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Munich Spurns Steve Ballmer's Software Rebates

Kurt Pfeifle writes "Steve Ballmer's recent trip to Munich to offer up to 90% rebates for the Microsoft Software Assurance and Licenses was in vain. The ruling party of Germans biggest city and self-proclaimed 'technology capital' now decided to migrate 14.000 workstations to Linux and an OSS office suite. A study comparing the alternatives had assigned 6218 (out of 10.000) points to Linux/OSS, while the MS Windows platform only scored 5293. Babelfish translation of the latest newsticker story."

736 comments

  1. Good job. by grub · · Score: 5, Insightful


    When any manufacturer offers incredibly deep discounts like this, it's only so they can get their hooks into you. "Give them the razors, sell them the blades."

    --
    Trolling is a art,
    1. Re:Good job. by GameMaster · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Actually, the other possibility is that they are looking at the over-all PR picture and figure that the loss in profits is worth not getting the bad PR of having a whole nation convert over to OSS. In which case it could be looked at as a great deal from the Munich government's prospective because they could always make the switch to Linux later if MS starts trying to tie them down.

      I think it shows even more strongly the wisdom of the Munich government in their decision to take government software out of the hands of a proprietary company.

      --

      Rules of Conduct:
      #1 - The DM is always right.
      #2 - If the DM is wrong, see rule #1
    2. Re:Good job. by Jason+Earl · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Microsoft isn't worried about PR. They are worried about the thousands of German businesses that are going to be drawn inexorably towards Free Software. Lots of companies have to deal with the Munich city government, and the default formats for dealing with this organization just switched from MS Office to OpenOffice.org.

      The trickiest part about using Free Software is dealing with proprietary document formats. Read a review of any Office Suite for Linux and the first thing that the reviewer writes about is the ability to share documents with users of MS Office. When OpenOffice gets a negative review it is almost never because the tools are not sufficiently capable, but rather it is because the MS Office conversion filters aren't up to the task. Companies in Munich now can deal with their city government without resorting to these proprietary MS Office formats. In fact, the bureacrats are probably going to mandate the use of OpenOffice.org formats. They might not even do it on purpose, but you can bet that when the government employees have problems opening up a document that they will point the person towards the OpenOffice.org website. It probably won't be too long before a significant part of the Munich business community uses OpenOffice.org formats as their new lingua franca.

      What's worse, there is a good chance that many other German cities will follow suit. Microsoft could very easily find that one of the largest economies in the world is no longer interested in MS Office.

    3. Re:Good job. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "the default formats for dealing with this organization just switched from MS Office to OpenOffice.org"

      Well then nobody is better off than before! Originally you couldn't contact the government unless you had Word, now you can't contact the government unless you have OpenOffice.org. Gay!

    4. Re:Good job. by saden1 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Microsoft is in a real catch-22. I mean what is stopping governments/companies from getting those deep discounts by threatening to switch to Linux? If they don't give discounts they may well lose contracts and the pool of people using open source software grows. If they do they aren't going to make as much money and they'll surely have to dip into that 45 billion dollars they are sitting on.

      M$ has been ripping people of for year. Now they'll be the ones getting extorted. Like the old saying goes whatever goes around comes around.

      --

      -----
      One is born into aristocracy, but mediocrity can only be achieved through hard work.
    5. Re:Good job. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      "Well then nobody is better off than before! Originally you couldn't contact the government unless you had Word, now you can't contact the government unless you have OpenOffice.org. Gay!"

      Hello?! Have you taken a look at the price tag of both office packages?

    6. Re:Good job. by twalk · · Score: 5, Insightful

      What really puts them into a spot is their investors. They still think that MS is a growth stock. If they cut prices to compete with linux, they have a bunch of really pissed off investors, because their revenue won't be increasing as expected. If they raise prices to increase revenue to please the investors, then linux wins in the long run.

    7. Re:Good job. by zakezuke · · Score: 4, Interesting

      They "could" actually release "microsoft office" for linux. That would be an idea!

      Seriously... while it is a comercial product, it is one that is actually *used* by a great many people. What better way from profiting from the free software movement then actually releasing comercial products for it. Rather then offering a discount of 90%... offer them a product they will buy.

      Assuming the price is the same... city saves money on operating system, but doesn't have to spend money on migrating documents.

      --
      There is no sanctuary. There is no sanctuary. SHUT UP! There is no shut up. There is no shut up.
    8. Re:Good job. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Lots of companies have to deal with the Munich city government, and the default formats for dealing with this organization just switched from MS Office to OpenOffice.org.

      I don't get this ? Previously were these companies forced to use MS Office formats because the city government was using the same.

      Do companies really exchange formatted documents with the government all the time ?

    9. Re:Good job. by A+Naughty+Moose · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Microsoft only has to offer these deep discounts to those companies that are serious. I mean do you think that a Fortune 500 company is going to say to Microsoft: "No thanks, we're going to switch all all desktop to Linux and OpenOffice", without actually devoting resources to looking into the feasability of such a project? The only way to get MS to give you discounts is to actually mean it. Go into a meeting with Steve, and say: We've done the research, OSS will cost us X to switch, and Y to support each year. After Z years, the OSS solution pays for itself, and after that, we're running a profit in the IT division. Now we really don't want to switch, the short term headaches will be a bitch, what deals are you going to make for us Mr. Ballmar? What if the company didn't do this research or actaully make a comitment to change if the response is: "Screw you, You'll take what we give and like it."? What is the company going to do? The point? You can't use OSS as leverage unless you actually plan on going through with it. Kudos for the German goverment for playing the hard ball game, but this only becomes meaningful once this is in operation.

    10. Re:Good job. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well then nobody is better off than before! Originally you couldn't contact the government unless you had Word, now you can't contact the government unless you have OpenOffice.org. Gay!

      >
      >
      Not Gay. Now people will go back to using ASCII text for documents.

      Imagine. Getting a proposal that's a 21k ASCII text file rather than a 4 megabyte Word doc file

    11. Re:Good job. by sproketboy · · Score: 2, Informative

      The format for Open Office files are OPEN you dimwit. There's no "lock in" here. Read about at http://xml.openoffice.org/ before before posting nonesence.

    12. Re:Good job. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Of course, that's exactly what Office 2003 does with nothing included that could be deemed to be proprietary. Pure XML. As open as you could want it. Of course, some people will still need to gripe at that too.

    13. Re:Good job. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But.. why would anyone want that? Current Microsoft operating systems are actually not that bad. The Office suite is more expensive than the OS and most of the lock-in problems are "bundled" with MS Office, not the OS. If you're going to switch to open source, it's not because of the OS. The OS switch is just the icing on the cake because you're no longer tied to Windows by proprietary data formats. One could say that Munich has decided to use open file formats and can therefore freely choose the operating system and applications, and under these circumstances, Microsoft can't compete.

    14. Re:Good job. by solidhen · · Score: 1

      I could come up with an encoding scheme that converts any binary file to XML and vice versa. XML is no more open than binary is.

      Could you tell me were I can find the specification for the schema they are using?

      --
      Some things are more important than an animated rat
    15. Re:Good job. by krisp · · Score: 3, Informative
      Perhaps you should take a closer look at this story. Unless you plan on spending $900 on your copy of office, you don't get XML support. Sounds proprietary to me.

      Likewise. from the article:

      Text in Office 2003 files stored in XML format might be viewable in other desktop programs, but all document formatting would be lost


      Sounds to me like you'd be better off saving it as an RTF then as a MSXML file. Save yourself 100kb.
    16. Re:Good job. by saden1 · · Score: 5, Interesting

      I agree with you about having to mean it but I am confident that M$ would immediately jump and offer discounts if they ever heard company X say we'll do feasibility and cost study on Linux. M$ would offer discounts just not to have the study done. Now companies/governments have some leverage where as before they'd always tell you "Screw you, You'll take what we give and like it." Take the changes they made to their license policy a year or so ago. They made a killing at the expense of their customers/users. I don't think they can low ball people like that anymore. No wonder why they are supporting SCO.

      --

      -----
      One is born into aristocracy, but mediocrity can only be achieved through hard work.
    17. Re:Good job. by innocent_white_lamb · · Score: 1

      Do companies really exchange formatted documents with the government all the time ?

      With government offices and agencies, and with other businesses, and among themselves.

      Of course!

      There are many occasions where I've received a MS Office doc file containing one or two sentences of simple text. "Here is the price that you asked for. We currently have 300 in inventory."

      Many secretaries, warehouse monkeys and the like honestly have no idea that you can use MS Outlook to actually type text into. They just use it to send Word attachments.

      --
      If you're a zombie and you know it, bite your friend!
    18. Re:Good job. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      It's what's inside that counts. XML is just the facade. The Open Office file format has to be open simply because the source is available, but furthermore the format is actively developed in an open fashion. MS Office file formats on the other hand have to be reverse engineered even when the data comes in XML containers. Even MS doesn't get conversions of old files right. In a normal MS Office document you will find text which was supposed to be deleted and other potentially dangerous junk data. MS Office files are a mess.

    19. Re:Good job. by jd142 · · Score: 1

      I know this is slightly offtopic, but at least if something happens to a Word document, you can open it in a basic text editor and get the text out of it. Have you looked at an OpenOffice file? I believe they are stored as compressed files which means that if one part of the file becomes corrupt, like a sector on a floppy, it becomes impossible to get the original text back.

      Here an example of what I mean. I opened Word and Writer and made a simple file using the default settings. The file said, "I like to read slashdot." In the word file, in addition to all the binary date, you can actually see the words. In the writer document all you get is binary data and some xml info. There's no way to actually see the text in the document in the default install.

      I work for a university and it is not uncommon for students to save their files on floppies. When those floppies go bad, I can get most of a file back for them, losing only the data in the bad sector. Sometimes they just lose a paragraph or two. This would be impossible with the default OpenOffice format. Just coming off exams, I saw this about 5 times in the past two weeks. Usually they have backups at home, but not always, and the stress can really get to some people.

      Word's next version will probably have this same problem, based on what I've heard about file formats. Wordperfect has it too; they use a special character instead of the space character to separate words. You can get the text, but you have to do a lot of search and replaces on it to get the spaces back.

    20. Re:Good job. by Eric+Damron · · Score: 1

      "n which case it could be looked at as a great deal from the Munich government's prospective because they could always make the switch to Linux later if MS starts trying to tie them down."

      My department is 100% Microsoft. We have hundreds of Word macros that talk to our Microsoft SQL server etc. If we wanted to switch it would take use several years to phase out Microsoft. It would be ugly. Worth it in the long run in my opinion but ugly getting there.

      --
      The race isn't always to the swift... but that's the way to bet!
    21. Re:Good job. by Eric+Damron · · Score: 1

      NO! It's Microsoft's "flavor" of XML. They're at there old tricks of embrase and extend.

      --
      The race isn't always to the swift... but that's the way to bet!
    22. Re:Good job. by mav[LAG] · · Score: 5, Interesting

      They "could" actually release "microsoft office" for linux. That would be an idea!

      No it won't and for a simple reason: more than anything else, Bill Gates likes to win. The money is incidental. Yes I am being entirely serious. Go and read Accidental Empires by Robert X Cringlely or Big Blues by Paul Carroll or any other detailed treatise of the early (and subsequent) days of the PC. The overriding impression of Gates is that he wants to win. It's a philosophy that permates the organisation from the top down. Why do you think Microsoft Account directors are being given millions in discounts and orders to "under NO circumstances lose to Linux"? Surely that money would be better spent in the medium term in other ways? But seen in the context of "winning the business at all costs" it makes perfect sense.
      Here's the telling quote and you can be really really sure that Gates has read it and knows it:
      "If Microsoft ever does applications for Linux it means I've won" - Linus Torvalds. Source here
      This is a lovely quote from Linus and I'm sure he knew exactly what he was saying by putting it in terms of the "win-lose" mentality of Microsoft.
      Office for Linux would be a huge loss of face. Can you imagine the /. headline (and the next one a day later :): Linus prophecy fulfilled as Gates loses face over Linux Office.
      The IT press would be all over it.

      --
      --- Hot Shot City is particularly good.
    23. Re:Good job. by Jason+Earl · · Score: 4, Interesting

      The difference is that OpenOffice.org is Free Software. You can download the program from the Internet. The city of Munich could even make money selling install CDs.

    24. Re:Good job. by repoleved · · Score: 1

      Well... the file is much smaller, so you could always save it twice to minimize the risk that a bad sector would affect both files... or uncompress it since the format underneath is XML... There is also an option to pretty-print the XML to make reading it even easier. Finally, you could distribute customized versions that install your favorite configuration that deals with this problem.

    25. Re:Good job. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >Many secretaries, warehouse monkeys and the like honestly have no idea that you can use MS Outlook to actually type text into. They just use it to send Word attachments.

      Not even that. They write their text in Word, then select "Send message..." in the file menu, and automatically get an e-mail window with an empty message body, subject set to the document name (which defaults to the first words of the document), and the document attached. Select the receiver and click send.

    26. Re:Good job. by Metasquares · · Score: 1

      Continue to use word format. The conversion is decent as-is and will only improve with time.

    27. Re:Good job. by bwt · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You've got to be kidding. An open office file is a zipped XML archive. This is a big advantage for OO over MS Office. The better solution to your floppy problems is to stop using floppies. It is no longer reasonable to expect students to have PCs that have floppies (it rules out new PCs from vendors like Dell).

    28. Re:Good job. by Jason+Earl · · Score: 1

      Microsoft's $45 billion (or whatever) in the bank is nothing more than a red herring. The truly important number for Microsoft is the price of MSFT stock. Most of Microsoft's executives have a significant amount of cash tied up in MSFT. Not to mention the large investments in MSFT that the company makes, and the fact that MSFT stock options save the company billions in taxes each year.

      When investors realize that Microsoft no longer merits their price/earnings ratio of nearly 30 then Microsoft's stock is going to fall out of the sky, and Microsoft's biggest asset, their ever-increasing stock price, will be gone forever.

    29. Re:Good job. by Eric+Damron · · Score: 1

      "They "could" actually release "microsoft office" for linux. That would be an idea!"

      No! It would come with VBA for Linux and all of the Word viruses would follow!

      Oh well, there goes the neighborhood! :-)

      --
      The race isn't always to the swift... but that's the way to bet!
    30. Re:Good job. by zakezuke · · Score: 1

      Ummm, why would anyone want that? Cause dispite the rampent hate for microsoft, Office is a good product in many people's eyes. So good, people are willing to pay bucks for it.

      Well... let me check my local prices on OEM editions of Office and Windows

      Between $94.90 - $139.90 for win98/winxp win2k/xp pro respectifly

      $185.90 for Office XP Small business edition
      $309.90 for MS OFFICE XP PRO (OEM)

      So let's say, just to be lazy.. $100 for the os and $200 for office SBE. That's $300. A 90% discount of that would be $30.00, a kick ass price.

      While office typicaly costs 2x to 3x more then the OS (assuming Oem editions) it is a product worth paying for.

      I don't presume to judge why this city is going linux, but as an average joe cost saving manover, I see a *tremdious* market for Office for linux. If this wasn't the case, the Wine project wouldn't be nearly so popular.

      The very reason it's a marketable product is because of the fact that it's propriotory, and *popular*. I.e. it would be worth it to many businesses and administration bodies to buy a copy of office just to be compatable with everyone else. Plus the fact that people are typicaly trained in these power applications that pretty much justify the expence in the machine and operating system.

      "One could say that Munich has decided to use open file formats and can therefore freely choose the operating system and applications"

      One could say that, but one can also say people actually choose Microsoft Word over other choices in the market place. One of the reasons I still run windows is because I like Microsoft Word, and i've used a vast number of word processing programs among many platforms. One of the major reasons I switched to the PC was the fact that I wanted to run Microsoft Word. I would not want to run Word Perfect for example, nor am I 100% a fan of Star/Open office.

      Microsoft is a software company, who have made a choice, I personaly feel the wrong one, to try to practicly give away their product so people don't make the switch to Linux. If they were actually to sell somthing of value to linux users, they wouldn't have to play that game. Besides, as you say, Office costs more then Windows.

      It's only common sence, if you can't get users to buy your os to use your products, make your products for their os.

      --
      There is no sanctuary. There is no sanctuary. SHUT UP! There is no shut up. There is no shut up.
    31. Re:Good job. by Foofoobar · · Score: 1

      It's not PR. If they get you used to an OS, you won't want to switch. Once you are running Microsoft on your desktops and servers, why use competitors products when Microsoft bundles it all together? Why use Apache when you've got IIS? Why use REAL when you've got Media Player?

      Then they want you to use THEIR IDE's and development languages which further gimps you and makes you more and more reliant on Microsoft.

      It's just like a pusher and a junkie; the more smack they buy from you the more addicted they get.

      --
      This is my sig. There are many like it but this one is mine.
    32. Re:Good job. by PurpleFloyd · · Score: 1
      What do you suggest as a replacement for floppies? CD-RWs are cheap, but take forever to format and require special software (unless you're using Win XP, which is a major headache to roll out). Iomega Zip and Jaz are decent, except that the standard is controlled by one company and media is ridiculously expensive ($10 for 100 megs? You've got to be kidding, I can get a cakebox of CD-Rs for $25!). Floppies are still a "lowest common denominator"; they can be found on almost all systems, they're cheap, and have enough room for a few Word documents or similar files.

      Although you argue that students shouldn't be expected to have floppy drives, you don't produce any alternative. Floppies remain the cheapest and easiest method for transporting small amounts of data.

      --

      That's it. I'm no longer part of Team Sanity.
    33. Re:Good job. by jd142 · · Score: 0, Troll

      So stop using the most ubiquitous storage medium there is?

      Telling the user to either save the file twice or use a different storage medium doesn't solve the underlying problem. Because text data is not stored as text, it becomes incredibly difficult to retrieve partial text data when the underlying medium is damaged. All media can become corrupt and damaged, floppy, hd, and yes even cdroms. Storing text data as anything other than text adds a layer of complexity to the recovery process.

      It also makes it more difficult to view the file in another program. If I don't have something that can read a word 2000 file, I can always pop open any text editor and get the data without the formatting.

      If I don't have a program that can read an openoffice file, I first have to know what compression is used, find a program that can uncompress it, then open it in a text editor. Again, that's completely unnecessary. I have yet to see a justifiable reason for compressing the data. My two little "I like to read slashdot" files came in at 4.5 kb for Open Office and 9 kb for word 2000. That's not enough difference to justify the space saving.

    34. Re:Good job. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So why is there Microsoft Office for Mac? M$ hasn't exactly won against Apple yet.

    35. Re:Good job. by DarcSeed · · Score: 1

      Too bad Jobs never said that about the Mac :P

      --
      Best death? What, die from a naked lady avalanche?
    36. Re:Good job. by bwt · · Score: 1

      I suggest internet connectivity as a replacement for floppies. I think USB keychain drives would also work.

    37. Re:Good job. by YU+Nicks+NE+Way · · Score: 1

      Perhaps you ought to look at that story yourself. Several poeple, including me, refuted the core claim as made by the editor and the "original submitter". There is no loss of formatting when you save a document in XML from Word.

      The original article was SlashFUD, nothing more, and the original poster is correct.

    38. Re:Good job. by fermion · · Score: 1
      I think the issue might be that Germany has gotten good at looking at the long term effects of their decisions. For example, I believe back in 1991 they enacted laws to make manufacturers responsible for their waste. In Munich, most restaurants pay a great deal of money if they choose to use non-reusable serving products. This is in stark contrast to the rest of the western world where disposal cost for manufacturing and restaurant wastes are often externalized to the tax payer and future generations.

      It seems to me that the decision to use Linux, even though discounted MS products might be cheaper and easier in the short term, is consistent with the forward thinking that seems to have become typical of German politics.

      (I am sure those of you in Germany will corrects any errors I may have made).

      --
      "She's a scientist and a lesbian. She's not going to let it slide." Orphan Black
    39. Re:Good job. by BalkanBoy · · Score: 1

      Dear friend- Microsoft may win, but alas, it may be a Phyrric victory. For what good is it to you if you win, after you have lost all or almost all of what you stood for? At least in the sense of operating systems... Microsoft may well be a very diverse company, but Bill Gates would be ill advised to continue fighting something that has the making of a long term loss, rather than a victory... Progess, albeit slow, is inevitable...

      --
      'A lie if repeated often enough, becomes the truth.' - Goebbels
    40. Re:Good job. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I read review after review talking about this problem or that reading/converting Office file formats. I see low ratings in these same reviews because Open Office (or any other Office substitute) doesn't support macros written in MS Office.

      Why don't I read any reviews about MS's failings in these very areas? I have been using and supporting Office since 6.0. MS has never supported their own file formats successfully!

      The company I work for right now just made the switch from Office 97 to Office 2000 just over 1 year ago. All of our product manuals are done in Word. Without exception, every manual has had to be reformatted when moved to Word 2000! Some reformatting was minor, some manuals had to be scrapped and rewrittten, but all manuals had to be changed! And we are not doing anything fancy in Word. These are the simplest formatting and pagination things that break!

      I used to rely pretty heavily on Word and Excel macros to automate tasks for customers. I got trained outa that by MS when I had to rewrite the macros whenever Office was upgraded! And I don't mean minor changes; I mean major rewriting. In each case, the time spent to rewrite the macros was on the order of the time it took to create them in the first place.

      Office file format compatibility is a myth! If that is the only thing holding back adoption of Open Office, go ahead and switch. Even if you are compatible now, you won't be when the next Office debuts. But I'll bet Open Office will work with it's file formats no matter what the rev.

    41. Re:Good job. by rjamestaylor · · Score: 1
      • When any manufacturer offers incredibly deep discounts like this, it's only so they can get their hooks into you. "Give them the razors, sell them the blades."
      So grow a beard and join the Free Sftware Movement.
      --
      -- @rjamestaylor on Ello
    42. Re:Good job. by AstroDrabb · · Score: 1

      Umm, WRONG. Just because the plain text will be in XML doesn't mean anything about being able to read all the proprietary formating Scheme in the XML. MS will NOT release that. So at best you will be able to get only the text from an office doc, which is not hard to do now. MS will not hand over thier cash cow. They are going to keep doing any unethical, monopolistic practices they can to keep MS office and MS's OS'es closed and as incompatible with anything else they can. As someone else said, they are willing to give you the razor, however they are going to kill you on the blades. They are goig to control who can make the blades, sell the blades and use the blades. Are you makiing an MS Razor compatible blade? Oh well, we are going to use some of our $40 Billion USD in cash reserves to sue you over "IP".

      --
      If Tyranny and Oppression come to this land,
      it will be in the guise of fighting a foreign enemy. -James Madison
    43. Re:Good job. by GameMaster · · Score: 1

      That is a valid point. However, it sounds as though they are already running 100% Microsoft and are looking to make the switch away from it. In which case, they're already defying the difficulties you are describing.

      --

      Rules of Conduct:
      #1 - The DM is always right.
      #2 - If the DM is wrong, see rule #1
    44. Re:Good job. by TKinias · · Score: 1

      scripsit Eric Damron:

      No! It would come with VBA for Linux and all of the Word viruses would follow!

      Yeah, and you'd have to run it as root or it would refuse to execute... just so the macro viruses could do real damage...

      --
      In principio creauit Linus Linucem.
    45. Re:Good job. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The Germans don't need a setup like Windows, where no tickering is possible. No fun at all if you can't tweak it!

    46. Re:Good job. by IDIIAMOTS · · Score: 1, Flamebait

      At least they have a P/E ratio, as opposed to SUNW or RHAT. :)

    47. Re:Good job. by SStrungis · · Score: 1
      I have to agree...Do we really give a frog's fat ass whether it's in Times New Roman in .doc format or in courier as plain ol' text?

      99.9% of all of my serious correspondence contains NOTHING in it that Word makes "special". If I want page layout, I can use Quark, or Illustrator, or something else, but not Word.

      Ascii is for me!

      Scott

    48. Re:Good job. by rainer_d · · Score: 1
      My department is 100% Microsoft. We have hundreds of Word macros that talk to our Microsoft SQL server etc. If we wanted to switch it would take use several years to phase out Microsoft. It would be ugly. Worth it in the long run in my opinion but ugly getting there.

      Geez. I guess that makes arguing and bargaining with your MSFT sales-rep really easy.
      You can be certain that he has allready calculated the maximum price of Office for your site before a switch becomes actually financially viable.
      Oh. And don't forget to run every BSA-audit. ;-)

      Rainer

      --
      Windows 2000 - from the guys who brought us edlin
    49. Re:Good job. by Proudrooster · · Score: 1

      Why bother porting Office? You can run most of Office under Linux with Wine ala Cross-Over Office.

    50. Re:Good job. by Sri+Lumpa · · Score: 1

      "M$ has been ripping people of for year. Now they'll be the ones getting extorted."

      No, they are not, it is simply competition in action. Linux and assorted Free Software is good enough for a large enough variety of task to become a competitor to MS that they cannot get rid of easily so MS needs to start competing on price, first step is different pricing for parts of their customer base (the one most likely to switch) and as Linux and co gets better the reduced pricing should slowly become the norm until we have a truly competitive market, which will also be good for MS customers.

      --
      "The obvious mathematical breakthrough would be development of an easy way to factor large prime numbers." Bill Gates,
    51. Re:Good job. by Qacker · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Sure that isn't much diffrence but when you have a long (1meg+) book the space saved is a lot. As long as you can save as straight XML why is anyone complaining?

      --
      Learn lisp today!
    52. Re:Good job. by evilviper · · Score: 1
      The only way to get MS to give you discounts is to actually mean it.

      To Whom it May Concern;
      I have determined that switching all my machines to Linux will save me $100,000 every year. Now, to be fair, I thought I'd give you the option of just giving me $100,000 each year, and I will continue to use Windows on 99% of my computers.

      Sincerely,
      EvilViper
      --
      Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
    53. Re:Good job. by Malcontent · · Score: 4, Interesting

      You don't have to go those lengths. Here is what you do. I mean this, this actually works.

      Install a PC in the office of the CIO that's running linux or freebsd. Set a screen that shows a penguin or something like that. Install openoffice, set up a handful of programs like mozilla, a jabber client, and make their icons prominent on the destop.

      Also install two or three linux servers in the server room. They don't have to be doing anything but it would be great idea to lable them "postgres server" and "Mail Server".

      When the time comes to negotiate the new contract the sales rep will notice the servers (they are trained to look for them) and ask about it. At this point the CIO (and not anybody else) says "We are doing some preliminary analysis about the suitablity of a linux desktop and some servers". when the sales drone asks how it's going just say "it's too early to tell but so far it looks pretty good, Hey let's go to the server room and let me show you that new exchange server we installed".

      Bingo!. After touring the server room your company will be offered a substantial discount on your software licenses. The bigger you are the bigger the discount.

      Paying retail for MS licenses is like paying the sticker price for a car. Only the most stupid idiot CIO will do such a moronic thing.

      --

      War is necrophilia.

    54. Re:Good job. by buck_wild · · Score: 1

      Bah. 14000 licenses are a drop in the bucket. Maybe ONE junior executive won't get a bonus next year.

      The monetary value is incidental. The real issue is that Bill Gates wants to come out on top no matter what. It will be very interesting to see what he does next.

      --
      If all you have is a hammer, everything looks like a nail.
    55. Re:Good job. by citdude · · Score: 1

      Corel released a version of their office suite in 2000. in my opinion, their suite is better than openoffice in many ways, can deal with word docuements better, and can be read by ms office . . . but then there is no incentive for people used to ms office to switch to something else and microsoft doesnt take a hit.

    56. Re:Good job. by Rxke · · Score: 1

      What I don't understand, wasn't there a law in Europe that explicitly forbids to sell at a loss? (that's why you see the razors packed with a packet of blades) Wasn't MS attempting to do something fishy? or is selling at a 90% reduced price STILL profitable, if so, they're just telling everybody they are getting ripped off, making HUGE profits on evvery piece of ware they sell...

    57. Re:Good job. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ...dEspite...rampAnt.... ...typicaLLy...manEUver (or manOEUvre, Br.)...treMENDdous... ...propriETAry...compatIble...expenSe... ...personaLLy...practicALLy...somEthing... ...senSe... There's a rumor that Microsoft Word can check spelling....

    58. Re:Good job. by lateralus_1024 · · Score: 1

      Rules of Conduct: #1 - The DM is always right. #2 - If the DM is wrong, see rule #1
      I always knew Depeche Mode was influential to many other artists, but wasn't aware of their cult-like rules

      --
      If you think /. comments are bad, check out Digg.
    59. Re:Good job. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      GW:Facing Islamic extremism with extremely stupid Christian ideology and the vocabulary of a 4th grader.
      How ya like them apples?

    60. Re:Good job. by raju1kabir · · Score: 2, Insightful
      There are many occasions where I've received a MS Office doc file containing one or two sentences of simple text. "Here is the price that you asked for. We currently have 300 in inventory."

      And the most annoying thing about that (okay, the second most annoying, after having to fire up another application just to read two sentences) is that the attachment will be 150K, despite containing about 60 bytes of actual information.

      --
      "Patriotism is your conviction that this country is superior to all other countries because you were born in it." -- GBS
    61. Re:Good job. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Office for Mac came before Office for Windows.

    62. Re:Good job. by Lord+Flipper · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The thing is, they aren't a 'growth' stock, at all. In the two years ended 2001, MS showed a net of 21 Billion dollars US, however, they had over $22 Billion in salaries that were paid in (inflated) stock, and options. This 'payroll' was never declared against income, nor taxed, obviously. So...bottom line: They were losing money before the market crumbled.

      Also, the fact that their net income was artificially inflated had the side effect of making them appear healthier where financing (bonds, short term corporate 'paper', etc) was concerned. Just like Enron. And Apple, actually, and many others. But with the numbers so high, and the market 'weighting' in the S&P 500 so heavy, Microsoft perpetrated a giant, government-ordained, fraud on investors.

      Don't get me wrong, they still have the $45 Bil, but at some point there will be a reckoning. Any one of us, with a small-to-medium-sized company, should be able to easily imagine what the terms of biz loans, credit, etc, would be like if our payrolls weren't part of the 'cost of doing business'. No?

      My guess is that the Germans are more spooked by 'backdoors' in the OS, and the cozy relationship between MS and the DOJ (read: white house, oil-based oligarchy, etc), than saving a few bucks. Although, with the current US efforts to let the dollar fall (and Europe, Japan, and Asia go 'belly-up', in terms of currencies and trade) saving a few hundred million marks isn't such a bad side effect of German attention to their own security, sovereignty, etc.

    63. Re:Good job. by qortra · · Score: 1

      That makes a good deal of sense, and you are probably right (in that Gates will probably never release Office for Linux). However, it seems to me that given the mentality you just described, Office for Mac OS should never have been released. How do you explain that? Now, I realize that Mac OS isn't the same kind of threat as Linux, but once upon a time, it was probably the biggest obstacle to MS in terms of totally owning the consumer computer market.

      respectfully, qortra

    64. Re:Good job. by mav[LAG] · · Score: 1

      However, it seems to me that given the mentality you just described, Office for Mac OS should never have been released.

      Because Office for MacOS has been around a long time - Word for the Mac was already at version 3.0 in 1988 - before Linus even went to university. Microsoft was in the process of getting market share in those days - it had very strong competitors in the form of Wordperfect, Mac Write II and WriteNow. The Mac was (and I suppose is) just another applications platform to which Microsoft applications could be sold to paying customers. Today it has an installed base and I guess a big enough revenue stream to continue being viable.

      Now, I realize that Mac OS isn't the same kind of threat as Linux, but once upon a time, it was probably the biggest obstacle to MS in terms of totally owning the consumer computer market.

      Remember the context here is 1988. The rift between Microsoft and IBM hasn't really arisen yet. Windows is not really being pushed much by Microsoft. Paul Carroll in Big Blues (pp. 181-182) says that all the real energy at Microsoft was put into getting a version of OS/2 out by the end of that year. Operating systems were the company's main revenue - which is easy to forget today when we look at how much of a cash cow Office is for Microsoft. When it came to applications in the late 80s, Microsoft was just another player in the IT market and a small one at that. Developing Office for the Mac was just another task in the applications team which itself was fairly small compared with the 200 or so bodies engaged in the OS/2 deathmarch.

      --
      --- Hot Shot City is particularly good.
    65. Re:Good job. by dash2 · · Score: 1

      You wrote a one-line comment denying it. That hardly counts as a refutation, especially given that the original story was from a reputable news source, and you didn't mention which version of the Office 2003 beta you were using.

    66. Re:Good job. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Ummm, why would anyone want that? Cause dispite the rampent hate for microsoft, Office is a good product in many people's eyes."

      Change that to "in many *untrained* people's eyes".

      Office has *never* been any useful for proffessional purpouses. Try to automatice document creation, for instance, and you either won't be able or it'll be a nigthmare and will keep you tied to more Microsoft products.

      As any other Microsoft product, Office *seems* to be a good product. And that's the best "discover" Bill Gates did: it is not needed -in fact, you should avoid it, a good product in order to sell it. All you need -in fact, what you must pursue, is a bad product that *seems* to be good. Just look at it on critical eyes. Microsoft products are -all of them, bells and whistles to cover an embrace and extend technical policy.

      Please pay attention I'm not introducing any ethics here. I'm not saying this is either good or bad. I only say that's what Microsoft does and that's what you should pay attention for when considering an aquisition choice (*if* you even make a market research prior to aquire, say, a new Word processor. Most won't do that).

    67. Re:Good job. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You really haven't understood.

      Ms Office for Linux would mean Bill Gates surrending to the "Evil Penguin Powers" while Ms Office for Mac OS meant "Microsoft entering triumphantly Steve Jobs' Reign".

    68. Re:Good job. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And that's exactly what John Doe would do (and, in fact, it's already doing: some distros already make "usual user" under the group 0 and with autologin too).

    69. Re:Good job. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Still, it's open source and it has easy doable solutions:
      1/ Make the default format uncompressed XML, instead of standard compressed XML.
      2/ CRC test (or MD5) the compressed copied file to insure it has been properly copied (or even, try to use it so you know OO is able to read it).
      4/ Since last one can be a little cumbersome, program a sort script to do it for you.
      5/ Ask the OO team to include this test to be automatically done.
      4/ Since it's Open Source, do-it-yourself.

    70. Re:Good job. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes. And the more you stay tied to Microsoft, the uglier it will become.

      Remember: The first step is half the way.

    71. Re:Good job. by jd142 · · Score: 1

      An open office file is a zipped XML archive. This is a big advantage for OO over MS Office.

      I forgot to ask: Why is it a big advantage? I will grant you that an uncompressed XML file is an advantage, but why is a zipped archive an advantage? Just because it shrinks the file? You can store 3 uncompressed text novels(100,000 words) on one floppy, more than most people will ever write in their lifetime, so space can't be much of an issue with text files.

    72. Re:Good job. by jd142 · · Score: 1

      Yes, your number 1 is exactly what I've been looking for. Store it uncompressed by default and if someone really wants to save a few kilobytes on a 10 page paper, give them the option.

      Number 2 should actually be implemented at the operating system level. Most of the time, Windows will happily write to a bad sector of a floppy with no errors. It's only when the file is read back in that the errors become apparent. I haven't used bad floppies on a mac or linux box to know how they handle it.

    73. Re:Good job. by jd142 · · Score: 1

      Cool. I got moderated as a troll because I had the audacity to question the effectiveness of the darling program in certain situations.

      I have finally arrived. ;)

    74. Re:Good job. by CKer · · Score: 1

      Yes, Gay....Meaning better..

      --
      To err is human, but to really foul things up requires a computer. -anonymous
    75. Re:Good job. by SN74S181 · · Score: 1

      Okay. Then which standards are OpenOffice.org native file formats based on? I am not talking about 'what standard is beneath the format' like the XML that's beneath some of the latest-generation MS Office formats.

      I am saying: What tool besides OpenOffice itself (Star Office doesn't count, for any smart alecks who try that...) can open and readily manipulate the OpenOffice documents?

      Whoops! I guess it's just another defacto standard, not really any different from the MS Office defacto standard. The proof that it's a 'standard' will come when there's a competing office suite that can open, edit, and save OpenOffice native files. Will that day ever come?

    76. Re:Good job. by SN74S181 · · Score: 1

      I think Microsoft Word for DOS was up to about version 3.0 by then, too. The 'great merge' of the DOS/Windows and Mac versions of Word hadn't happened yet, though. Lotus was still king of the spreadsheets, and Wordperfect was still king of the Word Processors. Word and Excel were DOS/Mac things that goofy renegades ran.

    77. Re:Good job. by SN74S181 · · Score: 1

      I've often thought that Microsoft would be wise to offer binary drivers that offer native support for Ex2fs and the other popular Linux filesystem partitions. Without any security features, of course.

      A few nice plugins like that, maybe even to work on an MS-DOS boot floppy that Johnny Kracker can take into any server room he has access to.....

    78. Re:Good job. by SN74S181 · · Score: 1

      An open office file is a zipped XML archive.

      Wow. You just validated what he said. How do you get anything useful out of a corrupted 'zipped XML archive' using a text editor?

      Also, your anti-floppy-disk snobbery just kicked up a duststorm of dissent. Don't try rhetoric like that when you're trying to convert people.

    79. Re:Good job. by SN74S181 · · Score: 1

      'as long as you can save from Microsoft Word to RTF format, why is anyone complaining?'

      Pot.

      Kettle.

      Black.

    80. Re:Good job. by q.kontinuum · · Score: 1
      What tool besides OpenOffice itself ... can open and readily manipulate the OpenOffice documents? Whoops! I guess it's just another defacto standard ...

      Show me the free available specification of the so called MS-document standard and I will show you the specification of the OOo-document format. Deal?

      Hint: specifications for proprietary formats (like MS Products generate it) are not provided for everyone!

      --
      Trolling is a art!
    81. Re:Good job. by bwt · · Score: 1

      XML is verbose, which makes for good readability, but large file sizes. Standards based compression is used to minimize the file size. The savings can be dramatic over the full XML: 5-to-1 tyically, as much as 20-1 in certain cases.

      The OO format actually is both archived and compressed, and are obviously influenced by the success of the java archive .jar approach. RPM also uses this approach. You are starting to see more file browsers that can transparently drill down into an archive, treating it just like a directory.

      Also, I'm not sure that the statement up the thread that compressed files are completely ruined if one sector of the file media is trashed.

    82. Re:Good job. by bwt · · Score: 1

      Also, your anti-floppy-disk snobbery just kicked up a duststorm of dissent.

      So. Complain to Michael Dell -- he started it by simply stating the obvious: floppies aren't worth the cost or the space they take up. They're god awful slow and only have a few somewhat obscure use cases. They need to die.

      The original post describes using them as an asynchronous networking device (aka sneaker-net). This use is actively harmful.

    83. Re:Good job. by bwt · · Score: 1


      It just occurred to me how bizarre it is for somebody advocating using a 1.44MB capacity limited storage media to be questioning the value of smaller file sizes.

    84. Re:Good job. by fymidos · · Score: 1

      That's a 50% compression and it's not important for you ?
      besides *my* "I like to read slashdot" was 24 bytes -- 50 bytes after gzip compression.
      i made two points in the last sentence, by the way.

      --
      Washington bullets will simply be known as the "Bulle
    85. Re:Good job. by fymidos · · Score: 1

      Cool. I got moderated as a troll because I had the audacity to question the effectiveness of the darling program in certain situations.

      You are arguing that the .doc format is better than the OO xml format, which is from all views *not* right. That is the reason you get the moderation, not the questioning of openoffice...

      let's see, how you could rephrase it.. perhaps "i wish OO files were not compressed? "

      Let's see another example:
      " but with monarchy i can declare war any day of the week in freeciv" (troll)
      try this instead:
      " i wish i could declare war with no consequences with democracy in freeciv" (interesting)

      --
      Washington bullets will simply be known as the "Bulle
    86. Re:Good job. by jd142 · · Score: 1

      Considering that a 100,000 word novel fits in around 300-350 k, you can get around 4 full size text novels on a floppy. That's more than most people will write in a lifetime. That's why I'm questioning the value of compressing files. And I'm not even necessarily questioning the value of a compressed file, I'm just saying that losing 8k out of the middle of a compressed file makes it useless, where as losing 8k out of the middle of a file that preserves the text let's you get at the rest of the text.

      Here's the experiment I did. I zipped and lha'ed a web page. Then I opened the file up in a hex editor and replaced 16 characters out of the middle of the file to simulate a lost sector. Some utilities wouldn't decompress the files at all because they failed crc checks. Those that did had errors scattered throughout the document. While only 16 bytes had been altered in the file, there were easily a hundred errors in each file. Now instead of 16 bytes going bad in the original, imagine if 8k had gone bad. Much more than 8k would be altered.

      That's my only beef.

    87. Re:Good job. by SN74S181 · · Score: 1

      It's now time for a Mac advocate to chime in about how Dell was just copying another Apple initiative. The iMac had no floppy drive long before it became the default Dell config.

    88. Re:Good job. by SN74S181 · · Score: 1

      So you're conceeding the arguement. Okay. We agree that neither Microsoft Office or OpenOffice use a non-proprietary format for their default save format.

      It would help if either Office Suite had a readily available switch in it's config to set the default save format to RTF or some other non-proprietary format. But since both office suites are fighting a 'holy war to dominate the desktop' neither does.

    89. Re:Good job. by mbogosian · · Score: 1

      Yeah, and you'd have to run it as root or it would refuse to execute... just so the macro viruses could do real damage...

      Except the installer would require that you run it as root, and then it would install a bunch of root-owned setuid executables....

      Then there would be a MS Office for Linux, but who in their right mind would want to run it (except maybe in a chroot jail or in a vmware sandbox)?

    90. Re:Good job. by mbogosian · · Score: 1

      Cause dispite the rampent hate for microsoft, Office is a good product in many people's eyes. So good, people are willing to pay bucks for it.

      Huh? People have no other choice. Remember, the fact that MS is a destructive monopoly is no longer a debate. OEMs are stuck. Consumers are stuck. If you want to use a computer and trade documents with other people, you have to use/support Office. That means you either have to build a compatible product or buy MS Office at whatever price they set.

    91. Re:Good job. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It is not the market in action. Microsoft is a monopoly in an industry with strong network externalities.

      The only competitor has been created by a group of people working cooperatively for their own interests.

      None of the classic market assumptions hold.

    92. Re:Good job. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      We agree that neither Microsoft Office or OpenOffice use a non-proprietary format



      Not exactly. Documentation in the OpenOffice file format is available (-> that means it is _not_ proprietary), the MS-Office File-Format is not documented (-> that means it is secret, proprietary).

    93. Re:Good job. by Nederlander · · Score: 1

      Seems Reasonable. However, Munich is in Europe. And we do have some legislation here which prevents Microsoft from decreasing its prices.
      The European Union forbids Market Leaders (which Microsoft for Office Suites unmistakebly is) to decrease its prices. Therefore, Microsoft is not able to convince organisations financially.
      This is great news for Open Source community.

    94. Re:Good job. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      At that time (1984-86) M-$ was known by its very tiny BASICs, actually the only product Gates has been involved in, as a programmer. Macintosh designed a new version of Basic, a lot more powerful, by using the internal calls to Mac ROMs (guess where M$ learned the tricks?). But it seems Apple offered some kind of peace to M-$, waiting for their basic if and only if all the other applications (multiplan and word) were also included. I guess the hopes were to get some portatibility between Macs and PCs via the BASIC applications. Who knows.

    95. Re:Good job. by Sri+Lumpa · · Score: 1


      It may not be market in action in a traditional way but it is still market in action.

      Think of it that way, the market is composed of providers of goods and users of these goods. Now there existed a demand that was not fulfilled by the current market for a good quality OS that was cheap. The part of the market that created that demand didn't consider Windows good enough or traditional Unix cheap enough.

      Due to the absence of a good solution the users themselves provided one (Linux and then *BSD) which could be explained as Adam Smith's "invisible Hand" and some organised themselves as providers (RedHat...) thus filling the supply for which there was an initial demand. The users working hand in hand with these new providers did such a good job that it allows for the new products to compete even in other markets for which the product wasn't geared to at first and it is even starting to introduce competition in a monopoly market (desktop) although in a small way, thus increasing competition overall.

      This may be an unusual way for the "invisible hand" to happen but it seems to me to be the best example that such a force can exist given the right conditions: that the means of production of the goods are not restricted to a few big players... sound more communist than capitalist though; maybe capitalism can only work with a bit of communism (i.e. with some things not being owned by anybody).

      Ok, maybe that line of argument is a bit far fetched but still interesting to think about I believe.

      --
      "The obvious mathematical breakthrough would be development of an easy way to factor large prime numbers." Bill Gates,
  2. A sign of things to come? by Mistlefoot · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Is this a sign of things to come as more and more jurisdictions move to Open Source?

    1. Re:A sign of things to come? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Insightful

      I don't think so.

      I think the real reason they have so much support is because of anti-american sentiments.

      I mean really, windows XP is a good OS.
      The only way Linux really outperforms windows is price and freedom.
      In all other areas windows is usually better.

      But MS is american, and anti-americanism is quite big in germany now.
      So they would rather give their money to suse (a german company) than MS.

      Anyway I think it's a good move, but a lousy motive.

      Do it for the freedom people, not for anti-americanism.

    2. Re:A sign of things to come? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Anti-Americanism is *everywhere*. I'm posting from your number one ally, the UK, and people here grimace when you mention the US.

    3. Re:A sign of things to come? by rseuhs · · Score: 4, Insightful
      Sure is. After all, most cities are quite similar - when all applications the Munich government uses have been ported to Linux, migrations of other German and European cities will become a lot easier and faster.

      Also, millions of people will communicate with their government using OpenOffice formats, which essentially means that OpenOffice will become the "must have" office suite while MS Office will be the redundant "why should I use that when I already have.." Office suite in these regions.

      This of course will make it easier for companies to migrate to OpenOffice and possibly Linux themselves.

      Ballmer interrupted his skiing trip for a reason. He knows how important such a migration is and that just one large-scale migration is needed to start the landslide.

    4. Re:A sign of things to come? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The only way Linux really outperforms windows is price and freedom.

      Do it for the freedom people


      Just out of curiosity, who are the freedom people anyway? Is that like some offshoot of the Rainbow People?

    5. Re:A sign of things to come? by Angry+White+Guy · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I think that, rather than anti-americanism, it is a pro-germany stance. How many OS companies are in Germany? How many MS programming jobs are in Germany? How much economic runoff is there going to be in Germany in both scenarios?

      If the Germans go with Suse, they have programmers in the country, administrators in the company, technical support in the country. Conversely, should Germany go with Microsoft, they only have administrators.

      It just makes sense to go with Suse in this case. The technical barriers can be overcome, and interoperability only comes into play based on install base. You replace the whole load, compatibility problems go the way of the Moose.

      --
      You think that I'm crazy, you should see this guy!
    6. Re:A sign of things to come? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      You're not right. Various parts of the German government, especially the federal government, are considering Linux since quite a while. Munich's recent decision is just another step.

      The major argument have probably been the high costs of MS systems, which in this case have also been accompanied by a general matching of the open source ideals with the ideals of the current government of Munich (liberal and social).

      Oh, and by the way: The decision clearly wasn't driven by anti-Americanism. You can see that because IBM got the assignment, which is, as you know, also an American company.

      And just about your opinion that Anti-Americanism was quite big in Germany now: According to a recent poll 70% of all Germans still consider Americans to be their friends (the number didn't change due to the latest events). The Germans just have a different opinion about world policy, that's all.

      Kind regards,
      Chris

    7. Re:A sign of things to come? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What a pathetic attempt at karma-whoring. Go back to sucking on Daddy's willy, he needs a cummin'!

    8. Re:A sign of things to come? by rseuhs · · Score: 4, Insightful
      In all other areas windows is usually better.

      Sorry, but the only area where I found Windows to be better than KDE/Linux is gaming. And that's only because there are too few games, not because of any technical limitations.

      Also, the roots of this decision lie long before the Iraq war.

    9. Re:A sign of things to come? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How many MS programming jobs are in Germany?

      well, MS has 1300 in germany, although i doubt alot of them are programming, and an amazing 12 open ones
      their main german branch in munich though

    10. Re:A sign of things to come? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And guess what... we're not buying your pathetic "missile shield" either.

      (Chances are that it won't work anyway.)

    11. Re:A sign of things to come? by heby · · Score: 2, Interesting

      so what is it when the american government favours american firms over foreign firms for contracts or decides to buy american-made stuff for all their needs? even if this was not a technical decision, how would this be different?

    12. Re:A sign of things to come? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Now an anonymous coward from germany...

      This has nothing to do with anti-americanism.
      As a matter of fact, anti-americanism is mostly
      existent in radical rigth wing and radical left wing parties.
      Americans are still considered friends.
      That's why nobody in germany understands what all that childish american policy is about.
      (And the hypocritic kneefalls of our
      conservative politicians are just a provocation to the weak but existing german patriotism. They get theyr sarcastic mockery for it.)

      Pro and contra microsoft is about local
      economy, open source and security versus ...well... microsoft.

      When it comes to decisions, especially economic decisions, it's all about money and economics and nothing else.

      HAND
      Stephan

    13. Re:A sign of things to come? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Anti-Bush, Anti War, not Anti-American.

      When I had a look at US media I thought it was very biased. Note: No one called for a boycott against American goods.

      We - like the rest of European citizens - didn't found the US made the case. But only few Governments resisted to US pressure.

      We know what we owe the US. They helped us to defeat Communism. They made an end to this awful Nazi dictatorship for which I as a German feel as assamed. Germans became guilty, that why the moral case is very strong.

      So in post II WW Germany war was seen as the failure of policy. But last year persons like Richard Perle educated us that war shouldn't be the last resort. This was quite a culture shock.

      In our constitution support of preparation of an agressive war is unlawful and will be punished with long times in prison.

      Hitler din't care about international threaties. Therefore we believe that international legitimicy was very important.

      I like the US for their high standards on free speech issues. But now some US officials want to punish France and other nations that openly opposed an unlawful war. This demonstrates a lack of respect for other opinion.

      If you want to go to war you have to make the case. The US administration didn't, I know in US media it sounded like they did. Powell presented false evidence to the security council as later was revealed.

      I am happy that Saddam's dictatorship is abolished. However I believe that military action in Iraq will increase the threat of terrorism because no nation likes foreign invaders.

      German troops are in Afganistan which nobody thought would never happen three years ago. Military in Germany was for defense only.
      Let's continue to fight together islam terrorism and build a free operating system. Not against any nation but together.

    14. Re:A sign of things to come? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You?re 100% right!
      Best greetings from Hamburg

    15. Re:A sign of things to come? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are 100% right.
      Best and Greetings from Hamburg
      (much larger than Munich)

    16. Re:A sign of things to come? by razvedchik · · Score: 1

      Not to mention that SuSE is headquartered in Nurnburg (originally, Furth), which is in Northern Bavaria. So why shouldn't they be in a perfect position to support fellow Bavarians, with Munchen (Munich) being only about an hour's drive to the south?

      --
      I do what the voices on my console tell me to do.
    17. Re:A sign of things to come? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Ballmer interrupted his skiing trip for a reason.

      The truly amazing thing is that Balmer skis! Can you imagine that fat, sweaty monkey barreling down a mountain?

    18. Re:A sign of things to come? by Corporate+Troll · · Score: 1
      The only way Linux really outperforms windows is price and freedom.

      Wait a second... Isn't "Freedom" what the United States is so proud of. And now suddenly it is "a bad thing". Where did I miss something?

    19. Re:A sign of things to come? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I guess we are in for a nuclear holocaust then...

    20. Re:A sign of things to come? by netdudeuk · · Score: 1

      Yes, and some of us don't ! There are surely more of us who do like the Americans. Why shouldn't we ?

      And some of us guys like walking around in pairs wearing women's clothes and yet again, some of us (including me) don't. So what's your point ?

    21. Re:A sign of things to come? by flacco · · Score: 2, Funny
      Anti-Americanism is *everywhere*. I'm posting from your number one ally, the UK, and people here grimace when you mention the US.

      This actually gives me another reason to support the war in Iraq - it's pissing off foreign Microsoft customers!

      There is that "the rest of the world hates you" thing, but I can deal with that.

      --
      pr0n - keeping monitor glass spotless since 1981.
    22. Re:A sign of things to come? by A_Non_Moose · · Score: 1

      ...compatibility problems go the way of the Moose.

      Phew!

      For a moment I was worried all those problems were coming my way.

      It's A Non issue, apparently.

      {bah-dum-bum}

      --
      Have you read the moderator guidelines? Well, have you, PUNK? (and I want a Karma: Gnarly option)
    23. Re:A sign of things to come? by molnarcs · · Score: 1

      haha ... so price and freedom (!) would not justify the move, unless they are anti-american. It is somewhat puzzling to see that while 'freedom' is always compulsory in official US rhetorics, when it comes to others placing a value on freedom, it is discarded as irrelevant, no cause enough for a switch..

    24. Re:A sign of things to come? by praedor · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I'm all for it and hurray for Germany. It is great for Germany to go SuSE. I would like to see France go for Mandrake, and the US (never happen, especially with GW Crackheaddrunk Bush in office) go Redhat. Why? To push money into native software companies that adhere to open standards and at the same time drives innovation (unlike certain closed source, monolithic monopolies that I wont mention).


      Germany pays money that helps keep computer expertise (programming, administration) local and at the same time helps an international company (IBM) that helps world trade (and the USA). If France went Mandrake, the same thing accrues to them. China goes Redflag Linux, India goes...well with whatever as it doesn't really matter because if any country goes linux, it serves to keep computer expertise local and fuels innovation globally.


      --
      In Bushworld, they struggle to keep church and state separate in Iraq as they increasingly merge the two in America.
    25. Re:A sign of things to come? by Strudelkugel · · Score: 1

      I'm not so sure the parent post is not right.

      Germany has a huge unemployment problem, and continuing to farm dMarks out to foreign companies is not going to be popular. Of all the distros out there, why SuSe? Why not RH?

      Shifting the majority of the info-tech base to Linux will be a boost to the local software community in Germany. Now all they have to do is figure out which desktop they are going to use!

      --
      Imagine how much harder physics would be if electrons had feelings! -Feynman, maybe
    26. Re:A sign of things to come? by TheRaven64 · · Score: 1
      I guess we are in for a nuclear holocaust then...

      Cool. I've found the best place to watch a nuclear war from. Now all I need it a few billion in VC funding to set up a colony there...

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    27. Re:A sign of things to come? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Just remember, please, that blaming every American for what its government does is like blaming every German for what Hitler did. Do some support the government? Yes, of course. But there are many who loathe it, and many on this board that are American who cringe every time they hear the term. Take it from an AC afraid to post this under his nick.

    28. Re:A sign of things to come? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We have just moved one step closer to the day a review of Microsoft Office will be published which berates it for being unable to properly convert OpenOffice documents.

    29. Re:A sign of things to come? by xutopia · · Score: 1
      Actually no it isn't anti-Americanism. It is for freedom and to save money.

      Believing that people are anti-American won't get you anywhere. Sure they have aprehension because of bullish actions Bush take or M$ take but they don't hate Americans.

      The Bush administration would love to see you believe that outsiders are jealous of America so you see our voiced concern as anti-Americanism. Read a Noam Chomsky book such as 9-11 and be enlightened.

    30. Re:A sign of things to come? by sapgau · · Score: 1

      I agree.
      Is it too late to mode parent up?
      thx.

    31. Re:A sign of things to come? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Pirsig has made an interesting statement about freedom and individualism in America.
      And I think it's about time to return to the rebuilding of this American resource - individual worth. There are political reactionaries who've been saying something close to this for years. I'm not one of them, but to the extent they're talking about real individual worth and not just an excuse for giving more money to the rich, they're right.
    32. Re:A sign of things to come? by MAurelius · · Score: 1
      Sorry I have no mod points to mod you UP for a clear presentation of an opinion different from my own.

      We as Americans have a gut level hatred for the sort of regime that was Saddam Hussein's. He had to go. Likewise, the Germans benefited 53 years ago from the same American determination.

      Einige meiner besten Freunden sind Deutschen.

      As an American, I treasure my German friends, but Germany as a nation seems unable to use military force for any reason. Because of the Nazi time, it appears that Germany has lost the ability to see that sometimes the violent overthrow of a brutal, inhuman dictator by military action is necessary.

      Military invasion is not always evil.

    33. Re:A sign of things to come? by MAurelius · · Score: 1

      OK, my math is off, no more Chardonnay for me with dinner. Hitler's regime fell in May, 1945. He made it twelve years into his "Thousand year Reich."

    34. Re:A sign of things to come? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And why are you afraid? Because the loser patriots are going to mod you down just because you hint that don't like the government. Same thing if you talk with people in real life. Except that they insult you instead of modding you down. Now that's some kind of freedom.

    35. Re:A sign of things to come? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Dream on, little boy. Without us doing business with you, you couldn't even afford your military.

    36. Re:A sign of things to come? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      of course it will work, similar technology was used by the americans in kuwiat during the last conflict and it even managed to shoot down a british (ie allied) plane

    37. Re:A sign of things to come? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because Suse is German and RedHat is American. Why give an American company money when you can have a German one do it at same or better quality?

    38. Re:A sign of things to come? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      LOL! The US doesn't have the balls to take on an opponent of comparable size and technology. All it's good for is beating up on small third world countries. That's why we don't respect you.

    39. Re:A sign of things to come? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The Third Reich would have kicked the crap out of the US, had it been a 1-on-1 war.

    40. Re:A sign of things to come? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Those Americans couldn't engineer their way out of a paper bag. Luckily, they hired all the Nazi scientists after WW2, else the Russians would have easily won the space race.

    41. Re:A sign of things to come? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      OK. So are we disregarding who's fault the issues are, and just focusing on the issues?

      I find that hardware support is better on Linux. Because of this, the desktop is much more responsive (video card drivers). Using my Radeon 9000 in VESA mode for six months was a blast.

      I also have found that windows is easier to configure. There is a GUI for changing windows resolutions, adjusting monitor settings. Windows related configuration options are available in one centralized control panel.

      I have found the configuration is easier in Windows. I bought a new Wireless card a few days ago. I just plugged it in, and Windows went to windowsupdate.microsoft.com, downloaded the driver and installed it. Then it found the correct channel, and automatically configured my internet connection, and notified me with a little balloon. Can you please explain the simliar steps to use the internet with a wireless card via the distribution you use?

      How about SMB Sharing? I just click on "My Network Places" and a list of all the available computers pops up.

      How about just using a floppy. If I put in an unformatted floppy and click on its icon in Windows, Windows will ask me if I want to format it. In Linux, you have to mount devices. And yes I have used automount, and it did not work properly.

      And please feel free to respond with "you aren't smart enough for linux", which really means "i refuse to admit windows can do something better."

      I'm not trying to troll, if you have ways to do all of these things just as easily, please share them.

    42. Re:A sign of things to come? by TKinias · · Score: 1

      scripsit Strudelkugel:

      continuing to farm dMarks out to foreign companies is not going to be popular.

      Neither would continuing to farm out euros.

      That's why they chose SuSE, a German firm.

      --
      In principio creauit Linus Linucem.
    43. Re:A sign of things to come? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      ...but Germany as a nation seems unable to use military force for any reason.

      Perhaps this is because it's embedded into their constitution which, among others, the Americans helped to draft. Germany is legally unable to enter into war unless it's either in self-defence or with the approval of the United Nations. So you're right in a sense... Germany is unable to use military force in most cases.
    44. Re:A sign of things to come? by sdokane · · Score: 1

      I think it a good thing that Europe avoids any dependency on the US, particularly in IT - it's one less way the US can stomp it's feet and demand that you with are with us or against us. Linux doesn't belong to america!

    45. Re:A sign of things to come? by Cthefuture · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      I'll start off by saying I use Linux (Debian) as my primary OS, and usually only run Windows in VMware.

      However, Windows still feels better than anything on Linux (KDE 3.1, GNOME 2, or whatever). Windows is more consistant (all the widgets look the same), cut/copy/paste works better, and the UI just feels snappy and nice (file manager, desktop, start menu). Contrast that with Linux. The UI is all over the place, KDE is extremely slow to start up and just generally feels somewhat funky, the file managers are all slow and tend to crash a lot or just not work, there are not many good GUI administration tools. I could go on. Please note that I am way past the initial "neato" Linux phases. I've been using Linux since the pre-1.0 days. A lot of people who say Linux is so much better, faster, or whatever are actually just excited about using something different. Linux is getting better, but there is quite a ways to go before it's better than Windows.

      Really, the Linux and *BSD communities should take note of Mac OS X. That is UNIX with a nice (although slow) user experience. Now, Apple has it easy because the hardware configurations is extremely limited, but the friendlyness could be copied. I'm not talking about copying OS X in the strict sense, I'm just saying that OS X is an example of something complicated and text based (UNIX) that was made friendly.

      --
      The ratio of people to cake is too big
    46. Re:A sign of things to come? by Angry+White+Guy · · Score: 1

      Whoops, stupid me for using a colloquialism on /. Go the way of the Moose -> Northern US (Michigan) South Western Ontario. To dissapear. The deer population has effectively extripated the moose from the location (Brought on by brain worms from the moose and deer co-habitating) Way of the Buffalo -> Thank Buffalo Bill Way of the Caribou -> Ask an eskimo Way of the stick -> Ask beryllium, Still haven't figured it out myself.

      --
      You think that I'm crazy, you should see this guy!
    47. Re:A sign of things to come? by Angry+White+Guy · · Score: 1

      Let me try this again, with proper formatting.

      Go the way of the Moose -> Northern US (Michigan) South Western Ontario. To dissapear. The deer population has effectively extripated the moose from the location (Brought on by brain worms from the moose and deer co-habitating)

      Way of the Buffalo -> Thank Buffalo Bill

      Way of the Caribou -> Ask an eskimo

      Way of the stick -> Ask beryllium, Still haven't figured it out myself.

      --
      You think that I'm crazy, you should see this guy!
    48. Re:A sign of things to come? by Strudelkugel · · Score: 1

      Right, Euros, that is. (Let's not get started about Eurodollars, though...)

      So it sounds as though we agree that Germany is trying to better its employment picture (and trade balance) with Linux. Not necessarily a technical decision, but not an illegitimate one for a government...

      My guess is that they will have to keep some Windows desktops around for a while to run Office macros and legacy apps. Sure would be interesting to be able to monitor the usage patterns on both systems after they make the switch.

      --
      Imagine how much harder physics would be if electrons had feelings! -Feynman, maybe
    49. Re:A sign of things to come? by hhnerkopfabbeisser · · Score: 2, Insightful

      As a German, I respect your view, but I have a few points.

      Over here, pacifism is not just in people's heads, since WW2 it's so deeply buried in our constitution that we couldn't have joined that war even if we had wanted.

      You certainly had your role in the european part of WW2, but the Nation that played the most important role certainly was the Sovjet Union. From a military point of view, the Sovjets freed, Germany. AFAIK, the eastern front bound about two thirds of the Nazi armed forces.
      Of course you brought us Democracy (West Germany, at least), and for that, I can't thank you enough.
      Recieve praise where you deserve it, but don't claim it all for yourself where you don't. Did you know the movie U-571 is based on actual events, but that is wasn't American soldiers who did it, but Tommys?

      The last time people over here saw war rage through our country is less than 60 years ago. America hasn't seen a war from close up for almost 140 years.
      People over here tend to believe that this made you at least slightly ignorant of the terrors of war, because your memory (historically) of them is not as fresh as ours. We tend to believe that you resort to violence too quickly.

      People over here don't really think a war is always wrong, but that it can only be a last resort, not a common tool of politics, and have the impression that you, or at least Rumsfeld and the like, seem to think otherwise.
      The way the Bush administration desperately searched for excuses to wage a war instead of trying to prevent one, and the frequency with which you send your soldiers out lately gives people over here the willies, or makes them just angry.

      Most Americans are so upset by anti-americanism because you don't understand how the world percieves you, and that trying to bully the world around when they don't do what you want is not really a good way to make friends (here I refer to what your government seems to regard as 'diplomatics').

    50. Re:A sign of things to come? by petman · · Score: 1

      Let's continue to fight together islam terrorism ...

      You were sounding pretty coherent, up to the point you revealed you blatant bigotry with your last sentence. Are you really a German? What have you got against Islam? I'd understand if you are American or Jewish, or French, even. But I don't recall any Islamic "terrorist" ever attacking Germany.

    51. Re:A sign of things to come? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      IBM is also involved in this deal and will reap in a big part of the profit so it is not an Anti-American choice.

    52. Re:A sign of things to come? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Anit-Americanism is not big in Germany. People still tons of American products, watch American movies etc. and I do believe that IBM which will probably take the larger part of the profits is an American company? It is more an Anti-Bush policy thing.

    53. Re:A sign of things to come? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Agreed, 100%.

      There is so much confusion between people fighting to keep Linux "leet" and those who actually love Linux, and want to make it more accessable, that often nothing gets done either way.

    54. Re:A sign of things to come? by saforrest · · Score: 1

      This actually gives me another reason to support the war in Iraq - it's pissing off foreign Microsoft customers!

      There is that "the rest of the world hates you" thing, but I can deal with that.


      It's a lot easier with a global superpower at your back, eh? :)

    55. Re:A sign of things to come? by saforrest · · Score: 0

      Just remember, please, that blaming every American for what its government does is like blaming every German for what Hitler did.

      I suspect most Europeans, at least, watch enough American media to know of quite a number of different Americans by reputation, at least. This is pretty good at keeping one from thinking of Americans as a monolithic group.

      Still, when one talks about Microsoft, a company that has aided, benefited from and is closely connected with the current American government, than cancelling a contract thorough disgruntlement with American government decisions is a bit more well-founded.

    56. Re:A sign of things to come? by stpats · · Score: 1

      You aren't posting from the number one ally of the USA unless you're posting from Canada. Not the 51st state, and more of an ally. No support for the war on Iraq the way it went, but friends are allowed to have differing opinions.

      There may be some good natured fun had at the expense of Americans in the great white north, but people here don't grimace when you mention the US of A.

    57. Re:A sign of things to come? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you like windows so much better, why don't you use it as your primary OS?

    58. Re:A sign of things to come? by twaltari · · Score: 1

      > migrations of other German and European cities will become a lot easier and faster

      Exactly. This is the beauty of OSS; if tax payers' money will be used for porting software and polishing the Linux desktop for the City of Munich, the city could as well mandate all the work to be published as open source. Once Munich has migrated, most of the other major cities in the European Union can simply reproduce their software environment.

      If I were Microsoft, I'd be very scared of the likely results of Munich successfully migrating to Linux.

    59. Re:A sign of things to come? by mrscorpio · · Score: 1

      Maybe the problem is with your box speed, or Debian itself?

      I'm using Mandrake 9.1 with KDE 3.1.1a and it's at least as fast as Windows 2000 Professional (which I also have on this system dual booted). Running an Athlon XP 1700+ w/256MB PC2100 RAM, nothing spectacular for this day and age.

      It's also at least as graphically unified if not more than my Win2k partition, because I'm using Open Office/Mozilla/Winamp/Trillian over there, and Open Office/Mozilla/XMMS/GAIM over here, the rest are basically the KDE/Mandrake apps. My gripe with Linux, the fonts, has been solved with Anti-Aliased fonts and now Mandrake has made getting the Windows fonts easy, giving a three-click install process to obtain them in the control panel.

      The configurability is way better whether speaking graphic tools or console, and of course everybody knows that the Windows console (AKA DOS) cannot compare to Linux. I've been using Linux for a year and a half now so I think I'm out of the "gee wiz" phase too (have used Mandrake 8.1 - 9.1, Red Hat 7.3 - 8, Gentoo 1.2).

      Mandrake automagically installed my printer and graphic card drivers in the install, a first with any distribution for me. It also installed the rest of my hardware problem-free, leaving only my scanner which was a three-click process with Scanner Drake through SANE.

      The install process for Linux has been as good or better for a year. Office tools have been as good or better for 6 months. But with the newest crop of releases, I feel (and many agree) that Linux is really ready for the desktop now.

      Chris

    60. Re:A sign of things to come? by Cthefuture · · Score: 1

      I disagree with Microsoft's licensing scheme and Microsoft's business practices.

      However, the main reason is security. I'm a consultant and I have to plug into different networks all the time. Linux provides me with more control than Windows can. Sure, there are firewall products for Windows but I've never been convinced those truely work (eg. there have been exploits that go right past some Windows firewalls).

      --
      The ratio of people to cake is too big
    61. Re:A sign of things to come? by Cthefuture · · Score: 1

      I never said Linux wasn't ready for the desktop, I just said that it needs some work to catch up with Windows. I never mentioned the install process either.

      It's not the speed of my machine (2.2 Ghz, 1GB RAM). But would that matter? I'm comparing Windows and Linux on the same machine.

      --
      The ratio of people to cake is too big
    62. Re:A sign of things to come? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Maybe the problem is with your box speed"

      Yeah, it migth be. Here I'm writing this from my 128MB RAM K6-II 400MHz (Debian GNU/Linux running KDE3.1) and it JUST WORKS.

      Try WinXP on this... or try WubXP on a 512MB P-IV 1.5GHz for that matter, and still you'll get better feeling from my current box (that's why I haven't bougth a new one... coz I don't need to!!!)

    63. Re:A sign of things to come? by FurryFeet · · Score: 1

      At least they're not calling it "Freedom OS".
      Glass houses, you know.

    64. Re:A sign of things to come? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Anti-Americanism is *everywhere*. I'm posting from your number one ally, the UK, and people here grimace when you mention the US.

      They're still mad about having their asses kicked 225 years ago and again 190 years ago.

    65. Re:A sign of things to come? by FlyGirl · · Score: 1

      There may be some good natured fun had at the expense of Americans in the great white north, but people here don't grimace when you mention the US of A.

      Unless, of course, they are traveling and someone calls them "Americans." :-)

    66. Re:A sign of things to come? by mrscorpio · · Score: 1

      Sorry, I forgot about my actual point :) My point is that on my box, Mandrake 9.1 is as fast or faster at everything except opening Open Office.

      Chris

  3. Munich isn't Germany's biggest city ... by moonbender · · Score: 4, Informative

    ... Berlin is. Berlin has got a population of approximately 4 million, compared to Munich's approximate 1.5.

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    Switch back to Slashdot's D1 system.
    1. Re:Munich isn't Germany's biggest city ... by the+uNF+cola · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      How big is it in kilometres? Or miles... or inches :)

      --

      --
      "I'm not bright. Big words confuse me. But Wanda loves me and that should be enough for you." - Cosmo

    2. Re:Munich isn't Germany's biggest city ... by Libor+Vanek · · Score: 1

      Who cares? Main point is that MS was f*cked out of the city. (OK - at least a bit of...)

    3. Re:Munich isn't Germany's biggest city ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      and that has what to do with the topic?

      i could understand if you want to challenge the 'technology capital' bit, but i dont see what that has to do with population

    4. Re:Munich isn't Germany's biggest city ... by Vlad_the_Inhaler · · Score: 1

      Well, it takes over 90 minutes to drive right around Berlin on the Autobahn, assuming no traffic jams. Munich does not have a ring-road, but is far smaller. Hamburg is 50% larger than M but around half the size of B.

      --
      Mielipiteet omiani - Opinions personal, facts suspect.
    5. Re:Munich isn't Germany's biggest city ... by tekunokurato · · Score: 1

      oh, whatever dude. He's demonstrated that at least one direct claim of the submitter is blatantly wrong, and you should be thankful for that. Wouldn't you rather the news out of slashdot be accurate?

    6. Re:Munich isn't Germany's biggest city ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      yea your right, sorry. i read over the 'germanys biggest city' part, and immideatly discarded it as wrong, so by the time i read the comments, i forgot about it

      i guess that teaches me to stop reading the article, and just concentrate on the summary, like everybody else :)

    7. Re:Munich isn't Germany's biggest city ... by Black+Copter+Control · · Score: 0
      Probably Munich was West Germany's biggest city. With reunification, the combined east and west berlin are now bigger than Munich, but Munich is just failing to notice the change in status because it really doesn't want to give up the crown.

      I believe, however, that Munich is the capital... Is it possible that that transates to something like 'biggest city"?

      --
      OS Software is like love: The best way to make it grow is to give it away.
    8. Re:Munich isn't Germany's biggest city ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How long does it take to drive left around Berlin?

    9. Re:Munich isn't Germany's biggest city ... by AT · · Score: 1

      I believe, however, that Munich is the capital

      Berlin is the captial. Before reunification, Berlin was the the capital in the east, and Bonn was the capital in the west. Munich has never been the capital of Germany, although it is the provincial capital of Bavaria.

    10. Re:Munich isn't Germany's biggest city ... by dipipanone · · Score: 4, Funny

      I believe, however, that Munich is the capital...

      Let me guess, you must be an American, right?

    11. Re:Munich isn't Germany's biggest city ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "I believe, however, that Munich is the capital..."

      Umm, no it isn't, and it never has been (you could argue that it's the capital of Bavaria however). Berlin is Germany's capital (the capital of West Germany used to be Bonn though).

    12. Re:Munich isn't Germany's biggest city ... by moonbender · · Score: 1

      As others have said, Munich is not and never was the capital of modern Germany. It also wasn't the biggest city (ranked by population) before the reunification, in fact the reunification didn't change anything in the ranking: (Western) Berlin, followed by Hamburg, followed by Munich, followed by Cologne, and so on.

      Also, I have to correct myself, my approximations in the original post are both a bit too high, it's more like 3.6 million for Berlin and 1.25 for Munich. Numbers are a bit dated, from 1990, but you get the point.

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      Switch back to Slashdot's D1 system.
    13. Re:Munich isn't Germany's biggest city ... by grungeman · · Score: 1

      The interesting thing is that Munich would be the last German city to be expected to use OpenSource. If they do you can bet that many others will follow, and Berlin for sure.

      --

      Signature deleted by lameness filter.
    14. Re:Munich isn't Germany's biggest city ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Munich is the biggest city, that is no federal state. Berlin is the biggest city, Hamburg the next, but both are federal states like, i.e. Bavaria.

    15. Re:Munich isn't Germany's biggest city ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hmh, perhaps Munich is the capitol of it's state (Bavaria?) Germany is after all a confedaration, by US design.

    16. Re:Munich isn't Germany's biggest city ... by moonbender · · Score: 1

      And both are also cities. It's not exclusive over here. Nobody around here would say Munich is the biggest city in Germany.

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    17. Re:Munich isn't Germany's biggest city ... by Black+Copter+Control · · Score: 1

      heh.. well, in this case, I'll just say "close enough".
      I couldn't remember which german city was the capital, but Munich seemed like a not-too-bad guess. That's why I put the modifier on it. On the other hand, (last ditch effort at saving face!) what percentage of Europeans can properly name the capital of Canada?

      --
      OS Software is like love: The best way to make it grow is to give it away.
    18. Re:Munich isn't Germany's biggest city ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      the city of Munich is about 300 square kilometers, it's about 115 square miles.

    19. Re:Munich isn't Germany's biggest city ... by fwr · · Score: 1

      Hmm, All I know is that Munich was one of the cities in diplomacy for Germany. Or, at least I seem to remember so.

    20. Re:Munich isn't Germany's biggest city ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      i think hamburg is more interesting then munich

      http://www.hamburg.de/index/1,2709,JGdlbz0zJG9rP TE 1ODk4JHVrPTE1OTIwJA__,00.html

    21. Re:Munich isn't Germany's biggest city ... by Corporate+Troll · · Score: 1

      Uhm... As a European... isn't the capital or Canada "Ottawa" or am I mistaken somehow?

    22. Re:Munich isn't Germany's biggest city ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Washington DC?

    23. Re:Munich isn't Germany's biggest city ... by zulux · · Score: 1

      I believe, however, that Munich is the capital...



      Actually, it's Brussels is Gremany's new capital. Germany owns europe, just 60 years late.

      --

      Moneyed corporations, non-working 'poor' and criminal prisoners are turning productive citizens into tax-slaves.

    24. Re:Munich isn't Germany's biggest city ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bill O'Reilly: You also say that California has more people than any other state. I say New York State has more people - tell me where I'm wrong!

      Thomas Woodward: [ confused ] Um.. well.. Bill.. actually, California is the most populous state.

      Bill O'Reilly: I don't know, Counselor. I live in New York, and I walk down the streets every day, and there's people everywhere! You can't move! You know what I mean? Last week, I was in California, went to the beach in Malibu. Nobody! Practically empty. So, for my money, New York's got more people. Probably New Jersey, too.

      Thomas Woodward: Well, Bill, your own experience nonwithstanding, each of the last four censuses has clearly shown -

      Bill O'Reilly: Sorry, Counselor, not buying it! Not buying it!

    25. Re:Munich isn't Germany's biggest city ... by Black+Copter+Control · · Score: 1
      Uhm... As a European... isn't the capital or Canada "Ottawa" or am I mistaken somehow?

      hey: I'm not trying to claim that there aren't a reasonable number of Europeans that do know the capital of canada (btw: Yes, you're correct). I'm just trying to point out that I deserve to be classified as a moron (as opposed to idiot) for getting the capital of Germany that far off. It's not like I couldn't have known better, or anything.

      --
      OS Software is like love: The best way to make it grow is to give it away.
    26. Re:Munich isn't Germany's biggest city ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny
      I believe, however, that Munich is the capital...

      Let me guess, you must be an American, right?

      Nope, we Americans would assume Toronto is the capital. As well as the capitol, for that matter. And an Ottawa is a small, sea-dwelling mammal. Remeber, once ketchup is a vegetable, all things are possible! :-)

    27. Re:Munich isn't Germany's biggest city ... by dasunt · · Score: 1

      I believe, however, that Munich is the capital...

      Let me guess, you must be an American, right?

      No, Americans know that the capital of Europe is London. :)

    28. Re:Munich isn't Germany's biggest city ... by Old+Wolf · · Score: 1

      2.500 square libaries of congress.. that's what Nasa Earth Surveyor said anyway

    29. Re:Munich isn't Germany's biggest city ... by Old+Wolf · · Score: 1

      You could say they're Munchen up the microsoft executives

    30. Re:Munich isn't Germany's biggest city ... by Old+Wolf · · Score: 1

      Hey, the rest of the world isn't as dumb as Americans (no, really). It seems to be a culture thing. I saw a show once where they went to a Florida beach and asked general knowledge questions to random people on the beach. It went something like this:

      "What's the capital of France?" "Italy"

      "What's the capital of Italy?" "France"

    31. Re:Munich isn't Germany's biggest city ... by ewg · · Score: 1

      Munich is the capital of Bavaria, a large and influential state inside the German Federal Republic. So the outcome of this decision will be carefully watched by IT decisionmakers all over Europe.

      --
      org.slashdot.post.SignatureNotFoundException: ewg
    32. Re:Munich isn't Germany's biggest city ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nope, it's France, UK and Germany with a lot of veto power from those other european countries.

      And that's quite difficult diplomacy...

      HAND
      Stephan

    33. Re:Munich isn't Germany's biggest city ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Now as a german that's been in school in communist GDR I know for sure, that I shall not answer without consulting a world map.
      However for a fair chance game, I just give it a shot and guess it's Toronto with beeing quebec that region nobody knows whether it actually belongs to canada or not. :)

      Now toast me and tell me the correct answer. :)

      HAND
      Stephan

    34. Re:Munich isn't Germany's biggest city ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's right.

      HAND
      Stephan

    35. Re:Munich isn't Germany's biggest city ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Dude, any European who doesn't know the capital of Canada is automatically classified as a moron. And rightly so.

    36. Re:Munich isn't Germany's biggest city ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Remeber, once ketchup is a vegetable, all things are possible! :-)


      Hey that's one thing 'bout americans that always amazed me:
      If a strong american corporation would start selling "ketchup plants" - lots of people would buy it. Lots of germans would buy overprized tomatoes... Think of microsoft. ;)

      HAND
      Stephan
    37. Re:Munich isn't Germany's biggest city ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      You ain't a moron either.
      You just didn't have a look at the world map.
      Ask me for something on a different continent and I'll be lost.
      My geometry teachers always had a favorite trick question: What's the capital of america?
      Correct solution of course was, that america is a continent containing more lot's of states like USA, Canada, Mexico, Cuba, and so on... and therefore there is no capital of america.
      It was a real catcher. A bad one.
      (And I just realized that the capital of canada is Ottawa and not Toronto... ;) )

      HAND
      Stephan

    38. Re:Munich isn't Germany's biggest city ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      given that you must confess that more than 90% of europans are morons.
      Maybe you're right. :)

      I askes some students (yes german meaning - university!) some weeks ago, who was our president. Answers: Kohl, Weizäcker, "we have a president?", Merkel, ...

      Oh well, somebody mentioned Rau.

      And I'm still not good at american geography.
      I just don't need it and when I was in school,
      there was hust 1 chance to see that continent in my live - World War III.

      HAND
      Stephan

    39. Re:Munich isn't Germany's biggest city ... by he-sk · · Score: 1

      Hamburg is the second biggest city after Berlin. Munich only comes third. At some point in the future, the Essen area will be bigger than Munich.

      --
      Free Manning, jail Obama.
    40. Re:Munich isn't Germany's biggest city ... by he-sk · · Score: 1

      You're my hero for the day.

      --
      Free Manning, jail Obama.
    41. Re:Munich isn't Germany's biggest city ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In his defense, it actually was a good defense. I don't have the real statistics, but I'd guess at least 80% of the readership of this site is American. Coupled with the fact Germany had a massive restructuring in the last 20 years, and most people outside of Europe would be pressed to come up with the capital off the top of their heads, it would be an accurate guess to say he is an American. Also, Americans are notoriously bad at geography if it doesn't involve their own country or select allies. Heck, most people couldn't find Iraq on a map, and we are still in occupation.

    42. Re:Munich isn't Germany's biggest city ... by Sri+Lumpa · · Score: 1

      "I believe, however, that Munich is the capital..."

      "Let me guess, you must be an American, right?"

      "Let me guess, you must be a pompous ass, right?"

      And they say germans don't have a sense of humour.

      Being Freedom (oops, I mean French) maybe I should take it badly whenever I am called a surrender coward?

      --
      "The obvious mathematical breakthrough would be development of an easy way to factor large prime numbers." Bill Gates,
    43. Re:Munich isn't Germany's biggest city ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ha...not only ignorant, but too lazy to take a few seconds to verify his information.

    44. Re:Munich isn't Germany's biggest city ... by golgotha007 · · Score: 1

      at least the American's know that it's not Paris...

    45. Re:Munich isn't Germany's biggest city ... by Black+Copter+Control · · Score: 1
      Also, Americans are notoriously bad at geography if it doesn't involve their own country or select allies.

      I was in WaltDisney World, and I ended up talking to a guy from Texas. He asked where I was, and I told him "Alberta ... Canada".
      "What state is that Next to?" he asked.
      "We're right on the border with Montana".
      "What?" he replied, incredulously, "I thought Montana was right next to Texas!".

      This was around 1979, and he was a bit too old to have been GW Bush.

      --
      OS Software is like love: The best way to make it grow is to give it away.
    46. Re:Munich isn't Germany's biggest city ... by Paul+Komarek · · Score: 1

      On the other hand, the Deutsches Museum is awesome. I believe it's the world's largest technical museum. IIRC, it has a full-scale coal mine model in the basement.

      And admission is very, very inexpensive.

      -Paul Komarek

    47. Re:Munich isn't Germany's biggest city ... by Daimaou · · Score: 1

      Actually, there are shows like that in nearly every country I've been in (Japan, India, US, Canada, Australia, Singapore, etc.)

      The US has not cornered the market on ignorance. It is pretty even around the world.

    48. Re:Munich isn't Germany's biggest city ... by moonbender · · Score: 1

      Of course, the Deutsche Bergbaumuseum (German page, sorry) has an actual coal mine in the basement. :)

      --
      Switch back to Slashdot's D1 system.
    49. Re:Munich isn't Germany's biggest city ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's interesting that your geometry teacher asked you geography questions...

    50. Re:Munich isn't Germany's biggest city ... by pezking · · Score: 1

      how many americans know the capital of canada?

      by americans, I mean `from the united states'. (we don't have many other options, you realize. `united statesian'? `USers'?)

      --
      "They can kill you, but the legalities of eating you are quite a bit dicier" -dfw
    51. Re:Munich isn't Germany's biggest city ... by Lispy · · Score: 1

      Personally id say: Munich is the greatest City in Germany ;-)

      Just to start a little Flamewar with all the other Germans around here...

    52. Re:Munich isn't Germany's biggest city ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      montreal...........bet U didnt know it huh?

    53. Re:Munich isn't Germany's biggest city ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Munich ain't no city - it's a ToyTown!

    54. Re:Munich isn't Germany's biggest city ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Must have been Al Gore, then.

    55. Re:Munich isn't Germany's biggest city ... by KlausBreuer · · Score: 1

      And compared to job opportunities, growth and general well-off-being, Berlin is a major dump compared to Munich. The Berlin position used to be a punishment for moronic politicians, and thus you still find Germanys worst up there. And they cost a LOT of money.

      I should know. I used to live in Berlin (as a freelance programmer), and my brother still does. I'm in Munich now, and my brother is seriously considering coming down here, too, although he likes Berlin itself.

      So, IT-wise, Munich is much bigger than Berlin.

      --
      Free PC version of ChipWits at http://www.breueronline.de/klaus/chipwits/
    56. Re:Munich isn't Germany's biggest city ... by 3247 · · Score: 1

      No, the biggest city of West Germany was Hamburg. Well, that is if you only count municipialities. If you'd define "city" differently -- the largest metropolitan area is the Rhurgebiet, which consists of several large neighbouring cities.

      --
      Claus
    57. Re:Munich isn't Germany's biggest city ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Usonians" (from Esperanto) works quite well.

  4. Math by Nexum · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Anyone want to do the math on this one?

    If we assume Linux never existed, and therefore the 90% cut price offer never made, making Munich pay full whack for 14,000 copies of Windows, how much would this cost (on this scale - obviously i doubt they would pay the full ~$300 permachine?)

    Or put more directly... how much has this shaved off the MS bottom line for this financial quarter? If anyone knows what the purchase rate for both WINDOWS and OFFICE on this scale... please... let us know the math!

    -Nex

    --

    This sig has been deprecated.
    1. Re:Math by djupedal · · Score: 2, Interesting

      The math that's worth doing is not what this incident alone will or will not cost...it is the cost over many, many quarters when MS can't 'project' earnings from another fish on the hook.

    2. Re:Math by Teckla · · Score: 4, Funny

      I think it's one human soul per Windows/Office seat, as well as your first born.

      -Teckla

    3. Re:Math by TC+(WC) · · Score: 1

      Of course, you've looked at the costs associated with an installation of this size and done a cost analysis before stating that, right? I mean, you wouldn't just make statements up on Slashdot, would you?

    4. Re:Math by Spellbinder · · Score: 1

      no no no it's just your third son they want...

      --


      stop supporting microsoft with pirating their software!!!!!
    5. Re:Math by Nexum · · Score: 1

      I've not stated anything in my post - go back and read more carefully.

      I'm asking for more information from people who may be privy to such things exactly what this is likely to cost Microsoft.

      -Nex

      --

      This sig has been deprecated.
    6. Re:Math by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      when you click a few links, you get to the story about the actual study, which says:
      Microsoft-Kunden müssen jetzt jährlich für Software-Lizenzen bezahlen. Bei den 10.000 städtischen PCs käme eine Summe von zirka 4,5 Millionen Euro zusammen.
      in english:
      Microsoft clients now have to pay a yearly software licence. with the 10000 PCs that would be around 4.5 million euro.

      exactly why this article talks about 10000 computers, and the other one about 14000, i don't know

    7. Re:Math by TC+(WC) · · Score: 1

      Hehe, then you appear to have forgotten the question part.

      You wrote a statement in the form of an inequality. It would have helped if you had actually put a question there somehow.

    8. Re:Math by Nexum · · Score: 1

      Well it's lost on me... perhaps you could tell me what my supposed statement is?

      --

      This sig has been deprecated.
    9. Re:Math by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Large corporations get HUGE discounts as long as every computer is licensed. Per seat costs of $50 or less which include all MS Office products and connection licenses exist. These costs are for an org larger than Munich.
      We just count desktops and pay MS annually. I'm not certain whether the initial license costs are included or not, since I don't purchase desktops.

    10. Re:Math by jcast · · Score: 1

      He's not replying to you. He's replying to the troll who replied to you.

      --
      There are reasons why democracy does not work nearly as well as capitalism.
      -- David D. Friedman
    11. Re:Math by jcast · · Score: 1

      You're talking about Munich. He's talking about M$. Even if TCO of M$ were less (which it's not), M$ would still lose money when Munich goes Linux.

      --
      There are reasons why democracy does not work nearly as well as capitalism.
      -- David D. Friedman
    12. Re:Math by TC+(WC) · · Score: 1

      It turns out I wasn't even replying to you... I assumed you were actually the person I replied to when you took offense at what I said. Dump your filter down to see, since he's since been modded Troll.

    13. Re:Math by l33t+j03 · · Score: 0

      Of course, you've looked at the costs associated with an installation of this size and done a cost analysis before stating that, right? I mean, you wouldn't just make statements up on Slashdot, would you?

  5. Re:to the editors of slashdot by grub · · Score: 1, Funny
    Dear Mr. Gates,

    Please don't take it personally. I'm sure you're a nice man.

    Regards,

    grubby
    --
    Trolling is a art,
  6. Would that be . . . by acceleriter · · Score: 1, Funny

    der W00t, die W00t, oder das W00t?
    </font>

    ~~~

    --

    CEE5210S The signal SIGHUP was received.

    1. Re:Would that be . . . by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      none of the above, it's an adjective.

    2. Re:Would that be . . . by vegetablespork · · Score: 0

      "Woot," an adjective? I thought it was one of those words that could be a variety of parts of speech, like "fuck."

      --

      Call (206) 338-5780 COLLECT for information about a genuine BA, BS, MA, MS, MBA, or Ph.D.

    3. Re:Would that be . . . by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Overrated? Pussy.

    4. Re:Would that be . . . by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Jesus. Get it right. Stop using that broken, shitty HTML fool.

      <span style="15px fraktur, serif;">

      Ah Slashdot. Where standards are double and ignored where convenient.

  7. the decision hasn't fallen yet by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    as the article says, may 28th's the day.
    (though it looks likely)

  8. babelwhat? by pphrdza · · Score: 0, Offtopic
    Boris Schwartz, deputy leader of the parliamentary group, takes position: "the decision Munich town councillor per Linux into the monopoly-like position of Microsoft will strike a breach. With the city Munich decides for the first time a large German municipality for open SOURCE often commodity. Beside larger economy for the city this is also a contribution for genuine competition on the market for software.

    Gotta love those computer translators...

    1. Re:babelwhat? by gbjbaanb · · Score: 1

      yes you do - its translation of German to English is way, way, way better than my ability to read German.

  9. Re:oh christ by stevejsmith · · Score: 1

    Next time you know they'll be capitalizing nouns. Crazy Germans... You'd think that the language that branched out of the modern American dialect of English would be more respectful of its parent language.

  10. Errr.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    First, it should be: "Germany's biggest city";
    and secondly, Munich is not the largest city in Germany.

  11. List of Switchers? by vivIsel · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Is there anyone out there who mantains a list of countries, cities, companies, &c who have made the move to Linux? If not...well, it would be useful for making Open Source pitches to prospective switch-ers in government, business, and the like. To be sure, Munich isn't alone, but how much company does the city have? I imagine something like one of those push-pin maps, sorted by distro, perhaps, and by the size of the switch (citywide, countrywide, corporate). Would be neat. Does it exist?

    1. Re:List of Switchers? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      I'll get right on that, sir. SHUT THE FUCK UP AND STOP ORDERING ME AROUND! No shit it's like YELLING, Slashdot...otherwise I wouldn't have done it...

    2. Re:List of Switchers? by rkz · · Score: 5, Funny

      We could use mappoint!! Lets start it ASAP
      More info

    3. Re:List of Switchers? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'll do the database with Access. Maybe some mass mailings, I could wipe together a quick VB program for Word/Outlook.

      Let me know what I can do, I'm @hotmail.

    4. Re:List of Switchers? by innocent_white_lamb · · Score: 1

      There's canopener.ca but it appears to be Canada-only.

      --
      If you're a zombie and you know it, bite your friend!
    5. Re:List of Switchers? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why would these people want to paint a target on themselves? Haven't you read about the dirty tricks pulled by M$ on the people who even think about switching? The time wasted on a major software audit alone probably exceeds the cost of M$ software at a typical large org.

    6. Re:List of Switchers? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There are a couple of sites focused on governments and open source. One is the IOSN run by the UNDP. It's currently Asia-Pacific only but I'm sure if you submit links, they will put up the information. They welcome all submissions and are currently in the early stages of setting up the site and the infrastructure behind it. Expect them to be more active in the near future.

      Alternatively, if it is only Asia-Pacific focused, links can also be submitted to AsiaOSC. It's a Wiki page so anyone can post information (after registration of course).

    7. Re:List of Switchers? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Why would these people want to paint a target on themselves? Haven't you read about the dirty tricks pulled by M$ on the people who even think about switching? The time wasted on a major software audit alone probably exceeds the cost of M$ software at a typical large org.

      Is a software audit even a legal requirement? It seems to me that anyone who knows they don't use unlicensed MS software should just tell MS to go fsck themselves. If MS believes there to be unlicensed software in use, they should sue.
    8. Re:List of Switchers? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There is BundesTux.de. It is in german, but concerns most of the world.

  12. preliminary decision by tholti · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Note that it is still a preliminary decision. But as you can read from the article if it comes to the final decision there probably will be 43 (SPD and Gruene party) to 33 (CDU and FDP) votes for Linux. :-)

    1. Re:preliminary decision by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      so where did you read that the CDU and FDP are against??

    2. Re:preliminary decision by tholti · · Score: 1

      The idea of deploying Linux at Munich's administration is an older one and in the course of discussion it turned out that most politicians of CDU and FDP will be against the Linux solution.
      But it's politics, who knows ...

  13. Re:oh christ by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Think for 2 seconds, then read it again.

  14. Wow! by togofspookware · · Score: 1, Insightful

    14 workstations! Good work, guys!

    Seriously, if slashdot starts using "." and "," interchangably, it could get confusing. We ought to decide which notation we like better and stick with that. Personally I don't see why we need to stick in a <whatever> every 3 zeroes at all.

    --
    Duct tape, XML, democracy: Not doing the job? Use more.
    1. Re:Wow! by corsec67 · · Score: 1

      yeah, and there is also putting a space every three numbers, like 7 000 000 000. that causes a problem when I have a computer with 2 X 900 mhx processors, for example.

      You are right, they should stick to some standard,

      --
      If I have nothing to hide, don't search me
    2. Re:Wow! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The german industry norm (DIN) is actually older than anything the US ever cooked up.
      And most stuff makes a lot more sense.
      month/day/year anyone? *barf*

    3. Re:Wow! by CableModemSniper · · Score: 1

      Yes I know, complaining about mods is like screaming at god but...

      I don't think this is a troll at all. Its not the most important thing in the world, ofc. but he does make a valid point, and it hardly deserves a troll mod.

      --
      Why not fork?
    4. Re:Wow! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      they have - the european standard for writing decimal notation. I don't like it, being in the UK, but I don't think we should try to make the Germans adopt a different notation just because you happen to use a different one.

      what next, we should ask that all their web documents be written in english for the benefit of the US of A.

    5. Re:Wow! by TheRaven64 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Or better yet, actually use those nice facilities built into CSS2 for that kind of internationalisation. Of course that would make the site not work properly in IE (which doesn't support that part of the CSS spec) but hey, no one cares about a few MS users, right?

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    6. Re:Wow! by zoloto · · Score: 1

      I'm not sure if this is just a EU thing or a german thing, but the period is a delimiter for numbers with greater than 3 digits. ie: 3.000 00 and did you notice the space after the first 3 zeros? that's supposed to mean the cents value (or at least in the old german monitary value a pfennig (spelling??))

      Don't quote me on that exactly, but it's what i remember learning a ways back in school.

    7. Re:Wow! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I prefer the Perl way of doing things, which is to use underscores. Thus,

      $x = 9_000_000;

      is legal Perl code that assigns nine million to the variable $x. This is pretty keen, IMHO, because

      1. it avoids the comma vs. period international problem; and
      2. the human mind (maybe not all, but many of them), as well as lots of computer code out there, already recognizes the underscore as a non-word-breaking character, so it feels somewhat natural already; and also
      3. the underscore is rarely used as an operator in computer languages (esp. compared to how often comma and period are used as operators); and finally
      4. a bit unrelated, but on my keyboard at least, the underscore is in the same row as the numbers, immediately adjacent to the zero, in fact, making it much easier to type numbers with underscores (try it).

      All of which is sort of a long way of saying that, with today's unprecedented global communication, there is value in having a common format for things, and furthermore it's nice to use the same format for code and other stuff when possible, and Perl already has a solution that's works well in all these situations.

      (Hmm... Unfortunately there is one down side. "9,000,000" is easily pronounced as "nine comma zerozerozero comma zerozerozero", but "9_000_000" is harder to pronounce.)

    8. Re:Wow! by daniel23 · · Score: 1

      Your spelling is flawless, 100 Pfennig equalled 1 Mark in the days before the euro.

      On the other hand, the decimals are separated by a comma, not by a space. However, sometimes thousands are separated by space instead of a dot. Ie, a milliard could be written as 1.000.000.000 or 1 000 000 000 or 1000000000.

      This isn't just a German thing nor limited to Europe, it's rather the US being the exception here. However, in countries influenced by Chinese culture there is a habit to separate groups of four digits.

      ~dp

      --
      605413? Yes, it's a prime.
    9. Re:Wow! by zoloto · · Score: 1

      thanks for the correction and a bit of education there in your expansion of my origional comment.

      too bad the money is worthless, i have about 1,000 marks and franks left over. - eh, collectors items perhaps?

  15. Re:to the editors of slashdot by cheesybagel · · Score: 1
    Maybe.

    But pray tell me how is this story unrelated to Linux? Did you even bother to notice that Linux actually won the contract? Since Linux is OSS this is an OSS related news story.

    So there.

  16. Security issue ? by Krapangor · · Score: 5, Funny

    With OSS they can see the source and verify that it's frre of any backdoor. So they can protect their precious secrets about the Oktoberfest and what Bavarian beer is really made of.

    --
    Owner of a Mensa membership card.
    1. Re:Security issue ? by gmhowell · · Score: 5, Informative

      what Bavarian beer is really made of

      The same thing as all German beer: barley, hops, water, yeast.

      The actual law.

      --
      Jesus was all right but his disciples were thick and ordinary. -John Lennon
    2. Re:Security issue ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bavaria is a dutch beer.

    3. Re:Security issue ? by ShadyG · · Score: 2, Funny

      It's PEOPLE! Bavarian beer is PEOPLE!!!

      -- ShadyG

    4. Re:Security issue ? by Exatron · · Score: 1

      Hmm, needs more dog.

      --
      "I think so, Brain, but 'instant karma' always gets so lumpy." - Pinky
      "Decepticons FOREVER!!!" - Ravage
    5. Re:Security issue ? by FuzzyBad-Mofo · · Score: 1

      The same thing as all German beer: barley, hops, water, yeast.

      What, no Barvarians?

    6. Re:Security issue ? by Dr.+Spork · · Score: 1

      Jaaaaah! Open source bier! Now if only I could get it free...

    7. Re:Security issue ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      With OSS they can see the source and verify that it's frre of any backdoor. So they can protect their precious secrets about the Oktoberfest and what Bavarian beer is really made of.

      ... and we all know that American "beer" could certainly use some improvement.

    8. Re:Security issue ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Damn you! Damn you all to hell!

    9. Re:Security issue ? by 3247 · · Score: 1
      So they can protect their precious secrets about the Oktoberfest and what Bavarian beer is really made of.
      The University of Technology Munich tells everyone: They offfer a study programme in brewery.
      --
      Claus
  17. Better translation by akruppa · · Score: 5, Informative

    I had the same story submitted, along with a cleaned up translation, but it was rejected.

    Anyways, here's the corrected translation, hope it helps.

    Alex

    Munich City Hall's SPD decides in favour of Linux

    In today's meeting, the SPD faction of the Munich City Hall spoke out in
    favour of using Linux on the PCs of the city's administration. Thus a
    preliminary decision has been made, spokesman Jürgen Bühl said. The Munich
    city administration migrates from Windows NT to Linux as the client
    operation system and to an office suite from the Open Source domain.

    The transition to Linux guarantees greater independence of suppliers and
    greater "flexibility in the design of the future IT landscape of the city
    administration". Additionally considerably lower cost are created.
    Considering the tense budget situation in the states [Bavaria] capital, this
    is an aspect that "supplements the strategic-qualitative advantages," says
    the note from Munich.

    Town councillor Christine Strobl, deputy leaders of the parliamentary group
    and SPD spokeswoman in the personal and administrative committee, states:
    "At the same time we provide for the further shaping of the technology
    location Munich. For development and support the city will purchase
    services. Thus we promote high-quality jobs in the region. In this context,
    the Technical University of Munich's support during the migration underlines
    the outstanding position of the science location Munich."

    The migration of the 14,000 PC systems and Notebooks with over 16.000 users
    is to take place "gently". In particular departments with extensive
    specialized applications are to be able to plan on a long-term basis. The
    final decision will be made by the city council in the plenary assembly on
    May, 28th. For over one year SPD has held 35 of the 80 seats , the CSU 30,
    the Greens 8 and the FDP 3. The other parties account for the remaining four
    seats.

    "We are fully conscious that our decision has a signal effect", says Strobl.
    "That's why we have investigated the matter intensively." The consulting
    firm Unilog initially rated the impoved offer from Microsoft as advantagous.
    But open questions had remained and finally a new offer of IBM was present.

    The new total evaluation of capital value and qualitative-strategic criteria
    led to a draw between both solutions, continues the town councillor. As the
    combination of Linux and an Open Source office suite
    "qualitative-strategically clearly comes out in front, the SPD parliamentary
    group decided for this option as the long-term direction".

    --
    Heisenberg may have been here
    1. Re:Better translation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Thx,
      before your post, much og the above posts was just gibberish, fishy, some would say.

      Actually, I din't even bother to read the article, which I usually do, with some exceptions.

      I prefer a real translation to any fishy one, that for sure.

  18. Heard at M$-HQ by netcongestion · · Score: 5, Funny


    "How many shares shall I sell today?"

    1. Re:Heard at M$-HQ by geeklawyer · · Score: 1, Interesting

      you joke, but blow-hard Balmer sold stock recently.

      probably just co-incidence. I mean if it wasnt he'd be insider trading and that would be illegal. And nobody in Microsoft management would ever do anything illegal would they?

      --
      -he who laughs last, is a bit slow.
      journal
    2. Re:Heard at M$-HQ by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Huh, did Balmer outsmart the system???

    3. Re:Heard at M$-HQ by Angry+White+Guy · · Score: 1

      It wasn't insider trading. He just needed enough cash to cover the 90% discount.

      --
      You think that I'm crazy, you should see this guy!
    4. Re:Heard at M$-HQ by Ost99 · · Score: 1

      Balmer sold shares in Microsoft for the first time in 12 years today...

      - Ost

      --
      ---- Sig. gone.
    5. Re:Heard at M$-HQ by rseuhs · · Score: 4, Insightful
      It's funny.

      First Ballmer interrupts his skiing trip to talk to Munich officials.

      Then a Microsoft memo gets leaked in which it is stated that "no matter what, don't lose against Linux"

      Then Ballmer offers a 90% discount

      Then Ballmer sells 10% of his MSFT-stock.

      And finally Munich uses Linux anyway.

  19. Re:to the editors of slashdot by Neil+Watson · · Score: 4, Insightful

    This is not an article about just Miscrosoft. It is an article that offers me a faint glimmer of hope that maybe, just maybe, greedy mega-corps do not control the entire world.

  20. Not yet by rainer_d · · Score: 2, Interesting
    This decision must still be finally confirmed by the city council, the original Heise Newsticker article does mention this, though.
    The ruling SPD-party does not have a majority in there, but it should not be a big problem to get enough votes from other parties.

    Rainer

    --
    Windows 2000 - from the guys who brought us edlin
    1. Re:Not yet by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But with their coalition partners they have.
      The Greens will also vote for it.

  21. Now THAT'S a monopoly! by crivens · · Score: 4, Insightful

    90% discount?! Now THAT'S a monopoly! I don't see Steve Balmer rushing to offer me a 90% discount on any MS products. Then again I'm not a city so no wonder!

    1. Re:Now THAT'S a monopoly! by bstadil · · Score: 5, Insightful
      90% discount?!

      I am surprised that this was offered. Microsoft is not out of the legal woods in Europe and a discount of this magnitude can almost only be construed as an attempt to leverage a monopoly situation. There can be no other rational business reason for this discount.

      On an aside this is a huge blow for MS. The knowledge of the offered discount is probably worse than not getting the biz.

      --
      Help fight continental drift.
    2. Re:Now THAT'S a monopoly! by Anonvmous+Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

      "Then again I'm not a city so no wonder!"

      Must... resist.... yo mama... joke....

    3. Re:Now THAT'S a monopoly! by rseuhs · · Score: 5, Insightful
      I am surprised that this was offered. Microsoft is not out of the legal woods in Europe and a discount of this magnitude can almost only be construed as an attempt to leverage a monopoly situation. There can be no other rational business reason for this discount.

      The reason was that under no circumstances Microsoft wants any publicly visible large migration to happen. They would have paid Munich to run Windows if it wouldn't look too stupid!

      Hell, they DID pay a lot for the Bundestag to stay on Windows at least on clients. They invested over 5 million $ for a PR-campaign, which translates to 1000$ for each of the Bundestag's computers.

      Money is not the issue here.

      The issue is a big organization showing the world that Linux is viable on the client.

      The issue is that now a lot of applications are going to get ported to Linux and Linux will be an even better deal for other cities.

      The issue is that now millions of people are going to communicate with OpenOffice file formats with their government.

    4. Re:Now THAT'S a monopoly! by Angry+White+Guy · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I just see it as Microsoft blatantly stating that their products are gossly overpriced.

      --
      You think that I'm crazy, you should see this guy!
    5. Re:Now THAT'S a monopoly! by GammaTau · · Score: 1

      90% discount?! Now THAT'S a monopoly!

      The irony is that even after that discount they lost. Since Microsoft is starting to get some serious competition, I'm not sure how long it will be proper to accuse Microsoft of abusing its monopoly position.

    6. Re:Now THAT'S a monopoly! by Spellbinder · · Score: 1

      one of the previous heise.de articles told me it was about 15% discount
      i can't see where this 90% number comes from

      --


      stop supporting microsoft with pirating their software!!!!!
    7. Re:Now THAT'S a monopoly! by moncyb · · Score: 1

      We'll just have to say they're abusing their customers and everyone they come in contact with.

    8. Re:Now THAT'S a monopoly! by bussdriver · · Score: 1

      You forget the SCC report. MS makes over 500% on windows. 90% discounts will not break them.

    9. Re:Now THAT'S a monopoly! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The real important part is : using open "file formats with their government"

      Remember that little fiasco of UK where only IE browser may use a goverment website?

    10. Re:Now THAT'S a monopoly! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm a little confused as to how this makes it a monopoly. If it were a monopoly, they'd say "Hey, Munich, go fuck yourself. What else are you gonna buy?"

      Discounts indicate competition, not a monopoly.

    11. Re:Now THAT'S a monopoly! by crivens · · Score: 1

      *chuckle*

    12. Re:Now THAT'S a monopoly! by Richard_at_work · · Score: 1, Troll

      So what does that say about boxed versions of Redhat, Mandrake, Suse, blah blah blah?

    13. Re:Now THAT'S a monopoly! by cabalamat2 · · Score: 1

      The knowledge of the offered discount is probably worse than not getting the biz.

      And what's even worse is that MS offered a 90% discount and still lost the contract. I doubt they'd be able to give away their software to Munich!... though perhaps they could try paying Munich to use it :-)

    14. Re:Now THAT'S a monopoly! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nobody likes the feeling of eagle talons in his back!

    15. Re:Now THAT'S a monopoly! by beta21 · · Score: 1

      This doesn't sound like a rationale to make money, more to stall for time. Sounds like MicroSoft is just stalling the acceptance of Linux.

      Maybe they have something in the works...who knows

    16. Re:Now THAT'S a monopoly! by Narcissus · · Score: 1

      It says that if I am willing to go to the effort to download it or find a friend with it, instead of going to the shop to buy it, then I can pay for the convenience.

      There would be no change in deliverables from Microsoft when they reduced the price, so one may be able to say that the original price is inflated.

      It's to do with convenience.

      There's also the fact that those boxed sets provide support, which neither the downloadable versions or an originally priced MS product, let alone one whose price has been reduced by 90%, do.

    17. Re:Now THAT'S a monopoly! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Depends on who has what axe to grind. After all, if /.sers were choosing they'd go for Linux regardless of any offer put forward by MS.

      When we had the coal strike in the eighties, some local gov people decided to push for a cut in the use of police horses because they were so effective in dealing with the rampaging miners.

      Not common sense nor a good move - just motivated by politics.

    18. Re:Now THAT'S a monopoly! by mindriot · · Score: 1

      I don't know where that number actually comes from, it's nowhere in the article. But assuming it is true, and considering Munich has decided that the Linux-based solution is still the cheaper offer, I think it tells you something about what a Microsoft operating environment really costs you, in comparison to a Linux-based one. And it might just be a hint that those TCO-for-MS-is-better-than-for-OSS studies could be far from reality.

    19. Re:Now THAT'S a monopoly! by danila · · Score: 1

      Bullshit. The marginal costs of one copy are negligible. Even more so with corporate licenses, where you don't need to provide packaging, etc. Pricing in software can be completely arbitrarily and there is nothing bad about setting it at any level or even giving a 90% discount. Such discounts are common for academic users, for example. And in some cases certain groups of customers get the product for free. So MS has the right to give MS Office away - they are not dumping.

      BTW, in the past courts (in the US) agreed that setting the price below average costs but above marginal costs is not dumping (I don't remember where and when the decision was made - read about that 2 weeks ago in a Macroeconomics textbook).

      --
      Future Wiki -- If you don't think about the future, you cannot have one.
    20. Re:Now THAT'S a monopoly! by mindriot · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Actually, This article says:

      Microsoft has lowered its price offer by 15 per cent in order to prevent the city switching to Linux

      That would be a bit less then. So I still wonder where that 90% is coming from, and if that's a 90% discount on the complete price... more likely, some components were reduced by 90% so that the overall discount is closer to 15%.

    21. Re:Now THAT'S a monopoly! by jpetts · · Score: 1

      I am surprised that this was offered. Microsoft is not out of the legal woods in Europe and a discount of this magnitude can almost only be construed as an attempt to leverage a monopoly situation. There can be no other rational business reason for this discount.

      Has everybody forgotten this article already. It quotes Orlando Ayala, who was top sales executive at MS, as saying "under NO circumstances lose against Linux"

      --
      Call me old fashioned, but I like a dump to be as memorable as it is devastating - Bender
    22. Re:Now THAT'S a monopoly! by Narcissus · · Score: 1

      I wasn't talking about dumping. And you can't even say that corporate licences allow them to cut the price that much: unless, of course, they weren't providing corporate licences to begin with.

      What I was talking about was in reference to the parent post comparing MS cutting the price by 90% without a change in product to free downloads of Linux distributions, which are a different product to that which you buy boxed.

      My point is that they would have been getting a corporate licence *before* the discount. Discounts for academic users are different, as they are a different product, with regards to licencing, anyway. When I purchased Visual Studio in uni, the licence stated that it could not be used for commercial applications. Hence, a different product.

      My only point was regarding a change in product when there's a change in price.

      So tell me: if the price is not inflated (and I never said that it was, just that some people can argue it) what has been the product change to reflect the price change?

      Nothing. That was my point, entirely to counter the reference to Linux based products. There was no malice intended towards Microsoft: I was merely deflecting that heading towards the Linux companies...

    23. Re:Now THAT'S a monopoly! by smallpaul · · Score: 1

      I am surprised that this was offered. Microsoft is not out of the legal woods in Europe and a discount of this magnitude can almost only be construed as an attempt to leverage a monopoly situation. There can be no other rational business reason for this discount.

      I would say that monopolies do not have to discount that much. They will use this as evidence that they are under pricing pressure just like a "normal" company. Obviously if it were not for the competition of Linux they would not slash their pricing this much.

    24. Re:Now THAT'S a monopoly! by ealar+dlanvuli · · Score: 1

      Bullshit. The marginal costs of one copy are negligible.

      Holy shit dude, have you put a software package on the shelf recently? Jesus I knew slashdot had some idiots, but that takes the cake.

      40$ for a home user package, sub 25$ for packaging and distribution (if not more, really depends on how large their sale volume is [hint: higher = cheaper]). Sub ~5$ for support costs (depending on call volume, I'm assuming the average RH box needs about 10 mins of phone support, with most needing 0). I seriously doubt they are making a killing on low end boxed solutions.

      Jesus christ, I swear some people will talk out of their ass no matter how little they know about the topic.

      "Enterprise" boxes offer all sorts of support and extra goodies that cost a lot more. While they are making cash, they probably aren't rolling in the boxes you get from Best Buy.

      --
      I live in a giant bucket.
    25. Re:Now THAT'S a monopoly! by tbradshaw · · Score: 1

      Actually, I would consider this proof that Microsoft is *not* a monopoly. They attempted the tried and true method of price-gouging, and they were still defeated by a superior product. I'm elated that GNU/Linux, OpenOffice, and the essential support contracts from IBM, SuSE, etc, have gotten matured to the point that they can truely compete in a free market. If this rate of improvement in linux technologies and the related support contracts can be kept up, the dream of a true MS competitor may be in out midst. I don't consider MS a coercive monopoly myself (not quite anyway, pretty borderline), but I've been waiting for the day that a worthy competitor could be groomed to take on MS in the public and private sector. I hope those contributing and profiting from gnu/linux keep up the hard work. Once the battle for marketshare really begins in earnest, the competition is only going to get harder and faster. gl

    26. Re:Now THAT'S a monopoly! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      "Now THAT'S a monopoly!"

      Dude, Microsoft has been declared a criminal monopoly years ago in U.S. courts. It has been through appeal and is now part of the public reccord.

      (too bad Bush is a whore...)

    27. Re:Now THAT'S a monopoly! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The 90% is coming from a leaked memo that detailed that "up to 90%" could be given to inhibit linux from winning (not limited and only for the Munich case, but for all cases).

      The actual rabat offered was 15%, you are right.

    28. Re:Now THAT'S a monopoly! by 3247 · · Score: 1
      The issue is a big organization showing the world that Linux is viable on the client.
      And by offering large discounts, Ballmer actually shot himself into the foot: Munich will not only show that OSS is viable -- and cheaper. Ballmer also provoked press releases from the ruling parties of the town council which say that Linux is also the qualitatively and strategically better solution. That's a huge PR accident.
      --
      Claus
    29. Re:Now THAT'S a monopoly! by SN74S181 · · Score: 1

      You should have seen the sour look on the woman from Red Hat Marketing's face when I asked her, back in the day, if I could just make copies of my Red Hat 5.0 CD set and give them to my friends.

      I understand they have gotten even more business oriented since then....

    30. Re:Now THAT'S a monopoly! by fymidos · · Score: 1

      Actually, I would consider this proof that Microsoft is *not* a monopoly.

      Ok, it is proven then.

      Seriously, overall linux is doing great, but the MS monopoly is still there for the people who are actually trying to make a *living* from linux. Linux is mature, and it's ready and great blah blah, but MS is *still* a monopoly, and it *can* use anti-competitive tactics (again).

      --
      Washington bullets will simply be known as the "Bulle
    31. Re:Now THAT'S a monopoly! by danila · · Score: 1

      You don't have to change a product. You can provide discounts to anyone. Practically any discounts and practically to anybody. You can give the product for free to people who have a birthday today. You can give the product for free (or at different prices) to academic users, to students, to citizens of a particular country/region (even a non-existing country), to people of a specific gender, etc. (I can give legal examples for every one of this possibilities) Why can't MS give a huge discount to a goverment in one particular city?

      And again, you can't speak about inflated price in regards to the software. If it sold for more than the price of the media, it is legal.

      --
      Future Wiki -- If you don't think about the future, you cannot have one.
    32. Re:Now THAT'S a monopoly! by danila · · Score: 1

      Don't be ridiculous, taking some fake numbers out of your ass. 25$ for packaging and distribution? What have you been smoking? How comes some software is sold for much less? Do they get their packaging and distribution free? And have you been checking the MS Office prices recently? 40$? Are you nuts?

      --
      Future Wiki -- If you don't think about the future, you cannot have one.
    33. Re:Now THAT'S a monopoly! by ealar+dlanvuli · · Score: 1

      Well, since I've put a product on the shelf recently, and our first three months cost more than 25$/box for P&D, I think I'm justified in making that figure up.

      Some software is sold for less because it gets worse spots on the shelf, is sold in fewer stores, and isn't marketed nearly at all.

      We were talking about a boxed version of RH, not a copy of MS office.

      Please grow up, feel free to reply to me again when you have some experience behind your claims.

      --
      I live in a giant bucket.
    34. Re:Now THAT'S a monopoly! by danila · · Score: 1
      Oh, thanks. I just became a day older, may I try again? Some software in some countries is sold for 3 dollars (legally distributed jewel boxes). While they might not be very profitable, presumably, these 3 dollars cover the packaging and distribution. That is the lower bound.

      Then may I kindly remind you that in my original post I said "Bullshit. The marginal costs of one copy are negligible. Even more so with corporate licenses, where you don't need to provide packaging, etc." Apparently, you was so excited that you managed to read only the first sentence of the post, took it out of context, and replied to it alone, saying how expensive the packaging is. Duh!

      Also could you please avoid including marketing costs in the P&D, ok? As well as the costs of agreements with the stores. We are talking about marginal costs of one copy (see your favourite economics book for the definition).

      Finally, I hope you realise that MS has a significantly higher gross markup on its products. To understand why, you need to think about their retail price (which for the MS Office is 10 times higher than for RH CD), about their net profit margin (ridiculous), and their cash reserves (Billions and Billions, (c) Carl Sagan).

      --
      Future Wiki -- If you don't think about the future, you cannot have one.
    35. Re:Now THAT'S a monopoly! by ealar+dlanvuli · · Score: 1

      Yes, I know MS has insane markeup, but the origional post was comparing the cost of Boxed RH to the cost of downloading RH. Something so inherently flawed it disturbed me greatly. ...

      --
      I live in a giant bucket.
  22. 90% isnt considered a rebate anymore by AvengerXP · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Why did they turn down that? Seems like a good deal to me, Linux or no Linux in the equation.

    --
    Trolls dont like to be Flamebait, because they burn so well. Protect our Troll heritage!
    1. Re:90% isnt considered a rebate anymore by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      several reasons:

      to strengthen the 'technological capital' thing
      free is still cheaper than 90% off, which is important in the current german economy. also, most of the cost that does exist will stay inside munich, instead of giving a foreign company the money
      it creates 'real competition'
      it gives greater flexibility
      the change will create jobs for qualified people (which means more off them come to munich)
      not dependent on a single company

    2. Re:90% isnt considered a rebate anymore by rseuhs · · Score: 3, Interesting
      Linux is more efficient in administration, vendor-neutral (= competition) and KDE offers more features than the outdated Windows GUI.

      Once you are used to multiple desktops (no, that measly 4 add-on powertoys desktops don't count.), Unix-style copy-paste and much greater flexibility and configurability, you will never go back to Windows.

    3. Re:90% isnt considered a rebate anymore by grungeman · · Score: 1

      Missed business opportunity for Munich

      1. Buy those 14,000 licenses with a 90% discount
      2. Sell them on ebay
      3. Profit

      --

      Signature deleted by lameness filter.
    4. Re:90% isnt considered a rebate anymore by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Microsoft is toast. Now that everyone knows they are desperate, "evaluations" of Linux should become mandatory by all government agencies, even if they never intend to use it. For a 90% discount, think of how many more beurocrats you can hire!

    5. Re:90% isnt considered a rebate anymore by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, I'm sure it was the copy-paste that sealed the deal.. the lack of interoperability for anything other than plain text must have been the selling point. I bet Unix-style drag and drop was also high on their list..

    6. Re:90% isnt considered a rebate anymore by chrysrobyn · · Score: 1

      Once you are used to multiple desktops (no, that measly 4 add-on powertoys desktops don't count.), Unix-style copy-paste and much greater flexibility and configurability, you will never go back to Windows.

      I was handed a quad processor machine with 2 gigs of RAM as my only computer in 1999. It ran Unix (AIX, all jokes aside about how "Unix" that is...), and I was very happy. I got used to a number of things, but the least of which was the file management. I'm very fluent with ls, rm, mv, etc, but it is still nothing compared to a real GUI file manager. Maybe I could have installed one, but AIX didn't have one that compared to MacOS or Windows. But I loved the multiple desktops, remote machine abilities, real honest-to-god use for a three button mouse, etc.

      Almost two years ago, I switched jobs within the company. Lost the Real Machine. Got a Thinkpad-- and suddenly the only applications I wanted to run were supported on Windows only.

      Sometimes it's not about the right tool for the job, but about the tool the job allows to have. I went back, but not by choice. File management got much better. Stability, on the other hand, is not always as good on Win2k installs as some would lead you to believe (despite a lack of installed software).

      Now if only IBM would release a Notes version 6 for AIX...(4 is no good to me)

    7. Re:90% isnt considered a rebate anymore by rmezzari · · Score: 0

      Guess what, dude: You will never get modded up if you dare to say the truth about Unix cut'n'paste.

      --
      "Emancipate yourself from mental slavery, none but ourselves can free our minds !"
    8. Re:90% isnt considered a rebate anymore by barawn · · Score: 1

      Er? GUI file managers are nice, but efficiency really comes with commandline tools if you're scatterbrained like me. Want to create a new folder with all of the PDFs in one directory? No problem: mkdir pdf; mv *.pdf pdf, and you're done. The number of clicks that it takes to do that in a GUI file manager is really insane. In Windows I'd bring up a commandline interface in a heartbeat to do something like that.

      Half the problem with Windows is the fact that the file management development really has only been on the GUI side. Cygwin's the first thing I install when I get a new Windows machine, and THAT makes it usable.

    9. Re:90% isnt considered a rebate anymore by buddha42 · · Score: 1
      Unix-style copy-paste...

      The one where copying and pasting between two different programs works "more often than not"?

    10. Re:90% isnt considered a rebate anymore by grahamlee · · Score: 1
      Once you are used to multiple desktops (no, that measly 4 add-on powertoys desktops don't count.),

      When I'm in Windows [.NET server rc2] I use Litestep, which has four nice proper virtual desktops. It also has a much smaller footprint than the usual Explorer.exe GUI. As you could probably guess I use Window Maker everywhere else (including XFree for Windows ;-)

    11. Re:90% isnt considered a rebate anymore by Error27 · · Score: 1

      90% off the initial cost is less than 40% off the TCO.

    12. Re:90% isnt considered a rebate anymore by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      There are a hand full of reasons which back the switch from Windows to Linux even if the move would be slightly more expensive today.
      • Everybody knows that after Microsoft's rebates there is a day where Microsoft's forced upgrades will cost lots of $$$. No more.
      • Isn't it a good idea for a public entity to use open standards instead proprietary ones? Check out those heroes who are publishing in .doc format on the web. BTW: which '.doc' format do they mean? .doc95, doc97, docXX?
      • Money is used to fund IT in 'OId Europe' instead of to fund IT in Redmond.
      • Can you trust somebody who sends his general to give you a 90%(!) rebate? This smells.
      • Bavarians don't like bullies.
    13. Re:90% isnt considered a rebate anymore by Jack+Comics · · Score: 2, Informative

      You mean the Unix-style copy-paste that often doesn't allow you to copy & paste information between various Linux applications, unlike Windows?

      --
      "We are all in the gutter, but some of us are looking at the stars." - Oscar Wilde
    14. Re:90% isnt considered a rebate anymore by FuzzyBad-Mofo · · Score: 1

      Why did they turn down that?

      I guess the Munic Government has these things called 'principals'. Maybe you're heard of them? Also, they are essentialy investing the money into their own country instead of sending it to the US.

    15. Re:90% isnt considered a rebate anymore by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      You're so obviously a n00b who's excited about using something different.

      Linux is getting there, but it's not as good as Windows on the client side. Not yet anyway.

      Multiple desktops, UNIX cut and paste, yeah they're neat, but after the newness wears off then you'll see.

      Use Linux for a year or two then go back and try Windows. You'll be surprised at some of the crap you put up with in Linux. And don't get me started on the slowness of KDE... ugh.

      Linux will get there, and things like this Germany deal help but it ain't there yet.

    16. Re:90% isnt considered a rebate anymore by HuguesT · · Score: 1

      Hi, I don't particularly like GUIs either, however your example is not good:

      Bring up file manager,

      0- make new folder - 1 click, type name, return.
      1- List directories details - 1 click
      2- Sort by extension - 1 click
      3- Click the first PDF file
      4- Shift-click the last PDF file
      5- Drag to new directory.

      5 clicks, one drag, done. People do it in their sleep. You can do it in Konqueror too, BTW.

      Now try to find all the files that have changed
      between two directories from the File Manager. Good luck if there are hundreds or lots of sub-directories. There are other still more convincing examples I'm sure.

    17. Re:90% isnt considered a rebate anymore by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You sound like my mother. Buy something you don't need, because "it was cheap", but it will alway be cheaper to not buy it at all.

    18. Re:90% isnt considered a rebate anymore by orcrist · · Score: 1

      0- make new folder - 1 click, type name, return.
      1- List directories details - 1 click
      2- Sort by extension - 1 click
      3- Click the first PDF file
      4- Shift-click the last PDF file
      5- Drag to new directory.


      One small correction: Are you sure step 0 is one click? I'd be fascinated to see how you a get a new folder with just one click. Unless you've put a new folder button on the toolbar (which I assume is possible, though I couldn't find the button for it in W2k), it's either 3 clicks or click, wait (for the nested menu), click again.

      Of course Konqueror isn't any better in this regard, which is why I even prefer: ctrl-t (for a terminal opened to the working directory), md [directory-name] (the SuSE alias for 'mkdir -p'), ctrl-d to close the terminal window. In fact I find the ability to switch back and forth from graphical to clt control one of my favorite things about konqueror, since I'm of the rare (at least it appears rare) camp that likes to combine gui and command line instead of preaching about the glories of one or the other. From your arguments, it appears you are also a fan of the middle ground :-)

      -chris

      --
      San Francisco values: compassion, tolerance, respect, intelligence
    19. Re:90% isnt considered a rebate anymore by fymidos · · Score: 1

      He was posting as an "Anonymous Coward", why on earth would he expect to get modded up ????

      --
      Washington bullets will simply be known as the "Bulle
    20. Re:90% isnt considered a rebate anymore by fymidos · · Score: 1

      yeah they're neat, but after the newness wears off then you'll see
      see what? that using one desktop is better ?? that pressing ctrl-c,ctrl-v all the time is actually better?

      Use Linux for a year or two then go back and try Windows.
      I don't know anyone who has done that, really, do you?

      And don't get me started on the slowness of KDE
      Oh, come on now, please get started, but you won't, you are an AC, what am i saying ..

      --
      Washington bullets will simply be known as the "Bulle
    21. Re:90% isnt considered a rebate anymore by fymidos · · Score: 1

      only (surprise!) with the latest microsoft licensing, TCO includes from a monthly deposit on their account. They did manage to lower the initial costs of course :>

      --
      Washington bullets will simply be known as the "Bulle
    22. Re:90% isnt considered a rebate anymore by barawn · · Score: 1

      No. Because you lose information there, and it's NOT always possible to do this, nor is it easy. What if you have 50 PDF files? OK, click the first one... great. Now... scroll down to find the last one.. damn, not yet, not yet, not yet, ah, there it is, shift click, wait five minutes for the graphical update... oh wait, can't just drag to the folder as the folder has to be in the VIEW of the window. Might as well click edit, go to copy, scroll down to the folder, enter the folder, click paste.

      There's about twenty extra clicks there. Plus you're not counting the extra clicks to restore the previous sorting.

      It is nowhere NEAR as easy to move many things in a GUI as it is from a commandline, and that's probably the most used feature when moving files around. "I want all of these, there."

  23. A good day for German Linux users... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Interesting

    First LinuxTag issues SCO with a cease or desist order, and now this. Godspeed you! Germans.

    1. Re:A good day for German Linux users... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ah - but will they be rioting slowly in Kanada?

      Bet noone gets that.

  24. Developers by birdman666 · · Score: 4, Funny

    I wonder if Mr. Ballmer learned how to say Developer in German before he went.

    --

    Nothing from nowhere I'm no one at all
    1. Re:Developers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      Entwickler, Entwickler, Entwickler, Entwickler!

      Wer sagte "hinsitzen"?

      Ich habe vier Wörter für Sie: Ich liebe diese Firma!

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

      You mean he should have ran around screaming "Entwickler, Entwickler, Entwickler, Entwickler, ..."

    3. Re:Developers by Tumbleweed · · Score: 1

      No, but he probably learned the German for 'Innovation' - it's the only word Microsofties know how to say.

    4. Re:Developers by s20451 · · Score: 3, Funny

      I wonder if he called himself a jelly doughnut. Then again, he was in Munich, not Berlin.

      --
      Toronto-area transit rider? Rate your ride.
    5. Re:Developers by Gropo · · Score: 1
      Don't you mean Kolonel Ballmer studied his mid-Twentieth Century German history for his ideas on 'successful cultural proliferation strategies'?

      Hmm... I'm getting a vision of a "Hogan's Heroes" parody with Steve Jobs as Hogan...

      J-obbbbs!
      --
      I hate Grammar Nazi's
    6. Re:Developers by ojQj · · Score: 1
      Of course Amerikaner is also a word for a German pastry -- it's a round and made out of a sugary white dough and frosted typically with butter or chocolate frosting. When Clinton visited Aachen in 2000, they were selling Amerikaner with his picture in frosting on top of them.

      A few months ago while the Americans were renaming French Fries, it occurred to me and a few friends that maybe it would be a good idea to rename the Amerikaner. A few of our ideas:

      • Französer
      • Freiheit Sandbrötchen
      OK. None of them was great. Anybody with better suggestions?
    7. Re:Developers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Then again, he was in Munich, not Berlin.

      Ich bin ein Munchkin!

    8. Re:Developers by easter1916 · · Score: 1

      Entwickler[n]?

    9. Re:Developers by easter1916 · · Score: 1

      How about just leaving the name as is? It doesn't sound like that pastry/bun is anywhere near as delicious as the other wonderful German confections... so it would be insulting to leave the name as is!

  25. Deutchland... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

    Deutchland Ousts Windows Alles

    Deutchland, Deutchland,
    Ousts Windows
    In comes Linux
    Good and free!

    Hear the howling
    And the gnashing
    From afar
    Redmond across the sea!

    Deutchland, Deutchland,
    Wise technologists
    And politicians
    who've listened to thee!!

    1. Re:Deutchland... by JeffTL · · Score: 1

      If this weren't anonymous, I'd suggest it be modded up for being the best filk of "Deutschland Uber Alles" I've seen in weeks.

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

      Learn how to spell Deutschland and you'll really have something there...

  26. With an 84% profit on each copy sold... by Realistic_Dragon · · Score: 4, Insightful

    This is selling it below cost, which is dumping, which is illegal. The EU competition commission should take note of this (along with other infractions 1 through 97bn) and throw the book at them.

    If it's a lead plated copy of War and Peace, hurled at 1,000 m/sec, all the better.

    --
    Beep beep.
    1. Re:With an 84% profit on each copy sold... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Nonsense, economically, the cost of an additional windows copy is virtually zero. As this is the case for all software, the ability to offer 90% discounts doesn't qualify as dumping but as price discrimination.
      Microsoft is - what is called - a natural monoploy, a side effect of the software business.

    2. Re:With an 84% profit on each copy sold... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      This is selling it below cost, which is dumping, which is illegal.

      It's not either. How does this shit get modded up? Is it because of the "throw the book at them" anti-Microsoft dig?

      There are circumstances under which selling goods below cost can be part of an anti-competitive practice, but the simple act of doing it is not illegal. Microsoft sells the Xbox below cost every day. Hell, the Gillette company sells their razors below cost in order to drive the sales of blades, which are immensely profitable for them. Selling one thing below cost in order to drive sales of another thing is (1) not illegal, and (2) common and smart business practice.

    3. Re:With an 84% profit on each copy sold... by jellomizer · · Score: 2, Informative

      Well these are 90% rebates. So basicly Germany will have to fork over to Microsoft the Full Price of the product. Then Microsoft hold on to the cash for a couple months and invests it and makes more money. Then after some time they give them 90% they gave them back. So say in this period of time they make 10% interest on the cash. Then they are still making a profit. You are assuming that Microsoft will just hold the cash and not do anything with it, which is furthest from the truth.

      --
      If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
    4. Re:With an 84% profit on each copy sold... by bigdavex · · Score: 1

      I don't think it's "dumping". It's just a reality of selling copies of information. Microsoft, when faced with the prospect of collecting $0, will be happy to collect $x. Dumping laws are meant to prevent a well-funded company from driving out its competition through low prices, and then raising prices in the long term. It's not like OSS is going out of business. And geez, the OSS folk are giving away the software, so I don't think it's fair to fault MS for their low prices.

      --
      -Dave
    5. Re:With an 84% profit on each copy sold... by ArmorFiend · · Score: 1

      If we were talking about Xboxes or cars, then yes this would be dumping. But since linux is constantly being given away at below cost, I don't see how we linux zealots can really get grumpy about this.

      "You MS Bastards are selling your OS for $30 dollars, which is less than it cost for you to make! You're dumping."

      `What about linux?`

      "It costs $0 retail and cost gazillions to develop"

      So how is Linux not dumping?

    6. Re:With an 84% profit on each copy sold... by dipipanone · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Nonsense, economically, the cost of an additional windows copy is virtually zero.

      Quite. Now would you remind telling Microsoft, FAST and the BSA of that fact, the next time they start whining about their huge losses to warez piracy?

    7. Re:With an 84% profit on each copy sold... by Kwil · · Score: 1

      Gazillions to develop? Really?

      Let's see your pay-stubs.

      --

      That Jesus Christ guy is getting some terrible lag... it took him 3 days to respawn! -NJ CoolBreeze

    8. Re:With an 84% profit on each copy sold... by ender81b · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Gazillions to develop? Really?

      Let's see your pay-stubs.



      Well think about it. How much do you value the time of the programmers working on the code? How much does it cost to have all the equipment necassary to work on linux (mirrors, bandwith, compiling machines, etc, etc). Linux (and OS) is not *free* software, it does cost something but the cost is just not factored into the price since the work is voluntary - in most cases.

      I have no idea what Linux, in general, costs if you factored in time, bandiwth, etc but I would not be suprised to see it in the tens of millions.

    9. Re:With an 84% profit on each copy sold... by Ed+Avis · · Score: 1

      Of course it's not selling below cost. The cost is zero. You could download Windows XP and Office XP from some filesharing network, install them on every PC you own, and it wouldn't cost Microsoft a penny.

      --
      -- Ed Avis ed@membled.com
    10. Re:With an 84% profit on each copy sold... by deranged+unix+nut · · Score: 1

      ...so, since OSS has no costs, it could be considered "well-funded"...is giving OSS away for free "dumping"?

    11. Re:With an 84% profit on each copy sold... by loucura! · · Score: 1

      Which is more complicated and expensive? Razor blades which require R&D, not to mention swivels, goo-strips, and metal, or a bit of plastic which only serves to hang said razor upon?

      The reason razor blades are more expensive is that they cost the company more to produce, due to R&D, and also the cost of materials. Razors themselves are just cheap bits of plastic to hang the blades on.

      --
      Black and grey are both shades of white.
    12. Re:With an 84% profit on each copy sold... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      "It costs $0 retail and cost gazillions to develop"


      You're literally giving a whole new meaning to the phrase "to look a gift horse in the mouth." Yes, it cost gazillions. Who paid that money? The individual developers, piece by piece. Then they just give away the fruit of their labors. So what is your problem?
    13. Re:With an 84% profit on each copy sold... by aallan · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I have no idea what Linux, in general, costs if you factored in time, bandiwth, etc but I would not be suprised to see it in the tens of millions.

      Oh, much more than that! See this article for details...

      Al.
      --
      The Daily ACK - Eclectic posts by yet another hacker
    14. Re:With an 84% profit on each copy sold... by ArmorFiend · · Score: 1
      [Linux developers] just give away the fruit of their labors


      And MS is giving away the fruit of its labors, too. The only difference is: Linux charges the same to every client, while MS charges differently depending on who you are (joe consumer vs munich vs student). I don't see how one can be a criminal offense (dumping) while another is not.

      I'm not trying to troll. In fact I have given away the fruits of my labors a few times too.
    15. Re:With an 84% profit on each copy sold... by Kwil · · Score: 1

      Congratulations on completely missing the point.

      I wasn't questioning the worth or value of the time and resources put into it. I was questioning how someone can consider Linux being "dumped" into a market when there are no defined costs of its production.

      Windows on the other hand, has very defined costs in R&D, programming, and (of course) marketing.

      --

      That Jesus Christ guy is getting some terrible lag... it took him 3 days to respawn! -NJ CoolBreeze

    16. Re:With an 84% profit on each copy sold... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Section 107, Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988
      107.--(1) A person commits an offence who, without the licence of the copyright owner--

      (a) makes for sale or hire, or

      (b) imports into the United Kingdom otherwise than for his private and domestic use, [so be careful what you do with those computers and what server you download the files from; if it is outwith the UK this strict rule applies] or

      (c) possesses in the course of a business with a view to committing any act infringing the copyright, or

      (d) in the course of a business -- (i) sells or lets for hire, or (ii) offers or exposes for sale or hire, or (iii) exhibits in public, or (iv) distributes, or

      (e) distributes otherwise than in the course of a business to such an extent as to affect prejudicially the owner of the copyright, [The person who put the thing on Gnutella or equivalent will thus receive first-hand insight into the criminal justice system.]

      an article which is, and which he knows or has reason to believe is, an infringing copy of a copyright work.

      To further emphasise the large cost to liberty:
      (4) A person guilty of an offence under subsection (1)(a), (b), (d)(iv) or (e) is liable--

      (a) on summary conviction to imprisonment for a term not exceeding six months or a fine not exceeding the statutory maximum, or both;

      (b) on conviction on indictment to a fine or imprisonment for a term not exceeding two years, or both.

      As usual, the fine that can be levied in the Crown Court is unlimited. Prison may or may not be given; the prisons are rather full so copyright infringers might not be entitled to free room and board.

      As to the cost to Microsoft Corporation, do you think that the police will do the invesigating for free? What about the cost to reputation (the downloaded software might not be intact) or support costs (answering the telephone, asking for the product code, denying help and then possibly sending out a constable)?

    17. Re:With an 84% profit on each copy sold... by Ed+Avis · · Score: 1

      I didn't consider cost to reputation (though it's hard to see how it could damage MS's reputation if pirated software doesn't work correctly) but only monetary cost. And I assumed that someone pirating software would not be so dumb as to call for support.

      Given the huge pirating of Microsoft software that happens in many countries (eg China), it's clear that the cost to MS must be zero, otherwise they'd be losing huge amounts of money.

      Anyway the point I wanted to make was that if Microsoft 'gives away' copies of Windows, it doesn't cost them a penny. All it requires is for a Microsoft representative to write a letter saying 'you are now authorized to install Windows on your PCs', and the cost of a stamp.

      --
      -- Ed Avis ed@membled.com
    18. Re:With an 84% profit on each copy sold... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The fact of the matter is that capitalist corporations profit off of the fruits of *the labour of others.* This is, in fact, the entire theory behind the capitalist economic model--I'll invest a little bit of machinery, that most everyone else cannot afford, and I'll force them to build me products. The difference between the price I pay them and the price I charge others like them (read: consumers), I'll keep.

      I mean, this was always wrong (it is always theft), but it's particularly wrong when you look at computer companies, where... frankly, the initial investment is miniscule. Mr. Gates is particularly ridiculed (not for his human rights or environmental violations like the folks at GAP or Nike) because he, in fact, provided nearly no initial investment. He was just a pure swindler, not a swindler *and* a property owner.

      The Southern US used to argue that they were in fact more humane than the Northern US. The South owed slaves. The North, they asserted, merely rented them.

      Given a man who owns a car and a man who rents a car, it's a near certainty that the man who owns the car will treat that car better than the man who rents it. After all, the owner has a vested interest in the car's wellbeing. The renter doesn't, since he can always get a new car at no loss to him.

      And so, the South had a vested interest in their ownership of people: a person was valuable, since he must live to work tomorrow. In the North, a person was cheap... since he could be thrown away and replaced with another person.

      This is something that I know the denizens of Slashdot understand, at a visceral level, but blinded by the mythic orgasm that was the "dot com Boom" they cannot accept.

      This makes you more naive than auto workers, for instance, but it doesn't make you less duped.

      The argument of the parent poster is patently absurd, on it's face. Microsoft is giving away the fruits of the labours of *others* -- the labours of its engineers, its programmers, its clerks, and its janitors. The programmers of free software give away the fruits of their *own* labour.

      Our societies, European and otherwise, have decided upon an acceptable level of fucking over the real labourers. Those who fuck them over more than this point are "dumping." This doesn't make the concept of usurping the labour of others less wrong, but, it's certainly incomparable to the products of labour given away, collectively, by the *labourers themselves* -- as an act of joyous creation, no less!

      To the parent poster, especially given the probability that this post will be ignored and downvotted by reactionary idiots, I'll get this one message through: you're a god-damn corporate whore. Fuck you, you fucking fuck.

    19. Re:With an 84% profit on each copy sold... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What the hell bank or fund gives you 10% after a couple of months? Fuck, give me their number now!#$!#$@#$%

    20. Re:With an 84% profit on each copy sold... by edxwelch · · Score: 1

      In some countries there are laws which make below cost selling of certain goods (such as food for instance) illegal. However, this does not apply to technology, which is why MS can sell Xboxes below cost without any problem.

    21. Re:With an 84% profit on each copy sold... by ArmorFiend · · Score: 1

      I enjoyed your reply. It does deserve better than score 0.

    22. Re:With an 84% profit on each copy sold... by fymidos · · Score: 1

      But since linux is constantly being given away at below cost
      come again?

      "It costs $0 retail and cost gazillions to develop"
      huh?

      You are not making any sense, it is free software.
      And yes it costs $0.
      (i really don't understand why any real person would have a problem with that, maybe you forgot to click the "post anonymously"?)

      So how is Linux not dumping?
      You kinda sid it yourself, it is *constantly* given away for free. While MS office, for example, is *NOT*.

      --
      Washington bullets will simply be known as the "Bulle
    23. Re:With an 84% profit on each copy sold... by ArmorFiend · · Score: 1

      So Linux is dumping constantly, while MS only dumps sometimes.

      Linux is *not* free. People have to write it. This takes computers, time, and education. That its authors choose to give it away out of the niceness of their hearts, is happy coincidence, and the only way MS can really hope to compete is by doing the same.

  27. 14.000 workstations by sstory · · Score: 3, Funny

    14 workstations running Linux is fine, but what's with the significant digits?

    1. Re:14.000 workstations by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      14 workstations running Linux is fine, but what's with the significant digits?

      Because not all the users are human!

    2. Re:14.000 workstations by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is about Linux on the desktop, where every milliworkstation counts.

    3. Re:14.000 workstations by Little+Brother · · Score: 2, Informative

      I know most of you know this already, but for those who don't the USA is one of just a few countries that use a point only to seperate whole numbers from decimal numbers, in many countries, including Germany if memory serves, you use the point as an American would a comma in a number, and a comma to seperate whole and decimal parts of a number.

      --

      Little Brother, watching the watchers

  28. I just wanted to submit that story... by rseuhs · · Score: 5, Informative
    Now that I have picked out all that links, I may as well post it:

    Munich will be the first city with over 1 Million inhabitants that is run by Linux

    Heise has the story (Babelfish may help you)

    Short facts are: The actual vote will occur on wednesday, but the SPD and Green party hold 43 out of 80 seats and have both committed to vote in favour of Linux to be used in the government of Munich, a city of about 2 million inhabitants.

    The main reason for the migration was "strategic-quality reasons" and to support competition in software, not cost, which was said to be about the same for Linux and Windows.

    About 14000 client computers are involved.

    The used distribution will be SuSE, but IBM is also involved. OpenOffice will be used as office suite.

    The earlier happenings are also quite exciting:

    • Study suggests that Linux is cheaper than Windows for Munich: - story, Babelfish
    • Microsoft CEO Ballmer interrupts his skiing trip to talk to Munich politians: story, Babelfish
    • Suddently a new study says that because Microsoft gave huge discounts, Windows is now better than Linux for Munich: story, Yoda
    • IBM also modifies their offer (see main story above)

    1. Re:I just wanted to submit that story... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

      Ballmer skies? That I would pay to see, in light of his monkey boy antics.

      Fat lil turd

    2. Re:I just wanted to submit that story... by ctishman · · Score: 2, Funny

      I've got four words for ya...

    3. Re:I just wanted to submit that story... by BroncoInCalifornia · · Score: 2, Funny

      Is this a crack in another Berlin Wall?

      Ballmer should have done his Monkey Dance for the people of Munich!

      --

      Religion is the main cause of atheism.

    4. Re:I just wanted to submit that story... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      From the article:
      Microsoft Ceo Steve Ballmer is to have interrupted its ski vacation...

      Hah! I always knew he wasn't human!
    5. Re:I just wanted to submit that story... by Ignominious+Poltroon · · Score: 1
      Munich will be the first city with over 1 Million inhabitants that is run by Linux

      They've voted Linux to be mayor?! Wow, that IS is a big step for open source software!

    6. Re:I just wanted to submit that story... by RealUlli · · Score: 1
      Short facts are: The actual vote will occur on wednesday, but the SPD and Green party hold 43 out of 80 seats and have both committed to vote in favour of Linux to be used in the government of Munich, a city of about 2 million inhabitants.

      In short: the vote is over, Linux won. :-) story, Babelfish

      Cheers, Ulli

      --
      Simple things should be simple, complex things should be possible.
  29. free software in Munich? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    as long as it comes with free beer.

  30. Now you know why Ballmer was selling shares by DailyGrind · · Score: 5, Funny

    Went to Germany got owned came back and started selling his MS shares....

    --
    You will have to pry my proprietary software $$$ from my cold dead hands!
  31. Which office suite? by Fished · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Does anyone know for sure which office suite they are using? I'm guessing OpenOffice (since in one place Babelfish calls it "Open Source Office". But it's never stated.

    --
    "He who would learn astronomy, and other recondite arts, let him go elsewhere. " -- John Calvin, commenting on Genesis 1
    1. Re:Which office suite? by mindriot · · Score: 1

      The article really states nothing more than "an Open Source office package." This article seems to suggest OpenOffice, but any other articles I have read do not give a definitive answer. I would expect them to use OpenOffice, though... there are not really any alternatives, especially when it comes to dealing with MS Office documents, are there?

    2. Re:Which office suite? by mrscorpio · · Score: 1

      AbiWord + Gnumeric for word processor and spreadsheet documents, can't think of any others off the top of my head that incorporate filters for MS format documents. I know KOffice is starting to incorporate some limited import abilities.

      Chris

    3. Re:Which office suite? by svachi · · Score: 1

      What are you talking about? Of course they use TeX for documents, and use CSV files and perl scripts to process them as spread sheets!

      --
      --- (The signature is intentionally left blank)
  32. Re:oh christ by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How do you figure? German existed before the United States did!

  33. Faint hope? by serenemy · · Score: 1

    So long as they don't control me I will continue to consider the world free. Who is "they" anyway, just people and systems, all changeable.

    1. Re:Faint hope? by Gumshoe · · Score: 1
      So long as they don't control me I will continue to consider the world free.


      That's a fair view point I suppose (just a wild guess, you're a middle aged Caucasian male, yes?). I just hope you realise that if you don't stand up for the people who are being persecuted right now, then there won't be many people left to stand up for you when your time comes

      Who is "they" anyway, just people and systems, all changeable.


      And how do you propose the systems be changed? I can assure you, overwhelming them with apathy won't work.
  34. they should have taken windows by rusko · · Score: 0, Redundant

    at that rate, they should have taken windows. i lub linux and all, but the maintenance costs are going to go through the roof on that one.

    with that said, munich is not known to be the 'technology capital' of germany as they claim, but rather as the 'white beer capital' =]

    all the same, im glad it went the way it did. although the discounted deal on bloze is imho better, i feel they decided on principle this time, recognizing that although a deep discount may have been advantageous short-term, they would end up paying out of their ass for it long-term because of verndor lock-in.

    paul

    1. Re:they should have taken windows by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      but the maintenance costs are going to go through the roof on that one

      Not really. I bet there are plenty of qualified Linux geeks willing to take these jobs at almost any price if asked. C'mon, you do know there's tons of unemployed Linux gurus all over the world who would jump at the chance to get a job using Linux and get paid to do it! This is a flawed argument and illogical point.

    2. Re:they should have taken windows by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "munich is not known to be the 'technology capital' of germany as they claim, but rather as the 'white beer capital'"

      Actually, that would be "Wheat Beer" capital. Hefe-Weissbier is a wheat beer, not a Belgian white beer.

    3. Re:they should have taken windows by rusko · · Score: 0

      if you are a governmental organization, you are not going to hire 'linux geeks', you are going to go to a consultancy company (which was mentioned in the article). the company, in turn, will indeed hire linux geeks for almost no money, however they will also put a large markup on their labor in order to build up some cash reserves that would cover their butts in case those linux geeks mess up the systems. it costs nike very little to have 3 year olds make their sneakers in 3rd world countries, but did you check out what they sell them for? if you disagree with me, feel free to reply, modding it away is not fair though. paul

    4. Re:they should have taken windows by sloanster · · Score: 1

      For someone who "lubs" linux (whatever that means) you are pretty clueless about it - anyone who has worked for a living maintaing both windows and linux /unix systems (moi for instance) knows that windows is a _lot_ more work to keep running.

  35. Re:oh christ by stevejsmith · · Score: 1

    Yes...I know...that was the point of the joke. And then there's the fact that English is a direct descendent of German, only becoming modern English somewhere around the 15th century (not sure of exact date, but it was somewhere around there) when it was mixed with French. Before then English was VERY closely related to German.

  36. Hudsucker industries by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Once you're dead, you stay dead. Just ask Waring Hudsucker." - Sidney J. Mussburger : The Hudsucker Proxy (Movie)(1994)

  37. Oh, so you're getting free crack cocaine? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    Comment from one sysadmin when MS offered us free software...

    1. Re:Oh, so you're getting free crack cocaine? by Capt.+DrunkenBum · · Score: 1

      The first taste is always free kids.

      --

      Not everyone deserves a 320i

    2. Re:Oh, so you're getting free crack cocaine? by TheRaven64 · · Score: 1

      Microsoft have been giving out free copies of .NET studio. I'd heard some good things about .NET, so I thought I'd give it a go. The installation crashed every time I tried it (in the pre-requisites section, no less) so I gave up.

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    3. Re:Oh, so you're getting free crack cocaine? by rutledjw · · Score: 2, Interesting
      I dunno, the MS-dummies where I work swear by it.

      Thier battle-cry is that it "has the best debugging and dev tools I've ever used". IMHO, this is a joke. Most of the developers I know who depend on those kinds of tools can't code their way out of a wet paper sack. Maybe it's different outside of the J2EE world, but within I'm always leery of those who are dependent on dev/debugging tools...

      In the end, the very thing that makes MS popular with so many developers (a trained monkey can use it) may be their downfall. Those same "trained monkeys" struggle with complex issues that require a greater understanding of technology.

      That may be a "flamebait" comment, but it's what I've seen...

      --

      Computer Science is Applied Philosophy
    4. Re:Oh, so you're getting free crack cocaine? by AstroDrabb · · Score: 1

      I agree 100%. The fortune 100 company I work for has just chosen J2EE over .NOT (I am very glad). All those against it are the worst developers there and are only capable of developing in VB and ASP. MS has lowered the bar for programming too low IMO. It is fine to do that with a desktop for the average user, however do we really want softare developers of such low calibur? They obviously become MS zelots because MS is the only place they can look to where they do not need real programming skills.

      At work we did a very detailed evaluation of the two products and .NOT offered nothing over J2EE. .NOT does not run on any other platform other then winders and MS will do everything they can to keep it that way. Sure there are efforts like MONO, however it will always be a step or two behind .NOT becuse that is how MS will keep it. So with .NOT you are right back at vendor lock-in and proprietary crap. .NOT offers no speed advantage over J2EE. And the big kicker for our enterprise is security. J2EE is encredibly secure with no know expliots that I have ever heard of. .NOT will be just like every other MS product and will have tons of security holes. J2EE has also been proven over time to be very solid and secure. .NOT has not proven anything yet. MS's marketing engine tries to make customers think .NOT has a much bigger following then it does. The only people using it are MS shops that are littered with sub-par programmers. In an enterprise of any size, J2EE is the only real option IMO.

      --
      If Tyranny and Oppression come to this land,
      it will be in the guise of fighting a foreign enemy. -James Madison
    5. Re:Oh, so you're getting free crack cocaine? by Tony-A · · Score: 1

      Microsoft, where mediocrity is an aspiration.
      Regarding the security of J2EE, why do you think Sun keeps as heavy a hand on it as they do? There's lots of ways to add "neat stuff" that doesn't quite keep the security intact.
      Personally I do not "like" java. Smells too much like gaggles of mainframes. But it's probably the only feasible way to bring massive COBOL systems into the current millenium.

    6. Re:Oh, so you're getting free crack cocaine? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Namco, oh, Namco, what have you done??

      This is the tenth mis-spelling of 'calibre' I've seen in TWO DAYS.

      I love your game with all of my heart, but you're negatively effecting the spelling ability of an entire generation.

  38. this is good by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Troll
    because I've just spent the weekend testing threading in .NET and my results so far haven't been good. Before people start ranting about pro/anti Microsoft, this is based on real world requirements and needs. Not some fantom BS from SUN or Microsoft.

    I've looked at several books to see how persistent server threads are used/designed/implemented in .NET and there isn't any that I can find. Of course this doesn't mean there isn't. It just means I can't find any. What I'm testing is the feasibility of using the default Thread or ThreadPool class in .NET to build a persistent "daemon like" service. I want to be able to manage things on IIS intelligently because the application has to handle real transactions that require sync calls to ADO. This is necessary because doing it in an async fashion would be more expensive, because it only delays the sync process. The service has to get data updates constantly from different sources and update a shared memory pool. The transaction absolutely have to have accurate data. A few seconds delay is not acceptable in this particular case. The responsiveness of the service has to update the shared data in sub 100 milisecond range.

    From my tests using 2 separate service threads, getting access to those threads can take several seconds. It doesn't matter if the updates are managed by another thread, or the data objects themselves subscribes to MSMQ. In both cases, getting access to the service threads takes considerably time and therefore makes it inappropriate. Consider this, if the order of data updates have to happen as they come in, it requires the sync access to those threads. that means, the delegate has to join the service thread. If the requirements allowed async updates it would be a piece of cake, but that's not the case. Doing sync calls on an existing thread appears to be an order of magnitude slower than Java in this particular case. I haven't even bothered to try more than two threads, since two threads is already too much for .NET.

    If you don't agree with my statements, feel free to prove me wrong with real facts.

    1. Re:this is good by hellswraith · · Score: 1

      If you don't agree with my statements, feel free to prove me wrong with real facts.

      Send me a message with the code your using, let me give it a shot.

    2. Re:this is good by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      so to sum your comment up, you crap on a thread to show how little time you spend designing for an environment you seem to know little about.

      we can only hope open source saves us from stupidity, eh?

    3. Re:this is good by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Send me a message with the code your using, let me give it a shot.

      Well I wish i could, but a significant part of the test I was running is proprietary and can't be released. Wish I could. The basic functionality that I have to meet is the following:

      1. the service thread must run like a daemon
      2. the service thread has to be able to get update events and the updates will trigger other events
      3. the service thread will be used by web services and a static handle declared in the global.asax.
      4. incoming requests will be inspected by the webservice and get a handle to the service thread if needed
      5. the service thread must retain state, and be able to rollback.
      6. there may be multiple service threads for handling specific categories of services.

      The primary challenge is most of .NET threading is designed for async processes. Things like making async ADO.NET calls or a webclient request. In situations where state maintenance is critical for transactions, and synchronization depends on context, using stock .NET threads makes the task very difficult. Not impossible, but very difficult. From the info I've found online, in books and from the API documentation, the right way to do it would be to write strong monitoring, semiphores and a scheduler. This way, the updates to the shared memory happens serially to preserve state and provide a reliable way of rolling back.

      People are probably going to say "sounds like you're building a database." Well it is a state machine, but it's not a database. think of it as a stateful messaging platform.

    4. Re:this is good by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      so to sum your comment up, you crap on a thread to show how little time you spend designing for an environment you seem to know little about.

      Unfortunately there are plenty of options, like writing it in C++, or Java. But I'm not in the position to make those decisions. If I had a choice, I would choose to write it either with C++ or Java. The current platform the project is suppose to replace is a VB/IIS platform which is having scalability issues. And as far as time spent on designing the system, your remark is accurate. The person who made the choice spent little to no time to understand the real problem. I simply inherited the problem. I'm not the lead architect, but the lead architect didn't make this choice either. Guess what, some one with very little technical knowledge made the decision, so I'm left with the task of finding a solution. Would I prefer the decision makers take the lead architects advice? Sure, but it's already too late for that. Obviously you've never been in this kind of situation. The problem is pervasive through every part of the platform and I'm only working on one small piece of the puzzle. which is why i'm posting AC duh!

    5. Re:this is good by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Think of it as a load of shite. Its pretty clear from your post you don't know your arse from your elbow - and what has this got to do with the topic anyway ?

    6. Re:this is good by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Think of it as a load of shite. Its pretty clear from your post you don't know your arse from your elbow - and what has this got to do with the topic anyway ?

      So you're an expert on shared memory architecture. please enlighten me on shared memory architecture. Care to explain how EJB differ from ODP and true shared memory architecture like the various research projects at MIT and UC Berkeley? Or how about explain in laymen's terms the difference between a RDBMS, finite state machine and rules engine? Just because the functional requirements seem ludicrous doesn't mean the people working on the project don't understand technology. It just means the people making the decisions don't understand and are making developer's lives a pain. then again if you knew anything, you would have been able to point out windows uses pre-emptive threading model, which is not the same as POSIX threads. And you would have been able to point out having a persistent thread in IIS is not recommended on MSDN and countless other .NET sites. You would have also been to point out threading in .NET can use Thread.sleep(0) so the thread will sleep until the next time slice. For heavy applications, calling sleep with zero is the recommended technique by several books and on MSDN. If you knew anything, you would also know that IIS6 uses .NET threads instead of I/O threads like IIS 5 & 4. Care to post a response that actually informs and illustrates your superior knowledge?

    7. Re:this is good by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Throw some more buzzwords in bozo, still doesn;t mean you understand any of this. Been out of college long ?

    8. Re:this is good by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      YOu trolls make slashdot an annoying place. The guy clearly is not a rocket scientist but thats no reason to just flame away. He'll learn, just give him time.

  39. Heh! by FyRE666 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Well, anything that stops Balmer dancing about like a happy, sweaty monkey sounds good to me. I'm only surprised Windows scored so highly!

    As an aside, we use Star Office at work on about half the Windows machines, but the people using it do seem to be envious of the staff with MS Office installed. Problems with printing multi-page spreadsheets/images, problems opening files etc, and lack of speed seem the biggest problems.

    Although, since the sales/service people are still mostly using PIIs with 64-128MB of RAM, it's little wonder. I recently built OpenOffice on my Gentoo box to see how it compared, and it does seem a lot faster, even though my Gentoo machine has a slower CPU (Athlon 1.4ghz) than my office machine (2.4ghz P4 - although the office machine has a shit SiS onboard graphic chipset).

    I doubt the management would like all the PCs building OO from source for 3 days though ;-)

    1. Re:Heh! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I doubt the management would like all the PCs building OO from source for 3 days though

      No, you build it once, and push it out to client machines. I'm sure something as sophisticates as Gentoo can do this.

    2. Re:Heh! by Jord · · Score: 1

      In a corporate enviroment I would not put Gentoo on the desktop. Don't get me wrong, I happen to like that distribution a lot and we use it on our servers. However we use SuSE on the desktop to avoid the build times.

    3. Re:Heh! by Markus+Registrada · · Score: 1
      fYreGGG wrote, "my Gentoo machine has a slower CPU (Athlon 1.4ghz) than my office machine (2.4ghz P4...)".

      Run some benchmarks. Those machines are about equivalent for most work. It's partly because Athlons rock, but more because P4s suck.

      YMMV.

    4. Re:Heh! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because P4s suck? I thought it was because they have a very, very long pipeline design which does very little in each stage, thus shifting the balance between clock speed and results. Technologically, this is neither a good nor a bad thing.

      To make a car analogy, a friend owns a 30-year-old Buick with a 455 cubic inch V8 engine. (That's 7.5 liters in modern units.) This engine rarely revs to 4000 RPM and probably redlines not far above that point. It doesn't need high RPMs to get lots of power; in fact, it delivers plenty of power even at 1000 RPM. By contrast, a brand new Honda S2000 has an engine with a much smaller displacement (2.0 liters) which revs much higher. In fact, it achieves its peak horsepower at 8300 RPM and peak torque at 7500 RPM, rotational speeds that might severely damage the Buick engine. So, which engine is better? Neither of them. It's an engineering trade-off. Holistically speaking, a moderate-weight car with the 7.5 liter Buick engine can probably accelerate just about as fast as the Honda with its 2.0 liter engine. The Buick will use nearly twice as much fuel, but then the Buick could tow a large trailer with ease whereas towing is not even possible with the Honda. It doesn't mean either of them sucks; it means that they are different designs that achieve similar results in different ways.
    5. Re:Heh! by horza · · Score: 1

      I doubt the management would like all the PCs building OO from source for 3 days though ;-)

      If they are all on a network, then you could check out distcc which will use all available machines to compile the source for your one target machine. Should cut compile time down drastically.

      Phillip.

    6. Re:Heh! by mrscorpio · · Score: 1

      Have you checked out either of the Star Office 6.1 betas (or the Open Office equivalents, for that matter)? Speed is drastically improved for me, I'm talking 1/4 - 1/2 the load time, it's great. With PDF and Flash write capabilities, it's going to save a lot of companies a lot of money who are willing to make the switch too. I am highly impressed with it.

      Chris

  40. It pains me to say it but... by hillct · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Microsoft has actually learned a lot over the past decade; particularly in the area or recurring revenue streams.

    At this point a significant portion of the company revenues are derived from subscription services. Even if they waive all future upgrade license fees, they still have support contracts, MSDN and other subscriptions to services many large organizations will rerquire. It'll be vary interestingto see what Balmer is willing to offer to get this contract/deployment. There has got to be a point below which they will refuse to go. 'Under no circumstances, loose to linux' must have a limit. I just wonder where it actually is.

    --CTH

    --

    --Got Lists? | Top 95 Star Wars Line
    1. Re:It pains me to say it but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And it's a network effect. If the government keeps using MS Office and accepting Word and Excel documents, it's a no brainer for businesses to keep using and upgrading their MS investements. If the government switches to open formats, it may give business owners a pause; it's good enough for the government, I can keep money in the local economy by hireing local people for support, etc.

    2. Re:It pains me to say it but... by greg_barton · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Even if they waive all future upgrade license fees, they still have support contracts, MSDN and other subscriptions to services many large organizations will rerquire.

      Golly. Sounds familiar. Isn't this the...*wait for it*...open source business model?

    3. Re:It pains me to say it but... by 10am-bedtime · · Score: 1

      that point is (quite obvious when you think about it) when usloth actually does lose to linux. that point is when all their efforts amount to pouring money (and any remnants of goodwill from their locked-in userbase) down the drain. that point is pretty much w/in the next half year or so.

      of course, there will be localized dingleberries here and there (e.g., united states government) but most of the world will wise up pretty fast.

      besides, greenspan already read the tarot: a "growth economy" based on "intellectual property" coercion is the bigger bubble that makes stuff like dot-bomb small in comparison. hopefully the bubble will seep instead of pop, but all these extra squeezing by elected bribe collectors don't help the situation much.

    4. Re:It pains me to say it but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Gee, I still can't figure out why PHB's won't switch to Linux. Maybe it could be that the idiots that recommend it can not tell the difference between 'loose' and 'lose'?

    5. Re:It pains me to say it but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Isn't this the...*wait for it*...open source business model?

      I thought open source meant that the source had to be open ?

    6. Re:It pains me to say it but... by Gumshoe · · Score: 1

      He never said it was Open Source, but that the suggested business model is one advocated by the Open Source people. The same business model that MS advocates say can't work.

    7. Re:It pains me to say it but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      'Under no circumstances, loose to linux' must have a limit.

      What is it with people and "loose"? Is this the opposite of "Under no circumstances tight to Linux"?
  41. Wow. The figures speak for themselves by gazbo · · Score: 5, Informative
    6218 (out of 10.000) points to Linux/OSS, while the MS Windows platform only scored 5293

    Under the Munich government's scoring system, one would generally expect scores around 6000, based on the extremely popular Novell system they had running for many years before they decided to "upgrade" to Windows after being given the hard-sell by MS. To score 6218 shows that Linux is well ahead of the curve; I believe that when they looked at a Solaris installation a couple of years ago, that managed slightly lower at about 6100 (I forget the exact number, but it was somewhere around that).

    The most interesting figure is Windows at 5293. AFAIK, that is the lowest score they've ever given out. Certainly the lowest one I've seen that they published.

    Go Linux!

  42. The article doesn't say by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's not a problem of the translation.

  43. Hey just a second by Battle_Ratt · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Didn't this guy just sell 10% of his stock in the company. Bet he knew it was going to break this way weeks ago. Insider trading anyone?

    1. Re:Hey just a second by rseuhs · · Score: 1

      That would be illegal and we all know that a) a Microsoft executive would never do that and b) MSFT-shareholders are such a dependent, spineless bunch they would never complain about it.

    2. Re:Hey just a second by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think major shareholders have to register large 5%+ with the exchange way in advance to prevent claims of dumping stock, insider trading etc.

    3. Re:Hey just a second by BrainInAJar · · Score: 1

      Or, perhaps it's because HE CAN'T LEGALLY SELL HIS STOCK ANY OTHER TIME. And you can't buy shit with stock certificates

    4. Re:Hey just a second by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And you can't buy shit with stock certificates

      Only other companies and their management officers.

    5. Re:Hey just a second by vadim_t · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Hmm, could you please explain how can a CEO engage in insider trading? Isn't s/he inside by definition? And how would Ballmer sell stock otherwise, when he manages the company and probably knows pretty much all that's going on?

    6. Re:Hey just a second by Daniel+Phillips · · Score: 1

      Hmm, could you please explain how can a CEO engage in insider trading? Isn't s/he inside by definition? And how would Ballmer sell stock otherwise, when he manages the company and probably knows pretty much all that's going on?

      The full name for this crime is "trading on inside information". That is, it's not illegal to be an insider, it's not illegal to be an insider who trades, but it is illegal to make those trades on information known to the insider, not the general public. The timing of a trade would be a key factor in determining whether someone acted on insider information or not. This crime is as old as the stock market, and lots of rich people have done jail time for it, some of them have lost their fortunes as well.

      --
      Have you got your LWN subscription yet?
  44. Re:to the editors of slashdot by Dimensio · · Score: 1

    Just wait. Microsoft will lobby US congresscritters to impose sanctions for this injustice.

  45. Coincidence? by djupedal · · Score: 1

    Ballmer's pitches fail... Ballmer sells shares....

    I'd give it a 74....catchy ditty, but I doubt Steve likes to dance to it. Let's see how it does in next week's rankings.

  46. Re:oh christ - Christ by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Christ", capital letter please. It is a noun.

  47. unilog vs microsoft by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    funny ... nothing on the unilog http://www.unilog.com
    about this. Probly not to proud to go
    against microsoft!

  48. Pilot program? by Doppler00 · · Score: 1

    I hope they actually did a pilot program with say 100 users to make sure this was a good decision. Remember, there are a lot of applications that simply do not run on Linux. They are probably not doing this to be anti-Microsoft, but simply to save money. Most of their users probably just use standard office applications, so standardizing on one platform that is open source probably gives them substantial savings.

    1. Re:Pilot program? by leomekenkamp · · Score: 1

      Remember, there are a lot of applications that simply do not run on Linux.

      It is not about the applications. It would be about the applications if they were only playing games. It's about data; civil servants get input, process it, and create output. Some only create output, <funny>an again others only have input</funny>.

      100 years ago some civil servant documented the birth of my grandmother. Now I can still have a look at the birth certificate of my grandmother; I do not need the civil servant that wrote it down to tell me what is written down. In 68 years all applications we use now will be long forgotten; my (great)grandchildren should not need some ancient version of a closed source proprietary application to read (electronic) documents about my birth; they should have the means to read the documents no matter what.

      --
      Wenn ist das Nunstueck git und Slotermeyer? Ja! Beiherhund das Oder die Flipperwaldt gersput.
  49. You may fire when ready by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

    In other news...

    "Today Bill Gates announced that Germany has been added to a group of 'rogue nations' that constitute an axis of evil. When Mr. Gates decided to test the full power of his newly built Microsoft Deathstar 2003 on the rogue nation, the machine had an internal segfault which caused a massive nuclear reaction which destroyed the Redmond Washington based companies R&D labs. Mr Gates declined to comment, but a spokesman has told us that Microsoft is still committed to developing world dominatory machines, and that their new model, to be released in 2005, will feature new 'twirly thingies and flashy lights' which will without a doubt improve destructive capacity exponentially. The Apple corporation has taken a similar approach to bring industrial strength 'shiny gunz' to the market, but has recalled that initiative because of blinding resulting from over-used chrome polishing and photo-realistic ammo that take hours to fire once the trigger is pulled."

  50. Historic paralell, anyone? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Beer Hall Putsch

    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

    The Beer Hall Putsch occurred November 8 1923 when Adolf Hitler and his Nazis along with General Erich Ludendorff and his conservative nationalists tried to gain power in Munich. Hitler planned to use Munich as a base against Germany's Weimar Republic government in Berlin; however, their support failed to materialize.


    Of course, given what happend ten years later.. we may have cause to be worried.

    1. Re:Historic paralell, anyone? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nazis are cool. Linux is cool. Linux Nazis are even better!

    2. Re:Historic paralell, anyone? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No no, Linux is Stalin/Communism. Apple in Nazi/Fascist. Microsoft is Baseball and American Pie. Get your special interest pandering correct or i'll come over there and spank you (erotically, of course).

    3. Re:Historic paralell, anyone? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My Tux has a Swastika armband...
      Nazi Tux gives new meaning to "Right Wing" eh??

  51. Where's Your Nationalism Now? by moehoward · · Score: 0, Troll

    This really sucks for the American economy. Software exports are one of the shining stars in our trade balance.

    Oh, well. We'll just gloss over the typical Slashdot bitching about jobs going to India. Now, the slashdotters gloat when American software companies lose sales. See? You really can have it both ways.

    Note: Mod this as a troll AND flamebait. I've been karma whoring and am feeling pretty bad about the whole damned affair.

    --
    "If you want to improve, be content to be thought foolish and stupid." - Epictetus
    1. Re:Where's Your Nationalism Now? by grungeman · · Score: 2, Insightful

      First I have to say that you nationalist whining kinda pisses me off.

      Second: Did you read the article? IBM will make the deal instead of Microsoft. You know what country IBM is from, don't you?

      --

      Signature deleted by lameness filter.
    2. Re:Where's Your Nationalism Now? by sloanster · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Huh?

      Did I miss the part where it said american companies will not be allowed to provide the linux software?

    3. Re:Where's Your Nationalism Now? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Eh, sh**!
      Where was ITS founder from?

    4. Re:Where's Your Nationalism Now? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      IBM divisions involved will be Germany, Canada and England. No US involvement yet, but with this big a project there is bound to be some.

    5. Re:Where's Your Nationalism Now? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      See? You really can have it both ways.

      Hey Troll, I can't have it both ways, but Slashdot has more than one person. Get it? We don't all agree on everything. Think about it. Do you agree with everything you see on slashdot? So why the fuck do you think finding a contradiction is hard and shows some kind of insight? I think it's just stupid. I think America's software systems sucks and we force it down other countries throats. We can't depend on that forever and the sooner we stop the better. I like Indian people. I've never seen India. They can have your job, but they'll never get mine.

  52. FECAL SOUP M1CR0SOFT FECAL STEW by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In my opinion: People may say, "well at least they're news items with a negative slant regarding m1cr0s0ft rather than praising them." Any publicity can be good publicity. They're advertising for M1cr0s0ft weekly with these news items whether they know it or not.

    Just another M$ slave. /in my opinion

  53. Another Domino by Tancred · · Score: 1

    Just another domino in a long line of them. Lots more in the future than there are in the past, but it's unstoppable now. Regardless of pricing, no nation wants to be dependent on a private entity.

  54. History may mark this point by TerryAtWork · · Score: 2, Interesting

    as the beginning of the end for MS...

    --
    It's Christmas everyday with BitTorrent.
  55. Mod parent +5 funny! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Please!

  56. Do the Math by moncyb · · Score: 1

    If we assume Linux never existed, MS would still have a similar problem--except with FreeBSD, OpenBSD, BeOS, or whatever.

    Also, the value lost to MS is much more than monetary. The fewer people running Windows, the more trouble they will have pushing people into their Palladium Censorship OS. ;-)

    If you want to understand more, listen to the song Do the Math by Mannequin Porn. Just substitute M$ where they say Juliet, and you'll have the solution!

    1. Re:Do the Math by fymidos · · Score: 1

      I have to argue that if linux never existed BSD wouldn't be a problem for them...

      Obviously *something* would have emerged but it would have to be gpl to make a difference.

      --
      Washington bullets will simply be known as the "Bulle
    2. Re:Do the Math by moncyb · · Score: 1

      Why would it have to be GPL?

    3. Re:Do the Math by fymidos · · Score: 1

      for many reasons, the spirit of the GPL is that the code is somehow protected from "abuse". A company cannot just grab linux kernel, fix some bugs let's say, and sell it (or give it away) as a superior product. The changes have to be available for the public, and the main kernel tree.
      BSD kernel is the other example, the code is good, so good that many many companies have used it, but developers got nothing in return (ok, maybe some gonverment funding). So it never managed to rise and has never been able to challenge commercial solutions the way linux has.

      --
      Washington bullets will simply be known as the "Bulle
  57. Just for that... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    ...Microsoft is removing Munich from its next version of Flight Simulator.

    1. Re:Just for that... by TheRaven64 · · Score: 1
      Why? So it can only be used to train future pilots to fly into American buildings?

      (-1, extremely bad taste)

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    2. Re:Just for that... by egork · · Score: 1

      Well, it might be actually introducing Munich in there, but in a new role, who knows... now when high precision munition is finding its way into computer games :)

    3. Re:Just for that... by Vegan+Pagan · · Score: 1

      But Uncle Sam is paying them so much to keep it in so hijackers will know where to aim!

    4. Re:Just for that... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      According to Encarta, Finland doesn't exist.

    5. Re:Just for that... by blibbleblobble · · Score: 1

      "Just for that, Microsoft is removing Munich from its next version of Flight Simulator."

      Replacement

      Scenery

  58. Re:oh christ by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Some people even claim english is just a very dumbed down/simplified version of the original latin-germanic language branch.

  59. Re:to the editors of slashdot by cheesybagel · · Score: 2, Insightful
    Yes there are many people in the Linux community who do not like Microsoft (in fact there are several people who dislike Microsoft regardless but I digress).

    Yes the user submitted a bombastic headline for this story. Heise.de actually used "SPD Munich goes for Linux" which is not quite this bombastic.

    However you really should learn to read stories behind headlines. Headlines are usually meant to be bombastic. There is indeed a mention to Linux in the news summary.

    Regarding Windows XP vs Linux there are several things which can be said.

    For desktop purposes indeed Windows XP is superior for several reasons: common look UI, proper crossapp DND, multimedia support, better hardware management GUI tools, etc.

    For server purposes Microsoft OSes lag in several respects: You do not have as many built-in facilities for automation of batches, the fact that UNIX devices are character streams make things like backup trivial, etc.

    For something like this desktop win at the German government it is very obvious license costs are important. These are 14,000 machines we are talking. It is a tidy sum. Microsoft may be willing to lower prices *now* but they could well recover their investment later on with upgrade fees after customers are locked in using data with proprietary Microsoft file formats. This way the German government also promotes the local software industry.

    What would *you* do if you were in their place?

  60. well, we've got it by RestiffBard · · Score: 1

    Now we just have to keep it. That's the hard part.

    --
    - /* dead coders leave no comments */
  61. Faulting MS is fair on many, many levels.... by djupedal · · Score: 1

    ...and we all know it, so stop the whitewash already.

    Dumping laws are meant to protect the local economy from running dry when tons of imported steel, etc. (whatever) are sold locally for less than cost, etc. in order to control said local market and local competition, raised prices or not.

    This isn't about software...free or otherwise. It is about not being on the hook for something, and in this case, the locals have decided in their own best interests. Good for them.

  62. cowards by moncyb · · Score: 1

    Is it just me, or are ACs getting more and more crazy?

    1. Re:cowards by fymidos · · Score: 1

      indeed, a preference to *not* see AC posts would be a wonderfull thing ... Or at least they should *seem* different, grey or something like that, they can be really annoying ..

      --
      Washington bullets will simply be known as the "Bulle
    2. Re:cowards by moncyb · · Score: 1

      I have them set to -6, but I usually check below my threshold for replies to interesting posts. You set it under the preferences, in the comments area. The setting is called "Anonymous Modifier". A value of -6 will guarantee ACs get a -1 rating even if they are modded up.

  63. Re:oh christ by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's not really based on german, but it's roots are the same as german. English is similar to french only in the words used, which also happens in german. There's quite a few german words that come from french and vice-versa...same goes for all other european languages, after a couple thousand years of evolution in relatively close proxymities.

  64. 90%? they would have gotten it back anyways by Hellasboy · · Score: 3, Insightful

    just some thoughts on the situation...
    first, it's been said before that by going w/ Linux it will help the German economy more than by going with windows.
    second, 90% is a great rebate discount. But what happens 5 years down the road when MS decides to not support the piece of software that they have already sold and instead tells the people of Munich that they have to buy new versions of the software at full price?
    Third, this is a good way to bring Linux to people's homes. Didn't the x86 processor (and subsequent MS OS) become popular due to the fact that it was all over the workplace and people wanted to use it at home? not exactly like that but i hope you get my thought.

    and just so people don't think i'm some Linux zealot, i use winxp and beos. i've tried several distributions of Linux and don't like it... yet. As more people use it, it will definitely get much better for home use.

    --

    "Tread softly because you tread on my dreams"
    1. Re:90%? they would have gotten it back anyways by Jord · · Score: 2, Insightful
      That is exactly how windows got into people's homes. They used it at work and then wanted to use the same at home. I remember when Windows "migrated" into the workplace and people didnt want it (too slow, etc.). However the push was made and other office products were pushed out. At the time, the GUI was a great new thing and everyone started to like it.

      Looking back at it now, it was probably a bad move :)

  65. political vs. cultural by chocolatetrumpet · · Score: 1

    While it is not the political capital, I would say it is the cultural capital, featuring the Deutsche Museum, Hofbräuhaus, and Olympiazentrum.

    --
    Spoon not. Fork, or fork not. There is no spoon.
    1. Re:political vs. cultural by grungeman · · Score: 1

      Even that isn't true. It's the beer, pretzel, and soccer capital.

      --

      Signature deleted by lameness filter.
    2. Re:political vs. cultural by loucura! · · Score: 0, Troll

      This is Germany... their culture is beer, pretzels, and soccer.

      --
      Black and grey are both shades of white.
    3. Re:political vs. cultural by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      NACK.

      Beer is a strong part of our culture, but I don't think that UK or USA could survive without beer... ;-)
      Brez'n are specific for Bayern.
      As a matter of fact, most germans are still not really sure whether Bayern and therefore München is part of germany at all. ;-)

      And having lived in München now for 4 years I can tell you, that most inhabitants of München aint that sure either. They're Bayern first. germany is ...well.. something else. ;)

      HAND
      Stephan

    4. Re:political vs. cultural by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      well, berlin also has a 'Deutsche Museum', and munich is not the only german city that housed the olympics. however, i think most people will agree that your right about the beer :)

    5. Re:political vs. cultural by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      well, others say bavaria and therefore munich _is_ germany ;)

      Everything else is - well - something else :))

    6. Re:political vs. cultural by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Brez'n is a wrong plural, it's Brezn. It's derived from bracchium (Latin), because of the form.
      Germany is sometihng hard to identify with. If you know history, this isn't the Germany that the non-Prussian people would have thought of in 1848.
      This evil German things like militarism, discipline are Prussian, while Bavaria hates them.

    7. Re:political vs. cultural by egork · · Score: 1

      This evil German things like militarism, discipline are Prussian, while Bavaria hates them.

      Come on, give us a break!

    8. Re:political vs. cultural by Old+Wolf · · Score: 1

      And fat men in leather shorts burping to the tune of "She'll be coming around the mountain"

      </BLACKADDER>

    9. Re:political vs. cultural by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh, well. In Austria (Österreich) and Switzerland (Schweiz) it's called Bayern too. And those 2 countries do NOT belong to germany. ;)

      Countryside_with_language_X_spoken /= Country_X;

      HAND
      Stephan

    10. Re:political vs. cultural by he-sk · · Score: 1

      You want to insult me? Come over and fight! Berlin is the cultural center of Germany. A distant second are Hamburg and Cologne. Munich is even in the same leage.

      --
      Free Manning, jail Obama.
    11. Re:political vs. cultural by fredrik70 · · Score: 1

      nope in swedish it's called bayern as well ;-)

      --
      if (!signature) { throw std::runtime_error("No sig!"); }
    12. Re:political vs. cultural by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > While it is not the political capital, I would
      > say it is the cultural capital, featuring the
      > Deutsche Museum, Hofbräuhaus, and
      > Olympiazentrum.

      Not to forget that munich stands also for the civilwar about beer, first communist counsil on german soil, the rise of Hitler and the first western city stroken by arabian terrorism.

      Now I'm scared and will hide in the basement. Right behind some caskets of Augustiner Beer. If I can chose I always prefer beer over commies, Hitler and arabian terrorists :-)

    13. Re:political vs. cultural by 3247 · · Score: 1
      This evil German things like militarism, discipline are Prussian, while Bavaria hates them.
      Prussia also had some positive contributions wrt to administrative las. On the other hand, Munich was the centre and "capital of the [Nazi] movement" -- that's definitely an "evil German thing" that's not Prussian.
      --
      Claus
  66. Does anyone have a link to the criteria? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Does anyone have a link to the criteria used between the two solutions? Although a score was provided, I would be interested to see how Linux scored in each of the areas.

  67. Re:to the editors of slashdot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Dear Mr. grubby,

    Please don't take it personally. You are a massive tool.

    Regards,

    Anonymous Coward

  68. Image of Microsoft by Luzumsuz+Lazim · · Score: 3, Interesting
    It's a pitty for Microsoft that it damaged its image so bad by using its monopoly power and producing so buggy software in the past. In recent years, it was only a bunch of people around me at MIT, and many (not all) slashdot people who didn't aprove what Microsoft was doing. Now, it became a common knowledge that even our secretary realized how Microsoft agresively marketed its products, and how bad they were.

    It's pitty, because it finally improved (not perfected though) its operating system that can be considered stable now. But, its too late for most of the people I know. I can tell that ALL science related machines (PCs) we have today use Linux instead of Windows both here in our department and in the part of the Los Alamos National lab. I know, and I'm proud that I was one of the few who started using it, and probably had some effect on this move.

    On the other hand Linux is not suitable for everything. I need a decent/mature interface and a machine which requires little maintanence at home, at which point I picked MacOS X instead of Microsoft because of the past experience. Which works pretty well for what it's supposed to do and more... So, again Microsoft lost one more individual as a customer. That's the primary term for Microsoft, instead of the user.

    Compatition is good. Now, they improved their products significantly (we must be fair!), and they're trying to reduce their cost, at least, the initial cost. That's also an improvement. Let's be naive and wish that it's not a trick to tie the costomers to rip them later. Actually, that's exactly the pshycological behaviour of most people when the Microsoft is involved. We do NOT trust them anymore...

    I do not wish that Microsoft disappears forever, but just wish that it can understand what they did wrong in the past, and try to repair the damage they did. However, it does not seem what is happening here.

    1. Re:Image of Microsoft by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not to nit pick but if you are using OS X to post try using Safari and turning the spell checker on :)

    2. Re:Image of Microsoft by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I gotta agree about the trust thing. It's gone. Even my dad, who is retired, is asking me questions about switching his and mom's computers to Linux. A decade ago, (when he was making money off his investments in M$) he dismissed any negative remarks I might make about them, but now he says he wants to switch because he's not happy with a lot of their business practices. It's the same practices, only they don't work long-term once viable alternatives are available.

      If you ask me, they picked an ironic time to come out with a 'trusted computing initiative' and bet the company on becoming the trusted gate-keeper of information. All the PR money can buy won't win back that trust, particularly when the whole trusted-computing scheme can be so obviously abused for profit once the user is on-board.
      Don't want to pay your monthly computing fee anymore because it's gotten too high? == Lose access to the key to decrypt your own 'trusted' data files. That's the clear path of 'trusted computing', and nobody wants it but M$.

  69. Better discount in Spain ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Steve Ballmer came a few weeks ago in Spain in order to prevent a town switching to GNU/Linux.
    According to the news, Microsoft promises :

    * Gift of software for 25 millions of Euros (nearly the same in dollars)
    * Investment of 5 millions of Euros for educational projects
    * Possibility to downloading a software to translate Windows XP into Catalan (a spanish dialect)
    * And somme others stuffs.

    Better than the German discount, isn't it ? The deal is not already done, but it shows that Microsoft can go very far to keep its monopoly. The link, in Spanish (sorry, I don't know Spanish language) :
    http://www.5dias.com/articulo.html?xref=2003050 9cd scdiemp_10&type=Tes&anchor=cdsemp&d_date=20030 509
    Another link from Wired :
    http://wired.com/news/politics/0,1283,58764,00. htm l

    1. Re:Better discount in Spain ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Catalan is not a spanish dialect. It is a language with his own history that is talked by milions of persons.

    2. Re:Better discount in Spain ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sorry, I know that but I'm not too fluent in english to express it correctly.

  70. 90% number not backed up by article by nniillss · · Score: 5, Informative

    In the Heise article, the rebate offered by Ballmer is not specified. In fact, the details of the offer seem to be secret. The 90% number seems to originate from earlier discussions (not linked to Munich) about an internal Microsoft order not to lose to Linux at any cost.

  71. office formats by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The problem of office formats and a possible way
    to a solution have been described here: http://www.mind.lu/~yg/office.html

  72. Munich vacation in the works. by small_dick · · Score: 2, Interesting

    A breath of freedom in a world owned by Microsoft.

    If this goes through I'm going on vacation to Munich later this summer...maybe rent a nice bike (BMW F650?) and bask in the freedom. Sounds like fun.

    Great job, Munich. I know OpenOffice has it's share of problems (it really isn't all that compatible with Word documents), and there will be some hiccups, but just seeing a government stand up for freedom is a breathtaking thing in these sad times.

    --


    Treatment, not tyranny. End the drug war and free our American POWs.
    See my user info for links.
    1. Re:Munich vacation in the works. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Uhh....you seem to be confused. This article is about what kind of office productivity suite a government department uses. Not world peace.

      If this is such a big deal in our life that you're going to bask in it then you have a sad existence.

    2. Re:Munich vacation in the works. by NilsK · · Score: 1

      A breath of freedom in a world owned by Microsoft.

      But you should have in mind, that the headquarter of Microsoft-Germany is located in Munich.

      Nils

    3. Re:Munich vacation in the works. by Jason+Earl · · Score: 1

      Munich is a government. If they tell you to send them an OpenOffice.org document, you won't send them an MS Word document. Bureaucracies don't have to be flexible.

      That's the reason that Microsoft is pushing so hard not to lose government contracts. Microsoft knows that governments are the one entity that can force people towards new document formats.

  73. Re:oh christ by Spellbinder · · Score: 1

    i prefere swiss german
    the very cool thing is there is no orthography
    everyone writes how he likes or how he pronouces it
    at school we learn standart german and use this too for business
    but the cool thing is the whole internet and sms brought us back to writing swiss german
    sometimes it's a little confusing
    especially if someone speaks a verry strange dialect!!

    --


    stop supporting microsoft with pirating their software!!!!!
  74. LPI by njvic · · Score: 1

    Does this mean I really should go out and get certified as a Linux Professional?

  75. Re:Wow. The figures speak for themselves by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    A score is just a number resulting from previous prejudice. Anyone may rig a number to their satisfaction, however, that is usually the providence Microsoft.

  76. It does NOT cost them anything by Great_Geek · · Score: 2, Insightful

    If you do a detailed business-case, I think you will find that Microsoft should be willing to charge nothing.

    Recall that if Microsoft loses the account, they get ZERO dollars. On the other hand, per-license cost (to Microsoft) is essentially ZERO as well. So whatever they can charge is extra profit. All of the talk of slush fund to pay for the discount is just accounting wool to pull over people's eyes (and may be keep bonuses straight).

    Also, if you look at the Market Share or Network Effect, that also argues for "do not lose". Indeed, as Microsoft (and other companies) has demonstrated, it is often worthwhile to pay a customer to take it.

    1. Re:It does NOT cost them anything by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      except that Berlin wont be willing to pay full price if Munich got an discount etc.. .

  77. Yup by MAXOMENOS · · Score: 1

    Bingo. The difference is, when you deploy Microsoft technology, Microsoft practically owns the support business. When you deploy Red Hat (for example), there are other competitors that the customer can choose from, including IBM, to support their systems.

  78. Re:Munich: The city where the Nazi party started by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    d) Hitler never knew what a computer or even what a calculator was
    Brrrrnt...

    The Nazi's employed IBM punchcard tabulators to track 'die Juden im schutz'. IBM knew what was going on, and still they not only maintained business with Der Reich, but kept hush-hush about what they knew back here in the 'States...

    That IBM is likely to get this account 70 years later is kind of ironic in my eyes.

  79. Deep discounts and future business by just+fiddling+around · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Microsoft did what any hungry business does to open doors to a good market: undercut every other. This ain't illegal anywhere.

    I just finished selecting a company to make a custom eLearning system at my job. The winner had the best technical offer (it had 10% more points than no.2) AND their price was 50% under the second best price. Moreover, there were about 10 bidders and the eLearning market is young and competitive. The winner was NOT the biggest, baddest, most deep-pocketed; they wanted to take over the bid to get visibility in the corporate structure (yes, we are THAT big).

    In this case, Microsoft did what they could and did not win. Which shows the value of the alternative!

    --
    You're not old until regret takes the place of your dreams.
    1. Re:Deep discounts and future business by Daniel+Phillips · · Score: 1

      Microsoft did what any hungry business does to open doors to a good market: undercut every other. This ain't illegal anywhere.

      You're sure? You've never heard of dumping? Or predatory pricing then?

      Advice for you: think hard about what you just said, or you're likely to make some remarkably poor decisions in the future with respect to ethics and the law, if you ever get into management.

      --
      Have you got your LWN subscription yet?
    2. Re:Deep discounts and future business by Paul+Komarek · · Score: 1

      The European Union has laws governing discounting. Microsoft is currently under scrutiny for offering possibly illegal discounts in the past. If the Munich discount wasn't already known, then it's almost certainly going to make things worse for MS.

      -Paul Komarek

  80. Don't forget Oktoberfest! by MsGeek · · Score: 1

    The "party on, dude" capital of all Deutscheland from September until November! "In Muenschen ist ein Hofbrauhaus...ein, zwei, zuffe!"

    --
    Knowledge is power. Knowledge shared is power multiplied.
  81. In other news... by Keebler71 · · Score: 0
    and in other news... every other city on the planet is using Microsoft.

    not a troll,... just putting things in perspective re: the war on MS.

    --
    "It takes considerable knowledge just to realize the extent of your own ignorance." - Thomas Sowell
    1. Re:In other news... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      and in other news... every other city on the planet is using Microsoft.
      yet

      This time it might be the right time to apply famous Domino Theory.
      And this time chances are pretty good that brick after brick _will_ fall.
    2. Re:In other news... by vinsci · · Score: 3, Informative
      and in other news... every other city on the planet is using Microsoft.

      No, that's not true. A couple of other cities running Linux:

      By the way, a lot is happening in developing countries. On May 22nd, I had the opportunity to attend the publication seminar of the interesting Free as in Education research report by Niranjan Rajani, sponsored by the Finnish Ministry for Foreign Affairs. Other writers published in the study are Cesar Brod (Brazil), Frederick Noronha (India) and Nico Coetzee (South Africa). Also attending the seminar, among many others, was Edgar Villanueva (Congressman, Peru), who sent the famous response letter to Microsoft, giving a talk on "Legal and Other Experiences in Promoting FLOSS in Peru".

      But cities are not the only ones interested in Free/Libre Open Source Software (FLOSS), of course. For example, what do you like the government of South Africa open source software web site at http://www.oss.gov.za/? Their Government OSS Strategy Document (in PDF format) could be interesting reading.

      --

      Trusted Computing FAQ | Free Dawit Isaak!
    3. Re:In other news... by vinsci · · Score: 1
      Just found out about this:

      --

      Trusted Computing FAQ | Free Dawit Isaak!
    4. Re:In other news... by fredrik70 · · Score: 1

      Also Korea seems to be interested as well!

      --
      if (!signature) { throw std::runtime_error("No sig!"); }
    5. Re:In other news... by vinsci · · Score: 1

      There's lots more... see Frederick Noronha's status of Free Software in Asia broken down by country. The same page also has similar reports for Latin America (by Cesar Brod) and Africa (by Nico Coetzee).

      --

      Trusted Computing FAQ | Free Dawit Isaak!
  82. I am liking this "open SOURCE". by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Steve Ballmer is a salesman. Why should the city of Munich pay any attention whatsoever to what he has to say by sticking his nose into their business?

    It's about equivalent to your friendly neighbour (Linus, who's a mechanic) getting ready to give you a nice car he's fixed up (Linux).

    Suddenly a stranger (Ballmer, a slightly greasy used car salesman with a forced smile and a well-practiced handshake) turns up on your doorstep and offers you a lease on the Windows Exploder 2003, the new revision of the old 'ploder NT that you've just got rid of.

    Of course, he says - you'll get a really great interest rate. For the first few months at least. You start to read the small print and it says you won't actually own the vehicle or be allowed to fix it yourself if it breaks. Heck, you're not even allowed to look under the hood. Invalidates the warranty, you know.

    Linus smirks in bemusement and throws you the keys to the sleek hand-built Linux SuSE parked out front. Manual transmission, of course. "Take it if you want it, we can always make another one" he says and walks back inside to go tinker some more.

    Ballmer tries to ignore the shiny keys you're jangling. The vehicles he's selling don't need keys to start. Who would try to steal a car? There is a master key - but only to the engine compartment, and he wouldn't dream of giving *that* to the customer. "Now, if you'd just sign right here on the dotted line", he smiles...

    Anyway - just because Ballmer is selling something doesn't mean you have to trust him, or that he isn't bending the truth to make the sale.

  83. Not quite... by Kircle · · Score: 1

    When OpenOffice gets a negative review it is almost never because the tools are not sufficiently capable, but rather it is because the MS Office conversion filters aren't up to the task.

    Not quite. The No. 1 complaint of OpenOffice I hear is its inablity to "word count" when compared to MS Office.

    --

    -- Kircle

    1. Re:Not quite... by anagama · · Score: 1


      I'm not sure what you mean. If you mean count the words in a document, open a document, select [file][properties] and then select the "statistics" tab in the popup. You get word count, paragraph count .... 8 different counts in fact. This with OOo 1.0.2 ... I don't actually find this useful so I have no recollection whether prior versions did this.

      --
      What changed under Obama? Nothing Good
    2. Re:Not quite... by Planesdragon · · Score: 1

      There are two problems with that.

      Firstly, and most importantly, it's imprecise and overdone. Sometimes you don't want to count an entire document--sometimes you just want to count how long a single paragraph is, or a few phrases. Or a page or two. (And, at least in 1.1b, it's way off--OoO just counted a 17k word paste as 101 words.)

      Secondly, and this is the really annoying part--it's buried. The standard location for word count is under the Tools menu, near the Spelling (and grammar) functions are. Spellcheck, Thesaurus, and Hypenation are all there--why not Word Count?

      You don't use it, so you won't push it--but I do use it, and so do many others. OoO's word count is not up to par--which is sad, really, as it's the last (latest) major roadblock to me switching over.

    3. Re:Not quite... by DarcSeed · · Score: 1

      I dunno about you but, when I was using OO to type up my 5 page exam paper, I needed to make sure I had at least 1500 words, so I asked my friend (who has always used Word and windows, etc.) where the word count was, figuring that the developers of OO had cloned more-or-less the whole interface. It's in the same spot that MS Word has it. File-> Document Properties -> Statistics.

      --
      Best death? What, die from a naked lady avalanche?
    4. Re:Not quite... by TKinias · · Score: 1

      scripsit Planesdragon:

      (And, at least in 1.1b, it's way off--OoO just counted a 17k word paste as 101 words.)

      You filed a bug, right? I know complaining is easier, but that won't get things fixed.

      --
      In principio creauit Linus Linucem.
    5. Re:Not quite... by TKinias · · Score: 1

      scripsit DarcSeed:

      when I was using OO to type up my 5 page exam paper, I needed to make sure I had at least 1500 words...

      Let me let you in on a little secret. Teaching assistants have much better things to do with their time than count the words in your paper by hand. If it feels about the right length and satisfactorily meets the requirements nobody is going to give a rat's arse about the exact word count. (Unless your university's teaching assistants have way too much time on their hands...)

      --
      In principio creauit Linus Linucem.
    6. Re:Not quite... by Minna+Kirai · · Score: 1

      What if he submits his paper electronically to TAs who use Microsoft Office's word count feature?

    7. Re:Not quite... by TKinias · · Score: 1

      scripsit Minna Kirai:

      What if he submits his paper electronically to TAs who use Microsoft Office's word count feature?

      I thought about that, but didn't think anyone would actually want electronic submissions except for an on-line class. I sure as hell prefer papers on paper -- I'm not going to mark them without printing them, and I spend enough on paper and toner without printing 300 pages of students' work for every assignment...

      --
      In principio creauit Linus Linucem.
    8. Re:Not quite... by Planesdragon · · Score: 1

      You filed a bug, right? I know complaining is easier, but that won't get things fixed.

      I'll see if I can reproduce the bug at home, and then vote for the bug.

      Thanks for the reminder.

  84. Re:Munich: The city where the Nazi party started by mangu · · Score: 1
    Linus is not exactly of pure Aryan stock.


    How so? I would say Swedish-Finnish is "Aryan" enough...

  85. Could this also be a result of the Iraq war? by Martin+Marvinski · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Before the war, there was an article on how the US was spying on countries to see how they would vote on the war resolution in the UN.

    http://www.observer.co.uk/iraq/story/0,12239,905 936,00.html

    Because of this Germany may also be moving away from software that may have potential secret backdoors written in for the NSA. No matter how much you get in rebates, it will never give a government the peace of mind of having compiled and inspected the code yourself.

    1. Re:Could this also be a result of the Iraq war? by praedor · · Score: 1

      I don't think this theory really washes because Germany could have easily gained access to windoze source via M$'s abortion of a program called Shared Source. Of course, billions of lines of spaghetti code would render such viewing pointless but the source would be there (for a fee).


      I think they are just going with the cheaper alternative that allows computer science expertise to remain and grow locally rather than feed the beast in Redmond to no benefit of Germany.

      --
      In Bushworld, they struggle to keep church and state separate in Iraq as they increasingly merge the two in America.
    2. Re:Could this also be a result of the Iraq war? by Gumshoe · · Score: 1
      I don't think this theory really washes because Germany could have easily gained access to windoze source via M$'s abortion of a program called Shared Source. Of course, billions of lines of spaghetti code would render such viewing pointless but the source would be there (for a fee).


      True. Moreover, how would you ever know that the source you're looking at relates to the binary that you've just bought. From what I can gather, the Shared Source thing doesn't allow you to make your own binaries.
    3. Re:Could this also be a result of the Iraq war? by vinsci · · Score: 1
      Actually, security is a major factor working in favor of Free/Libre Open Source Software (FLOSS) for governments around the world, according to the research report Free as in education: Significance of FLOSS for the Developing Countries by Niranjan Rajani, published last week. See the section Security and Technological Independence for details.

      Note: the first link above has more information and additional material. The research was sponsored by the Ministry for Foreign Affairs, Finland.

      Your suspicion of secret back doors are not off the mark. If you familiarize yourself with the upcoming security technology from Microsoft, called Palladium or more recently NGSCB, you will find that backdoors are likely to be mandatory in it. Furthermore, such backdoors in crypto-processors are already patented, see for example the patents ep1059578 Secure backdoor access for a computer or us5970246 Data processing system having a trace mechanism and method therefor.

      --

      Trusted Computing FAQ | Free Dawit Isaak!
    4. Re:Could this also be a result of the Iraq war? by Bartmoss · · Score: 1

      No, not really, but kind of. First of all, we're talking about a muncipal gov't here - a large city, but nothing more. Espionage from the United States against Munich specifically should be a minor issue.

      That said, Germany has been pushing several issues in this direction for many, many years. Remember the Bundestag (German parliament) examining Linux as well - Linux lost, marginally, against Windows then. There are other examples, also in the private sector. I can tell you that a certain large German corporation that shall remain nameless looked at adopting Linux on the desktop as well. The reason was simple: Money. Windows simply cannot beat Linux' licensing fees, even if Steve Ballmer offers even more discounts. And many corporations but especially the public sector has a huge problem with shrinking budgets.

      Now about the "Kind of" thingie. The German government has been advocating the use of encryption and other security measures for a long time. In fact they were pressured by Albright and co. to cease this policy. The reason was economic espionage, in which the United States excels, but other countries do it. So, the bottom line is: Yes, using open source has security implications too, but it's mostly a money decision.

    5. Re:Could this also be a result of the Iraq war? by EinarH · · Score: 1
      because Germany could have easily gained access to windoze source via M$'s abortion of a program called Shared Source.
      They already have access to the sourc code through NATO and EU programs.
      --

      Melius mori in libertate quam vivere in servitute.

  86. Re:oh christ by Little+Brother · · Score: 1
    Um Old English is directly Branched from old Low German, (Old low German would still be understandable to most native German speakers) So unless you want to say that modern English isn't really based on Old English (if you want to make that point go ahead, I'll follow up) you pretty much have to admit that modern English is derived from German. Or I suppose you could say that old Low German isn't really german, but that would be equatble to saying that the KJV bible or the works of Shakespere arn't written in English.

    Is there a linguic scholor who can tell me how many places I messed up? I'm trying to remember stuff I learned in High School.

    --

    Little Brother, watching the watchers

  87. hey fuck you by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The difference between saying "you must not be German" and "you must be American" earns you the finger. Fuck off.

    1. Re: hey fuck you by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Cool down. :-)
      He was just referring to an old joke.
      How often are germans related to nazis in the USA?
      Now that's what I call a *real* offense. ;-)
      Have a nice day
      Stephan

    2. Re:hey fuck you by dr_blurb · · Score: 1
      by Anonymous Coward:

      ... earns you the finger. Fuck off.
      And you must be American.

      :-)

  88. Re:to the editors of slashdot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I want you to think about this, though. If a Martian were plopped down in front of two otherwise identical PC's, one running Windows XP and the other running Linux, which one do you think he would guess is the more technologically advanced?
    >
    >
    The Martian OS that got him to Earth.

  89. Re:Wow. The figures speak for themselves by mangu · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Exactly what is the scoring system? Do you have any links to how those points are counted?

  90. 14.000 Workstations? Big Deal. by rjamestaylor · · Score: 0, Redundant
    In my home office environment I have 12 workstations (no fraction needed). When I switched from pirated^Wre-used copies of MS Office to OpenOffice.org nobody from Microsoft called, nobody wrote a press release proclaiming that "12.000 workstations" were converted from Windows to a single instance of Gentoo shared from a single server. Why do the Germans get all the press??

    _


    --
    -- @rjamestaylor on Ello
    1. Re:14.000 Workstations? Big Deal. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In europe and places outside the us they use the decimal point to separate thousands, millions, billions etc. The US uses commas, the whole world isn't the US.

    2. Re:14.000 Workstations? Big Deal. by rjamestaylor · · Score: 1

      see the link: _ in my original (and NOT redundant!) post

      --
      -- @rjamestaylor on Ello
  91. I like to imagine... by frozenray · · Score: 1

    ...that on hearing news like this, Bill Gates locks himself in his office, puts on a strangely shaped black face-covering helmet and starts breathing heavily.

    Ok, I admit it, I probably have seen too many Star Wars movies. Still, nice win for Open Source.

    --
    "There are already a million monkeys on a million typewriters, and Usenet is NOTHING like Shakespeare." - Blair Houghton
  92. Just a strategy to promote local tech industry by mulp · · Score: 2, Interesting
    "I think the real reason they have so much support is because of anti-american sentiments."

    A major reason given in countries outside the US is the advancement of a local software industry.

    The first country within an economic zone to switch to make Linux the preferred government business platform will probably be the first to develop Linux applications required within the zone. Germans are unlikely to develop applications for a South American country and vice versa.

    Most important, the US is least likely to develop Linux applications for use in countries outside the US. That means that a local preference for Linux gives the local software industry a competitive advantage.

    Produce for the US, then for the rest of the world is built into nearly all intellectual property marketing strategies. On the one hand, the US expects that the world will all speak American, but on the other, US companies want to control the release of IP outside the US separately from the US release. For DVD this was hardwired, the same is true for software as well.

    All programmers should welcome signficant Linux development. Even if you only know Microsoft, the demand for programmers for Linux projects will make the pool of MS Windows programmers smaller increasing your probability of keeping a job.

  93. Re:oh christ by Samari711 · · Score: 2, Funny

    i think any linguists reading slashdot would have had a stroke a long time ago....

    --

    I never said I was smart, I just said I was smarter than you

  94. The Capital Is Bonn/ Free software a comunists. by acomj · · Score: 1

    Bonn would be the capitol of west germany. East germany (DDR or the commie half..) has a different capital.

    This is acording to my map.. Which might be a LITTLE out of date

    Of course this whole using free software thing might be the fault of those anti-capitalist East Germans.

    Of course I might be kidding

  95. Dumping Rules? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "'Under no circumstances, loose to linux' must have a limit. I just wonder where it actually is."

    Given a 90% discount, why don't anti-dumping rules apply?

    Either Microsoft must be selling at well below cost, or the standard Microsoft prices must be grossly excessive!

    If no dumping rules apply, why can't they give a 200% discount, i.e., bribe prospective customers to use their product?

  96. one word for M$ by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Muwhahahahahahahhahahhahahahahaha!!!

  97. Re:Munich: The city where the Nazi party started by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    FUCK YOU TROLL!
    ASSHAT BITCH!!

  98. "correcyly"? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Some dumbass can't even use a spell checker!

  99. Re:Something Else Heard at M$-HQ by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    For another thing that is no doubt being heard at Microsoft look at the link below.

    http://www.billparish.com/20030420barronsoped.ht ml

  100. Dude... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No, Munich isn't a good guess. Any student of history should guess Berlin first, then Bonn (the old West German capital) second.

  101. Re:Wow. The figures speak for themselves by gazbo · · Score: 2, Insightful
    Well, I don't know the exact breakdown, but I believe that it is a rather over-complex system, but which seems to work well.

    The first strange thing is that two teams are assigned to work independently, each of which will ultimately produce a score out of 5000 (hence the 10000 total). The logic is that should there be any different approaches taken (especially during the TCO analysis) then they should smooth out somewhat.

    Then, the 5000 points are split into "distinct" sections; the reason I quote distinct is because in fact they are anyhting but: security, transition cost, and TCO. Of course, really TCO covers everything, but they chose to extract the first two as different sections because they can be measured in a much more direct way (transition cost) or must be measured in a far more heuristic way (security). TCO on the other hand is an amalgamated figure of ongoing support costs (minus security concerns, of course), training, and initial software cost, amortised over a 5 year period (the standard life-cycle of their system).

    I think the 5000 is divided into 900 for security, 1200 for transition costs, and 2900 for TCO. Within each of these, the actual figures they come up with are fit to the appropriate maximum score through a sigmoidal squashing function, that is attenuated at the low end, such that there is not much difference in score between the very cheapest solutions, but a huge difference between expensive solutions. Doesn't help Linux (cheap) look good, but on the other hand it does help Windows (very expensive!) look extremely bad.

    Then the scores are simply summed across the two teams to get an aggregate out of 10000. As I say, I don't really know the specifics, but that's more or less how it works.

  102. interconnection by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Like the rest of the slashdot community, I hate microsoft.

    However, I also recognize that when microsoft does badly, the entire tech industry does badly.

    Open source software is wonderful, but its mainstream adoption means that there are fewer jobs for programmers.

    Being a programmer, this troubles me.

    1. Re:interconnection by sloanster · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Your message is somewhat nonsensical -

      1. The slashdot community does NOT hate microsoft. Since the the slashdot community is composed chiefly of users of microsoft windows, your statement makes no sense.

      2. When microsoft does badly, the "entire tech industry" does not do badly, quite the contrary. Those who depend on microsoft stock do badly - period. "the industry" is actually much better off if software companies are able to freely innovate without the fear that the 1300 lb gorilla is going to smash them with monoploy hardball tricks.

      3. The mainstream adoption of open source does not mean fewer jobs for programmers, but quite the opposite - what on earth gives you that idea? open source opens up many more opportunities for programmers.

      Being a programmer, I find this delightful!

    2. Re:interconnection by praedor · · Score: 1

      Really? All the linux coders are unemployed? I didn't know they couldn't find work. I didn't know that they worked for alms on the street corners. Do they sit on the sidewalks of the world with their laptops on their laps coding away with an overturned hat next to them to catch stray cash people drop for them as they pass by?


      Linux adoption is GOOD. It means less likelihood of DRM. It means open standards that anyone can make use of (government documents that are readable to any and all regardless of whether they run Linux, Windoze, or MacOS). It means you can buy apps if that is what you want/need OR it means you can choose to use free/Free apps that work well for you. It means real, honest choice. It means cost savings for corporations because they do not HAVE to pointlessly upgrade ALL their office suites with every OS upgrade because you can be CERTAIN that a document produced by linux wordprocessor X will be readable to various other wordprocessors regardless of version.

      --
      In Bushworld, they struggle to keep church and state separate in Iraq as they increasingly merge the two in America.
    3. Re:interconnection by pair-a-noyd · · Score: 1

      "1. The slashdot community does NOT hate microsoft."

      Wanna bet??

      "Since the the slashdot community is composed chiefly of users of microsoft windows"

      Wanna bet??

    4. Re:interconnection by sloanster · · Score: 1

      Sure I'll bet -

      Show me the server logs - you'll find the majority of slashdot posters are ms windoze users.

      And if all the pro-microsoft bs here doesn't tip you off, I'm not sure what would...

    5. Re:interconnection by pair-a-noyd · · Score: 1

      Well, I don't have access to that information but how about submitting this to "askslashdot" and see what churns up.

      I see far more anti-M$ stuff here than I do pro-M$ stuff..

      Could it be that you are seeing things through "Redmont tinted glasses" ????

    6. Re:interconnection by Junks+Jerzey · · Score: 1

      The slashdot community does NOT hate microsoft.

      C'mon, do you honestly believe that?

  103. In fact, it's not even close by Ethelred+Unraed · · Score: 1
    Not by a long shot. Berlin is largest with roughly 3.5-4 million, Hamburg second at 1.8 million, Munich is third at 1.3 million.

    Still, great to see that OSS won there...free Paulaner all around!

    Cheers,

    Ethelred

    --
    Everyone wants to be Ethelred. Even I want to be Ethelred.
  104. Does OpenOffice1.1beta2 help the problems you saw? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative
    Yeah, I wouldn't recommend OO on anything less than a good 750MHz PII with 256MB RAM. (Those 900 MHz Via Samuels with non-DDR shared memory graphics built into the motherboard are too slow, too.)

    I'm very interested in the non-speed problems your folks have been encountering. OpenOffice 1.1 beta 2 is out; it would be good to know what issues still remain. Perhaps a few of them can be addressed before 1.1 final is out. See my page on the subject. If you have any documents that can't be opened in OO1.1beta2, please send me a copy, I'll light a fire under the developers. Or file your own issues if you're motivated.

  105. Re:Munich: The city where the Nazi party started by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It was the fault of the beer and the crisis in economics. So don't drink too much German beer if the economy runs not very well.

  106. Wrong headline! by Qbertino · · Score: 1

    You meant:
    Could this also be due to closed source software being potential spyware?
    The answer is: yes.
    Yet that has nothing to do with the Iraq Invasion.
    Germans throughout society can very well differentiate between a nations gouverment and a software vendor.
    Your headline is missleading when you look at it that way.

    --
    We suffer more in our imagination than in reality. - Seneca
  107. Ironically, the German word for "innovation" is... by Ethelred+Unraed · · Score: 1
    ...tada! "Innovation"!

    It's "die Innovation", if you're wondering...

    FWIW "developer" is "der Entwickler". Not that it matters. Plural is "die Entwickler". So Ballyboy was saying:

    Entwickler Entwickler Entwickler Entwickler!

    Cheers,

    Ethelred

    --
    Everyone wants to be Ethelred. Even I want to be Ethelred.
  108. Re:Munich: The city where the Nazi party started by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sieg Heil!

  109. Call me picky, but 6/10 is a good score? by Gldm · · Score: 4, Insightful

    When the winning software basicly scores 6/10 and beats out a competitor scoring 5/10, what does this say about the suitability of current software for what users want to use it for?

    Yes I know it's fun to watch linux vs windows and cheer from the sidelines etc, but how about this bigger picture?

    Maybe it's just me but software seems to be doing less and less of what we as users want and more and more of what marketing departments want. Useless features, obsolete features that are never pruned, tons of time and money spent dealing with ways to push advertising or find more ways to milk the consumer... Whatever happened to looking for ways to make doing everyday tasks easier and faster? Open source projects don't seem to be entirely immune to it either. I see lots of development in trying to keep feature parity or adding new things to invent new buzzwords for, but I haven't seen anything moving towards ease of using for some time now. All apps are now using "skinable" interfaces that make using them inconsistent with each other. Some apps have such complex configurations they're harder to learn to use than the average OS. I think that's a problem.

    So what were the almost 4000 points that weren't awarded based on?

    --

    Introducing the new Occam Fusion! Now with sqrt(-1) fewer blades!

    1. Re:Call me picky, but 6/10 is a good score? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      All "productivity suites" are bloated, buggy monsters. Paying for one is adding insult to an injury, hence the rising popularity of OpenOffice.

  110. Yay for linux, but... by AArmadillo · · Score: 1

    This is sad for Microsoft. Prejudices aside, I simply cannot understand how open source software can compete with Microsoft's software on a large scale. MS has the resources to hire the best, brightest, and most innovative minds in the industry, but it is losing ground to software written as a hobby. Its like some guy making movies in his backyard for fun -- and competing with Hollywood. Sounds like Microsoft has a seriously flawed R&D department to me...

    1. Re:Yay for linux, but... by sloanster · · Score: 1

      You have no clue -

      IBM, SAP, Oracle, SuSE GmBH, Nec, Fujitsu, Red Hat Software et al are not hobbyists -

      Whatever you're smoking, it must be potent...

    2. Re:Yay for linux, but... by !Squalus · · Score: 1

      Right answer, but the request was wrong. Should be: Whatever you are smoking, don't bogart it my friend, pass it on!

      --
      All Ad hominem replies happily ignored as the sender shall be deemed to lack the faculties to comprehend the equation.
    3. Re:Yay for linux, but... by leko · · Score: 1

      Most of the best and brightest I know would never work for microsoft out of principle.

    4. Re:Yay for linux, but... by xutopia · · Score: 1

      Blair Witch project, Jackass and the like!

    5. Re:Yay for linux, but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe thats because the best and brightest you know are not fit for employment at MS or anywhere else that doesn't welcome smelly nerds with no dress sense or personal hygiene ?

    6. Re:Yay for linux, but... by DF5JT · · Score: 1

      "MS has the resources to hire the best, brightest, and most innovative minds in the industry"

      Why don't they do it then?

  111. Their other alternative? by blair1q · · Score: 4, Funny

    "Attacking France and making them do all the typing," garnered 7012 points, until someone pointed out the German constitution forbids it.

  112. Re:oh christ by stevejsmith · · Score: 1

    i think any linguists reading slashdot would have had a stroke a long time ago....

    No no no, that should be would of had a strock.

  113. Typical politicians by tundog · · Score: 1

    I just read through the first half of the article. The funny part is when Christine Stobl (sauerkraut minister general) starts talking about how this decision is somehow pivotal in creating new jobs. I'm a big linux fan and all, but I somehow fail to see the logic that results in one OS creating more jobs than the other. Instead of MSCE's you need Uni sys-admins...

    --
    All your base are belong to us!
    1. Re:Typical politicians by sloanster · · Score: 1

      hmm, you fail to see the logic? seems clear enough to me -

      Let's say the city had been buying it's cars exclusively from an automaker who welded the hood shut and made it illegal to open the hood. Now the city has switched to a vendor who allows the hood to be opened, and provides tech manuals for the engine, electrical systems and whatnot.

      The local automotive tech geeks rejoice, now that they will be able to maintain the city's new fleet of cars, and so they immediately begin eagerly familiarizing themselves with the tech manuals.

      Meanwhile you say "I fail to see the logic of how this would help the local automotive techs"....

    2. Re:Typical politicians by xutopia · · Score: 1

      Well in a perfect world she would be right! The town would spend a fraction of what they saved to hire a few full time developers to fix bugs in OpenOffice! :)

  114. Never understood MS math and TCO by Hamster+Lover · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Microsoft had, until recently, spoke of Linux and threw around a lot of numbers and FUD about the total cost of ownership with Linux and how Microsoft was so much cheaper. So, if Microsoft is that much better why offer a discount at all? I realize that MS no longer makes this claim, but what does it say about a product that to sell it must be discounted by nearly all its selling value? It's a case of paying 10% now and 100% later when licensing expires or upgrades are required and then required again and again.

    This attempt by Ballmer to sell its software smacks of desperation.

  115. Re:Can't be... by lowieken · · Score: 1

    Great job, Munich. I know OpenOffice has it's share of problems (it really isn't all that compatible with Word documents)
    It's MS Word that isn't an Open Standard, not OpenOffice that isn't compatible with MS Office.

  116. What about Mexico City? by Vainglorious+Coward · · Score: 3, Informative
    Munich will be the first city with over 1 Million inhabitants that is run by Linux

    I would have thought Mexico City has a stronger claim to this title.

    --
    My next sig will be ready soon, but subscribers can beat the rush
    1. Re:What about Mexico City? by Old+Wolf · · Score: 2, Funny

      Make that 1 million non-destitute inhabitants

  117. Deutschlandlied by Qbertino · · Score: 1

    The first two verses of the german national anthem actually are illegal in germany. Singing or reciting them in public is an actuall criminal offense(!!).
    The one line you refer to "Deutschland, Deutschland über alles" (Germany, germany over everything...) is the first in the song. It was well and purposefully abused by the Nazis to express supriority of the german 'Übermensch' and his realm ("Reich"). Thus the somewhat rigid and humorless approach of the german authorities, and germans in general, with this issue.

    The actuall meaning comes from a much earlier date, where the nation of germany as a union of a bazillion small shires and earldoms was to be formed and the anthems composer (his name evades me just now...) wanted to express his notion and emphasise on the formation of the nation of germany. 'Germany, germany over everthing' ("including petty interrests of local lords").
    Another interressting example of how goodwill and meaning can be abused.
    Anyway, don't get caught singing the first two verses of the Deutschlandlied in germany, we'll give you a hard time. :-)
    The third verse is perfectly ok, though, and sung at any official occasion (International Soccer match, for instance):

    Einigkeit und Recht und Freiheit
    Für das deutsche Vaterland
    Danach lasst uns alle streben
    Brüderlich mit Herz und Hand
    Einigkeit und Recht und Freiheit
    Sind des glückes Unterpfand
    Blüh' im glanze dieses Glückes
    Blühe deutsches Vaterland.

    This verse is also the one best reflecting the actuall initial intention of the german national anthem and offers no chance of Nazi-misinterpretation.

    --
    We suffer more in our imagination than in reality. - Seneca
    1. Re:Deutschlandlied by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      People in Germany don't really care that much if you sing the first verse. Most just smile and giggle. There are of course the usual losers who think that they get paid somehow to be uber-politically correct.

    2. Re:Deutschlandlied by softwarekalteis · · Score: 1

      You are wrong here.

      Most people (apart from a few stupid and undereducated teenagers) will be quite offended if they would hear you sing the first verse.

      I don't know in which company you were when you did this but I can definitely tell you that it was certainly not the best.

      And by the way: I am German.

  118. German press is running with this one by Nice2Cats · · Score: 3, Interesting
    For those of you who need the Fish to read German, let it be noted that this story is spreading fast in the German media, having been quickly picked up by none other than Der Spiegel, Germany's counterpart to Time and Newsweek rolled into one. If nothing else, this is a big publicity win for Tux.

    1. Re:German press is running with this one by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      TRANSLATION FOLLOWS . . .

      It is official; Netcraft now confirms: *BSD is dying

      One more crippling bombshell hit the already beleaguered *BSD community when IDC confirmed that *BSD market share has dropped yet again, now down to less than a fraction of 1 percent of all servers. Coming on the heels of a recent Netcraft survey which plainly states that *BSD has lost more market share, this news serves to reinforce what we've known all along. *BSD is collapsing in complete disarray, as fittingly exemplified by failing dead last in the recent Sys Admin comprehensive networking test.

      You don't need to be a Kreskin to predict *BSD's future. The hand writing is on the wall: *BSD faces a bleak future. In fact there won't be any future at all for *BSD because *BSD is dying. Things are looking very bad for *BSD. As many of us are already aware, *BSD continues to lose market share. Red ink flows like a river of blood.

      FreeBSD is the most endangered of them all, having lost 93% of its core developers. The sudden and unpleasant departures of long time FreeBSD developers Jordan Hubbard and Mike Smith only serve to underscore the point more clearly. There can no longer be any doubt: FreeBSD is dying.

      Let's keep to the facts and look at the numbers.

      OpenBSD leader Theo states that there are 7000 users of OpenBSD. How many users of NetBSD are there? Let's see. The number of OpenBSD versus NetBSD posts on Usenet is roughly in ratio of 5 to 1. Therefore there are about 7000/5 = 1400 NetBSD users. BSD/OS posts on Usenet are about half of the volume of NetBSD posts. Therefore there are about 700 users of BSD/OS. A recent article put FreeBSD at about 80 percent of the *BSD market. Therefore there are (7000+1400+700)*4 = 36400 FreeBSD users. This is consistent with the number of FreeBSD Usenet posts.

      Due to the troubles of Walnut Creek, abysmal sales and so on, FreeBSD went out of business and was taken over by BSDI who sell another troubled OS. Now BSDI is also dead, its corpse turned over to yet another charnel house.

      All major surveys show that *BSD has steadily declined in market share. *BSD is very sick and its long term survival prospects are very dim. If *BSD is to survive at all it will be among OS dilettante dabblers. *BSD continues to decay. Nothing short of a miracle could save it at this point in time. For all practical purposes, *BSD is dead.

      Fact: *BSD is dying

  119. Re: Right headline! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Germans throughout society can very well differentiate between a nations gouverment and a software vendor.
    Your headline is missleading when you look at it that way.


    But what happens if somebody from government is 'asking' somebody from software production to 'adapt' a piece of software for 'special' needs? Do you think the guy from software production would decline that 'suggestion'? Especially if 'homeland security' is involved?

    The problem is that attitude of US administration and attitude of Microsoft seem to have a lot of aspects in common. Looks as if vassal countries are switching into 'freedom fries' mode.

  120. Der Spiegel has 15% rebate, not 90% by Nice2Cats · · Score: 1

    I'll second that one: In fact, an older article by Der Spiegel on this has the rebate at 15 percent and made fun of the ruling Socialist party in Munich for being that easy to buy out. Their title on the 21th of May: Microsoft kauft München -- "Microsoft buys Munich". Der Spiegel is the 600 pound -- uh, make that the 300 kilogram gorilla in the German press. I wouldn't be one bit surprised if this sort of reporting didn't change a few politicians' minds.

    1. Re:Der Spiegel has 15% rebate, not 90% by kris · · Score: 1

      Also, Bavaria is the home county of SuSE, the makers of SuSE linux.

      Can you imagine what would happen if some politician in bavaria would drive up to the parliament while NOT sitting in a BMW? Similar situation here with the software, I presume.

  121. Another Reason Microsoft Did This -- Developers by Travis+Fisher · · Score: 1
    I've seen several reasons cited above why Microsoft works so hard to keep clients like the Munich government:
    • Like a crack dealer -- willing to give things cheap now to get you hooked
    • They don't want the PR black eye of being rated below Linux
    • Governments set standards for things like documents that are used by everyone
    Here's another reason: open source users are (often) developers, causing a snowball effect in the quality of the product.

    Figure 14,000 computers at maybe 100 computers per competent sysadmin. That gives 140 new jobs to Linux sysadmins. Figure maybe one in ten Linux administrators will contribute to coding/bug fixing/documenting products. Poof -- 14 new developers. Not to mention all the other admins and users contributing general knowledge.

    So what does huge Microsoft fear from a few more coders? The thing about the free software movement is that it has a history of producing Davids to the industries Goliaths.

    1. Re:Another Reason Microsoft Did This -- Developers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You mean "Developers, developers, developers, developers..." ...right?

  122. Linux v. Windows by SphynxSR · · Score: 1

    I can see it now. Linux is run in the government = Government won't colapse Windows is run in BMW cars = Buy another car. scary. Smart move on that government.

    --

    I don't suffer from insanity, I enjoy every minute of it.
  123. seen shattered in a bar. by twitter · · Score: 1
    After the deal was lost, he was seen crying in his beer at the Hofbrau. It was hard to make out what he was saying, none of it was coherent but some fragments are reproduced here:

    More beeer, Shot-zeee! [this might have been an attempt at German, but could have just been a drink order.]

    Damn communists, bolshovicks! I should have known ...

    The GPL is the natural enemy of Microsoft and must be destroyed. [A few other tourists nodded their heads at this, but most had no idea what he was talking about.]

    We shall fight them in the air, on the sea, on land and in the streets and we shall never, ever surrender. [This cleared his table and several others.]

    Monkeydance, I'll get those bastards and make them pay. Where's my camera? [The police were called, ruining everone else's night. No camera was found.]

    On his cellphone, "sell, sell, sell, damnit!"


    Evidently, his last thought was the stongest.

    --

    Friends don't help friends install M$ junk.

  124. First Iraq, now this! by TheLastUser · · Score: 1

    Oh those snooty Europeans with their stinky cheeses and assorted languages. Why can't they just play ball and buy our nice software?

    1. Re:First Iraq, now this! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So, we are now member of the axis of evil ?

      But look, Munich is going to buy the linux stuff from ibm (perhaps with some suse help)... so you get your tax share.

  125. perfect clients. by twitter · · Score: 1
    As an aside, we use Star Office at work on about half the Windows machines, but the people using it do seem to be envious of the staff with MS Office installed. Problems with printing multi-page spreadsheets/images, problems opening files etc, and lack of speed seem the biggest problems.

    Ugh, you know that the underlying OS is the problem. Those machines would be great clients. Just get one nice little machine for documents and load it with Star or Open Office. Ohhh, imagine raid and easy find/tar based backups. Star Office runs OK on Woody if you don't want to take much of your work time maintaining a Gentoo box. Printing works great with CUPS/KDE. You could samba share out the document directories to those poor devils left running windoze, with it's latency and crash problems. The clients could have it through ssh X forwarding, and I promise the clients can be made faster than windblows.

    --

    Friends don't help friends install M$ junk.

    1. Re:perfect clients. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's nice. Your nickname still reminds me of the dying spasm of a retarded child.
      Do you have turret's? That would make the visualization much better.

  126. Anti-MS? Get real. by fygment · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Helloooo. This is just a "Buy Deutschland" kind of thing. So they buy SUSE and SUSE support and use an OSS office product. Call me skeptical but if it doesn't work out:

    a) MS won't cut them any slack when they want to return to the fold so they'll be worse off than before; AND

    b) the anti-OSS publicity will relegate future OSS to ... well where it is now but with even less hope of being mainstream.

    Gotta love this forum though. All this pro-OSS sentiment and happiness about this decision could be heart-warming. But whenever there's a post about how OSS doesn't live up to commercial standards, the poster gets flamed with comments about how OSS is written as expression _not_ to satisfy the "public". So a municipality contemplating a similar decision will have to go with a smaller commercial product (which may not necessarily be around in the long term) or it will have to put up with a hodge-podge of substandard OSS apps worked on, in some cases, by people who don't care about the non-geek user.

    Really, OSS is fine in academia but for the administrative needs of a governing body !?

    A ballsy move by Munich's politicos ... is there an election due soon?

    --
    "Consensus" in science is _always_ a political construct.
    1. Re:Anti-MS? Get real. by sloanster · · Score: 1

      > Really, OSS is fine in academia but for the
      > administrative needs of a governing body !?

      Wow, there seem to be so many ms shills here today, this must be killing microsoft...

      IBM, Oracle and SAP will be happy to explain to you about open source - oh, and welcome to the real world!

    2. Re:Anti-MS? Get real. by that+_evil+_gleek · · Score: 1

      Gee, couldn't Germany just employ a couple dozen programmers and have them make any improvements that were necessary? If they are necessary? Is ever wise to be that dependent on anyone? I'd say any goverment wants multipler suppliers for anything mission critical, and if not they want it themselves, wars have have started over supply problems...
      *laugh* World War III starts when Europe invades Redmond to ensure security updates are done in a timely manner ***
      Seriously, long before there was and independent software industry, companies that used computers, wrote their own software.. sometimes their app ran on the baremetal, meaning they didn't have an OS, sometimes they made a system so big it was basically its own OS....
      Anyway, opensource puts power in company and goverment computing departments,
      and frees them from being dependent on only 1 company for solutions.

    3. Re:Anti-MS? Get real. by NullProg · · Score: 1

      Really, OSS is fine in academia but for the administrative needs of a governing body !?

      I think the city of Largo, Florida might have something to say about that :)

      Enjoy,

      --
      It's just the normal noises in here.
  127. wait some more. by twitter · · Score: 1
    Bet he knew it was going to break this way weeks ago. Insider trading anyone?

    Wanna bet there's more to come?

    --

    Friends don't help friends install M$ junk.

    1. Re:wait some more. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, dumb ass.

      Man I really gave my girlfriend some good lovin in her twitter last night.

  128. If he did this, the SEC could come down on him by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That's insider trading. You can't do that. You can go to prison for it in the United States and most other civilized countries in the world.

    1. Re:If he did this, the SEC could come down on him by Daniel+Phillips · · Score: 1

      That's insider trading. You can't do that. You can go to prison for it in the United States and most other civilized countries in the world.

      Yes, well, in theory that's true, but remember which administration is running the country.

      If you want to see a nice example of insider trading, look at the movement of SCOX in the three weeks *before* the suit was launched against IBM. You might want to compare SCOX against other technology stocks as well, which were mostly headed the other way.

      --
      Have you got your LWN subscription yet?
  129. Ugh! Floppies are bad! by he-sk · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    I don't even remember using them anymore. CD-RWs replace them perfectly, and LAN connectivity even more so.

    --
    Free Manning, jail Obama.
  130. Re:getting the text out by macjohn · · Score: 1

    You might be able to get the text out in your example, but try it on a long document that's been edited a lot. The text will be all over the place, because when you make an edit, it adds editing info to the document instead of changing the original text.

    --
    --Hi. I'm in Portland and it's raining. This appears to be a permanent condition.
  131. doesn't sound so bad ... by timothy · · Score: 1

    If I were to draw up a map of all the things I'd like my computer to be able to easily do (*easily* that is, since most of these are possible, just not as easy to achieve as they should be), I don't think any available OS would score a 6/10 or even a 5/10, and not for want of trying -- just because human desires are for practical purposes infinite.

    I'd like a computer to:

    - work seamlessly (open, edit, save, convert format) with all my current documents
    - feature well-designed apps for recording and editing video and audio
    - come with an actually useful, contextually flexible help system -- man pages *and* For Dummies -style tutorials, and a searchable index linking to sections of both
    - never need the help system, since it's so intuitive
    - run on sunlight (or moonlight)
    - feature perfect voice recognition and synthesis
    - autodetect, configure, and if necessary, create new drivers on the fly for all my current and future peripherals
    - know what *I* want when I click a certain spot on a window.
    - (etc, etc)

    That the Munich gov't drew up high standards is smart on their part, recognizes the imperfection of software (as part of the imperfection of all human systems) in meeting all desires.

    A high standard partially met is more useful long-term than a low-standard which would have been met by a warehouse of C64s :)

    timothy

    --
    jrnl: http://tinyurl.com/c2l8yr / foes: http://tinyurl.com/ckjno5
    1. Re:doesn't sound so bad ... by Gldm · · Score: 1

      Some of these are doable and I wish someone would do them. I would but I think it's futile to try and introduce a new OS at this point without some major support.

      - work seamlessly (open, edit, save, convert format) with all my current documents

      This should be doable. Why isn't it being done? Is it really so hard to standardize a format for tasks that have been mostly unchanged for a decade, like word processing and spreadsheets?

      - feature well-designed apps for recording and editing video and audio

      This should be done. Apple is leading the way here and nobody else is even looking in their direction let alone following. Windows is having API problems because DirectShow is unsuited for certain tasks (I hear video editing is a major problem with it), and the only alternative is Video for Windows, which is so obsolete the last book still in print was written in 1994. On linux, the problem seems to be more of getting all the hardware out there to work with things. There needs to be a bigger push towards a standard multimedia api that's more integrated to the system.

      - come with an actually useful, contextually flexible help system -- man pages *and* For Dummies -style tutorials, and a searchable index linking to sections of both

      This should also be doable but isn't being done. Part of the probem is feature creep sabotages this. Developers want to ship on time and they don't care about "trivial" things like documentation, and the documentation has to keep pace with all the new features. If people wrote decent documentation with their apps this might be doable, but the thinking here seems to be "If you can't figure out you need to fetch app2.3.2.1.beta-omicron.build4173.tar.gz and update your kernel to 2.2.1.3.alpha9, and then make -f -q -g97 -i23 -^& on your own you're a worthless n00b who needs to RTFM and nobody will help you cause it's obvious."

      - never need the help system, since it's so intuitive

      This is REALLY unlikely unless you keep the interface perfectly standard for a long long time. It's doable in the long term though, it's done for simple interfaces all the time, like games.

      - run on sunlight (or moonlight)

      Doable for low power systems. VIA Eden systems use what, 4W?

      - feature perfect voice recognition and synthesis

      Unlikely to be perfect, and I never saw what the big deal was about voice recognition. I'm much happier with a keyboard and mouse. Maybe for handheld systems.

      - autodetect, configure, and if necessary, create new drivers on the fly for all my current and future peripherals

      Umm no, it's unlikely this would be possible given there's no way of knowing what kind of devices there will be in the future. =)

      - know what *I* want when I click a certain spot on a window.

      I hear thought interfaces are making progress but this one's a long long way off. :P

      --

      Introducing the new Occam Fusion! Now with sqrt(-1) fewer blades!

  132. Shared Source often useless. by dmaxwell · · Score: 1

    Shared Source does not permit a participant to compile it and see if it makes the same binaries his install CD's have. This is the simplest integrity check if you want to answer the question "Is the this full and correct source to the binary we are using." I also don't believe that participants have access to the dev teams that created the source in question. Its basically nothing but a huge wodge of look-but-don't-touch.

    The most obnoxious Open Source licenses only allow project leaders to distribute modified code. Its not uncommon to distribute patch files which must be applied to a separately downloaded pristine source to make modified versions of things like djdns. Shared Source doesn't begin to aspire to even that level of utility. You can't patch it, verify binary identity, or reimplement it. At best, it can be used to answer specific questions about how a piece of software functions provided one believes it is the unabridged source to that software. I can't see it being useful for any sort of true code auditing and only of limited utility for code troubleshooting.

    1. Re:Shared Source often useless. by rainer_d · · Score: 1
      Shared Source does not permit a participant to compile it

      I've read an interview with some MS-rep that said that they are now offering "build-kits" so one can more-or-less build one's own release of W2K.
      I've got no source to back up this claim, though.

      and see if it makes the same binaries his install CD's have.

      You'd also need the source of the compiler anyway...

      Rainer

      --
      Windows 2000 - from the guys who brought us edlin
  133. How Goliath was slaughtered. by Lurleen_Lumpkin · · Score: 1

    The move was on; the horse had bolted; Around the world, the mob revolted. Then the news sites all reported How Goliath had been slaughtered. Microsoft is dead! Long live open source!

  134. Consider the Data. by ChrisS-99 · · Score: 1
    The point about proprietary formats, is "at what point does a format become a (de-facto) standard"!

    Initially MS (and others) provided import/export filters, hence it was possible to edit a document virtually irrespective of the original product used to create it. Once a threashold in terms of market share was reached, then compatibility with other products was quickly dropped.

    Lets face it, on the desktop, MS exploits its customers by levering its document formats. The migration from MS is not a fallout of poor quality office software. The sooner more customers stop themselves from being exploited, then the sooner MS will be forced to compete fairly or be forced from the office market.

    One day MS will either be forced once again to share standards, or if it doesn't, its own incompatible formats will work against it.

    MS has plenty of options for the long term:
    * Share standards and play ball with competitors
    * Create a Linux varient of Office
    * Stop screwing the customers

    Until MS is forced below its "de-facto standard" threashold, it will never take one of these options.

  135. Nice math by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Nice assumptions you're making.

    I've been happily using gnu/linux for over two years now. The benefits are NO crashes, unbelievable uptimes, and an incredible collection of software, just to name a few things. But I'll stop at that, because to the non-believers, this is preaching, and you've heard it all before.

    Let's go back to your math. A couple hundred bucks? That's a pipe dream. Your math is way off. I have two desktops, 4 server/desktops, and a laptop in my home, for two computer users. While I'm not a typical or average user, your heavily discounted $200 would cost me $1,400 for your software description, not counting the server applications I use. Either that, or I'm a thief, a pirate of the high seas, and should be jailed according to Jack Valenti and his cronies at the mpaa/riaa/bsa.

    You conveniently left out the fact that a home user can't copy the operating system or office application from microsoft to another computer. You have to buy a separate "license" for each computer.

    While I'm not the typical user, I'd say that a majority of users have at least one fairly new desktop, one laptop, and possibly an older desktop that they either 1. threw out, or 2. don't use, because the new software from microsoft doesn't run well on older, but still usable, hardware.

    And the previous paragraph also brings up another point. Was a hardware upgrade required to use the new software? Did you have to buy more memory to make the os/applications usable? Faster processor? Completely new computer?

    Factor in hardware upgrades, and your minimized $200 is much higher.

    I know small business owners who like office, and either purchased one copy of the os and the office suite and copied it to other computers, or they didn't even pay for the single copies. With product activation, that's all over now. So I know small business owners that are using older versions of windows and the office suite on some computers, and will never pay for legit copies for each computer. Is it going to cost them your $200 figure? Hardly.

    When faced with the option of even just paying your $200 per computer, on multiple desktops, or paying nothing/one copy of gnu/linux and openoffice.org, for all their desktops and bringing their companies back into legal land, guess which path they choose?

    I know small business owners still using 486 computers, 386 computers, old versions of wordperfect, and several companies that even have the old 8088/8086 boxes running dos/basica for some light calculating work, because they won't pay the prices microsoft demands for their software, and they are getting by with what they have.

    I'm no expert, or sys admin, or anything like that, but I'll be setting up a network for each of these companies running a file/print server on gnu/linux, and the older computers will be used as terminals to log into the file server that will also be running openoffice.

    What's the cost for the companies? I don't do it for a living, so they're getting my help and advice for free. They already have some networking equipment and knowing their requirements, all they'll need is one or a few small switches, some ethernet wire, and cards in one case, and in another case, they have cards (the owner wastes time on ebay regularly, so he picked up a lot of cards in one auction), so he'll need wiring and a switch. Besides that, the cost of one distribution if they want documentation, or a copy of my disks if they don't want dead tree manuals.

    So for $200 in minor hardware purchases, these companies will be equiping a couple dozen computers with gnu/linux, and will be amazed with what they get. Instead of spending your minimal $200 x 24 = $4800. And that's not including the file server software for each company. And also, I know what they'll be using for their file servers. They in no way would be able to run windows 2000 or xp as a file server on their boxes. They would have to spend, what, another $800 or $1,000 a piece for a minimal file serv

    1. Re:Nice math by zakezuke · · Score: 1

      Well, if you were actually reading into it, you'd note that that is the going rate for a single copy of windows oem edition, and ms office SB... which is typical. And yes, a user would have to multiply it among additional machines, and I made sure to point out that my price quotes were comming from a local shop.

      But yea, just because you don't want Microsoft Office for linux doesn't mean other people wouldn't enjoy it. I have a copy of Open Office, I sorta lump star office / open office.

      And as far as not having a fundamental misunderstanding GNU/linux users... I believe Linus him self has been quoted as being a user of Microsoft office. And what of this Wine project? I think you are stereotyping GNU/linux basicly lumping them some sorta group. I use linux because I quite like it. I like apache, I love samba, sendmail is adquate, and I love having spiffy commandline support. My only reason for keeping a win box around is for Office. I prefer word over open office, and if I had a linux version of microsoft office, I really wouldn't have any reason to run windows.

      Not every Linux user is fundimentaly anti-microsoft, though at times it seems like the vast majority of them are. I my self respect some of the decent products they produce, and dislike the (MSN) crap they produce. They have produced alot of crap, esp ms-basic for the amiga that was generally a bugridden piece of filth. I find that this attutide of "gnu/linux community" to be one of the stifling factors why linux isn't more often accepted for what it is, a *viable platorm* rather then some exclusive club. This is the primary reason why I'd support the idea of Office for linux, because it would validate linux as a viable solution to a great many people. And hell, microsoft might make a buck too, which being a business is what they are in the business for.

      In the case of MS Office, sure it's a propriority standard, but one which is in such common use that it's become the de facto standard like it or not. If you support *choice* you wouldn't protest any user who makes the choice to use a product you don't like.

      And you can protest all you like, but *I* would enjoy seeing some power applications for linux. Like Photoshop, which was very spiffy under Solaris BTW. While you might dislike adobe, you have to admit it's is a power application.

      --
      There is no sanctuary. There is no sanctuary. SHUT UP! There is no shut up. There is no shut up.
    2. Re:Nice math by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The server business at MS makes >$1 B per year. that's not nothing.

    3. Re:Nice math by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I have never found any graphic that I haven't been able to create or manipulate using gimp that I have on photoshop.

      Then again, I used to make only part of my living with graphics creation/manipulation. I'm sure just as people with favorite operating systems and car brands, people will live or die by photoshop or gimp.

      Gimp has advanced features. And plugins. It just take time to learn the application, just like photoshop. Those that don't take the time to learn the application throw in the towel and go back to their photoshop immediately, never giving gimp half the chance. And the choice of operating system/other apps should not be dependent on one application unless that one application is the money maker (what percentage of the population is a graphic artist/related field?), or unless they are carrying a bias that they don't want to get rid of.

      As for word, you can run microsoft word on gnu/linux using suse's desktop linux release. Suse's gnu/linux distribution (the regular 7.3, 8.0, 8.1, 8.2 professional versions) is an excellent distro, I use them for my desktops and servers, and from reading the reviews and knowing someone who purchased it, the suse desktop linux release is excellent also.

      Star Office and Open Office are not the same, although they share code. And Star Office isn't free, though it's much cheaper than ms's word/office.

      What of wine? Don't know. Never had to use it yet, and I suspect with the current development momentum, and with all my application needs being met by gnu/linux, I'll never have a reason to look at it. But apparently you have a need for it, so you can look at suse's implementation of wine (which is what gets word to work on their distro), with their further development of wine, as I mentioned above.

      As for power apps, let me know how much the proprietary version of snort costs, vs. the open source version, and which has better functionality, etc. Should I go through a complete list? Did you add the cost of photoshop to your lowball price? With a more realistic price for the oem version of windows, the small business retail version of office, and the retail cost of photoshop, we're now talking a thousand bucks, right? Per computer. Right?

      Power app? Photoshop on windows? Take a look at slashdot today. Load Knoppix's cd with the openMosix kernel patch on a handful of my computers, as I'll be doing shortly, and my installation of gimp will rip to pieces in rendering time for any graphic you want to compare on photoshop. But of course, if you must use photoshop, you now have no excuse to not use it on gnu/linux.

      Power app? Your photoshop on windows on one box, vs. my gimp on an openMosix/linux/debian cluster. Yeah. Now that's a power app! Your cost, about a $thousand$. My cost? An iso image download, and wiping a cdrw for each computer. And should I mention uptimes? In the hundreds of days for my servers, and approaching that for my desktops, only because I decide to shut them off. More specifically, if it wasn't for a reboot required for some reason by a video driver, I'd have been running my servers for close to two years without a reboot. I've never, I repeat, never, had a gnu/linux server or desktop crash on me. Minor application crashes, for less mature or beta applications, but you learn to get around them or fix them (ark still crashes on occasion, the find/properties on konqueror as a file server ocassionally chokes on multi gig file sizing, but I use the command line, which is better and faster, etc.). I don't recall EVER losing data on gnu/linux, except for hard disk crashes (raid took care of that).

      How much does a proprietary windows clustering application running photoshop cost? Per box? For all necessary licenses included? Can you even do that without advanced server and other windows server/network

    4. Re:Nice math by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0



      Yes. You must have missed my "besides" sentence. Besides the os and office suite, everything else loses money.

      And it looks like ms agrees with my top post, and my second response where I mentioned suse's desktop office release. Because news is out today that ms is cutting their office suite by something like 15% to smaller customers. And it looks like ms is still making their office suite available for theft, as they don't check the purchasers of the "scholastic" version of their office suite, to verify that they actually are educators or students (see first news.com.com link).

  136. Don't loose to linux by IpsissimusMarr · · Score: 1

    Doesn't this exemplify what we read in a recent article about an internal Microsoft memo saying "under no circumstances loose to linux"? Even if they had to give MS products away for free?

    --
    "Engineers do the work of man, Physicists do the work of God"
  137. What a shock - the Krauts want... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...to use their own software. (SuSE) You can trust that it won't be an American company that benefits from this decision.

    This is yet another small loss for the American economy. Another U.S. company is losing business overseas, and you fanboys continue your gleefull dance.

    Take a look at the trade deficeit, weakness of the dollar, and the number of IT jobs outsourced overseas this year, and then let me know how happy this kind of news makes you.

    1. Re:What a shock - the Krauts want... by sloanster · · Score: 1

      Yes, in the past it was customary for the microsoft pee cee fanboys to launch into yet another frenzied rendition of the monkey dance whenever microsoft drove yet another american company into bankruptcy -

      But no, I don't think the ms fanboys are doing the monkey dance over this one...

  138. Even better for OpenOffice by carlmenezes · · Score: 1

    Linux almost grows by itself. This is nothing short of absolutely sound decision on Munich's part. However, who would benefit the most from this would be OpenOffice. Like the Linux wave, I think Munich might have just given OpenOffice enough energy to start it's own wave.

    Now corporations have a GOOD reason to use OpenOffice. This is going to mean a huge increase in OpenOffice usage and, if things go well, the eventual shift to an open office standard.

    This could not have come at a better time.

    --
    Find a job you like and you will never work a day in your life.
  139. Re:to the editors of slashdot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Headlines are usually meant to be bombastic.

    Bullshit. Headlines are meant to be accurate and truthful summaries of the stories they lead. If a headline isn't accurate or truthful--this one was neither--then it's broken.

    What would *you* do if you were in their place?

    Buy Macs.

  140. True friends will tell you if you're screwing up. by Chuck+Chunder · · Score: 1

    You need those checks more than you need yes men.

    I'm a citizen of two out of the three countries that entered Iraq (Australia and England) and I think the war was probably necessary and ultimatly carried out as well as a war can be.

    But for me the scariest thing seems to have been the ease with which America appeared to fall into a sea of groupthink and propaganda in the name of patriotism. One single terrorist act, carried out by a small number of men, seems to have so greatly shifted America's perspective that I fear what could happen if something truly devastating happened.

    --
    Boffoonery - downloadable Comedy Benefit for Bletchley Park
  141. Steve Ballmer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Would you buy a used car from this man?

    HELL NO!

    Then, why would anyone even think about buying software from him?

  142. Unix gets a 'D'. Windows gets an 'F'. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Makes sense.

  143. Re:Ironically, the German word for "innovation" is by daniel23 · · Score: 1


    It didn't help him in Munich, I guess he failde to master the bavarian intonation.

    ~dp

    --
    605413? Yes, it's a prime.
  144. Ok ... think a minute ... by fygment · · Score: 1

    a) IBM, Oracle, SAP have in their employ _literally_ thousands of tech oriented employees incl. coders (They're tech/software giants for ----sakes!);

    b) IBM, Oracle, SAP have budgets comparable to many small nations let alone a large city;

    c) IBM, Oracle, SAP answer to a bottom line, with their _own_ money i.e. _not_ a taxpayer's;

    d) IBM, Oracle, SAP as businesses are necessarily oriented towards a certain amount of risk and are organized to manage it; and

    e) Neither IBM, Oracle, or SAP run their business on OSS.

    No governing body I know has those resources (not even USofA). Nor could they afford them without significant expense. Governance isn't business ... welcome to the real world.

    --
    "Consensus" in science is _always_ a political construct.
    1. Re:Ok ... think a minute ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      BZZZZZTTTTTTT wrong!! Oracle most certainly does run it's back end on linux. Go back to your MS FUD guru and get some better arguments.

  145. Thnx Mr Bush what would we do without you.. by -=SteelRat=- · · Score: 0, Troll

    Many thanks to Dubia and Co. without their 1333t diplomatic slizzz where would Germany be now.

    Steel

    --
    There are none as blind as those who will not see.. (unknown)
  146. Re:True friends will tell you if you're screwing u by MAurelius · · Score: 1
    The Ozzies stood up with the US to Saddam, and I agree, it had to be done. I am heartened we did it with help from down under.

    As regards your nationality and your comment on groupthink: tell us about 'groupthink' among the English during the Blitz. They were all like-minded because the provocation and the argument for fighting back were compelling.

    Likewise, all of America changed because we recognize a)this is war and b)if we do nothing or just send in a few token cruise missiles the next attack will be much worse.

    Like the English during the Blitz, we Americans recognize a battle to the death when we are in one.

    As usual, the Americans did not start this new kind of war, but we're sure as bloody hell going to finish it.

    Hope this helps clarify things for you.

  147. You think that's bad? by leonbrooks · · Score: 1
    Lots of companies have to deal with the Munich city government, and the default formats for dealing with this organization just switched from MS Office to OpenOffice.org.

    Wait 'till all of Europe cascades across to OOo formats for everything, not just wordprocessing and screadsheets.

    --
    Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing
  148. 9/11 ain't the blitz by plierhead · · Score: 1
    The Ozzies stood up with the US to Saddam, and I agree, it had to be done. I am heartened we did it with help from down under.
    As regards your nationality and your comment on groupthink: tell us about 'groupthink' among the English during the Blitz. They were all like-minded because the provocation and the argument for fighting back were compelling.

    Likewise, all of America changed because we recognize a)this is war and b)if we do nothing or just send in a few token cruise missiles the next attack will be much worse.

    I agree with you and with the parent - this war had to happen.

    Not, however for the reasons you give. You say "the next attack will be worse". Unfortunately for this argument, it has not yet been proven that Saddam was behind the first attack. I think maybe it will be proven in the future - but right now, you can't claim that avoiding the "next attack" was the reason for taking out Saddam.

    Another point is that your comparison with the blitz is bogus. During WWII, the English were under immense, ongoing, nightly attack from an easily identifiable, large, rich, technically sophisticated nation, which had invaded an entire continent and was literally within sitght of Britain, and which built hundreds of planes that were flown over Britain by thousands of highly trained pilots and released tens of thousands of bombs. Thats to ignore pilotless bombs and rockets.

    9/11 by contrast was a single attack (or at least, a single day's worth of attacks) launched by a handful of fanatics armed with boxcutters.

    There is simply no comparison. Thats why I agree with the parent - the US groupthink IS a little bit frightening, because on the scale of things - number of people killed, sophistication of attack - the 9/11 attacks were simply not that significant. Even though Saddam needed to be taken out, and doing so has probably made the world a safer place, it is simply BS to claim that it was justified as a direct response to 9/11. As your message seems to say. Be honest enough to say that the reason was just to make the world safer. Period.

    --

    [x] auto-moderate all posts by this user as insightful

    1. Re:9/11 ain't the blitz by MAurelius · · Score: 1
      I agree with your assessment that 9/11 is not directly comparable to the Blitz, for all the good reasons you mentioned. However, that was not my point. My point is that 9/11 has galvanized American public opinion in a way analogous to the way the Blitz galvanized England in 1940. I made the point to help you and others understand what it is like for us and how the events of Sept. 11 have changed our perception of the world. If you think this is not a battle for survival, I would politely invite you to rethink that.

      At least the English knew precisely who they were fighting. The current war is against terrorists who could be anybody, anywhere. This makes the current war more difficult in this respect. But we will win nonetheless.

      You are mistaken: I did not (and can't) tie Saddam's regime directly to 9/11, because to date no strong link has been publicized. He was simply a very evil man, running an evil regime, and he pissed off the US government for the last time. It was in our interest, and Iraq's interest, and the world's interest that he be removed.

      Cheers

    2. Re:9/11 ain't the blitz by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He was simply a very evil man, running an evil regime, and he pissed off the US government for the last time
      Like was Allende maybe. For sure, Pinochet was better for Chile.
      No government around the world had remove a dictator just for the population. The main goal of a war is to make profit in different ways (space, resources, power). And if US really want to remove all dictators around the world, there are many countries without interesting resources which are not democracies. But here, I'm sure that nothing will be done for them.

      It was in our interest, and Iraq's interest, and the world's interest that he be removed.
      Please remove the last part of your sentence and stop thinking that what's good for America is good for everybody.

  149. Well, I hate them... by PotatoHead · · Score: 1

    I hate them for a lot of reasons. All of which have been posted before.

    I would question the win32 user base at /.

    #2 is one of the primary reasons for said hate. Microsoft has done more to harm innovation than any other company has. Though SCO is a wannabe ;-)

    #3 I agree with this.

  150. Munich is the biggest hearted city by Crass+Spektakel · · Score: 1

    Munich is the biggest hearted city of germany, therefore its nickname "Stadt mit Herz", but not even close to the biggest city in germany which should be the Ruhr-Area or Berlin.

    From what I guess the sozies just tried to test how far Microsoft may go. As Microsoft went very far they knew Linux would be a great choice :-)=

    Actually Microsofts desperate attempt in avoiding Linux was Microsofts Doom. There is only one thing which might backfire: Microsoft also has a big department in munich with lots of workers, so lets hope they dont pack up and run to some Microsoft-Village next door.

    --
    "Life is short and in most cases it ends with death." Sir Sinclair
  151. WOW!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    14 Workstations??? This is huge!

  152. Wrong analogy by SaDan · · Score: 1

    I think you need to compare what the wackos did on 9/11 to Pearl Harbor, not the Blitz in England.

    We were attacked on our own soil. The end result has been the same in both situations.

  153. Linux is not perfect, it's different by ledestin · · Score: 1
    I also have found that windows is easier to configure. There is a GUI for changing windows resolutions, adjusting monitor settings. Windows related configuration options are available in one centralized control panel. I have found the configuration is easier in Windows. I bought a new Wireless card a few days ago. I just plugged it in, and Windows went to windowsupdate.microsoft.com, downloaded the driver and installed it. Then it found the correct channel, and automatically configured my internet connection, and notified me with a little balloon. Can you please explain the simliar steps to use the internet with a wireless card via the distribution you use? How about SMB Sharing? I just click on "My Network Places" and a list of all the available computers pops up. How about just using a floppy. If I put in an unformatted floppy and click on its icon in Windows, Windows will ask me if I want to format it. In Linux, you have to mount devices. And yes I have used automount, and it did not work properly. And please feel free to respond with "you aren't smart enough for linux", which really means "i refuse to admit windows can do something better."

    You say familliar things. I have experienced them myself. But I think now that Debian is overall better than w2k (dual-boot). Things are done differently with Debian, you have to know what you're doing. If you don't, you RTFM, ask people around. After the "training", you become more proficient, you've learned something useful.

    Point in case:
    I've learned to use apt-get, now installing (and searching for needed things) is really easy, not as it is considered easy on Windows. Apt-get really makes difference for me. Yesterday, I have configured Sawfish, mapped certain keys to increase/decrease volume (aumix) and next/play/pause/prev (xmms). That makes listening to music easier.

    I don't use windows explorer equivalents (they're buggy I agree) on Linux, I use bash, and I recently migrated from jEdit to VIM.

    If you don't want to know how things work, don't want to go "native", you're better off with a system that doesn't require you to know how things work. If you don't work much with computers that should be fine for you. If you do, however, spend much time with something, it is more pleasure to have deep understanding of it. Sometimes you'll have to do something you don't know much about. If you click your way through or find and execute some obscure steps to resolve the problem, you're exacly where you were before, no knowledge gained. Next time this problem arises, you do similar steps...

    OTOH, my bash & vim configs don't need to be re-clicked through on a new machine, I have copied them from my work machine to home one. You get the picture.

    1. Re:Linux is not perfect, it's different by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you don't want to know how things work, don't want to go "native", you're better off with a system that doesn't require you to know how things work

      Yeah, I know.. Apparently I'm a rare breed of geek - I don't really care for tinkering and setting things up- but I love programming. My OS and software better work when I set it up - I'm not going to be debugging someone else's code after I just spent 3 hours debugging my own.

      I agree that apt-get is an improvement, not because i have used it, but because I have an equivalent (ports- FreeBSD). Its nice to be able to ssh to my other computer and just name the program I want to install. But I think its also hard to say that is an advantage of Linux, because many distros have package managers that are not as up to snuff as apt and Gentoo's portage, in terms of dependency managament and available software.

      I do use FreeBSD daily, but it does sometimes feel like I'm wasting my time. What are my gains of memorizing the command syntax for Emacs or Vi. Not much, most applications use their own shortcuts. I guess its just a personal preference really - I don't like mucking with XFree86Config to get a config that never works "just right".

      I do think FreeBSD and all of the Linux distributions beat Windows 9x hands-down, but I can't say the same thing about XP. CD burning works without any fiddling, sound, network card, USB flashcard reader (how else can I share those naked pics of my girlfriend? :), etc etc.

    2. Re:Linux is not perfect, it's different by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      For me, it usually lists almost everything as "unknown graphics card", or simply "unknown device", meaning I need to boot to Linux to get online to download the drivers (windows cannot get online without drivers). On Linux, drivers for most hardware is included on the install CD, with windows, you need to download it (unless using that damn image-CD, that will re-image the computer in it's own liking, and install a lot of crap software that I don't want, and which conflicts with just about everything).

  154. Re:Sometimes it backfires by Technician · · Score: 1

    Sometimes the free razors could be used for something else and users never subscribe to get the blades. Two examples come to mind. Free Cue Cats from Digital Convergance, and (dicounted) Microsoft's X-Box. Between all the mods availiable, the subscription to the original business plans are a little off.

    Digital Convergance is just about history as the users of the bar code readers didn't flock to the service so the advertising dollars (selling Cue Codes) dried up. Their website has an interesting note. If you have a Cue Cat, hang on to it. They have future plans for it. They still have hope for the blades end of the business. From their website:
    If you have a Cue Cat, save it. The patents and technology created by DigitalConvergence will again be available for business and consumer use.


    X-box is fighting mod chips which permit copied games to be played and using the console as something other than a game console. (Linux Box & media center)

    --
    The truth shall set you free!
  155. Re:True friends will tell you if you're screwing u by Chuck+Chunder · · Score: 1

    It is not a war and it's that sort of escalatory speech (amoung other things) which frightens me, especially when coming from someone who otherwise seems thoughtful. Most of us have never experienced one (and CNN doesn't count) but actual war is something very different to this.

    Comparisons between the Blitz and September 11th are frankly absurd.

    That's not to suggest this isn't bad or plain evil. But it different to war and needs to be thought of as such if the problem is to solved intelligently. The response needs to be thoughful and practical, not emotional.

    --
    Boffoonery - downloadable Comedy Benefit for Bletchley Park
  156. The competitive price of ONE license by ghum · · Score: 1

    is zero.

    That is not communism. That is market economy, lesson 4.

    In perfect competition the price of ONE good is exactly as high as it's marginal costs.

    "marinal costs" = what does THE ADDITIONAL UNIT cost.

    And for all practical purposes: Changing "you get 2000 licenses of XXX" to "you get 2001 licenses o XXX" costs zero money units.

    Don't believe that "fixed cost distribution" bullshit. That is correct, but has nothing to do with market prices. In the short run, fixed costs are irrelevant for decisions, in the long run, there are no fixed costs.

  157. OpenOffice.org import filters for MS Office? when? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I was wondering what will happen if the OpenOffice.org file format becomes popular: will MS Office users start to request a OpenOffice.org format input filter ?
    If enough people complain to Microsoft, will Microsoft write such a filter ?
    Is it possibile for a thirdparty (commercial or nonprofit) to write such a input filter or are the input filters built in in Microsoft office without giving developers a way to add more filters ?
    I think this battle will become interesting.
    E.g. imagine some customers saying to Microsoft: "give me OpenOffice.org import filters or I'll migrate to OpenOffice.org 100's of PCs in my company".

  158. Given that English is his second language... by leonbrooks · · Score: 1

    ...I'd say that his intent was "Let's continue to fight together militant zealotry". I'm guessing he'd not be on the side of the Crusaders against Islam, nor on the side of the Atheists against everyone else in the French Revolution.

    The violence you see out of Islam is the fault of a relatively few idiots, not of Joe Average Muslim in the street. Joe has his own problems, but violent militancy generally isn't one of them. Another thing to remember is that like Christianity (and Atheism, Jainism, Bhuddism etc), there is Islam as she are written, Islam as she are preached, and Islam as she are done, and they are all different.

    Yanks, Poms, Brazilianos, Singaporeans, Chinese, Zimbabwians, Germans can all be stirred into violence by a relatively few energetic zealots. Race and religion have very little to do with it.

    --
    Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing
  159. Hijacking by leonbrooks · · Score: 1
    I don't recall any Islamic "terrorist" ever attacking Germany.

    Hijacking is an interesting indicator. Hijackers prefer American craft, because if they pick on (say) Israeli vehicles, they're dead - guaranteed.

    BTW - terrorist attacks - Germany cops one and another, and a German citizen is killed by hijackers, Germany fights hijackers and so on. They get their share, you just don't hear about it because you're not German.

    --
    Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing
    1. Re:Hijacking by petman · · Score: 1

      I checked the links you provided, and except for the third one, none of the others suggested that the attacks were done by Islamic militants, or anyone associated with any Islamic groups. Even in the third one, the German death was collateral damage, the attack was directed at the US.

      I agree, terrorism in general is bad, and I would not have minded if the grandparent AC poster had said "Let's continue to fight together terrorism ...", but there's no reason to insert the word islam there. Bad English is no excuse. Islam is a specific word. How could he have confused it for militant etc.?

      Anyway, we're getting offtopic here. Let's not waste time arguing about the posting of an AC who might or might not be German and might, for some reason, or might not, have some kind of grudge against Islam.

  160. This is not about Linux vs. Microsoft by ites · · Score: 2, Interesting
    Read between the lines. The only reason that Munich went with Linux/OSS is because IBM is backing it. If Microsoft were offering a 90% discount to try to keep their hooks in place, how much do you think IBM was offering to install _their_ hooks instead?

    It is a little naive to assume that a city government (or any large group) would switch to Linux simply because it is "better" or "cheaper". There is only one rule to understand politics and business: follow the money. In this case, and I believe it's the same in many "switches" to Linux, we are seeing Linux/OSS used as a trojan horse by interests that just happen to be competing with Microsoft.

    Personally I admire IBM for having seen in 1999 that Linux aand OSS was their best weapon against their biggest enemy, namely Microsoft. Remember, this is the company that thought OS/2 would beat Windows... It has taken them four years, but now it is starting to pay off.

    Expect IBM to downsize their Linux/OSS sales pitch once they have the formula working.

    --
    Sig for sale or rent. One previous user. Inquire within.
  161. Don't look so shocked... by troff · · Score: 1

    ... they turned down 90% rebates!? How could they!? ... 'cause this way they pay 0%...?

    (oh yeah, and all those other pesky things like stability, configurability, modifiability...).

  162. Keep cool ... by haraldm · · Score: 1

    Keep cool, folks. The final decision is going to take place tomorrow May 28. I've seen too many changes in the decision process lately to cheer to soon.

    --
    open (SIG, "</dev/zero"); $sig = <SIG>; close SIG;
  163. correction by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    munich, that needs to be corrected, is not the biggest/largest or whatever city of germany. counting from population it is no. 3 with roundabouts 1,3 mio. people living there, running after berlin (over 3 mio.) and hamburg (1,8 mio.).

    (it is correct however that munichs city government and also the government of bavaria, the federal country of which munich is the capital, are keen on dubbing their cozy little place the "technology capital" of whole germany. and actually they've got a good point in that.)

  164. German city sizes by DarkDust · · Score: 1

    Well, fortunately Munich is not Germany's biggest city. That's Berlin, with 3.5 million people, followed by Hamburg with about 1.7 million and then Munich with about 1.5 million...

  165. Capital of Canada... by pommiekiwifruit · · Score: 1

    Washington DC!

  166. Funnily enough by pommiekiwifruit · · Score: 1

    Microsoft released a version of flight simulator on 9th november 2001 in europe, with a double page poster saying it was coming out "09.11.01". At the time I thought, umm are they serious with that ad???

  167. Cool, I'm from Munich by lleo · · Score: 1

    Can I now scp my tax return to them?

  168. Re:Wow. The figures speak for themselves by solferino · · Score: 1

    Well, I don't know the exact breakdown, but I believe that it is a rather over-complex system, but which seems to work well...

    ...[Highly detailed answer]...

    ...Within each of these, the actual figures they come up with are fit to the appropriate maximum score through a sigmoidal squashing function,...

    ...[more highly detailed answer]...

    ...As I say, I don't really know the specifics, but that's more or less how it works.

    ~ ~ ~

    Tell me, have you ever noticed people chewing off their own arms in boredom when you do know the specifics? Or sinking in to a catatonic trance?

    No really, that was fascinating, and you have confirmed all my preconceptions about german people :)

  169. Overlooking the Obvious by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    An order of magnitude worse than Java? Dear God.

    The way you talk about it, .NET seems horrible and I'm glad I don't program in it. Isn't shared memory one of the core concepts of multithreding? Even kids' MMORPGs are capable of that. One would think this problem could be solved by basic locking and unlocking of shared data.

    It's just a shame you can't tell us what you're trying to DO with this thing.

  170. Developers, developers, developers, developers? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    n/m

  171. Exactly. by bcaulf · · Score: 1

    Microsoft's market cap is presently about $260 billion, down from a high of about $630 billion. About 17% of the company's stock is held by company executives; Gates alone holds about 10%. So the executives personally hold $44 billion in stock, down $62 billion from the stock's peak. If the stock were ever to reflect more modest (some might say realistic) prospects for future earnings, those executives stand to lose tens of billions more. And of course all the Microsoft millionaires and ex-millionaires in the company are presently less motivated to stay and could become more demotivated by future declines.

    Jason Earl has it right; Microsoft's $45 billion may be a handy thing to have but it is only a rounding error compared to the stock market losses the company has eaten, and the losses it could face.

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

      Although broadband can dramatically escalate fortunes, games habitually increase jobs. Kangaroos lessen markets nationally or provide quests radically striving towards unix. Victorious wiring x-rays yearly zippers.

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

      Motivation is derived from JAVA, whether the code percolates in b-to-b sites or otherwise. De-motivation stems from XML or DHTML. Further, Windowless evironments though unusual are more sustainable and less commercial--more hipster.

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

      How can you eat something that you've lost?

    4. Re:Exactly. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Key bored, tell a phone, ex act, cell art, coda tabulate bloomer ode. tan trum

    5. Re:Exactly. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      bitt o rrent? torrent? bit? it? rent?

  172. Whats that sound? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Wirrr Wirrr Wirrr, clank.

    Well, well, well, sounds like someone just opened a can of whoop-ass on M$.

    What goes around comes around.. Bill.

  173. MS needs Apple by DrSkwid · · Score: 1

    As a credible, non-open, competitor.

    MS owns Apple stock, don't ever forget that.

    --
    There are places where the networks are not touching,and there are places where they are-Boeing's Lori Gunter
    1. Re:MS needs Apple by alannon · · Score: 1

      Microsoft sold their Apple stock years ago. And made a tidy profit on it as well. Don't spread junk like this.

  174. MS Linux by the_duke_of_hazzard · · Score: 1
    Maybe MS will cut their losses and do a red hat? I've often wondered why MS don't take over Linux and offer (expensive) support for a red hat type product. In fact, why not buy Red Hat, stick a Microsoft label on it and offer it to Munich et al at a much cheaper rate?

    It would blunt the effect of a lot of the threats of Linux to MS. Support is big money if you do it right, and it's what IT managers get nervous about over Linux.

    Of course, it would encourage the use of Linux, rendering Windows less of a player.

    I'd be interested to know why this would be a bad idea from MS's point of view.

  175. xml.openoffice.org by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...is where you find the specs.

  176. Frankfurt sticks with Microsoft by Woffle · · Score: 1

    Heise Newsticker reports http://www.heise.de/newsticker/data/anw-27.05.03-0 01/ that Frankfurt (Germany) sticks with Microsoft products and just signed contracts to use MS products in the future. I consider this perfectly timed. The Munich Stadtrat hasn't decided yet on going the Linux way (so far it is just a recommendation) and another big city in Germany stays on Microsofts side. Wonder how far Munichs decision will be influenced by that!

  177. get a better friend - Tools .. Word Count by DrSkwid · · Score: 1


    & you can put it as a button on the toolbar if you like

    99% of users only know about 1% of their applications

    Go into almost any pffice and see if their default document template is set up. I used to make extra money going into businesses and setting all that stuff up for them.

    Word is oversold, simple and plain.

    --
    There are places where the networks are not touching,and there are places where they are-Boeing's Lori Gunter
  178. www.artisticcheese.com by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Visit this pro-microsoft anti-unix site and root
    for your favorite OS!

  179. Re:getting the text out by jd142 · · Score: 1

    In long documents, the edited text is usually in a separate part of the file. There's a small amount of binary data separating it. Yes, it does mean the user has to cut and paste and of course reapply all formatting, but the text is there and is better than nothing, which is what you get from OOo.

  180. tnx for the info by DrSkwid · · Score: 1

    oops

    --
    There are places where the networks are not touching,and there are places where they are-Boeing's Lori Gunter
  181. Re:Munich: The city where the Nazi party started by softwarekalteis · · Score: 1

    If you only knew that this post was quite the most idiotic one I have ever read on /. !

    To post such crap shows quite a lot about you. The fact that you prefer to be anonymous does so, too.

    This is disrespectful if you think of the many victims the nazi regime caused in Germany.

    I am German. And I am NOT proud of this part of my nation's history.

  182. New advertising for Munich requested by MS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Austrian TV reported 30 minutes ago that MS wants a "Neuausschreibung" (new advertisment) for Munich.
    (link: http://futurezone.orf.at/futurezone.orf?read=detai l&id=162332&tmp=34911 )

    Babelfish translation:

    "Ms wants new advertisement for Munich
    "we demand a fair competition" | ms have offer already improved submitted | mornings fall decision

    Microsoft demanded the reopening of the advertisement for the renewal of 14.000 computers in the prestigious duel between its operating system Windows and the open SOURCE variant Linux of the city Munich.

    "we demand a fair competition", thus firm speaker Hans Juergen Croissant.

    The fair competition was set out of strength, said Croissant. to "the chance was granted our competitors on one side to improve their original offer on the basis of detailed knowledge of the offer of the Microsoft Germany GmbH."

    Microsoft dispatched "a revised offer concretized in some points specified more near and/or to the resident of Munich mayor Christian Ude [ SPD ]".

  183. 100,000 words=350k? by goldfndr · · Score: 1
    Considering that a 100,000 word novel fits in around 300-350 k, you can get around 4 full size text novels on a floppy. That's more than most people will write in a lifetime. That's why I'm questioning the value of compressing files.
    What kind of math is this that allows 100,000 words to fit into 350k without compression? This is using really small words?

    My suspicion is that you've never tested your theory - Microsoft Word has a lot of overhead if you're doing anything other than plain text (in which case plain ASCII would be adequate).

    --
    Copyrights, Patents, Trademarks: temporary loans from the Public Domain, not real property ("intellectual" or otherwise)
  184. A brilliant oportunity for MS. by jotaeleemeese · · Score: 1

    Open your damned standards, or even better, use published ones and enhance them (without enbracing them, MS style please).

    Show the world that MS can compete based in features, user support, and merit.

    Every new obstacle is an oportunity for improvement. OSS could be the best thing that happened to MS since they barely managed to jump into the Internet band-wagon.

    --
    IANAL but write like a drunk one.
    1. Re:A brilliant oportunity for MS. by Jason+Earl · · Score: 1

      The real problem is that Microsoft has structured their company around huge markups for Windows and MS Office. They can't really afford to have these products become a commodity.

      Think about it for a moment. Microsoft does not have a very good history of treating their customer well. In fact, most Microsoft customers (even the large customers) feel like Microsoft has put a ring through their nose so that Bill can yank them around with a cord. The reason that they put up with Microsoft's antics is that they have seen what has happened to Microsoft's past competitors. No one wants to risk their business on software that isn't going to exist in 18 months.

      Now put the shoe on the other foot. Let's imagine a world in which Microsoft actively participates in a commodity market. Let's imagine, just for a moment, that Microsoft published their specifications for their document formats and made it easy for OpenOffice and Corel PerfectOffice to read and write MS formats perfectly. All of a sudden one of the major reasons for buying MS Office disappears. If file compatibility issues go away then the largest differentiator between the office suites is price, and Microsoft's product is more than twice as expensive as Corel's PerfectOffice (and OpenOffice is essentially free).

      This trend would almost certainly hurt Microsoft's bottom line, and MSFT stock would drop out of the sky. Microsoft is supposed to be a growth company. Any shrinkage in revenue growth will send investors scrambling to sell. It is very likely that investors would push the price/earnings ratio from up around 30 to just under 10. In that sort of an environment, where MSFT stock had fallen out of the sky and where non-Microsoft software was gaining marketshare Microsoft would soon find that most of their leverage with companies was gone. Microsoft would no longer be able to force new licensing schemes on their customers, or bully the PC makers. Instead it would be Microsoft's customers and partners who would begin to play hardball.

      In short, the last thing on the planet that Microsoft wants is the commoditization of office suite formats. Microsoft beat Netscape in the Internet game because they could afford to give Internet Explorer away. Microsoft can't afford to give MS Office away. Doing so would destroy the company.

  185. Very true, but they can do something else. by jotaeleemeese · · Score: 1

    Use open standards for document formats.

    That way they can keep producing MS Office for Windows, adding features and improving support to their users (at a price if they want to, but it is good time that they really support the people using their software).

    I see no reason why MS can't have a slice of the IT pie. It would just be a slice based on merit, not on bully anticompetitive tactics.

    --
    IANAL but write like a drunk one.
  186. Too late. Everybody hates MS. by jotaeleemeese · · Score: 1

    I was extremely surprised when a friend bought a new Windows machine and the registration experience was so draining that he began to look around for Linux.

    This is a 60 year old person which you would not class as daring technologically speaking. But he has enough as do many regular people out there.

    --
    IANAL but write like a drunk one.
  187. Count them. by jotaeleemeese · · Score: 1

    You need:

    -People to check code.
    -People to adapt and expand code.
    -Development work in general.

    All this was done in the US, now most probably will be done locally thus helping the local economy.

    --
    IANAL but write like a drunk one.
  188. The 80%-20% Pareto Law by mickyx65it · · Score: 1

    Another key issue about transfering to Linux are applications. Most bureaucrat terminals don't need a config meant for gamers and just need the OS, wordprocessor, spreadsheet, email, internet browser and almost nothing else at all. Except maybe a taylor made database based application that they may easily ask their supplier to adapt to Linux terminals. So transfering to Linux is not really a major headheach in at least 95% of the cases, once the client computer is properly configured and current doc files converted by the Linux supplier. Just putting 6 icons on the desktop will be enough for most people to keep going on with the new OS.

  189. The Emperor has no clothes on by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sorry to break this party up but I tried to actually read that article before commenting on it (gasp!) and I have no idea where those 90% are coming from. A related article says 15% but that's the closest we get.