only get their version of Word as a beta release (6.0), yet if you buy the standard version for $24.95US you get both version 5.2 and the beta of 6.0?

    shouldn't you only get 5.2 with the standard, and both 5.2 and 6.0 beta with the full version?

    1. Re:i am confused by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      are you refering to star office? if you are, they are not talking about star office, but they are talking about Hancom office.

  62. Yeah, but what about StarCraft? by Brendan+Byrd · · Score: 1

    You know there's going to be some starving Koreans who need their online gaming fix. Linux just doesn't offer that right now. Blizzard better start moving towards Linux support, or there's going to be a lot of bitter Koreans.

    1. Re:Yeah, but what about StarCraft? by Jaysyn · · Score: 1

      Well you _can_ get StarCraft working with WINE at least.

      Jaysyn

      --
      There is a war going on for your mind.
    2. Re:Yeah, but what about StarCraft? by jfunk · · Score: 2

      You do know that they hired Sam Lantinga, right?

      Now, they didn't hire him for Linux development, but if anybody can show how to do cross-platform game development in SDL, he's the guy.

  63. Communists! by Dexter77 · · Score: 1

    As M$ has already announced, Linux is a communist operating system. Now Korea is showing a prime example how communism takes over the free markets. Next thing you know everybody is using Linux and you just have to watch how the communist-devil eats all your friends!

    1. Re:Communists! by metis · · Score: 2
      Insofar as communism means "industrialized dictatorship enhanced with crackpot economic theory", linux is not communist. I don't think RMS has a picture of Stalin in his office and I don't think Linus receives coded orders from Fidel Castro.

      However, Karl Marx never defined communism as a political system, but as a relation of production in which the producers have control over the tools necessary for production. That is IMHO exactly what free software does. It prevents the accumulation of software as capital (dead labor) thus guaranteeing access to written software to those who need it in order to write new software. Yep, that's communism. What part of it you don't like?

      --
      -- look, cheese ahoy!
    2. Re:Communists! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What gives M$ the right to announce something about OSs it has nothing to do with?

      I hereby announce that "Windows is crippleware and should not be used on any computers".

    3. Re:Communists! by metis · · Score: 2
      So far, everyone who tried it (and lots of people honestly tried to make it work) failed miserably.

      Nope, first, most dot coms never tried to make a buck by selling any product to consumers. Their real business plan was to sell a two-bucks business plan to shrewed bankers who then went and unloaded it in the 401k plans of idiots. New linux dot coms were part of the bubble. Most of them "failed" like everything else, nothing particular about linux here. If you want to understand how this works, go see "The Producers".

      Quite a few succeded to survive, including Red Hat and other linux based shops. Obviously, the company that initiated this thread is doing fine.

      Besides, the point of free software is not to empower big capitalist firms but flesh and blood producers, i.e. software writers, consultants, sysadmins, etc. People who use software to produce, not people who sell software other people produce. Just because some business idea failed does nothing to undermine the success of free software.

      Got a love it. Next time I go to Paris, I am going to wrap up a nice Debian CD in flowers and put it on old Marx's grave. Ha ha ha!

      --
      -- look, cheese ahoy!
    4. Re:Communists! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Linux == stalinist ??? Not quite, but a joyless, teeth-gritting, neocom pall does hang over much of the Linux desktop. Quite consistent - for those who can afford a choice - with the 0.25% Linux_usage figure. Only a truly ugly, unpleasant experience , a real gut-level revulsion could justify that low acceptance. 'Course listening to the byte-pervs rant on this site makes that conclusion obvious.

    5. Re:Communists! by kz45 · · Score: 0

      Besides, the point of free software is not to empower big capitalist firms but flesh and blood producers, i.e. software writers, consultants, sysadmins, etc. People who use software to produce, not people who sell software other people produce. Just because some business idea failed does nothing to undermine the success of free software.

      So what consitutes a "big capitalist firm". If I own a small company, start selling software for linux (closed source I might add), and I start making hundreds of thousands of dollars, would I still be be considered a "flesh and blood producer"?.

    6. Re:Communists! by metis · · Score: 2
      If I own a small company, start selling software for linux (closed source I might add), and I start making hundreds of thousands of dollars, would I still be be considered a "flesh and blood producer"?.

      I really don't know what you are after. The GPL would prohibits you from certain usages of open source software in your closed source shop. As long as you comply with the GPL, go get rich to your heart's content. I wish you all the best, really.

      --
      -- look, cheese ahoy!
    7. Re:Communists! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What part of it you don't like
      What part of it have you seen? Reading your words, I don't even dare to ask, how much of it your understand...

    8. Re:Communists! by vb.warrior · · Score: 1

      Of course it might be more effective to go to London where he is actually buried
      .

    9. Re:Communists! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You missed the point my friend.
      I would not bother myself talking about such insignificant events like dotcoms...
      I was referring to history flirt with the communism ( and Marxism ) itself -it never had a happy ending.

    10. Re:Communists! by heretic9 · · Score: 1

      Got a love it. Next time I go to Paris, I am going to wrap up a nice Debian CD in flowers and put it on old Marx's grave. Ha ha ha!

      Marx is buried in Highgate Cemetery, England. It's the original communist plot.

    11. Re:Communists! by 13Echo · · Score: 1

      Communist, like AMD processors?

      http://www.theregister.co.uk/content/28/23650.ht ml

    12. Re:Communists! by anotherCoder · · Score: 1

      Karl Marx's grave is in London. Perhaps you were thinking of Jim Morrison? ;-)

    13. Re:Communists! by metis · · Score: 1
      Perhaps you were thinking of Jim Morrison? ;-)

      Finally, someone who can read my mind!

      --
      -- look, cheese ahoy!
    14. Re:Communists! by Dexter77 · · Score: 1

      Finally, someone got the point :)

  64. Re:my, what a lot of big words you know lunix luse by Jennifer+Ever · · Score: 1

    Oh my. The tiny TV world I live in. Next you'll be quoting Zinn.

  65. theKompany by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    I wonder what sort of deal they have with theKompany:


    Take a look at the screenshots.
    1. Re:theKompany by woosoki · · Score: 2, Informative

      What I've heard is that theKompany have actually made a deal with HanCom, which includes: providing HanCom with licenses of Rekall, Kivio, etc. and promoting and selling HanCom Office in the US.

      --

      Slashdot me with L$s!

  66. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 2

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  67. I hope... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I hope the South Koreans don't mistake Yellow Dog for a new delicacy.

  68. Hancom by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ok, I admit having never heard of Hancom Office. I wonder if anyone knows what this software is based on? Is it their own product using Qt3? Is it based on Koffice or StarOffice? If *you* know, le me know....

  69. A great test... by _johnnyc · · Score: 1

    ..of linux and open-source in a large scale deployment. It's a huge win, but will be a great logistical test. This is a massive deployment and may be used as a model for future large-scale deployments of "linux in the enterprise".

    Any way you look at it, Linux and open-source will benefit. It is a massive challenge as well as a great victory.

    1. Re:A great test... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This deployment, in terms of size, is analagous to the Home Depot and the Burlington Coat Factory deployments. It's a yawner.

    2. Re:A great test... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, it is not. These are desktops not point of sale terminals...

  70. this is blatant troll by ljaguar · · Score: 1

    This is a troll, he most intentionally called it North Korea. Any body worth his salt would know that North Korea is a communist regime. We are talking about South Korea right now. So this is either a troll or an idiot.

  71. Is this the route Linux distributors should take? by JonathanF · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I've noticed that it's governments, more than any other institution or demographic, that seem to latch on to Linux the most (witness adoptions in Scandinavian countries, the NSA in the States, China and so on). However, most distributions don't specifically target government at all; they generally either go after the serious Linux user or try to focus on user-friendliess (Corel and Mandrake, as examples).

    What if focusing on government demands was the answer? Ask them what they want, or develop with government needs (security, administration, etc.) in mind. If you do it right it shouldn't be hard to convince a government, be it municipal, provincial/state or maybe even national, that it's in their best interest to use a very cheap OS with few security holes and entertainment-based distractions (as much as we love Solitaire).

    If you can get government workers to be exposed to Linux every day at work, it would encourage them to use it at home (though some might try to avoid it if the experience is unpleasant). That would then increase the general user base and give more reason for civilians to use it (as their friends would use it).

  72. Remember Mexico by Charles+Dodgeson · · Score: 1

    This is great news, but I we need to make sure that it actually succeeds. I don't know how the typical /.-er can do that, but let's keep our eyes open for opportunities has they arise. (answers to questions on newsgroups, providing decent internalization in our projects, etc).

    --
    Prime numbers are exactly what Alan Greenspan says they are -S. Minsky
  73. file import correctness by xtp · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I've tried StarOffice, AbiWord and a few other things. They all barf in one way or another
    on some of the Word or PowerPoint docs that I must be able to display and edit. These are mostly IEEE standards documents. IETF is fortunately more enlightended.

    Since I only have to work with such things about 10% of the time, Vmware has been the solution for me. Expensive? Absolutely since I purchase both vmware and M$. Expensive hardware too since running two operating systems requires more memory. Vmware sucks up a lot. But it works flawlessly for me.

    I'll give Hancom a try.
    I can't imagine a government agency standardizing on it if it didn't work well. Even so, I have a queasy feeling about whether the software can readily accept my ieee documents or not. Their webpage cites "Enhanced compatibility with MS office files" - kind of noncomittal. Even so, I'll try this before something that seems overly pretentious and overly hyped like Lindows.

    It may be worth mentioning that I would really prefer that Adobe had not backed away from Framemaker on Linux. But that's no longer an option.

    g

    1. Re:file import correctness by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They backed off because of a perceived lack of market.

      They'll be back. :-)

  74. This is GREAT NEWS. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    All I can say, is that it's a major development, not just for Red Hat, located in RTP, NC(my home state!!!) but for alternative operating systems everywhere!

    Good work, communities.

  75. Why?? MS vs. Linux, yet again... by dracon32 · · Score: 1

    So why exactly are they doing that?? What are they going to do with 120,000 copies of Linux?? I mean, of course Linux is better then MS in it's own ways. Do they plan to distrubute the copies around Korea in hopes people will buy, but by common figures, most people are familar with MS's Window basis and will the people actually make use of Linux??

  76. Re:Slowly but surely... by alext · · Score: 1

    Pardon me, but don't you mean 'all you Linux PDA/phone/settop box lusers' need to embrace Java? That's where x-platform capabilities count, no?

  77. Re:dog eaters should be put in coincentration camp by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I love you, Bridgitte Bardot, the stupidest bitch in the world!

  78. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  79. sloppy journalism by news_junkie · · Score: 4, Insightful
    The Korean government has just signed...

    hey folks, aren't there still two Korea's?

    1. Re:sloppy journalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, right. South one and North one.

  80. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 2

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  81. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 2

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  82. I'm not convinced by crivens · · Score: 1

    I'm not convinced that Hancom Linux is the best choice here. Personally I'd take a small KDE distribution of some kind, and use StarOffice or OpenOffice. Heck, you could even try KOffice, if you really wanted to. It doesn't support Microsoft documents, but ignoring that, it's fairly usable and quick(ish). Though, kspread does crash often while doing a search.

    I briefly tried the beta version of Hancom Office (look on the Arstechnica forums for the link), but I uninstalled it after about 2 minutes as it was shockingly slow and horrible to use. Still it was a beta version, and hopefully in the near future, they'll improve the performance a great deal.

    Personally I lean towards Mandrake, as it has vast support for applications through the Mandrake Cooker, and it's simple and swift to install.

    Although I'm just about to try the latest versions of Redmond Linux and Elx Linux.

    I currently have Mandrake 8.1 running StarOffice 6 beta, using Truetype fonts, and it looks fantastic!

  83. Re:Slowly but surely... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yes, but the cash strapped desktop is not ready to run Java which needs 512MB ram and a super fast CPU. Ever looked at the requirements for one of those Java development suites?

  84. Re:Slowly but surely... by crivens · · Score: 1

    Java? I don't think so! I haven't seen a single Java app that doesn't reduce my P3-700 & 256Mb to a P-120!

  85. Reasons the Korean government adopted Linux by tavon79 · · Score: 5, Informative

    The REAL reasons that the Korean government is adopting Linux is not because they believe Linux is necessarily a better OS but because Hancom's Office Software, more specifically, Hancom Word runs on Linux.

    Since the early 90's, the most widely used word processor in South Korea has been Hancom Word. Before Windows 95, it ran under DOS and when Windows 95 came out, a graphical version appeared. Even today, most universities and all government agencies use Hancom Word because of national pride and preference to software developed within Korea and by Koreans. It was a brillient move to port the software to Linux/Unix(I'm not sure which version of Unix it ran under... i believe the originally the port was targeted for Solaris) and with the sudden interest and popularity of Linux in Southeast Asia, Hancom is reaping the benefits.

    100% of the Korean Government is currently already running the Windows version of Hancom's Word so it was a particularly easy decision to choose free/open source operating system over M$ Windows... Meaning, that if 23% of the annual purchase is Linux/Hancom Office, it's because 77% percent is Windows XP but running Hancom's Word Windows version. It simply doesn't matter to the Korean government what OS it runs as long as it runs Hancom Word... It doesn't have to worry that 23% of its documents will be incompatible to the rest. Since every government agency runs Hancom Word, 100% compatibility is guaranteed.

    Sadly, this isn't the case outside the government and education system. The majority of the Korean public run Windows because virtually all PC games run only under Windows(In my opinion, S.Korea is becoming the Gaming Mecca of the World, but that's another story). The Korean public will never adopt Linux unless Starcraft and Fortess(a korean online game) are ported to Linux (hehehe). In other words, unless either an exact counter-part or a superior standard base/software doesn't exist... people won't switch.

    Anyway, this type of move would not be as easy in other countries/governments because most countries rely on Microsoft Office products. Unlike the rest of the world, the South Korean government standardized it's office suite with a korean Office suite, which wisely ported it's product to Linux. I'm not sure if China's government is using an office suite developed by a Chinese company, but it wouldn't surprise me it it did... if that's the case, it would be extremely easy to switch the OS within the Chinese government to Linux as it was in the South Korean government.

    Since it doesn't seem anytime soon MS will port MS Office so I guess we just need to develope a better Office suite.(keep up the good work guys)~

    1. Re:Reasons the Korean government adopted Linux by SoLoatWork · · Score: 1

      The Korean public will never adopt Linux unless Starcraft and Fortess(a korean online game) are ported to Linux (hehehe).

      And Lineage... :)

    2. Re:Reasons the Korean government adopted Linux by Steeplerot · · Score: 1

      Don't forget diablo2 there fucking crawling on battle.net
      PK GOGOGO!!!!!!!!
      SEND POTAL!!!!!!
      BABA GIVE ITAM!!!!
      ^_^ HUK HUK
      christ at least they fixed it so we cant see there fucked charset in screwed up ascii when they talked
      Too bad no more korean drop hehehe anyone remember when you could drop them by scrolling lines of periods LOL funny shit!

      --
      Vaughn "Its always darkest before it goes pitch black."
  86. Whooptie. M$ loses nothing by TheQuantumShift · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I wonder how many of those copies of windows were legally purchased licensed copies? Thought so. Not even our government pays for all it's software. We're going to see alot of this as M$ cracks down on unlicensed copies, and tries to exrtort more and more money from it's customers. More and more businesses at the top level where only one thing counts (the bottom line), are going to go with whatever can even theoretically get the job done as long as it's cheaper. Of course you say "Well why haven't they done it yet? Linux is so ready for prime time." Lets face it, as much as I love it or you love it, it still isn't ready for the masses. But soon, my pretty, soon... or somethin' like that...

    --

    Shift happens. Fire it up.
  87. This is NOT good news for Open Source by Ogerman · · Score: 5, Informative

    From the press release:
    January 9th, 2002 in Seoul, Korea - HancomLinux, ... , has announced that they have concluded an agreement with the Central Procurement Office of the Korean Government to supply the 120,000 copies of desktop Linux office packages in this year.

    [warning: lots of strong worded opinion ahead (-:]

    Piss-poor Slashdot reporting at work again. Read the press release, people. The Korean government is purchasing 120,000 copies of the proprietary, closed source commercial office software, HancomOffice. Linux is free. They're not paying for free software. They're not paying for localization work done by the KDE/Qt people. They're not paying for the RedHat Linux distribution. No.. They're paying for proprietary software (with proprietary file formats) and related support services. This is NOT what Linux needs. The article does not mention the cost, but even at a very conservative estimate of $10 per copy x 120,000, that's $1,200,000 and I would guess that support services are extra. Does the Korean government realize that if they took that same amount of money and paid say.. 15 top Open Source programmers for one year to work full time and perfect KOffice or OpenOffice, that they (and the entire rest of the world) would never have to spend another dime on office software?! But instead, they've just locked themselves into an upgrade cycle, even if it does use Linux and is a much better/cheaper product than Microsoft's. Proprietary software is damned stupid and totally uncalled for. And it makes me sick to think of how much the US government spends of my own tax dollars on proprietary software as they make the same type of mistakes.

    Open Source programmers need to wake up, quit their day jobs and realize that the world is in great need of their services. Yes, it will take innovation and initiative. Yes, it will take new business models that are purely service, support, and consulting oriented. But as this article shows, the money is out there.. loads of it. And you can help change the world for the better at the same time. Once software is set free, it's permanent. Obviously small companies (hence with small programming staff) such as Hancom and Gobe have been successful in producing high-quality office suites in a relatively short amount of time. Why? Because it's not that difficult! Here sits Microsoft's cash cow sleeping on a grassy knoll, just waiting to be tipped over. And yet the various Open Source productivity projects are moving at a snail's pace because nobody has taken a strong enough initiative to get the job done and over with once and for all.

    As a sidenote, anybody else think Slashdot editors are going a little bit soft on proprietary Linux software these days? *cough*va*cough*

    1. Re:This is NOT good news for Open Source by Lonath · · Score: 5, Insightful

      It depends on your goal. If you want 100 percent scores on the FSF Purity Test from everyone who encounters or uses any OS/FS, then you're correct.

      If your goal is to give as many people as possible a taste and gentle introduction to OS/FS because you reason that "you catch more people with honey than with vinegar", then you should support this move.

      I think the second approach will make for more people using OS/FS in the long run, simply because more of them will be exposed to it.

      Sure, they're using a proprietary program on top of an OS/FS system, but it's better than a proprietary system on top of a proprietary OS.

      The world will be a better place when nongeeks at least know about OS/FS so they can decide if they want to use it or not. Beating someone over the head doesn't work unless that person is already one of the converted.

    2. Re:This is NOT good news for Open Source by Tyrant+Chang · · Score: 1

      Even then this is a good deal for Korean government. Instead of paying $XXXX mil to Microsoft, they pay much less to a local company. This will keep money in the country as well as encourage local development in the country. A win-win situation IMO.

      Paying 15 top Open Source programmers? Who are these top Open Source programmers - not Koreans. Korean government has responsibility to their citizens so paying their own citizens to help local dev is much preferable to paying non-citizens who will def. not contribute back into tax coffers.

      Yes, this sin't what open source needs but this is exactly what the Korean gov and the people needs.

    3. Re:This is NOT good news for Open Source by vicious_sloth · · Score: 1

      hmm but why does th Korean government have to spend its 1.2mil for top programmers so that the rest of the open source community can beneifit. it may be win ,win for them and the open source community. But why should the Korean Government have to absorb the enitre cost? If i were the Korean Governemtn and spent a large sum of money hiring the best programmers out there, i would not simply give it [the software] all away. While the Open source movement is indeed noble, It is not what people are gonna want to do. people are inherently greedy and that is why communism failed. am i comparaing open source to communisim? you decide. all i am trying to say is that i just dont see how you can make real money in open source. espically video games. so then is software a product or a service? if it is a service you could potentially make money, if it is a product, then i doubt you could do as well as MS did developing software. And if great open source software could be achieved simply with large sums of cash, and have a large payoff then why hasn't it happened already? Open source succeeds only becuase there is a group of dedicated individuals who work very hard and concentrate more on quality and then profits, unfortunatly most of the world likes profits more.

      --
      Sun is Warm, Grass is Green
    4. Re:This is NOT good news for Open Source by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ooh, you are off topic. We don't care who the SK government pays!!! We care about the desktop deployments. Money will come later to everyone - including KDE and Red Hat - if there are enough desktops. Sheesh, these windows-people... can't see the obvious.

    5. Re:This is NOT good news for Open Source by archen · · Score: 5, Insightful

      This is NOT what Linux needs

      Oh? And what does Linux need? Only open source programs that are free? Are you saying that people can't make an honest living programming and selling their closed source software? I agree that it sucks that it uses a closed file format, but that's the way it works sometimes. With any luck maybe that format will be opened some day. Does it matter though? They can't be worse than Microsoft who makes it a point to constantly change their formats mainly just to screw everyone else.

      Realistically I think you might be comming at this from the wrong angle (as many of us tend to do). What does Linux need? Who cares? They didn't purchase those licences because they neede Linux, they purchaced it because they needed superior software that did what they wanted it to. If Hancom makes a better product and they sell it, then more power to them. I'd like to see more corporations drop their closed source ways too, but right now that's not going to happen, and unless some of these companies start making things for Linux, Linux will be sitting in obscurity for quite some time. If open source alternatives are going to take over, then they must be better products - and unfortunatly right now Star/K office only get "close but no cigar". Right now open source is only making strides because of those products which truley are better, like Apache. Closed source isn't all that great, but right now Linux could probably use a small crutch like this. I mean really, what's the alternative: use MS Office on Windows like every other goverment...

    6. Re:This is NOT good news for Open Source by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are so stupid ...

      When do you idiots will learn that no one, not even RMS can bend the laws of economy.
      You CAN'T sell free stuff.
      Again - YOU CAN'T SELL FREE STUFF.
      Repeat after me: one cannot sell stuff that is available for free.

      "Once software is set free, it's permanent."

      Sure, and once one company pays for creation of software , others will make use of it for free.
      Next time people who paid for it will get "smarted" and wait out for someone else to pick up the costs.
      Gee, are you that moronic to actually believe that this model will work ?

    7. Re:This is NOT good news for Open Source by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "would never have to spend another dime on office software?!"

      And put thousands of developers out of business.
      Are you blind or just plain stupid ?

    8. Re:This is NOT good news for Open Source by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I am an open source admin - I'd say my counter-parts in Sth Korea will be getting paid....wouldn't you?

      There is also the people who actually do the implementation, and there's the world wide credibility factor (ie kudos) that Linux will get from the operation. Add that to the fact that all public service people (and possibly schools, and colleges) will have familiarity with Linux.

      Maybe it *is* what Linux/Opensource needs :)

      I think so - well done to everyone involved - now we have China, Sth Korea, a good chunk of India, many governments in the rest of the world.....

      Linus dream is coming true - the fat happy penguin will set you all free *yeah*

    9. Re:This is NOT good news for Open Source by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Air. CO2. O2. H20. Sex.
      All are free, yet many pay for it. It just matters how you sell it.
      Redhat and other linux companies does something similar. Not all things have to be free. The packaging is not free. Support is not free. The Model works. It just takes a big base. But that is coming. And, it is this that bothers you, as it will mean REAL competition to deliver the best.

    10. Re:This is NOT good news for Open Source by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      We don't care who the SK government pays!!! We care about the desktop deployments. Money will come later to everyone


      Absolutely correct! It's all about eyeballs. It doesn't matter if we're losing gobs of money, and all these naysayers who call this boom a "tech bubble" which will "burst" and send stock prices plumetting 90% have no idea what they're talking about. This time it's real, and as soon as I get off this dessert island and back to civilization I'm going to put the rest of my kids' college fund into the markets!!! You'd be a fool to not do the same!!!

    11. Re:This is NOT good news for Open Source by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Dessert island? What flavor?

    12. Re:This is NOT good news for Open Source by Ogerman · · Score: 2

      If your goal is to give as many people as possible a taste and gentle introduction to OS/FS because you reason that "you catch more people with honey than with vinegar", then you should support this move.

      My point is that OS/FS programmers should be able to offer a sweeter deal with completely free software instead of half-free/half-proprietary. It's not a matter of vinegar. It's a matter of realizing that non-free doesn't make sense simply because it's more expensive to obtain. If you're going to spend millions on software one way or the other, why would you buy licenses instead of paying somebody to polish existing Open Source software to meet your needs? The only reason why Hancom has a market is because they're the only ones providing ANY solution. If programmer geeks realized that they could contract themselves out to produce free software, proprietary software would die almost overnight.

    13. Re:This is NOT good news for Open Source by Ogerman · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I'd like to see more corporations drop their closed source ways too, but right now that's not going to happen, and unless some of these companies start making things for Linux, Linux will be sitting in obscurity for quite some time. If open source alternatives are going to take over, then they must be better products - and unfortunatly right now Star/K office only get "close but no cigar". Right now open source is only making strides because of those products which truley are better, like Apache. Closed source isn't all that great, but right now Linux could probably use a small crutch like this.

      This is the very mentality that is holding Open Source back from total domination. It is the view that free software can only be produced outside of business because there's no money in it. Therefore, as the thinking goes, proprietary software is ok because it produces solutions that people need right now, while free software must wait for volunteers to make slow, steady progress.

      The reality is that customers will pay for whatever solution is cheapest and does the best job--whether they are paying for licenses or the labor of free software programmers. It is the fault of Open Source developers for not capitalizing on this to provide themselves an income and allow them to work on their pet projects full-time. There's no need for proprietary licenses whatsoever in this model. Consider this scenario:

      Business customer needs software solution X, to be rolled out in 6 months.

      Seller A will provide X by means of licenses for $2 million, plus extra for priority support services as needed. New versions of X with cost future licenses fees. Customizations will also cost extra.

      Seller B will provide X by negotiating a contract for a complete solution: provision of all software, support services, and desired customizations, for $1.5 million. All new versions of X are free. Seller B ensures that customer's needs are met precisely and in time for the rollout date. Customer is treated as a peer in the development cycle, resulting in more personal service and higher quality software.

      A is proprietary solution provider, B is Open Source. The choice is obvious, given that geeks will get off their respective arses and bring B into fruitful existance instead of moping around complaining that there's no money in free software blah blah blah.

    14. Re:This is NOT good news for Open Source by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And you my friend, need to learn what comes first. The chicken or the egg.. Noone can deliver everything everybody would need, for free.

      And while we're ranting at other people instead of looking at ourselves. How do you make a living?

      Realize that if there has to be a change in this world, that change can only start with YOU. Whatever else, you have no power or influence over.

  88. Linux can flourish where labor is cheap by RebornData · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Linux is definitely much more of a "do it yourself" system than Windows is. That's viewed as a liability by most corporations in the US, but it's an advantage where skilled labor is cheap.

    There's a parallel in the construction industry. In US, labor is more expensive in comparison to construction materials than in, say, Mexico. In the US, construction uses as many prefabricated, pre-assembled components as possible in order to minimize on-site labor. It's cost effective to manufacture, stock and transport a large variety of pre-fab parts to minimize on-site assembly. In contrast, where labor is cheap in comparison to materials, you find that it's more common to bring raw-materials on-site and create what you need from them, since it's cheaper to pay a skilled laborer to do it as-needed rather.

    The same thing applies to software. It does suprise me that countries like Korea and China like Linux where having skilled on-site talent is more cost-effective than paying large license fees to MS.

    1. Re:Linux can flourish where labor is cheap by bstadil · · Score: 5, Informative

      Interesting point but the Korean labor cost is not so cheap. Here is a list of various countries. Compare the $8.14 hourly rate in Korea with the $2.46 for Mexico.
      Your point is well taken though.

      --
      Help fight continental drift.
    2. Re:Linux can flourish where labor is cheap by hughk · · Score: 2
      I think you are a little unfair there about Linux being a DIY system. Support can be, and that is where the cost saving is. Support for closed sourced software is very expensive and you have no alternative.

      This is why I recommend Linux where appropriate for developing countries who might be able to get a licence for, say, Microsoft Back Office on the back of a World Bank loan, but who can not then afford to keep it up to date.

      --
      See my journal, I write things there
  89. huge irony by twitter · · Score: 2
    Those who argue that Linux is not ready for the desktop must finally face the fact that the cash strapped *desktop* IS ready for Linux.

    Incredible. The poorest desktops will then be the first to embrace all the goodness of freedom and be technically superior. So while government cubicles in Korea have ssh, X, compilers of all types, postgress, mySQL, multiple virtual screens, multiple workplaces, multiple and superior image manipulators, multiple and superior file and web browsers, I at a fortune 500 US company will be stuck with an w2k machine with all of it's fundamental and implimentational flaws. No real user accounts, no real file permissions, no encypted remote login, no real GUI export, no real image manipulation, one quirky file and web browser, no real shell, no grep, no find, and no compilers. How much of that do I really need to get my job done? None, but I don't need anything other than a knife and a match to cook dinner. The match is optional really, I could just eat nuts, berries and grass.

    Somehow, I don't think this competitive advantage will escape corporate America forever.

    --

    Friends don't help friends install M$ junk.

  90. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 2

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  91. and... by simpl3x · · Score: 1

    can a fiercely market-based economy which relies on the private sector to accomplish everything compete with social-based markets which actively invest in education and technological infrastructure? this perhaps is not a question for today, but it is for the near term.

  92. Oh really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


    But what about Word documents?

    1. Re:Oh really? by kcurrie · · Score: 1

      Who will create them? The standard will be Linux based, not Windows.

      --
      -- I speak only for myself.
  93. Re:my, what a lot of big words you know lunix luse by plastercast · · Score: 1

    And the problem with Zinn would be...

    The fact of the matter is that he has done more to change the way people look at the history of the United States than all but a few people. A little self analysis doesn't hurt anyone. This of people such as Zinn who find the dust bunnies that government and indusrty sweep under the rug.

  94. Re:Slowly but surely... by kz45 · · Score: 0

    Those who argue that Linux is not ready for the desktop must finally face the fact that the cash strapped *desktop* IS ready for Linux

    Just because linux is "free", does NOT make it better than windows. I use linux on a regular basis (as a Server), but I feel to become popular as a desktop OS, it needs the following:

    1) driver support (this includes all types of hardware)

    2) the ability to change the resolution/video card/monitor/refresh rate without having to drop down to the command line.

  95. Which Korea is it? by Tuxinatorium · · Score: 0, Redundant

    North or South? There is no "Korea". Unless your map is over 50 years old.

  96. Re:World's gonna end by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You'd better hope that asteroid shows up on time or you are going to have to face one killer of a hangover!

  97. Domino Theory only works for slave states by twitter · · Score: 2
    I'm so sick of this Linux is communism bullshit. Marxist economic theory applies to the world of physical goods, not free speech publishing and ideas. The modern notion of copyright is a modern by product of mass produced printed material and now obsolete mechanisms of press. Before such mass production, people who published hoped that their ideas would be coppied and improved on. IT HAD NOTHING TO DO WITH ECONOMIC OR POLITICAL SYSTEMS. Today, the Free Software Foundation and others believe that their code should be free of obsolete notions of copyright and have taken steps to insure that others will benifit from their works. It's called public spirit and co-operation and it's one of the hallmarks of free societies.

    The domino theory was that they newly aquired slave states could be put to use spreading the interests of the Soviet slave state. This was seen in Cuba, which supplied the USSR with sugar, and fighting men for troubles in Angloa, as well as subversives for the rest of Central America. The whole country was made into state property controlled by Fidel, who therefore owned it all. Free speech and press were eliminated, those opposed were liquidated, universities, schools and presses all became tools of the party which was ultimatly rulled by people in Moscow. The reward for this slavery is one of the lowest standards of living in the Americas, matched only by slave states in Eastern Europe and Asia. So while these unfortuanate places became horribly inefficient, all of the effort could be directed at conquest. China agreed with this assesment at the time and was rather upset about North Korea and Vietnam, which they viewed as an extention of Soviet power. China had designs of it's own.

    In the software world, M$ is the slave state. It is an all embracing company that sees itself getting between you and anything you want to do with computing machinery so that Bill Gates can extract your money. M$ is one of the largest proponents of the inaptly named "Digital Rights Management" movement that will strip you of ownership of your intelectual property. M$ has already written software licenses that forbid use of their software to criticise M$ (see Front Page story Slashdot ran a few months ago for evidence of this blatant corporate censorship). All M$ licensess are written so that M$ may terminate your use of their software at anytime, though they would never dare test it in court. Those who fall victim to M$ software inadvetantly spread it as M$ jurry riggs their file formats to be impossible to impliment on other platforms. All money and efforts spent on M$ software is effort and money furthering the M$ slave state.

    --

    Friends don't help friends install M$ junk.

    1. Re:Domino Theory only works for slave states by tsinterface · · Score: 2, Informative
      > The reward for this slavery is one of the lowest standards of living in the America


      what are you smoking? If you've ever been to Cuba (and I have been, because my government allows me to) you would have seen that even if the people there are not rich, there are no beggars or homeless people, all children go to school, there is no unemployment and everybody gets medical treatment for free.

      Compare this with e.g. colombia and stop your uninformed trolling about "slave states". there is no free speech, but what means free speech when you starve ?

      An btw the percentage of children which die in the first years (don't know the term) is in Cuba less then in any american country (including the US)

    2. Re:Domino Theory only works for slave states by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      don't know the term


      Infant mortality rate.

  98. Re:Slowly but surely... by einer · · Score: 1

    I really wish this guy wasn't right... But Java on Linux blows greased weasel butt.

  99. Is it MS who is going to be mad??? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It s gonna be a bit offtopic, but anyway...

    I d like to know if Hancom won the contract from MS or from someone else. I just say this because in my school, we are replacing Sun machines by Linux x86. I m not saying that this is a bad thing, but I would rather have dumped Windows from our PCs.

    So bascially what I mean is that maybe it s not MS the looser but Sun. And that s not as good as if it would have been MS!

    This is what Redhat says too. "Linux has a smaller TCO that unix, risc, etc...." I think they should rather be promoting Linux against Windows!

    If Linux fights UNIX, it just fights its own roots! Doesn't sound very decent to me!

  100. Re:Slowly but surely... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Try Ctrl-Alt-[KEYPAD +] and Ctrl-Alt-[KEYPAD -]

    And now, just what hardware are you having issues with?

  101. Re: Not an original thought. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Look, we all know you're just repeating what Nader said recently. Just link to it in the future, OK?

  102. No M$ Lobbying in Korea by javacowboy · · Score: 1

    Looks like M$ hasn't bothered hiring lobbyists in Korea yet, like they have in most Western countries....

    --
    This space left intentionally blank.
    1. Re:No M$ Lobbying in Korea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Are you kidding? MS has heavy lobbying in Korea. Why? Because Korea's the main testbed for the Asian market. Nations who do not want to risk expansion into the Japanese and Chinese market first test things out in Korea before before going into those bigger markets.


      It works the other way too. Hong Kong film industry tested out Crouching Tiger Hidden Dragon in Korea before sending to Japan which was before they sent it to USA. Europe is not a good testbed, since they will just like whatever the US likes.

  103. This is GREAT news for the open source movement by chiguy · · Score: 0, Troll
    Look a little deeper. Yes, the office suite may not be Open Source, but look at what it's doing: it's displacing Microsoft... ALL MICROSOFT PRODUCTS!

    That's 120,000 machines that won't have MS Windows, MS Word, MS Excel, MS Money, MSN, .Net, IIS, IE, ANY MICROSOFT!

    That's step 1. Step 2 is that now you have some economic motivation for people to actually DEVELOP Linux apps. Hey, even if it's proprietary, they're developing on the platform. [So how much you wanna bet more Linux games will be coming out of Korea than anywhere else in the world?] So is more proprietary stuff bad? NO! The people developing proprietary software on Linux will likely use AND HELP IMPROVE open source tools.

    They'll be using Gnome as their wm (or that other one), gimp to edit graphics, Kword to edit docs. There is now MOTIVATION OTHER than the religions of OSS or anti-MS.

    In the real world, this is the kind of government endorsed monopolies that changes the course of technological development.

    Step 3, presumably, the 120,000 licenses will be for DESKTOP WORKSTATIONS, not servers or developers. Now that there's money to be made in the Linux world, development shops will pop up all over the place, further expanding the reach of Linux and associated OSS tools.

    Step 4, all these office workers working day in and day out with Linux will go home and want their home machines to look/act like the ones at work. And since Linux is free, no reason for them not to try it (ed: except that no average office worker could install Linux in less than 3 months).

    Step 5, repeat 2-4 a few times and you get a huge rise in the user base.

    Step 6, all of this means there will be more installations of Linux in S. Korea than any other country in the world. [You heard it here first!] Pretty soon, we'll be using software that's named K-*#$%@. We won't know what it means (being Korean), but we'll know it's the best damned OSS DVD player out there.

    And all this because the S. Korean government standardized on a Linux based proprietary office suite. We've all said that as soon as there's an office suite that rivals MS Word, then maybe Linux will have a chance at displacing Windows.

    PEOPLE, THIS IS WHAT WE'VE BEEN WAITING FOR!

    [Hey, anyone need a UI designer to help break into this market?]

    --
    passetspike!
    1. Re:This is GREAT news for the open source movement by nusuth · · Score: 1
      We've all said that as soon as there's an office suite that rivals MS Word, then maybe Linux will have a chance at displacing Windows.

      You, sir, obviously have never used Hancom office. Staroffice is light years ahead. OpenOffice is only a light year behind Staroffice and closing. Perhaps none of these two can be used by Koreans, because they(especially openoffice) has little support for localization. For the western world, Hancom is not an option, it is confusing, awkard and expensive.

      --

      Gentlemen, you can't fight in here, this is the War Room!

  104. Linux is great for that ... by wirefarm · · Score: 4, Informative

    I work as the only foreigner in a Japanese company and frequently have to work in either language. To switch languages on my Linux box, I simply log out and log back in, selecting the other language when I do. On the NT machine, I have to reboot.
    If I want both English and Japanese on the NT box, that means I have to have two seperate licenses and two different installs on the same machine in two different partitions.
    I had heard that Win2K lets you choose between languages and related that to a friend who was buying a PC here in Tokyo, but that simply isn't the case. (At least not for J/E.) MS apparently does make such a version, but it is only available to corporate customers, not via retail.
    As for software, apps are being made in other languages and sometimes 'ported' to English. Sylpheed (http://sylpheed.good-day.net) is one such package, a really good mail client (MUA).
    Other packages have been translated well enough that a non-English speaker may think it's a native program - Webmin comes to mind, as does Sourceforge's website.
    There are probably others that are similar, but I haven't realized that I am not seeing it in the developer's native language. (I get a lot of my software from the Japanese Linux magizine CDs' monthly picks, so it's not always clear what the 'original' language of a package is.)
    Funny thing is, I've never seen Mandrake in these distro magazines - I hear it's one of the most popular in the US, but have yet to run across a copy here. I've wondered if it's an i18n issue...
    IMHO, multi-lingual envronments is one area (critical for me) that Linux outshines its closed-source alternatives. (Want Icelandic Linux? No problem. Windows? No can do.)
    Cheers,
    Jim in Tokyo

    --
    -- My Weblog.
  105. Re:Slowly but surely... by kz45 · · Score: 0

    Try Ctrl-Alt-[KEYPAD +] and Ctrl-Alt-[KEYPAD -]

    This somewhat works, but not for the average user. Why can't there be some kind of setting, within the gui itself (hint: settings->control panel->display).

    And now, just what hardware are you having issues with?

    any network card besides 3com,ne2000, or realtek. I normally have to "specially" buy a network card for a linux machine.

    any sound card, besides a creative labs variant.

  106. It already has these.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Linux supports every kind of hardware, there is a linux hardware compatiblilty list with this very information.

    If you want a wireless network for your Linux box, check the list, find one of a dozen that you can use, pick one, buy it, use it.

    Sure you may not be able to buy the Zork forbitzalizer, but you will be able to buy the Acme forbitzalizer that does the same exact thing.

    As far as changing the resolution while you are in X... I select all the resolutions I want during the install, then I can switch between a half dozen different ones with the press of the alt-ctrl-+ keys.

    Try that in windows.

    1. Re:It already has these.... by kz45 · · Score: 0

      Linux supports every kind of hardware, there is a linux hardware compatiblilty list with this very information.

      If you want a wireless network for your Linux box, check the list, find one of a dozen that you can use, pick one, buy it, use it.


      I would rather use windows, in this respect. I can buy any brand of hardware I like, instead of settling for "what works".

      how about the ability to easily install a driver for a piece of hardware AFTER linux has already been installed.

      Try that in windows

      I don't need to preselect resoutions, I can just change them dynamically as I see fit.

      I would rather concentrate on remembering things that are a little more productive...rather than all the keystroke combinations, which are vaguely documented.

    2. Re:It already has these.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I like Linux. I think that Linux is good. Everyone should use Linux. It is the best.

  107. What Loophole? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Dude, if you own something it doesn't get taxed unless it is generating dividends and/or interest, which is what he would pay when necessary. It's when you sell it that you get hit with all the cap gains.

  108. Regarding your first point, by Bake · · Score: 1

    I'd say you're a fool thinking that up to 60% of consumers buy components and put them together.

    I'd even dare to say that up to 95% of people that DON'T buy from the major OEMs buy a machine pieced together by the retailer and/or other much smaller OEMs that simple. They usually have a volume discount deal with Microsoft regarding exactly that, at least it wouldn't surprise me from a pure business perspective.

  109. It's all a communist plot! by babbage · · Score: 2, Troll
    Korea Replacing 120,000 Windows with Linux

    My that'll be drafty.

    This of course points only to the evil cabal of insulation manufacturers, electricity generators, and natural gas producers, all of whom will clearly benefit by the transition from hermetic glass membranes to the newer & not yet proven cd-rom membrane technology.

    Thank god I live in America, where you can pry the Windows from my warm, vibrant home over my dead body!

    :)

    1. Re:It's all a communist plot! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Are You dead body, I wouldn't bother to kill you

    2. Re:It's all a communist plot! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Troll?

      Looks like the moderators got a bad batch of crack again...

  110. Is this really what we want for Linux? by zhensel · · Score: 0, Redundant

    This is all entirely intriguing, but isn't Korea in monsoon country? I've heard rumors of Linux making an excellent protective wall against fire, but I don't believe it's yet robust enough to provide the same protection while retaining a high level of transparency.

  111. What?? by zCyl · · Score: 2

    That argument makes as much logical sense as saying that a country that purchases 120,000 TV's is going to be the next Hollywood.

    1. Re:What?? by Hard_Code · · Score: 2

      Um, no it doesn't, because you can't PRODUCE anything with TVs. Duh. But still, I don't think this will mean much for Korean WRT India and China's software markets.

      --

      It's 10 PM. Do you know if you're un-American?
  112. In other news... by sunhou · · Score: 1

    The maker of the Linux distribution that the Korean government is running this Hancom office suite under has made a $15 profit, as the Korean gov't bought one copy and then proceeded to legally make 119,999 copies of it for the rest of their machines.

  113. The Domino Theory was far different, actually by Y-Crate · · Score: 2, Interesting

    In practice, the Domino Theory had more to do with the beleif that nations who demonstrated independance from Washington's spehere of influence (even if they didn't become Communist or pose a threat to the U.S in any way) were a danger because they would serve as a good example for their neighbors who would be less open to exploitation by foreign governments and businesses. It's detailed in government documents from the Cold War. Noam Chomsky's supremly excellent What Uncle Sam Really Wants examines them in detail.

    Most of our covert and not-so-covert operations were directed at those who posed a danger of not submitting. This lead to some of the worst atrocities of the century.

    1. Re:The Domino Theory was far different, actually by nathanm · · Score: 2
      This lead to some of the worst atrocities of the century.
      Any atrocities caused directly or indirectly by American operations were small potatoes compared to Stalin, Mao, Hitler (dare I invoke Godwin's Law), Pol Pot, or Milosevic.
    2. Re:The Domino Theory was far different, actually by deaddrunk · · Score: 1

      Tell that to the Vietnamese or the Indonesians, both of whom have suffered greatly thanks to US foreign policy.

      --
      Does a Christian soccer team even need a goalkeeper?
  114. Re:Slowly but surely... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Java isn't the (whole) answer. Amiga DE is.

  115. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 2

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  116. Actually unicode isn't really used in east Asia by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    Unicode doesn't have enough character space for Chinese. However, it tries to cram Chinese, Japanese, and Korean into the same character space. This REALLY doesn't work too well since in many cases they use different forms of a given character. Unicode will arbitrarilly pick one form and use it for ALL 3 languages. As a result it's never pretty, and it's sometimes confusing to read. As such, Japan typically uses shift-JIS, Taiwan and Hong Kong use Big5, and Korea uses UHC or JOHAB. Unicode is pretty much universally disliked here in the orient. That's the problem with westerners trying to "redesign" Chinese scripts.

    1. Re:Actually unicode isn't really used in east Asia by Giant+Robot · · Score: 2, Insightful
      I've actually been using unicode for quite a while in backend applications, while converting unicode back to regular character sets (Big5,GB..) for the user. Sometimes this involves converting from traditional to simplified chinese in unicode first (easier than the "other" way around, since it is a many to one mapping), and then to GB code.

      Actually, Unicode does have different glyphs for the different forms of the same character, for example:

      Traditional:
      Simplified:
      Japanese:

      And without Unicode, you wouldn't be able to see all three characters in one page without doing a lot of messy stuff. Also, most chinese can usually read both sets, and many write simplifed on a daily basis (the difference is just like handwriting/printing, with thousands of variations, not just 52 alphabets :)

      In the later versions of Unicode (3.x), almost ALL necessary characters are included, including obscure cantonese swear words... If you are concerned about how the fonts are shown based on the different cultures (like missing a dash here and there), you can use a japanese font instead of a chinese font, and just map to it.

      The main problem is that Unicode CJK characters usually take 3 bytes while other character sets like Big5 and GB only takes 2. And also, almost all legacy systems, including many business and especially cargo shipping software in south east asia uses their local character set, not Unicode. This will not change for a long time. However, the trend is to use UTF8 in the data storage layer and converting it to the local set (and just replacing a character not in the local character set with a '?') for the user in the display layer.

  117. Korea is a country of Education oriented consumers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    After MS tried to bully the Korean Government over the buyout of the bankrupt company that makes the popular "Hangul office suite", going so far as to ask the Hangul Office developers to stop working on the program if MS takes them over, this is a little retribution. The Korean Government is most likely quite annoyed by the transnational American software monoply.
    Besides, Linux has a pretty good following in Korea. I installed my first Korean version of Redhat in 1996.
    Still the problem is political. Korea has a lot of pirated MS software installed on Government computers-- especially police stations and public/university school computers. Since Korea's government doesn't want this to be an issue for them in trade negotiations or even issue when having to mobilize *raids* on their own agencies at the behest of MS/US, why not just eliminate the problem with Linux. Here is where greedy, inflexible licensing kills itself. Use the alternative to save political headaches not necessarily political ones.

    At the heart of it, people are more forward looking in Korea towards technology and always seek ways in which to help their youth to get a decent education--corporate computing looks out for itself, yet public/school computing should be accessible to all students and at a low cost with the backing of smart government agencies. SInce Korea is developing a nationwide fiber network for itself, it will need an OS robust and distributable enough to satisfy needs. Linux is it. Besides, the national "good feelings" from using a Koreanized Linux OS is a lot more patriotic than using a foreign made and costly OS.
    I always believed Linux was most suitable in countries where copyright protection/intellectual property was negligble anyway. Linux is just more legal for Korea at the end of the day. That is a fact the MS most face in Asia.

  118. Re:Wish AmigaOS was available on x86. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Unfortunately it seems like most Linux users come directly from the Windows world, without any other previous computer experience.
    If all you (not Mr. Ballz specifically) have used is Windows I suppose you can be impressed by anything. The goal shouldn't be Linux on every desktop, the goal is Microsoft software on as few desktops as possible.

  119. Re:Why?? MS vs. Linux, yet again... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Read comments, and do not ask stupid. Everything (every piece, every computer) is already assigned.

  120. Re:dog eaters should be put in coincentration camp by jjsoh · · Score: 1

    Thanks for the well thought out reply, but here's the truth.

    This is off-topic, but I believe it has to be said:

    AFAIK, back when Korea was a poor country, meat was scarce, so it was hard for many to afford meat; especially of the bovine variety, which would explain why majority of Korean dishes rely heavily on vegetables. The next best thing was probably pig and unfortunately dog (not sure if it was the domesticated kind or not, but it was dog). Anyway, that was then and they're not as poor as they used to be.

    However, now, even though I've been told that it's "against the law" in South Korea to eat dog, I'm sure there are still places where they still do (since it's probably not enforced).

    And yes, I'm Korean: born there, but raised here in the States. Never ate canine, never care to. But for others who have.. maybe it's just a part of old culture that can't be shaken? Who knows, but it's probably easier for me to understand (yet still not condone), than for someone who is not from Korea.

    Food for thought (no pun intended).

    Any comments or criticism is welcome.

  121. Re:dog eaters should be put in coincentration camp by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I bet the stupid bitch, who'd put Koreans in camps is M$ user.

    He's nicely enforcing food licences and he is abnormaly stupid and ignorant.

    I'm no Korean but I aggree.

    If some of them were canine eaters, OK in bad times people eat even more unthinkable kinds of food. But the stupid bitch is a M$ moron and a fashist

  122. Great for the Community by Swaffs · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Does anyone else see the huge advantage of getting countries like China, India, Korea, etc. involved in Linux? Just think of how many developers would come out of that. Look at the population they have, and just think of what kind of progress could be made with their help. Microsoft can't keep up with that.

    --

    --
    "Karma can only be portioned out by the cosmos." - Homer Simpson [1F10]

  123. Cash Cow? by Lethyos · · Score: 1

    Let's go Cow Tipping. :)

    --
    Why bother.
  124. MOD THIS UP, PLEASE by Burz · · Score: 0
    ...because it's the truth. Anyone who thinks we entered the Gulf 'War' for humanitarian reasons has their head in the sand. The USA does go to war for economic interests and it's about time we stopped kidding ourselves.

    S.O.A.

    Blowback

    CIA in Guatemala

    Interview

  125. Re:Is this the route Linux distributors should tak by thirdrock · · Score: 1

    I've noticed that it's governments, more than any other institution or demographic, that seem to latch on to Linux the most (witness adoptions in Scandinavian countries, the NSA in the States, China and so on). However, most distributions don't specifically target government at all; they generally either go after the serious Linux user or try to focus on user-friendliess (Corel and Mandrake, as examples).

    This is an excellent observation, to which I would add that in my country, and other countries I have visited around the world, governments are not very well funded. And because of this, they often do a very poor job. Making the various levels of government more effecient would be of great benefit in many countries in the world. Unfortunately, many local governments have old PC's and no money for software licenses.

    Enter Linux....

    Most of the operating system and tools are free, and it can be parred down to run on older equipment. I have worked with small government departments and also volunteer organisations, and the thing that really breaks the bank is per-seat server licensing.

    This is where linux really shines. Set up a mail/web/print server using a cheap PC, and you have taken the first step to moving the whole shop over to Linux.

    Another thing is that in many of these small organisations, they use their PCs for very a specific purpose, like managing a single database. And so the question of Word, Excel, Access never comes up. Oftentimes, the people I meet in these small organisations have never used these applications, because they couldn't afford to purchase them.

    Sometimes there was some 20yr old DOS programme running and they were happily using that to do their day to day work. Port that to ncurses and away you go. No gnashing of teeth about desktops and applications, just cheaper hardware and software so they can remain employed.

    What if focusing on government demands was the answer? Ask them what they want, or develop with government needs (security, administration, etc.) in mind. If you do it right it shouldn't be hard to convince a government, be it municipal, provincial/state or maybe even national, that it's in their best interest to use a very cheap OS with few security holes and entertainment-based distractions (as much as we love Solitaire).

    I think you are on to something here. I am going to look into it straight away. Local governments here are keen to improve, but are cash strapped. Picking specific applications for use in local government might be a good way to get Linux in.

    --
    >>
    I am the director, and this is my movie ...
  126. How about.... by Tom7 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    How about paying for 1 copy (or, say, 10) and copying it to all the machines that need it?

    The excess money can go to pay for a real service, like to employ free software programmers.

    1. Re:How about.... by nathanm · · Score: 2
      How about paying for 1 copy (or, say, 10) and copying it to all the machines that need it?
      They can do that with the OS, since it's GPLed, but not the office suite. Hancom Office is propriety, closed-source software.
  127. BOFH by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Networks.... AND systems," I cry, "I like it!" The PFY shares my enthusiasm, realising the full potential for dodgy deals at our fingertips. "What was it Orwell used to say?" he responds cheerily, "All power corrupts, absolute power..." "... is even more fun," I finish.
    Following the coup d'etat at the end of last year, the PFY and I have got it all - the network, the machines, the head of department's password-changing methodology - use the same word year after year, but just increment the numeric suffix by one.

    Mind you, it beats addingan 's' to the end of it, as was his original practice.

    "New car please," I cry.

    The PFY depresses a button, and down in a packed storeroom in the basement, a tape stacker unit whirs into life. However, instead of the DLT cartridges it's used to working with, it's current payload is seven slot cars. A robot arm grabs one and deposits it onto the track set out around the locked room. Checking its position on the CCTV, I turn to the PFY.

    "Right, how about a 10 lap job? Loser has to reload the stacker and answer the phones for the rest of the day."

    "You're on," says the PFY, lulled into a false sense of security by my previous effort which ended badly at a particularly sharp corner.

    Just 15 minutes later the PFY's down in the basement reloading the stacker.

    While he's gone. I return the acceleration settings on the PFY's slot car driver to normal - cheating on a game of skill, how can I stoop so low? Years of practise, that's how. It's been hard going but now I can stoop lower than a pygmy limbo dancer.

    Upon his return the full weight of his loss descends upon the PFY's shoulders. Our increased role means increased responsibility, and worse still, increased user interaction. A newly arrived phone rings. I smile smugly at the PFY as he answers it.

    "Hi, look I've forgotten my password on the human resources system and I need to get into the database this morning."

    "OK," the PFY responds with uncharacteristic helpfulness. "Just bring your ID up here and we'll change it for you."

    I'm just about to book in for a hearing check-up when I notice the PFY switching the lifts into weekend mode, effectively making them lockdown at the ground floor.

    A couple of minutes later a chunky personnel type wheezes through the door after slogging the two flights of stairs to our office.

    "I'm here to get my password changed."

    "Oh, I'm sorry, the PFY has just gone down to your office to change it for you," I say, as the PFY plays dead under the desk.

    "He told me to meet him up here," our visitor gasps.

    "No, I'm sure he said he was going down to meet you."

    "Oh. Well can you change it then?" the user pants.

    "I could, but he's likely to change it and overwrite the change that I make."

    "Oh," the user mutters and trundles back downstairs.

    A couple of minutes later he's back on the phone.

    "It's about my password," he says

    "Ah yes," the PFY responds, "You weren't in your office when I came down. How about you wander up and I'll change it immediately for you?"

    "But I was just up there and I talked to the other guy."

    "Well, you're just going to have to come up here again aren't you?"

    The phone slams down and the PFY goes back into the lift maintenance menu.

    After the third time the wheezing's so bad I make the PFY come out of hiding and change the password before the poor user has a coronary. I know, I know, Mr Softy, that's me.

    Of course, it would have caused the poor guy a lot less discomfort if the PFY hadn't replaced his asthma inhaler propellant with helium, causing him to panic that his vocal passage was prolapsing, and then faint. On the way down he takes my CD-ROM drive with him, which puts me in a foul mood.

    I'm forced to get the next call while the PFY drags the unconscious body to the sick bay. Well, puts him in the freight elevator and presses the relevant floor anyway. Never let it be said that we don't care about our users.

    "Hi, I've got to get some important sales data off a floppy which says it's in DOS format."

    "DOS format?"

    "Yes."

    "That's easy. Go into DOS."

    "Uh-Huh." >clickety click "And use the FORMAT command."

    "Oh, of course."

    Another barrel shoot successfully completed.

  128. Re:Excellent, excellent news FOOLISH EMPLOYER by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    LIKE FIRST If You were a good employer, You should know that a good employee >> is not M$ slave or Lunix zealot. What does really counts???? It's the quality of being on the job he's working and not what he likes and dislikes. For me, I don't care even if one of my employee hates me, as long as this does not affect job. Sometimes even us employers make mistakes. At least I do. But anyway I've managed to keep people that are good employees and I intend to. You with Your fashism attitude just like to control. Bad karma.

    You see, I'm an employer, and I'd fire ignorant guys like You first, guys who don't see that there is a world behind their ass.

    COMPETITION IS A GOOD THING, Isn't being cheaper software some kind of competition. Let's say Hancom vs. M$???? Sun vs. M$???? IBM vs. M$. I don't really know but M$-ingnorant-never-look-something-else-fools must live a really fucked up life, either they're extremlly rich or extreme idiots.

    Setting ***X servers and Workstations proves to me to be much faster than M$. I can actually administrate desktop workstations remotely. But anyway, You as a extra-smart employer should know that controling and replicating ***X is much easyer.

    In fact You're pulling M$-licence-fashism. I bet You never went avay from M$. I did and liked. My company supports M$, (Expert in one, at least experienced desktop user in others always was my condition)). Believe me, I (personaly for my use) own at least one desktop and one notebook for every platform I support. The system I use is choosen acordingly to the job, not to my religion. But let's face it. Year 2001 brought to Linux enough Software to do almost anything, and since every god damn thing on ***X is CLI based I like bashing, because bashing let's me combine jobs in some intuitive way You probably can't even imagine.

    In fact I can say I'm Lunix zealot. I actualy spend a lot less money than You (Software costs, no administration time(set computer and use is main intention, not system repairing), job automatition, being able to make my computer network does jobs I need to get job done by combining different software on different computers (imagine how expensive that kind of M$ software would be, ***X has bash, I won't even mention more sophisticated ways to do that)), and my job gets done faster.

    I think I've explained You enough but from judging Your comment >> I doubt it

    JACKASS LIKE YOU, is nice example of brain-not-ready-to-be-employer
    and
    fool-buys-Bill-new-house

  129. QUESTION Isn't he answering him self by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Same language, same low cost words, same lack of brains. He waited 2 hours and posted at least one positive response to him self.

    Language is showing your employer attitude, dude

  130. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 2

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  131. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 2

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  132. NO! Not *linux! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Argh! The Korean government is run by idiots.
    They should have switch to BSD instead.

  133. It would be cheeper to burn FreeBSD by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Buying 120,000 copies of Linux? Now that's just foolish. They could have just bought 120,000 CDR's($120,000) and burned FreeBSD 120,000 times. FreeBSD is a complete system and it's free, unlike CrapHat Linux which costs $60. Which raises the issue of "is linux really free?". Well, CrapHat certainly isn't.

  134. Re:my, what a lot of big words you know lunix luse by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Shut the fuck up, you stupid fucking bitch! You're nothing but a humped over retarded whore!

    (P.S. Wanna fuck?)

  135. Why so many copies? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The South Korean government could have saved a LOT more money buy purchasing *ONE* copy and just installing it multiple times.

    It's free fucking software, for christs sake. My *god* people, get some priorities!

  136. South or North Korea by vortex+tzu · · Score: 1

    There is no such thing as "Korea". Is it N. or S.?

  137. The next step in world domination by slashdot_commentator · · Score: 2


    StarCraft allegedly runs under Wine. (which means it runs under Linux.)

    Get those Korean geeks working on Fortress, and then we will own Korea.

    Bahahahahahahahahahahahhaahahahaaaaaaaaaaaaaa...

    --
    There is no America. There is no democracy. There is only IBM and AT&T and DuPont, Dow, General Electric, and Exxon
    1. Re:The next step in world domination by Corrado · · Score: 2, Funny

      Wow, this is getting to be a giant, real-life sized game of RISK. :)

      --
      KangarooBox - We make IT simple!
  138. Korea 2002 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    http://www.hancom.com/en/product_service/word0823. html

    At this page you will a screenshot mentioning the Soccer World Cup 2002!!! It IS in Korea this time!

    Just think! No, don't imagine beowulf, clusters, or quake. Just think of the PR! Prime time PR for Linux - worldwide!

  139. Fix the open relays by stesch · · Score: 1

    I hope now they have the right software to fix the open relays. We don't need no further spam from Korea.

  140. Re:Slowly but surely... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Great. What if the modeline isn't already in XF86Config? What if you have a new monitor and you need to change the refresh rates?

    Oh look, you need to drop to the command line!

  141. Re:Slowly but surely... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sounds like you've had an unlucky streak with hardware!

    I have to admit to having problems with an (Old) AMD PCNet Lance NIC, and I went out & bought a chepo Realtek card instead. I also had problems with an AWE32 back with kernel 2.2.x (This was Redhat 5.1)

    Apart from that, everything has worked. Even my USB Quickcam was detected by Mandrake 8 & "just works" with V4L (Xawtv will display the picture, and I also had with working with a Netmeeting type application just to try it out).

    Then again, I did once install a "port" of Redhat 5.1 for the Amiga on an A4000, and got that working, so it's horses for courses in many ways.

  142. And so it begins... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I work for a UK government body - we have a large (3k users) MS based network which now gets fscked up about twice a week because of the uselessness of Outlook (unless you are a script kiddie).

    The real reason to change - that the current system is inefficent - is there. The cost of buying software off the monopoly compared to getting it free is not going to be the clincher.

    The fact that the software supplied by the monopoly is crap ought to be ... one day.

  143. Unfortunatly true, and starting up all over again by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Now that Bush is being given a free hand for "security" matters I suspect that a lot of this will soon be occuring. Consider, the "cuban detainees"
    they are not POWs, but detainees. As POW, they would have more rights than what they have currently. We (bush,etc.) are using semantics. Likewise, we are detaining 1000's of muslims without any reasons to do so. Yet, it is about wanting to have a heavy hand

  144. Biazed political opinions by TaboE · · Score: 0

    Weird you call Kim Il Sung a F*cking Dictator and KIM DAE JUNG.an president.
    Do you know the number of political prisoners in South Korea?
    You know what happens with you when you try to organise as a worker?

    Look up Dungeon in a dictionary...

    They are the USA son's of bitches but they are no democracy as well

  145. Then where's the distinction? by cduffy · · Score: 1

    If you support him and his sole proprietership getting rich so long as they follow the law, where's the distinction between that and any "big capitalist firm" whose wealth you seem less supportive of?

    1. Re:Then where's the distinction? by metis · · Score: 2
      Ok. Here is an explanation of what I see as a "marxist" (decidededly neo-neo ) take on the GPL. This isn't connected to anything recognizably "communist" in common stereotypes.

      Writing software is labor. And hence, written software is the product of labor. It is also a tool that can be used to do other types of labor, such as writing new software or even writing a letter. In that respect software is a mean of production. All tools (means of productions) are the result of prior labor.

      Capital is created by the private appropriation of the means of productions (prior labor). The result of capital accumulation is that would be producers (workers) cannot produce on their own. They must contract with an owner of capital. The result of this contract is that the value created by production is shared between labor and capital, in a ratio determined by their relative power.

      In communism, Marxs said, the means of productions will be owned collectively by the producers. Thus, they will not need to negotiate with capital owners the right to use them in production. As a result, they will enjoy a better share of the value they produce through they labor.

      This is essentially what the GPL does. It creates both directly (to the GPLed work) and indirectly (to derivatives,) a public ownership of prior labor (means of production)

      Marx wanted to do away with capitalists altogether. Whether it is possible, or even desirable, is not relevant here (I am rather agnostic). The GPL certainly does not destroy Capitalism. However, in harmony with the model, you can think of the GPL as creating public means of production, that you can use without having to negotiate. That strenghtens the negotiating power of labor vs. capital owners.

      Compare two models of a deal.

      In the first one, A, who owns rights to software tools, hires B to write, using those tools, a new tool, which A sells to others.

      In the second one, A hires B to use public tools to write some new tool (most likely public), with the intention of selling B's labor as consultancy to the future users of the new tool.

      You don't have to be a genius to realize that A will have to pay B a larger share of the value produced in the second case, because in the second model, A's contribution is smaller.

      Now that is sweet ( if you are living off work, naturally.)

      Again, this is not the kind of communism that will make Stalin smile (on the contrary). But it falls within Marx's model nonetheless.

      When the producer is working on his own, the whole issue is moot, safe that public software makes it indeed easier for people to work on their own. That is the whole point. There is nothing wrong in making money. The only problem is workers without bargaining power.

      I hope that discussion made sense to you.

      --
      -- look, cheese ahoy!
  146. Oh great ... by Ryokos_boytoy · · Score: 2, Funny

    120K new open mail relays ; )

    --


    If you don't say anything, you won't be called on to repeat it. -- Calvin Coolidge
  147. Re:Wish AmigaOS was available on x86. by vortexau · · Score: 1

    Wish granted with...
    Amithon! (To some degree)!

    --
    (David Bowman, EVA near HUGE Monolithic Win-PC in orbit around Jupiter) "My God - its full of Malware!"
  148. I Like Linux by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Linux is really good. I like Linux. Everyone should use Linux. It is the best.

  149. Re:Is this the route Linux distributors should tak by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That is not true.
    Governments offices are usually bad, not because they are underfunded, but because there is no accountability meaning their pay and job prospects are not related to their performance.
    As far as Linux is concerned, this is just another symptom of it.
    They don't give a fuck, they can screw 10 times over and nobody will do anything about it.

  150. Funny you should say that, by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That's what I think of US domains. You guys are all sex-starved viagra addicts who need mortgages refinanced at lowest rates yet. Pah! When I get spam from UK addresses it tends to be job offers (from recruitment agencies) which is slightly less obnoxious.

  151. Shift JIS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    is a *subset* of Unicode, not a superset... and it is a horrible bodge compared to the beauty of utf8 (try parsing a shift-jis string backwards e.g. for working out file extensions and then tell me it is a superiour system).

  152. Unicode supports over 1,000,000 character points by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And if you can remember enough characters to fill that space up you have a better memory than me. Frankly I think 65536 is enough, but you obviously would disagree with that. And Hangul does not require anything like that, since it was sensibly designed.

  153. They aren't called North or South really by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    it's "The Republic of Korea" (Seoul) and
    "The Democratic People's Republic of Korea"
    (Pyong-Yang) (which is a heriditary absolute monarchy, but then the US is hardly in a position to complain about that since their presidency is heriditary too!)

  154. Thats a lot of copies.. by josepha48 · · Score: 2
    Why so many? Are they going to cpoy them then make it available to the public? Use it in various goverment offices and thus distrubute them around?

    Looks like they are replacing desktops from the article. I guess this may be a test to see the compatibility and if it works then maybe they'll deploy them everywhere. I think in the long run it may be cheaper than a SUN or Windows solution.

    I think the real issues is that this is a Korean software company and the goverment is supporting their own. Why pay money to the US when they can support, monitor, and control an OS in their own country. They have the source and can make it as secure as they choose and add in monitoring software into the system if they choose.

    I think we will see more countries adopt Linux for the fact that it can help support their own econemy in their country by having a software company in thier country. Unlike Windows which is in the US. Kind of a way of keeping money in their own country an dkeeping their econemy going. That along with the fact that there are less srtingent licensing issues with RH/Linux.

    --

    Only 'flamers' flame!

  155. Re:my, what a lot of big words you know lunix luse by Jennifer+Ever · · Score: 1

    Pfft.

  156. Re:dog eaters should be put in coincentration camp by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I was just kidding... I admire dogmeat eaters for pissing off animal rights activists and dog-lovers and personally I have no problem eating any kind of meat except that of monkeys and humans.... and perhaps soup with the foot/tail of a pig in it and ox tongue and most organs (because that's yucky)

  157. And it's more productive! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You can watch all the Korean TV programs and many Korean movies online if you have a fast line, which many Koreans do.

    So the other advantage of the Linux system is that you can't watch such contents anymore since many sites are supporting IE only.

    Thus, it makes the government workers more productive! I think the guy who first thought about purchsing Linux systems is a genius. It is not only much cheaper but makes the government workers work.

    1. Re:And it's more productive! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      it.. it.. it's the really gooooood point!!!!!!

    2. Re:And it's more productive! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Moreover, they cant trade their stock on the internet while working.
      because "home trading system" is only working on windows.
      whoelse even try to do it on linux..?
      more work is waiting for you korean. ;)

  158. Re:my, what a lot of big words you know lunix luse by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You're giving ME the raspberry!??!

    Best be careful, 'fore I kick you in the cunt and use you as a waterski.

    P.S. My offer to fill your snatch with my impressive schlong still stands.

  159. Re:my, what a lot of big words you know lunix luse by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Zinn, another liberal posing as anarchist. Great all we need is another one of those.

  160. You speak from bad perspective by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In most cities, a computer repair shop is within walking distance. A lot of these folks learn quickly what works and what doesn't. The competition is intense. This adoption of Linux isn't mandate, a lot of people in the tech industry knew it was eventually coming anyway because they couldn't run HanCom legally on pirated Win platforms.

  161. Sadly, this company was/is on the ropes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    POSCO did not become the world's largest steel manufacturer without intense government guidance, support and sweet deals. I can only laugh at the American Republican party supporting "free competition" and "globalism"-- the American Suburban beggars are coming.

    Hancom has struggled financially since pirating was such a problem despite the protests of its genius founder.

    If you bought a new Hard drive from a computer shop, you could almost always be sure that a pirated set of programs was installed as after-service. This is the Korean government's "shoot in the arm" to it's struggling software industry.

    This is politics at the national level, not just choosing the best technology.

  162. Don't pop the champagne quite yet... by guntomypenguinhead · · Score: 1

    Perhaps the Korean government is enlightened on this particular issue, but if you were over here in Korea, you might be inclined to call them a lot of things, but "enlightened" probably wouln't be one of them...........

  163. Only if Japan goes open source first........ by guntomypenguinhead · · Score: 1

    I live in Korea, and I gotta agree with tavon79 with an additional precondition. The Koreans make much of how they hate the Japanese, but they imitate them at every opportunity (especially the not so good stuff): xenophobia, idiotic youth fashions, fiscal obfuscation, inefficient domestic goods distribution, provincialism, etc.... They generally don't adopt any concept from the west unless it arrives in Seoul via Japan. A couple of years back one of those PC rooms opened up as the "Linux PC-bang" Guess I don't have to tell you what they're running now.... Until the japanese port some games to linux, you won't see it on their desktops. As soon as it arrives from Tokyo, they'll claim it as their own idea.................

  164. Yes AC does know something about korean politics by guntomypenguinhead · · Score: 1

    I live in korea and AC is right! One of the niftier features of the korean economy is that the average korean citizen's bank deposit is subject to being transferred at government direction to a chaebol to keep it's (inept) management afloat and partying. Sweet deal, huh!? Koreans in general, have no tolerance of anybody saying anything negative about them, they further lack the ability of self examination, preferring to blame ALL their problems on foreigners (which can bring on some interesting mental acrobatics at times) I'm standing by for the oppa gangsters, now.....

  165. okay, Korean movies suck in general, too.... by guntomypenguinhead · · Score: 1

    Here in korea, logical sense doesn't have much to do with anything. Koreans will continue to pirate M$ windoze for their desktops because: a. They've been doing it for years. b. Starcraft runs on it. c. Windoze was written by foreigners, and koreans have nothing but contempt for foreigners and their intellectual rights. Just don't say anything bad about them or their stuff, though.....

  166. Re:my, what a lot of big words you know lunix luse by Jennifer+Ever · · Score: 1

    Physical threats in an imaginary universe will get you nowhere.

  167. Gadzooks! by jo42 · · Score: 1

    Imagine if all of these machines got root'd. Either you will get top spot in SETI@Home or a huge server farm for here.

  168. Re:my, what a lot of big words you know lunix luse by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Zin is a cock sucker. He slurps on dick all the time.