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South Korea Jumps To Open Source Software

mormop writes "Following on from the news that a far-eastern Linux distro is on the way, silicon.com is carrying news that South Korea is switching $300,000,000 worth of PCs to Open Source Software. The only question now is will Steve Ballmer be capable of covering the sort of distance needed to pull back all these switching governments before collapsing with exhaustion, or is he en route for the Air Miles record?"

287 comments

  1. What about Warcraft/Starcraft/etc? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Those South Koreans love their Blizzard games! They even have a network that shows people playing the games. Will they be switching to open source games, too?

    1. Re:What about Warcraft/Starcraft/etc? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well no, seeing as how there are no RTS open source equivilants to Warcraft/Starcraft. However, those games do run perfectly well in Linux using Wine/WineX.

    2. Re:What about Warcraft/Starcraft/etc? by WindBourne · · Score: 2, Interesting

      But I would suspect that with Korea, China, and shortly Japan moving to Linux, that the game companies will start producing native Linux version.
      Loki was just ahead of their time.

      --
      I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
    3. Re:What about Warcraft/Starcraft/etc? by Theatetus · · Score: 1

      Not a fan of Freecraft?

      --
      All's true that is mistrusted
    4. Re:What about Warcraft/Starcraft/etc? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I am the Onceler. I speak for the Thneeds.

      The Onceler spoke for the Barbaloots, the singing fish, and the bird-analogs. The thneeds were oddball combination garment/potholder/tent/socks which were knitted from the tufts of the truffula trees.

      Oh, yes, the Onceler spoke for the truffula trees, too. The thneeds and the anti-hero of the story (what was his name? I'm drawing a blank.) were about the only things he didn't speak for.

      CAn you tell I have kids?

    5. Re:What about Warcraft/Starcraft/etc? by Carpet · · Score: 1

      I wouldn't be too optimistic... the last few times I was in an internet cafe in China/Taiwan/HK/Korea, the most played game was either Lineage or Dragon Raja, MMORPGs coming out of Korea. Stores were lined more with local games than imported US games. Granted, CS/SC/WC/UT have a following, the local software companies have a better grasp at what the local taste is like.

      I don't have any sales numbers, but I suspect most US-made games sell a whole lot more in the states/Europe than they do in Asia. Not to mention rampant piracy.....

      Unless, of course, we all start playing non-US games, which does seem to be the coming trend. Lineage II (Korea) is coming to the states, FFXI (Japan) is soon to be released, and China... well... the cultural differences have yet to been bridged. Chinese games are more tied in with their history and culture, and really geared towards Chinese-literate.

      Now.. imagine.. five years down the line, FFXX-3 being developed for Linux due to Japanese everyday usage... and imagine the average Joe in the US when said FF is being brought over.

      "Dude, you hear the next Final Fantasy will run on this Linux thing?"
      "Damn man, how much is it?"
      "I hear it's free!"
      "Let's get it!!"
      *massive slashdot-effect (err... FF-effect) as Joes/Janes all over the US suddenly started downloading Linux*

  2. Simple by blitzoid · · Score: 3, Funny

    MS will just buy an airline to keep from paying those high travel costs for Balmer. It's the sensible thing to do!

    But I wouldn't wanna fly on it... they'll probably innovate the control systems with .NET and Passport, so if someone were to check their hotmail they might accidentally trigger the CRASH_INTO_MOUNTAIN subroutine.

    --
    I am a filthy pirate.
    1. Re:Simple by Forge · · Score: 1

      Doesn't MS already own a plane or 2 ?

      Or perhaps it's Bill who has a private jet. Note that this is almost a trivial purchase for any Billionaire.

      --
      --= Isn't it surprising how badly I spell ?
    2. Re:Simple by prs_013 · · Score: 1

      Even simpler would be to buy the country itself.. which I am sure Microsoft can do!

      --
      PRS.
    3. Re:Simple by airConditionedGypsy · · Score: 3, Interesting
      So, this isn't too far from the truth.

      Remember the big power outage in the northeast a month ago? (of course you do)

      Well, the next day while I waited with a bunch of other folks in the sweltering subterranean heat of Penn Station, I was horrified to see that all the ticket machines had friendly little Windows dialog and error boxes popped up, screaming about not being able to restart properly.

      What a ubiquitous piece of software.

      --
      I bootleg Fizzy Lifting Drinks.
    4. Re:Simple by arcanumas · · Score: 2, Funny
      But I wouldn't wanna fly on it... they'll probably innovate the control systems with .NET and Passport,

      Naahhh. They just want YOU to use .NEt and Passport. They run THEIR important systems on Linux. (www.microsoft.com)

      --
      Slashdot Sig. version 0.1alpha. Use at your own risk.
    5. Re:Simple by grue23 · · Score: 1

      There is a huge display billboard on the 405 freeway near Long Beach, CA, that plays all sorts of nifty animated advertisements. One day it was almost completely filled with a huge Windows error box.

    6. Re:Simple by Geek+of+Tech · · Score: 4, Funny
      > But I wouldn't wanna fly on it... they'll probably innovate the control systems with .NET and Passport, so if someone were to check their hotmail they might accidentally trigger the CRASH_INTO_MOUNTAIN subroutine.

      I don't see your point. What in your history with Microsoft make you think that their CRASH_INTO_MOUNTAIN subroutine would actually work? :P

      --
      Stop the Slashdot effect! Don't read the articles!
    7. Re:Simple by badboy_tw2002 · · Score: 1

      I'm sure thats the fault of windows and not the ticket serving application running into power problems.

      Actually, I'm not sure, and neither should you be. There's all kinds of shitty programmers on both Linux and Windows, and just because shitty programmer X chose Linux to write his ticket dispensing application doesn't mean that it won't crash if say, the ticket server was out of power.

    8. Re:Simple by airConditionedGypsy · · Score: 1
      Ah, don't react so harshly...I was just commenting on how prevalent Windows as a piece of software is..right down the whatever terminal-server software is needed to run dumb ticket vending machines...

      --
      I bootleg Fizzy Lifting Drinks.
    9. Re:Simple by badboy_tw2002 · · Score: 1

      Heh, not a problem. I see that point in your post, but the tone led me to smash the anti-FUD button a little too quickly.

    10. Re:Simple by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Heh, Microsoft Airlines...

      BSOD = Blue Skies Of Death?

    11. Re:Simple by Ponkinator · · Score: 1

      That's the funniest thing I've read in a while! Wish I had been able to see it. It would have given me a chance to experience Windows in a big way and in the great outdoors to (re)boot.

    12. Re:Simple by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ah, Microsoft really has important systems?

      I mean besides their legal and financial department
      which are using typewriters and abacus because
      they are guaranteed immune to hackers.

    13. Re:Simple by SgtChaireBourne · · Score: 1
      Using an unstable platform in a highly visible display is asking for loss of face.

      Every day I go past bus schedule kiosks displaying Windows errors. It's a shame and a waste of money to not use something more stable or even designed for embedded systems. QNX and Linux come to mind right away.

      --
      Beta is broken and the link to classic doesn't work. Stop wasting our time or there won't be anybody left here.
    14. Re:Simple by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      After a long night of having my comp defrag for 8 odd hours so having s**t sleep, that made me smile :)

    15. Re:Simple by torpor · · Score: 2, Funny

      Good point.

      What will happen, though, is the pilot of said airplane may try to 'check his email on this cool new Outlook control surface thingy' and the plane will be instantly infected with virus ... and *then* it'll crash into a mountain, subroutine or none!

      --
      ; -- the corruption of government starts with its secrets. a truly free people keep no secrets. --
    16. Re:Simple by Captain+Large+Face · · Score: 1

      Don't be a fucking Troll. Microsoft run their own products on the backend of microsoft.com, and used the Linux-based Akamai caching service to cope with the high demand.

  3. About time by artlu · · Score: 0, Interesting

    Finally, a large government has adopted this kind of standard. Hopefully more countries and more companies will join the bandwagon after seeing such a large example of free software implementation!

    --
    -------
    artlu.net
    1. Re:About time by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

      Finally, a large government has adopted this kind of standard. Hopefully more countries and more companies will join the bandwagon after seeing such a large example of free software implementation!

      You didn't even bother to fill in the name of the country into the blanks of your standard-form.

  4. Hmmm... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

    Open SARS software?

    1. Re:Hmmm... by xtturbo · · Score: 0

      thats so bloody racist and poor taste

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

      I agree - I got a kick out of it too!

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

      Mod everyone up!!!

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

      Typical ignorant remark. South-Korea had and has no cases of SARS

    5. Re:Hmmm... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    6. Re:Hmmm... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This seems to be a slap against South Korea, unfortunate enough to have SARS cases.

      The Winter is not over yet. Who can see into the future and tell us where SARS will strike next? Anyone? God? Whoops, you are not telling? What's that you are writing in the clouds... R..E..D..M..O...N..D..?

  5. Air Miles? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What do you mean air miles? I'd have to imagine that Microsoft has a corporate jet just for such promotions.

  6. Don't worry, is on it! by Maskirovka · · Score: 1

    In a dark candle lit cavern beneath redmond, Uncle Fester and his staff are dancing and clapping around a black butterfly- chanting devlepers, Developers DEVELOPERS!

    1. Re:Don't worry, is on it! by You're+All+Wrong · · Score: 1

      He's gonna have to practice saying "Deveropers, deveropers deveropers" surely?

      YAW.
      (whose g/f comes from S.Korea, and she says it's not bad taste to make such a comment!)

      --
      Your head of state is a corrupt weasel, I hope you're happy.
  7. well by xao+gypsie · · Score: 2, Funny

    we have all seen him dance......the dude has pretty good stamina. personally, i imagine he will be dancing himself silly to the heads of each government only to find that its hard to convince people your OS is better when you dance like my grandmother after a bottle and a half of wine....

    xao

    --


    xao
    http://TheHillforum.hopto.org
    1. Re:well by EverDense · · Score: 1

      its hard to convince people your OS is better when you dance like my grandmother after a bottle and a half of wine....

      The dude dances worse than MY Grandmother.
      ...and she's been dead for 8 years now.

      --
      http://jesus.everdense.com/
  8. Funny you should mention that... by Atario · · Score: 1

    ...because Kim Jong Il just announced any future missiles will be running Linux.

    That, and he's instituting a death penalty for trying to steal his magic bag.

    --
    "A great democracy must be progressive or it will soon cease to be a great democracy." --Theodore Roosevelt
  9. 2004 finally the year of Unix by Crashmarik · · Score: 1

    Just when you finally thought it wasn't going to happen, it finally does. We will at last have the year of unix but it will be linux. Oh well good to see just the same.

  10. Oh my GOD! by slashcop · · Score: 0

    IS that 300 million or 300 thousand? If thats 300 million, Microsoft is in DEEP SHIT! South Korea is the most high tech internet connected nation in the world.

    1. Re:Oh my GOD! by SoSueMe · · Score: 1
      It is $300 million:
      "If the change is successful, we will be able to save about US$300m a year. Also, we may ensure security and inter-connectivity of national information system," the spokesperson continued.
  11. BFD by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    Now your KIAs and Hyundais can be built with pride using Linux! Yay!

    1. Re:BFD by Short+Circuit · · Score: 1

      Sorry, but their testing equipment runs QNX.

      I should know, I've got close friends and relatives who write the software for it. I look forward to the day when strict realtime extensions find their way into the main kernel tree.

  12. Summary misquotes story by DeepRedux · · Score: 4, Insightful
    The summary says that "South Korea is switching $300,000,000 worth of PCs to Open Source", but the story says that "if the change is successful, we will be able to save about US$300m a year."

    The amount of savings is not the same as the worth of the PCs.

    1. Re:Summary misquotes story by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Didn't you know? All those 'free software' people not only steal their programs, they steal their whole computer too!

  13. I hate to say that by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Informative

    ... but "$3,000,000 worth of PCs" is about 3,000-4,000 boxes. It is hardly a big number for a second largest Asian economy.

    1. Re:I hate to say that by Luminary+Crush · · Score: 1

      It's 300 HUNDRED million, not three million. And it is the amount of savings, not the dollars' worth of boxen.

    2. Re:I hate to say that by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      but the number is not 3M, but 300M. In addition, the machines are not 1000/box. It is a great deal less.

    3. Re:I hate to say that by wankledot · · Score: 1

      that's three hundred million dollars.

      --
      My sig is blank, I typed this by hand.
    4. Re:I hate to say that by B'Trey · · Score: 1

      Three HUNDRED million, not three million, which would be about 300,000 to 400,000 PCs if your cost factor is correct. But, as has been previously pointed out, the article actually says that they'll be able to save around three hundred mil, meaning that's the cost of the software being replaced, not the cost of the PCs.

      --

      "The legitimate powers of government extend only to such acts as are injurious to others." Thomas Jefferson.

    5. Re:I hate to say that by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And that is per year, not a one time deal.

  14. the last paragraph is most intriguing.... by tokengeekgrrl · · Score: 4, Insightful

    "Last month, Japan, China and South Korea met in the Cambodian capital of Phnom Penh to sign an agreement to jointly research and develop non-Windows, open source OS."

    Wouldn't it be great if state governments (yes, I'm fixated on state governments because I work for one but also because it is the public's money that is being spent) here in the US would do the same thing? I've seen individual states start various research projects but no larger effort that leverages all the resources in all states.

    Tangent: my graduate thesis is going to be on why governments should have an open source technology preferential mandate given the cost-savings and total ownership provided by doing so. Call me crazy but I really believe that government should always choose the least expensive option whenever possibe. Currently, you ask for funding for a project and once you get it the rule is use it or lose it, thus, more money is spent than is really necessary for most projects in order to keep the funding for future years.

    - tokengeekgrrl

    1. Re:the last paragraph is most intriguing.... by Strudelkugel · · Score: 1

      Wouldn't it be great if state governments (yes, I'm fixated on state governments because I work for one but also because it is the public's money that is being spent) here in the US would do the same thing

      So you are saying there should be 50 slighly different distros?

      No thanks.

      --
      Imagine how much harder physics would be if electrons had feelings! -Feynman, maybe
    2. Re:the last paragraph is most intriguing.... by dieman · · Score: 1

      Yes, least cost keeps spaceships in orbit, people off of the streets, and kids disease free! Please, qualify your statements. :)

      --
      -- dieman - Scott Dier
    3. Re:the last paragraph is most intriguing.... by temojen · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I'd really like to see ministries/departments of education across the english speaking world get together to create open-source textbooks for elementary & highschool subjects.

    4. Re:the last paragraph is most intriguing.... by rruvin · · Score: 1

      Oh, please.

      If the US federal government or state government tried to do that, it'd be immediately accused of tolatiarianism, spying, and Big Brother behaviour.

    5. Re:the last paragraph is most intriguing.... by nsda's_deviant · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I'm not positive about the cost effectiveness of open source (yet) but there are two issues in south korea that must be taken into consideration that is more unique than the US. First, SK is hugelly dependent on MS everything, penetration in UNIX-LINUX-MAC OS X is almost negligible and the past 2 years of worms have devestated the tech infastructure to the point that billions are lost consistantlly when a MS worm is unleashed. Using Linux would then offer a new possibility of being MS independent so they can patch when they want as soon as possible. The Second problem stems from the huge dependence on IE. South Korean portals like Daum.net and hundreds of others are designed almost exculusivelly for IE. There will have to be huge changes made to site infastrcture-design and even business models for web companies if a signifigant minority of the population starts using Mozilla.

      The proclimation is interesting because it doesn't guarantee anything. Future prospects of a success would be monumental and could set a future example for dozens of countries. Here's hoping the South Korean population can make the switch

    6. Re:the last paragraph is most intriguing.... by dubStylee · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Wouldn't it be great if state governments ... Did you read about Oregon's open source bill? It didn't make it through the legislature but it came pretty close. One great thing about the bill is that the actual wording mentioned not only cost savings, but the issues of local control, of keeping public information resources accessible, of preventing spyware or adware being installed and others. More info here

    7. Re:the last paragraph is most intriguing.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Tangent: my graduate thesis is going to be on why governments should have an open source technology preferential mandate given the cost-savings and total ownership provided by doing so. Call me crazy but I really believe that government should always choose the least expensive option whenever possibe."

      Support for linux is not cheap. TCO of Linux vs windows is questionable.

    8. Re:the last paragraph is most intriguing.... by Citizen+of+Earth · · Score: 1

      Wouldn't it be great if state governments [...] here in the US would do the same thing? I've seen individual states start various research projects but no larger effort that leverages all the resources in all states.

      More specifically, the states that opposed the DoJ settlement and pursued their own settlement should be the ones to lead the charge. Since their claim is that they have been ripped off by Microsoft, why should they be content to continue to be ripped off by the toothless DoJ settlement? They're hypocritcial if they don't implement some sort of Microsoft blacklisting.

    9. Re:the last paragraph is most intriguing.... by platypus · · Score: 1

      "Last month, Japan, China and South Korea met in the Cambodian capital of Phnom Penh to sign an agreement to jointly research and develop non-Windows, open source OS."

      Maybe South Korea should first invest more money (the 300 umptilion they seem to save here) into better education of their admins (I count every user as admin here). They are one of the biggest sources of spam, last I saw, and the reason for that is ratio of boxes with big pipes vs. capable admins/users over there. Mind you, I'm not saying that the s-koreans are less competent than somewhere else, it's just that they seem to have one of the most advanced network infrastructures of the world. That makes every homeuser an attractive target for spammers cracking the box and using it for sending tons of spam.
      If they switched everything to linux tomorrow, I'd expect the proportion of exploitable OSS systems vs. windows systems to change in a significant way.

    10. Re:the last paragraph is most intriguing.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      my graduate thesis is going to be on why governments should have an open source technology preferential mandate given the cost-savings and total ownership

      Well, it seems you already have a fine grasp of the scientific method. Choose the results of your investigation ahead of time, then carefully select the data to support the point that will please your target audience. You'll be able to rake the grant money in with that approach.

    11. Re:the last paragraph is most intriguing.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      State supported/mandated OS? No thanks... even if it were legal.

    12. Re:the last paragraph is most intriguing.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, I agree.... probably learned it from Microsoft and their endless rounds of M$ funded Windows versus ?? studies.

    13. Re:the last paragraph is most intriguing.... by Angst+Panzer · · Score: 1

      I'd really like to see ministries/departments of education across the english speaking world get together to create open-source textbooks for elementary & highschool subjects.

      This project would immediately fork over the number of "u"s to use.

      Then there are the less serious cultural differences to take into account...

    14. Re:the last paragraph is most intriguing.... by Short+Circuit · · Score: 1

      There was a brief (but nice) piece on NPR this evening about the rebuilding of the educational system in Iraq. Iraqi kids started school today; buildings have been repaired (to a point), textbooks have been slightly modified, and the poster of Saddam Hussein has been torn down from the front of every classroom.

      They're working on developing a curriculum worthy of comparison to Western standards.

    15. Re:the last paragraph is most intriguing.... by Tony-A · · Score: 1

      So you are saying there should be 50 slighly different distros?

      50? Far too few. The states by themselves would rack up a few hundred.

    16. Re:the last paragraph is most intriguing.... by willabr · · Score: 1

      In real terms, Do you belive that they have actually be "Paying anything" to microsoft anyway?. Most of the Asian goverments are running on phoney software anyway, so the move to "Open Source" is just a horizontal move. In line with there understanding of "free" market.

    17. Re:the last paragraph is most intriguing.... by temojen · · Score: 2, Interesting

      hmmm... It seems to me I had quite a few textbooks in elementary school that misspelled colour, flavour, etc. If the books are open source, the local governments would be free to localize them to their spelling or other concerns, and could either print them themselves or contract out the printing to the lowest bidder.

    18. Re:the last paragraph is most intriguing.... by jez9999 · · Score: 1

      South Korean portals like Daum.net and hundreds of others are designed almost exculusivelly for IE. There will have to be huge changes made to site infastrcture-design and even business models for web companies if a signifigant minority of the population starts using Mozilla.

      Site design, perhaps. If it's a badly designed site, it may need to be slightly redesigned to be compatible with more than just one browser. But business model? Could you explain what you mean by that? Why would a portal need to change its business model based on what browser you were using?? It's like saying that out of town retail parks would have to change their business model because some people change from Ford cars to GMs.... they wouldn't.

    19. Re:the last paragraph is most intriguing.... by Frit+Mock · · Score: 1

      Your argumentation around IE is very intresting. To sumarize in short: Korea is heavily dependant on IE (proprietary software/standards in general?) and that's the reason why a change to another software (anything, not only opensource) is very costly. So why change, if the change it is that expensive? Actually a shortsighnet argumentation, since you only cover the time such changes endure. Fine, you suggested Korea to stay with proprietary standards and to slip in always deeper dependancy on proprietary standards, because swithching to open standards _is_ costly. A classical vicious circle, because of a shortsightned vision. TCO of the next 2 years is much lower than costs for a change. The oversight is that, after a change the TCO is lower and you save money _every_ year. Even if the return of investment (costs for a change) will be just in 10 or 20 or even a 100 years, RoT will be ther if the TCO is lower after a change. Korea (gov't only) expects to save $300m per year after a change. If that is right, they could invest $3 billion and achieve RoT after 10 years. Regarding changes in web technology, there is a momentum, you have missed. All web technology undergoes constant changes! New hardware development and all new possibilities resulting from constant software development and vonstantly increasing expectation of customers (regarding web-services) and competitive pressure from rival companies make it neccessary to _always_ improve, adjust and change the webtechnology. Actually there are _additional_ costs for a change in infrastructure-design (and the same with buisness models) since they are always there! The web is and always was and will be (at least for the next 10 years) under constant development, so it does not lead to _additional_ costs when using open standards! (In fact it leads to money savings in general.)

    20. Re:the last paragraph is most intriguing.... by horza · · Score: 1

      Call me crazy but I really believe that government should always choose the least expensive option whenever possibe.

      I'd rather they chose best value for money. Not necessarily the same thing. This can also take into account wider considerations than TCO; there is also local job creation, future savings in not having data locked in a proprietry format, even philosophical values (something paid for by the people should be owned by the people).

      Currently, you ask for funding for a project and once you get it the rule is use it or lose it, thus, more money is spent than is really necessary for most projects in order to keep the funding for future years.

      No problem with them spending the surplus money, as long as they again provide value for money re: the public. This is where oversight is necessary to make them justify their spending.

      Phillip.

    21. Re:the last paragraph is most intriguing.... by equivocal · · Score: 1

      Wouldn't it be great if state governments here in the US would do the same thing? "Representatives from Oregon, South Dakota, and Mississippi met in Phnom Penh last month..."

    22. Re:the last paragraph is most intriguing.... by nsda's_deviant · · Score: 1

      just imagine if 40-60& of your revenue depended on selling (tv dramas, cell phone ringers-graphics, avatars for your website blah blah blah). now imagine there being a major national shift towards a new infastructure that wouldn't work witih your technology.

      thats a huge problem, it means going back and redoing audio codecs for your wmv files, wma files, it means going through huge databases of files and making sure its all compatabile for people with other browsers. it doesn't just mean site design, it means pulling out your spreadsheet and realizing that your going to have to change the way you sell products online. how are you going to sell a tv drama for 50 cents when you can't use the WMV codec? what if you can't find a codec to cheaplly sell tv? are you going to limit yourself to one sector of the market?

      on the plus side, i'll finally be able to go to cyworld.com and see my friend's pictures on Safari.

    23. Re:the last paragraph is most intriguing.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      another point your missing (and i ommited in my original post for lack of time) is that there is a huge lack of linux geeks in korea (relative to us).

      tco aside, there is great value in controlling your own destiny. getting a crippled economy, crippled network, crippled data infastructure all because a company in Washington state fucked some line of code is damning. what your missing in your post is the network goes down for 10% of the population when a worm like blaster hits korea. MS doesn't seem to give a crap (comon trustworthy computing my ass) so theyve found a new solution no matter how hard its going to be. Independence by software platform means less liability to someing Korea has little to deal with and thats MS.

    24. Re:the last paragraph is most intriguing.... by jez9999 · · Score: 1

      WHy couldn't Mozilla use the WMV codec? Windows users with Mozilla could still download and play the files just fine. You might have problems embedding it, but then again so might IE if that patent they're being sued for is successful.

  15. RTFA! by 8tim8 · · Score: 1

    From the article: "If the change is successful, we will be able to save about US$300m a year."

    They're not changing $300m worth of PC's, they're saving that much on licensing.

  16. Re:He he he... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    HAHAHAHA!!! "BillyBoyWare"!!! HAHAHAHAHA!!! OMFG, thatz so funny!!!1! I mean, LOLOLOLOLOL!!! HAHAHAHAHA!!! u r teh r0xx0rz!!!!

    And "M$"??? HAHAHAHHA!!!! How'd you come up with that??? It's hilarious!!!!

    HAHAHAHA!!!!! I need to hang out here more, if only for the comic relief!!! HAHAHAHA!!!1!!

  17. $300M for 20% of their Computers? by temojen · · Score: 1

    South Korea hopes to save $300M by converting 20% of desktops and 30% of servers. They must have a hell of a lot of computers! Or a really bad bulk licensing deal. Although why they's stop at 20% I don't know... in their shoes, I'd probably try to convert about 95% (assuming some systems need non-WINE-able legacy software for some reason).

    1. Re:$300M for 20% of their Computers? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      300M is not just for software. Linux, like Unix, has a much lower cost to admin. It has better uptime, and requires a fraction of the support that MS has. Finally, there will be more software savings than just the OS. I am sure that they will get off of Office, SQL Server, etc. I suspect that they will save a lot more than 300M if they convert their government over.

    2. Re:$300M for 20% of their Computers? by SmallFurryCreature · · Score: 1
      This plan is to do it by 2007. Perhaps the rest ain't ready to be replaced yet? You don't replace a perfectly good fully paid up machine just to make a point. Well not when you are a goverment.

      Also this is perhaps a test. A BIG HUGE WHOPPER of test but nonetheless a test. By not replacing everything at one they are very likely not going to find themselves suddenly unable to send email or something silly because someone forgot a tiny little server somewhere.

      This is really a first. I think, unless I missed something, that this is the largest deployment of linux yet.

      So be patient. If this works and unless MS has access to nukes I don't see why it shouldn't then the rest will follow after 2007 as and when machines and licenses reach their end date.

      Sigh, I just wish our western goverments had these kind of balls. Wonder how the imigration laws are over there.

      --

      MMO Quests are like orgasms:

      You may solo them, I prefer them in a group.

    3. Re:$300M for 20% of their Computers? by gregfortune · · Score: 1

      Simply because it's a wide scale test. Right now, Linux users are blocked from "several key Korean web-based services" and it looks like South Korea is trying to remedy that. I expect that given that the general landscape hasn't changed by 2007 and the test is successful, they'll slowly roll their entire infrastructure over. Note that they cited security as a principal reason for the switch...

    4. Re:$300M for 20% of their Computers? by Xerithane · · Score: 1

      They must have a hell of a lot of computers!

      You don't play many computer games, do ya?

      --
      Dacels Jewelers can't be trusted.
  18. Logical for Non-US companies by Dark+Paladin · · Score: 5, Insightful

    One thing that companies outside the US (Germany, China, South Korea, South American nations, etc) is that employing Microsoft is really only good for Microsoft.

    But by switching to Open Source for the government, there are several benefits that "trickle down":

    1. Programmers within the specified nations are now employed, which keeps money inside the country.

    2. The advances that come from Open Source software can be then used in businesses inside the country, which reduces there expenses, and if more development/administration is needed, they can look inside their own country rather than going elsewhere.

    3. Exportability. If you have a country with top engineers in Open Source, and another country happens to need those, you are now in a better position to export those services.

    I'm not quite with the "governments should make laws forcing Open Source down people's throats", but I am in support of measures that will give them control over their own software destiny.

    Granted - as long as they play by the rules of the GPL, BSD, and other licenses.

    1. Re:Logical for Non-US companies by Peaker · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I'm not quite with the "governments should make laws forcing Open Source down people's throats"

      No person may have Free Software (or opensource code) shoved down his throat. Companies may have "Free Software" forced on them - but they're not people, and their interests in this case do not coincide with those of the people.

      Anyhow, counter this with:
      * I am not quite with the "governments should make laws forcing Freedom down people's throats"
      The negative association is only added by the "throats" part, and there's no real reason not to force Freedom of (modifying and redistributing) Software, like other freedoms.

    2. Re:Logical for Non-US companies by oolon · · Score: 1

      Well we are billies bitch here in the UK, Microsoft got to do alot of the government portal stuff and guess what! It only really works well with windows.

      James

    3. Re:Logical for Non-US companies by TrancePhreak · · Score: 1

      You make contradictory statements saying that countries can keep to themselves for programmers, but then you say that they can export them.... It's either one or the other, and it most likely means more jobs for India.

      --

      -]Phreak Out[-
    4. Re:Logical for Non-US companies by hawkfish · · Score: 1

      You missed one:

      4. Data Integrity. Both in terms of being able to maintain the national data in non-proprietary formats and in terms of being able of secure the data against outside meddling. This was a major consideration for Peru.

      On a side note, all of the benefits you listed are economic. For some reason a lot of people here seem to forget that governments have non-economic concerns, like supporting culture, dispensing justice, providing for defense and the general welfare of the people. Open Source has a lot to offer in support of these goals as well.

      --
      You will not drink with us, but you would taste our steel? - Walter Matthau, The Pirates
  19. OSS unemployment? by bladernr · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I am in a position of managing development and procuring hardware and software. I have used Open-Source Software (OSS) instead of Commericial Off-the-Shelf (COTS) applications recently; I have moved some of my development overseas to India recently.

    In hindsight, what I notice, is that I did both for the same reasons. While the COTS applications have lots of advantages (support, professional services, a vendor to yell at), OSS' price was right, and it was good enough. There are a lot of problems with off-shore development (time, politics, control), but, its good-enough, and the price is right.

    I know of COTS software companies whose chief competitors are OSS solutions. As a customer, I have picked OSS over COTS. The companies have had layoffs. Imagine if lots of people decided to work on auto assembly lines in the spare time; what would that do to the gainful employment for auto workers?

    I'm not advocating anything, I just think that it is important to remember that jobs are lost due to OSS as well as foreign outsourcing. On /., we focus on losses due to outsourcing, but ignore the OSS losses (because this community, including me, tends to be pro-OSS and anti-offshore). In some cases, those losses are the same, when OSS work is done in foreign countries. If you want to be protectionist by making it harder to off-shore work, shouldn't you also be trying to limit OSS?

    On the other side, if you want openness, shouldn't we have openness in labor markets as well as software?

    Just food for thought...

    --
    Sarcasm and hyperbole are the final refuges for weak minds
    1. Re:OSS unemployment? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "If you want to be protectionist by making it harder to off-shore work, shouldn't you also be trying to limit OSS? "

      No! I want to be a globalist -- I want the work going offshore to represent greater opportunities for Americans to relocate to other parts of the world. I would prefer a Francophone country, someplace in a temperate zone with a good coastal area... But there are definitely parts of India that I would love to go to, especially if it meant substantially reduced costs of living relative to a reduced salary even.

    2. Re:OSS unemployment? by donnz · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Well, experiences differ. When we started our campany 6 years agao there were five of us. Now there are 32 of us. Like 80% of the software industry we develop bespoke solutions. OSS has hugely enhanced our capability to deliver complex solutions using best of breed technology for a fraction of the cost.

      Services companies like our will easily take up the slack of product companies. Just remember, we are a services industry and the cost of our tools detract from what can be delivered for a given amount of money (everything else being equal).

      --
      -- Free software on every PC on every desk
    3. Re:OSS unemployment? by Peaker · · Score: 1, Flamebait

      I'm not advocating anything, I just think that it is important to remember that jobs are lost due to OSS as well as foreign outsourcing. On /., we focus on losses due to outsourcing, but ignore the OSS losses (because this community, including me, tends to be pro-OSS and anti-offshore). In some cases, those losses are the same, when OSS work is done in foreign countries. If you want to be protectionist by making it harder to off-shore work, shouldn't you also be trying to limit OSS?

      You start with agreeable arguments (People doing things for free in their spare time means less jobs in the field), and yet reach a very weird (and dangerous?) conclusion: We should limit what people do in their spare time for free.

      This is rediculous, capitalism should encourage resources that come for free. Jobs that are created by artficial limitations and would otherwise not be required are not really good for the economy as they may seem.
      Might as well pay these people that same money to do anything that's really required, while getting the original service for free.

      Maybe the oxygen producing factories are not making enough money now? Jobs are being lost. We should cut down trees and limit their ability to create oxygen because those trees are hurting the ability of oxygen creation factories to make a living. I see this as equivalent.

    4. Re:OSS unemployment? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I have used Open-Source Software (OSS) instead of Commericial Off-the-Shelf (COTS) applications recently

      First of all, COTS and OSS are orthagonal concepts. Is Red Hat COTS or OSS in your view?

      Second I _hope_ you don't just download something off the net and call it a day! Free/Open requires commercial support just like non-Free/Open software.

      The difference between Free and non-Free is the licensing model and the lack of "use" and "copy" restrictions. By making a dichotomy between "commercial" and "open" instead of "commercial" and "non-commercial", and "open" and "proprietary", you're creating distinctions that don't exist.

      Imagine if lots of people decided to work on auto assembly lines in the spare time; what would that do to the gainful employment for auto workers?

      Bad analogy: it is impossible to sustain an auto industry by volounteers. I might be willing to fix my own car, but I have no desire to waste time fixing someone else's too. However, if I can fix my car and instantly distribute the "fix" to millions of other cars, I might do that.

      A better analogy, maybe: imagine that every time you had to put gas in your car, you had to pay somebody to do it. And you always had to buy a full tank, even if you weren't empty yet. And you had to buy a new set of tires. Then an "open-service" station comes along where you can pump it yourself, and it's cheaper. Sure, there are some benefits missing, and you might get your suit dirty, but it's a lot more flexible and it's cheaper.

      In that case should you feel sorry for the "closed-service" gas pumper? Hell no, he was a waste in the economy. Time to retrain!

      Basically I'm saying that if jobs are lost and prices come down in the software industry, it's because they were *charging too much* in the first place. I don't feel sorry for dead weight.

      The India thing is another story, which probably has to do more with America's great wealth (labor is more expensive, etc) than anything else. In time this will fix itself. I compete with my Indian competitors by doing a much better job than they do. However I'm not above using their services for "grunt work".

      Also, there are other forces at work: limiting OSS to protect jobs also yields great power to the closed-source software companies. It sure makes me nervous to think that my bank records, my medical history, my legal history, my credit history, my bank account, my entire life is stored across the country on computers mostly using software from one company. That's just a little creepy.

    5. Re:OSS unemployment? by Master+Bait · · Score: 4, Interesting
      You forget that many COTS companies have also lost their livelihood due to the monopolization of commercial software by Microsoft.

      --
      "Only in their dreams can men truly be free 'twas always thus, and always thus will be."
      --Tom Schulman
    6. Re:OSS unemployment? by consumer · · Score: 2, Interesting
      That's crazy talk. People gain jobs from OSS. OSS allows them to get good at programming or other technical work without paying a lot of money to learn it. Companies that use OSS employ people (like me) to write code with it. Anyone who was good at writing code for IIS should be able to switch to a job writing code for Apache, unless they are unwilling to learn it. The only ones who potentially suffer are the ones who got paid by Microsoft to create IIS, and they ought to be able to find something else to program on. Or maybe IBM will pay them to hack on Apache.

      Imagine if lots of people decided to work on auto assembly lines in the spare time; what would that do to the gainful employment for auto workers?

      Auto workers are not guaranteed a job, and neither are programmers. You have to keep up and change with the times if you want to stay employed.

    7. Re:OSS unemployment? by AxelBoldt · · Score: 3, Insightful
      jobs are lost due to OSS as well as foreign outsourcing.

      Jobs aren't lost due to foreign outsourcing, they are simply moved from one country to another country which arguably needs them more.

      Clearly, jobs are lost due to OSS. Jobs are lost due to all programming, and due to all automatization. After all, it is the very point of technical progress that machines do the work that otherwise humans would have to do. Obviously, the better we make our machines (and programs), the more jobs will be lost.

    8. Re:OSS unemployment? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Again, I don't think jobs are really lost through OSS, only shifted. One of the most important features about OSS is its ability to be customized. Instead of jobs making a generic COTS product, you have jobs customizing OSS software.

      Not as good for software product companies, great for programmers/software service companies.

    9. Re:OSS unemployment? by line.at.infinity · · Score: 1

      Whether it's offshore or OSS, it saves money. And the company that saves the most money can stay competitive, and with that, they won't lose market share. By not losing market share, they can keep more jobs than they would have if they didn't save money with OSS or offshore dev. If US companies didn't save money with OSS and offshore dev, there would be higher US unemployment when foreign companies out-compete them. Slashdot's anti-offshore development thing to me seems like nothing but nationalism/xenophobia, and such attitude will only hurt the US in the long run.

    10. Re:OSS unemployment? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I just think that it is important to remember that jobs are lost due to OSS as well as foreign outsourcing.

      It's like that industrialisation I've been hearing about. Damn Spinning Jenny taking our jobs and our livelihoods.

    11. Re:OSS unemployment? by rking · · Score: 1

      On the other side, if you want openness, shouldn't we have openness in labor markets as well as software?

      Yes.

    12. Re:OSS unemployment? by Fluid+Truth · · Score: 1

      Not all jobs are "lost" to OSS. I maintain a perl module. I do so on the clock. It was a "product" that my company needed, but we needed some additional functionality. The original maintainer was unable to continue, so he turned it over to me. I get to work on an open source project, other people benefit from the work I do (well, they will once I complete testing and release it), and I get paid. What could be better?

      --
      Apparently, of the rich, by the rich, for the rich.
    13. Re:OSS unemployment? by morelife · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Thought provoking but (respectfully) incorrect thinking:

      The COTS guys who "lost" their job because a competing Open Source package was found to be any one or more of

      1) cheaper
      2) easier to deploy/maintain
      3) architecturally superior
      4) unencumbered by an unknown future pricing structure
      5) -fill in another OSS advantage here-

      lost their jobs for the correct reason, this is what happens in a free competitive economy.

      Additionally if they've been clinging to their old model, while ignoring the changes in the software world since around 1994, they deserve the hard lesson.

      May I point out that in a free economy, the inventive ones can create jobs.

      I would like to think that for every proprietary software job "lost" that the OSS world might gain the expertise of yet one more soul.

      It's easy to blame this situation on the software. Mistake. What's hard to create is superlative customer commitment and high-level professional services. It centers around the human interaction, not the tools -- successful people are always making money by helping their customers succeed with new and better tools/methodologies.

    14. Re:OSS unemployment? by primus_sucks · · Score: 1

      OSS makes source makes the economy more efficient and increases productivity. An increase in productivity leads to a higher standard of living. Some people may lose their jobs (err, like me!), but in general OSS helps the majority of people.

    15. Re:OSS unemployment? by EraseEraseMe · · Score: 1

      I realize that you may have started your own company, but you can't say you use OSS and at the same time use "Best of Breed" technology. The only "best of breed" OSS project I can think of is Apache, and even it isn't considered "Best of Breed". Nice try though, you've got the marketspeak down pat :)

      --
      "Anybody who tells me I can't use a program because it's not open source, go suck on rms. I'm not interested." (LT 2004)
    16. Re:OSS unemployment? by ElectricPoppy · · Score: 1
      My company has recently been using OSS. However, we also do custom programming on Linux and *BSD that you could think of as glue code. It's a combination of pre-existing OSS and custom code to tailor it to whatever problem we're working on.

      We also get work because of offshoring - when the software comes back and is total crap and we have to redo it correctly.

    17. Re:OSS unemployment? by danila · · Score: 1

      It's good when jobs are lost. That means less human labour is required and it can be used for something else. Now it's the responsibility of the state and various other organisation to help people do the transition. And it only looks scary in the short-term, when you need money to pay for the mortgage and have to live unemployeed for 6 months. In the long term (more than a few years) the economy becomes more efficient and everyone benefits.

      We usually tend to overestimate the importance of the short-term changes. For example, the attention we pay to the MP3 sharing issues is too great, compared with the real importance. In 5 years we will look back and see (hopefully) the weakening of traditional copyright as the logical and expected thing. Today we think about it as a revolution, a battle or something...

      --
      Future Wiki -- If you don't think about the future, you cannot have one.
    18. Re:OSS unemployment? by God!+Awful+2 · · Score: 1


      You start with agreeable arguments (People doing things for free in their spare time means less jobs in the field), and yet reach a very weird (and dangerous?) conclusion: We should limit what people do in their spare time for free. This is rediculous, capitalism should encourage resources that come for free.

      I actually think you start with a ridiculous argument a reach an even more ridiculous conclusion. "Capitalism should encourage resources that come for free." My opinion is that you shouldn't try to personify capitalism. It seems to be that either capitalism encourages an output or it discourages an output. Telling it that it "should" encourage an input is meaningless.

      Perhaps you are implying that capitalism works best when people work for free. That is a highly dubious conclusions. Capitalism is an economic system, based on statistics and game theory, that tends to increase the wealth of society. However, capitalism is not perfect. It only works well in the average case. Both globalization and the GPL lead to edge cases where the laws of capitalism don't lead to an optimal result.

      -a

    19. Re:OSS unemployment? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Clearly, COTS also results in unemployment. Ask any employees of companies recently bought out by M$...antivirus software comes to mind...M$ buys the competition, and then throws them onto the unemployment lines...

    20. Re:OSS unemployment? by f0rt0r · · Score: 1

      Exactly. Plus the fact that when you open source code under the GPL, it's open to everyone in the world and will have the same base cost ( disregarding download bandwidth or buying the CD's ) to everyone as well. This differs greatly from *just* the U.S.A opening up its labor market to everyone in the world and not requiring all the other countries do the same ( you remember the story about the U.S. citizen who was denied even the opportunity to apply for employment in India? ).

      First, due to differing economies and standards of living, the U.S. solutions ( i.e. people ) to labor needs would likely be much more costly ( quality is another issue ) than that of many other countries it would be allowing to compete, so you are already on an uneven playing field. OSS can be
      kept under your complete control while outsourced labor makes that level of control impossible, and so on.

      The creation of a global job market would require countries world-wide to change the way they work on socio-economic-political levels, including a complete rewrite of their constitutions ( for example, the U.S. constitution specifies government for the people by the people, so rules created outside of that scope are not valid, no matter how many treaties we make ).

      I am sure others have things to add, but you are comparing apples to oranges, that is the gist of it.

      --
      I can't afford a sig!
    21. Re:OSS unemployment? by 4of12 · · Score: 1

      it is important to remember that jobs are lost due to OSS

      Some, yes.

      If you look are the overall picture, though, there is progress.

      Your company's costs of doing business have decreased and your productivity has gone up. Increased productivity is the key to economic expansion and is a necessary ingredient for increased earnings and/or increased wages.

      You're also in a position where you may need services from IT professionals capable of keeping up with all of that OSS. Despite it's reliabiltiy, you may want security patches from time to time, upgrades for increased capacity, new applications installed, you may even decide that your business needs an application developed that is not ready made avaiable from freshmeat.net. The nice thing is that you have more money available to devote to getting customized services and paying less for commodities like OS's and other standard applications that are used by millions of people.

      I'm not denying that some of the people currently employed in the software industry will need to find different things to do. I'm saying that there will be things for them to do, software related things to do, and that overall the economy benefits as a result of the extreme commoditization from FOSS.

      To put it in perspective, consider the loss of jobs in the carriage making business when automobiles were introduced.

      Yes, some highly-skilled carriage makers had to find different things to do [my great-great grandfather was one of them], but it happenned. And the economy overall benefitted as a different mode of transportation was introduced.

      --
      "Provided by the management for your protection."
    22. Re:OSS unemployment? by pmz · · Score: 1

      If you want to be protectionist by making it harder to off-shore work, shouldn't you also be trying to limit OSS?

      No, because protectionism is stupid. Also, it is pretty stupid to try to earn a living creating products that are available free elsewhere. Why invent a whole new line of wood screws, when everyone will just go to Home Depot and buy them for a penny a piece there instead of from you?

      Recognize that OSS is the free market as it should be, where some software just isn't profitable, anymore, and no legislated fantasy will change that.

      Actually, OSS is doing a great service, where people don't need to waste time trying to market office suites, for example. There are bigger and better things to go on to, even if we haven't imagined them, yet. I believe that's what innovation really is, no matter how much Microsoft tries to destroy that word for their own ends.

    23. Re:OSS unemployment? by Peaker · · Score: 1

      Telling it that it "should" encourage an input is meaningless.

      You are correct that I could have stated it better:
      Capitalist countries should encourage free resources rather than limiting those resources in order to create jobs (Destroying free oxygen to create jobs for oxygen creating factories, for example).

      However, capitalism is not perfect. It only works well in the average case. Both globalization and the GPL lead to edge cases where the laws of capitalism don't lead to an optimal result.

      That's evidence of your ignorance of capitalism. Capitalism is all based on the extreme-case estimations of a global, extermely huge market. That's when it is supposed to work well. For example, Capitalism theory predicts prices will lower to production costs. This is something that will only happen in huge markets with a lot of competition.

      The bigger the market, the closer capitalism theory is to capitalism in practice.

    24. Re:OSS unemployment? by God!+Awful+2 · · Score: 1


      Capitalist countries should encourage free resources rather than limiting those resources in order to create jobs

      True, but maybe not if the free resource comes with a price (the GPL) that will counteract the economic benefits of the free resource.

      That's evidence of your ignorance of capitalism. Capitalism is all based on the extreme-case estimations of a global, extermely huge market.

      Typical of a /. reader to believe in extremes.

      That's when it is supposed to work well. The bigger the market, the closer capitalism theory is to capitalism in practice.

      I guess it depends on whose theory you believe. The thing about theories is they often work well in theory, but not in practice. Lots of people (many of them economists) have observed that stifling competition is bad for everyone involved. My personal opinion is that you believe in extreme *anything* then you probably haven't thought your opinions through.

      -a

  20. Or bluffing as a negotiating tactic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    S Korea may just be using this as a threat to get MS to negotiate on price and/or features. Until recently, govts (and large companies) haven't really had much of a credible alternative to Windows, so they haven't been able to use their incredible scale as purchasing and negotiating power. I wouldn't be surprised to see MS and S Korea come to a deal in six months time...

    1. Re:Or bluffing as a negotiating tactic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      MS has a huge incentive to not let this happen. They cannot afford to let a large, technologically advanced nation 1) demonstrate that there is an alternative to Windows, and 2) fund such an alternative. Once one country does it successfully, the floodgates are open and everyone will switch. MS will make a deal with SK behind the scenes. They'll give the software away if they have to. The press release will then say something about how SK on reconsideration determined that OSS did not meet their needs fully, wasn't mature enough, etc., plus MS will outsource some work to some Korean companies, etc.

    2. Re:Or bluffing as a negotiating tactic by Daniel+Phillips · · Score: 2, Interesting

      S Korea may just be using this as a threat to get MS to negotiate on price and/or features. Until recently, govts (and large companies) haven't really had much of a credible alternative to Windows, so they haven't been able to use their incredible scale as purchasing and negotiating power. I wouldn't be surprised to see MS and S Korea come to a deal in six months time...

      Oh I don't doubt that MS will discount heavily over the coming months, but if you have any knowledge of Korea at all, you know that there are two prime motivators: efficiency and freedom, especially the latter. Yes, Koreans are a freedom-loving people. Open source gives them the tools they need to be independent in software, and not only that, it gives them the tools to build a new software industry.

      Just watch what comes out of korea in the next few years, prepare to be amazed.

      --
      Have you got your LWN subscription yet?
    3. Re:Or bluffing as a negotiating tactic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Will these amazing things happen before or
      after the Communist North rains Nukes on the
      gullible South?

    4. Re:Or bluffing as a negotiating tactic by mcrbids · · Score: 1

      S Korea may just be using this as a threat to get MS to negotiate on price and/or features. Until recently, govts (and large companies) haven't really had much of a credible alternative to Windows, so they haven't been able to use their incredible scale as purchasing and negotiating power. I wouldn't be surprised to see MS and S Korea come to a deal in six months time...

      But that's the point.

      Even when Linux is used only as a bargaining chip against Microsoft, the fact that it is a bargaining chip against an abusive monopoly means that Linux is providing a real-world benefit.

      It's clear that we (consumers) are already winning because of Linux.

      You don't have to be a *nix geek like me to appreciate this!

      --
      I have no problem with your religion until you decide it's reason to deprive others of the truth.
  21. Blizzard by amplt1337 · · Score: 0

    ... but the real question is, will they be running a Linux port of Starcraft?

    --
    Freedom isn't free; its price is the well-being of others.
    1. Re:Blizzard by KingJoshi · · Score: 1

      Yes. 30% of servers and 20% of desktop computers at organizations where people are supposed to work is exactly where computer games are played. Blizzard would be wise to exploit this linux market

      From the article, this seems like a boon for mozilla users in SK. This probably means more OpenOffice users and that's another positive. And if this pans out, more people in SK would be receptive to try Linux at home. But unfortunately, Linux has quite a ways to go before it really becomes an enticing game market.

      --
      In times like these, it is helpful to remember that there have always been times like these. - Paul Harvey
    2. Re:Blizzard by Drakon · · Score: 1

      How many LEGAL copies of starcraft sold in SC?
      Does anyone have the stats for this? I was under the impression that it's mostly piracy...

    3. Re:Blizzard by ad9798 · · Score: 2, Informative

      Around 2 million copies. Very impressive... http://www.frictionlessinsight.com/Articles/BeingB lizzard/BeingBlizzardEntertainment.htm

  22. IE compatibility? by afra242 · · Score: 1

    Currently, Linux users are not able to use several key Korean web-based services. For example, many portals run by banks and government agencies support only Microsoft's Windows operating system and Internet Explore (IE) browser. [from the article].

    What's that have to do with Linux? The pages won't run on Mozilla within Windows either then.

    If this is one of their main concerns about switching over to Linux, I don't think this is much of a problem. I mean how hard would it be to tune these portals to work on browsers other than IE? These portals should be fixed anyhow, not just for Linux, but for other browsers out there such as Opera, Mozilla, etc, etc.

    1. Re:IE compatibility? by bryanthompson · · Score: 1

      I'm having the same kinds of browser issues with my university website. they use lotus notes, which is requiring IE. Anyone who makes a website that's only usable on one browser on one platform ought'a be looking for a new job.

    2. Re:IE compatibility? by molnarcs · · Score: 1

      >I mean how hard would it be to tune these portals to work on browsers other than IE? These portals should be fixed anyhow, not just for Linux, but for other browsers out there such as Opera, Mozilla, etc, etc.

      Hard? click :)

    3. Re:IE compatibility? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This actually points up another reason for dumping Microsoft. For years, they have made a habit of passing out their web-site creation software for free and/or bundling it with other M$ software while deliberately making it generate HTML that will only work well with IE.

      As people start creating web-sites with software other than MS's, I expect to see this get better.

  23. Which of S.Korea's state subsidized monopolies... by Osrin · · Score: 2, Interesting

    ... will take the lead in this do you think? Hyundai, Samsung or LG?

    S.Korea had a similar plan during the 70s when they subsidized the big three to each develop and market their own version of Unix in the hope that they would be able to undercut the Americans.

  24. The effective cost of an OS is now $0 by kfg · · Score: 1

    And people are starting to realize this.

    I'm not just talking Linux. BSD, Plan 9, maybe the BeOS projects soon and a number of other players are all distribuing with some form of open source license.

    The IP of some of these is absolutely unassailable ( I'd like to see SCO claim rights to Plan 9 ).

    During the antitrust trial one of the statments Bill made in his defence was "I'm just one good idea away from oblivion."

    Well, there are lots of good ideas floating about freely these days and more on the way.

    For every person that switches to a non MS OS their ability to control the market because they control the market weakens. Then they have to start marketing based on added value over the base of free.

    You can see that this is actually what they're trying to do with the TCO campaign while trying to match open source with "shared source."

    Well, guess what Bill? You'll have to do a bit better than that. I'm not saying you won't necessarily pull it off in the long run, but you'll still be reduced to just one of a number of players, without all extortionate markup gravy either.

    The commoditization of the OS is an existing reality. The commoditization of the office suite arrives sometime next week or so.

    It's a Brave New World.

    KFG

  25. Mr. Maskirovka, I love you! by slashcop · · Score: 0

    Hello Mr. Maskirovka! Call me, my phone number is 531-692-4456

    1. Re:Mr. Maskirovka, I love you! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't do toll calls. Email me if you want something. Posted anonymously to avoid karma burnage.

  26. A foot in the door.. by Haxwell · · Score: 2, Insightful

    or camels nose under the tent, whatever way you want to explain it, this is very cool. Something I just realized, if enough governments or corporate arenas move to open source software, inertia will help us bring down Microsoft because they will have to create there software to interoperate. If they don't, their current customers will not be able to communicate as effectively with our open source bretheren. The tables will have turned. The tables are turning. Thats very cool.

    --
    http://www.haxwell.org
    1. Re:A foot in the door.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      talk to me when one oem makes linux their default operating system shipped on new PCs. that'll be the sign that the revolution has started.

  27. Blizzard by lobsterGun · · Score: 5, Funny


    I would think that this would mean that we will be seeing more games coming out for Linux (at least from Blizzard).

  28. The Dam has Broken and the Floodgates are Open! by overbyj · · Score: 1

    This one is big....real big and it means big trouble for MS. Losing a city like Munich or even one state like MA MS could absorb but an entire country like South Korea? If I was Ballmer, I would be getting my assistant to fetch me those Depends because he should be shitting his pants. South Korea is a major economic force (relatively speaking, i.e., compared to Peru and Brazil which are dabbling with OSS) and when they do something in the computer and electronic industry they don't do it half-assed or haphazardly.

    This is a major blow to MS, but not undeserved and no, I am not just automatically anti-MS. This is just that old adage "What comes around, goes around." MS has sown the seeds of discontent themselves by overcharging and maintaining an iron-fisted and draconian grip over the software industry.

    --
    No trees were harmed in the composition of this; however, numerous electrons were inconvenienced.
    1. Re:The Dam has Broken and the Floodgates are Open! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Considering Korea probably has 10 valid licenses for all their software they are only saving the money from having to be "legit". Microsoft on the other hand isn't losing squat.

    2. Re:The Dam has Broken and the Floodgates are Open! by mangancha · · Score: 1

      Brazil = 9th economy of the world... not bad. But you point is well taken.

  29. Isn't it a bit worrying ... by BillsPetMonkey · · Score: 1

    when governments jump onto bandwagons like this? Sure, Linux is great software, the GPL is a solid license, Microsoft is the Demon of the Decade but most of the politicians (in the UK) don't actively use email so why is it that they now suddenly "get" OSS?

    Is it their enthusiastic advisors plugging OSS? Then I hope they have a good alibi if their bosses "understanding" doesn't match their expectations - it's a good start but politicians sometimes have a "midas" touch on these issues. Except it's not gold it turns into ...

    --
    "It's not your information. It's information about you" - John Ford, Vice President, Equifax
  30. Re:Which of S.Korea's state subsidized monopolies. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    you're forgetting one. 'Lotte' is huge in korea too...It's indeed scary to see how much power those companies have. Controlling and creating everything from theme-parks to the windows you look through (you know those transparent ones)

  31. No zepplins !!! by taniwha · · Score: 1

    or rather hot air ballons - they have lots of that

  32. In the other news by wumpus188 · · Score: 2, Funny

    Yesterday, North Korea has switched all their 7 PCs to RedHat Linux. That makes them second MS-free economy in the world (first was, of course, The Principality of Sealand. Film at 11

  33. On the contrary by Baki · · Score: 1

    With OSS you get a customizable product with less (formal) vendor support.
    As a customer, this is cheap to buy AND gives you extra flexibility, but OTOH you need to buy service instead.

    So you shift the cost of purchase to the cost of service, with the advantage of independance from a single vendor and possibility to customize the software more to your liking.

    A standard (COTS) product can be produced off short. The service for OSS however must be (partially) provided by someone who is on-site, i.e. is harder to move off short.
    The whole idea of OSS as a business model is to sell a service, not a product.

    1. Re:On the contrary by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      NineNine is a known troll. You know what to do, mods.

    2. Re:On the contrary by azzy · · Score: 1

      Anonymous Coward is a known troll. You know what to do, mods.

    3. Re:On the contrary by kryptkpr · · Score: 1

      I know this is a troll, but I'll bite.

      OSS w/Service translates to custom tailored software to the needs of you and your company. Even _if_ you have to pay more for it (and this is a rather large if), the return you get from increased productivity (as your users are using software made and tailored for their needs; if their needs change, their software can too, quickly) far outweighs the costs associated with the software itself.

      This is what I try to explain to all my consulting clients, and the overwhelming majority of them get it (or go somewhere else).

      Commercial software simply cannot be customized. Two, or three comercial packages cannot be combined (easily; you can sometimes hack your way around it, but an elegant solution is often not possible). It either does what you want it to, or it doesn't.

      --
      DJ kRYPT's Free MP3s!
    4. Re:On the contrary by swillden · · Score: 1

      Assuming it's equally as easy to install and maintain as the off the shelf software, then there's a net loss in the development jobs.

      By this logic, we would all be better off if high-level languages were banned. Imagine how many more programmers would be needed if everything had to be written in assembly! Custom code required for every hardware platform! Yay, lots 'o jobs!

      Intentionally preserving inefficiency to maximize jobs is sheer stupidity. If we have too many developers (and we don't), then some of the developers should learn to do something else rather than wishing that there were more jobs.

      --
      Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
  34. BREAKING NEWS by s0rbix · · Score: 1, Funny

    Update: North Korea has also announced plans to switch over its 3 computers to open souce software...

    1. Re:BREAKING NEWS by Basehart · · Score: 1

      Ouch, that must hurt....missing being Funny by one minute.

    2. Re:BREAKING NEWS by gregfortune · · Score: 1

      300 Million dollars in savings? Yeah, I'll bet it's just 3 computers.

    3. Re:BREAKING NEWS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      FUCKING IDIOT. THE ARTICLE IS ABOUT SOUTH KOREA. HE SAID NORTH KOREA. LEARN TO FUCKING READ FAGGOT.

      Reason: Don't use so many caps. It's like YELLING.
      # Important Stuff: Please try to keep posts on topic.
      # Try to reply to other people's comments instead of starting new threads.
      # Read other people's messages before posting your own to avoid simply duplicating what has already been said.
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  35. Wrong. by NineNine · · Score: 1, Interesting

    The effective cost of an OS is now $0

    That's wrong. I gladly pay for my W2K licenses because it helps me get more work done quicker. For me to learn how to use Linux, it would take me many, many hours. Time is money, kiddo. No OS is free.

    1. Re:Wrong. by Jord · · Score: 1

      Might want to start investing in your own future and learn another OS. Otherwise your time might be as valuable as an Amiga operator...

    2. Re:Wrong. by kfg · · Score: 1

      That would fall under the added value and TCO I already covered in my original post.

      A free coach ticket is a free flight. Period. Owning your own Lear jet costs a lot of money. The TCO of owning a Lear may be lower if the time you save in traveling is worth several thousand dollars an hour. Lear makes money selling jets to those few that fit into this catagory.

      In the meantime my family flies coach for free and have determined that total cost, to us, is $0.

      KFG

    3. Re:Wrong. by NineNine · · Score: 1

      Might want to start investing in your own future and learn another OS.

      My job isn't to learn OS's. I have a business to run. Not everybody is an IT geek. I pay MS a few hundred, install the software, then go on with my life.

    4. Re:Wrong. by NineNine · · Score: 1

      Exactly. A W2K Pro license costs me $200. Assuming that my time is worth only $20/hour, I'm only saving money if I spend less than 10/hours per box figuring out things like what to download, how to download, download time, how to install, how to change the resolution, time to find the various drivers, a trip to the store to buy Linux-compliant parts, how the hell to get the modem working, etc. which isn't likely to take less than 10 hours.

    5. Re:Wrong. by Jord · · Score: 1

      Not everyone is in IT I would agree. But just imagine if MS went away tomorrow, where would you be? Even non-IT people can benefit from learning other tools besides MS.

    6. Re:Wrong. by NineNine · · Score: 1, Flamebait

      Not everyone is in IT I would agree. But just imagine if MS went away tomorrow, where would you be? Even non-IT people can benefit from learning other tools besides MS.

      I'd be in more trouble if the sun suddenly exploded tomorrow, which is about as likely. What IS more likely is using an obscure OSS package, then the kid who wrote it, say, gets kicked out of college, and doesn't have broadband at his parent's house, so he can't support it any more. Or, the OSS company that wrote it goes belly up. Call me nuts, but I feel a bit more secure with one of the largest companies in the world backing up my software than some college kids working out of their dorms.

    7. Re:Wrong. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      what you are describing is exactly what a lot of folks call "lock-in".

      Whenever you hear about Microsoft "adjusting" their license fees, you also hear a lot of griping. Folks saying "this is it, we're switching to Macs" or something. However they usually don't, because the cost of retraining. migrating apps, etc., is too high.

      It works the other way too. It would take me years to bring my Windows skills up to par with my Mac and Unix skills. However I can freely move between Unix varients (and Mac OS X) with minimal change. I recently switched a few servers from Red Hat to FreeBSD, and now they are running the same apps on a different OS.

      So for me I'm "locked-out" of Windows, and "locked-in" to flexible Free software. Fine with me! I guess I'm kinda glad that the first OS I learned was Ultrix.

      Of course some folks are really good at convincing themselves that they *CHOSE* this arrangement... but it's just the great cost of switching and retraining, plus the fact that Windows comes on most computers. Microsoft knows this and has been milking it for all it's worth, and then some!

    8. Re:Wrong. by kfg · · Score: 1

      While the article refers to South Korea adopting Linux, please note that I did not.

      I spoke of open source operating systems.

      KFG

    9. Re:Wrong. by Jord · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Who said it had to be OSS? Locking yourself into ANY one vendor is nuts. I can remember back when business owners couldn't be bothered to learn how to use a computer themselves and would rather have an assistant do all that "techno stuff" for them. I now know quite a few of them that are out of jobs and cannot get a job because they are suddenly lack experience in crucial areas. The world of technology is a lot bigger than just one company no matter how big that company is. Tying yourself to any one company is just a bad business mistake. Keeping your options open is the smarter move. As for OSS, I seriously doubt it is going to just disappear if one person stops using it. That is contrary to the way the system works. Not to mention all of the big companies that are supporting it. To me, I would rather use software that is supported by MULTIPLE very large companies rather than roll the dice with one company who continues to get themselves in more and more trouble. But hey, its all just opinion. Enjoy your comfy box, I don't think I would feel as comfortable trusting MS.

    10. Re:Wrong. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I have a business to run.

      Let me check this...

      I pay MS a few hundred, install the software, then go on with my life.

      ...not true.

    11. Re:Wrong. by spektr · · Score: 1

      What IS more likely is using an obscure OSS package, then the kid who wrote it, say, gets kicked out of college, and doesn't have broadband at his parent's house, so he can't support it any more. Or, the OSS company that wrote it goes belly up.

      I know that you're a troll, and I shouldn't bother to answer. But if this is your picture of open source software, then you were living under a rock for at least the last 3-5 years. OSS is supported and actively developed by more than one big company.

      Or, the OSS company that wrote it goes belly up.

      Then another company can take the source, continue development or just support you. Which is not possible with proprietary software.

      Call me nuts, but I feel a bit more secure with one of the largest companies in the world backing up my software than some college kids working out of their dorms.

      Again, if a closed source company goes belly up, you can trash your installation. If a OSS company dies, you can choose your support from a wide range that starts with college kids in their dorms and ends with IBM and other big companies.

    12. Re:Wrong. by codepunk · · Score: 1

      That is exactly what most of us here on slashdot want you to do. You stick with your W2K half assed closed platform while the rest of us cut you off at the knee's. Say you walk into a customer and throw down your cool web app based on the great .not platform. The customers first reaction is going to be shock when you tell him he will need a sql server oh yes with enterprise licensing and on top of that a web server that will need to be patched daily and need to have a ton of ram just to run windows. Now being the coool assssed linux developer that I am I am going to go to this same client and say here buy my solution and hell I will throw in the database and web server in for free with no licensing.

      Bottom line is you just lost that deal, guaranteed.

      --


      Got Code?
    13. Re:Wrong. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My job isn't to learn OS's. I have a business to run.

      Ya know, so do I. And the constant gratuitous changes that M$ threw into every software release as well as the incompatibility with their own file formats is what finally drove me away from Windows!

    14. Re:Wrong. by IANAAC · · Score: 1

      Did it take you 10 hours or less to figure out how to properly administer a W2K box? How about how to find the proper driver for that new SCSI card? When you were prompted to go to Windows' update page, did you know what you actually needed to download and install, or did you just blindly download everything (I won't even mention the total downlaod time neede for THAT)?
      Proper W2K setup/administration is just as time consuming as Linux.

    15. Re:Wrong. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are obviously a troll, but I'll bite!

      I do a helluva lot more with Windows than just use M$ software. Specifically, I do a lot with adobe products and, more specifically, PageMaker. M$ has already set their sites on Adobe's turf. When the day comes that M$ drives Adobe out of business and I am forced to use Publisher (gakk!) I will go back to paper cut and paste for page layout.

      What IS more likely is using an obscure OSS package, then the kid who wrote it, say, gets kicked out of college, and doesn't have broadband at his parent's house, so he can't support it any more.

      Now you know damned well that all those college/living in mommy's basement kids are busily crafting the next round of viruses to take advantage of all those new M$ "features" added to the latest release!

    16. Re:Wrong. by redhat421 · · Score: 2, Insightful
      I feel a bit more secure with one of the largest companies in the world backing up my software than some college kids working out of their dorms.

      Your point would seem to make sense, except Microsoft is just as likely to decide that a product does not make them enough money, and discontinue it. When they do that, you have no recourse. If you were using OSS then you can hire your own guy to maintain or improve it. If your using open formats, then you could just switch programs an not think twice about it.

      Examples: ListBot IE for Mac Windows 98/NT

      So, having said that, doesn't it make sense that the government should mandate open formats so that they're protected from the OSS coder losing his broadband and MS locking them in? If MS Office really does the job the best, then they should not be afraid to use an open documented format. This goes for any product.

  36. Browsers by rdean400 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Makes it seem like all the pundits who called the browser wars OVER were a bit premature in their declaration. With non-U.S. governments going whole hog to non-proprietary products, Mozilla, Konqueror, and other open source products will finally see their share rise at the expense of IE (what else is there to rob from?). When the U.S. becomes a small subset of web users, IE's market share will be less like a monopoly and more like a realistic competitor.

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

      Not premature. Just because another war arises doesn't mean that the first one wasn't over. It took three Punic Wars before Rome finally crushed Carthage. It wouldn't have been a mistake to say that the first one was OVER in 235 BC.

    2. Re:Browsers by rdean400 · · Score: 1

      Fair enough. However, in this case, the market share numbers are fluid, with Microsoft still increasing (attacking, to use the parlance of the analogy, although they're not expending any effort to gain that share), so the war's not really over.

  37. Did anyone else... by sprekken · · Score: 1

    The only question now is will Steve Ballmer be capable of covering the sort of distance needed to pull back all these switching governments before collapsing with exhaustion, or is he en route for the Air Miles record?

    ... get an image in their minds of good ol' Steve bouncing around frantically from one country to another, sweat pouring down his face into his soaked clothing, shouting exhaustedly "Developers! Developers!..."

    Hah! Now that's priceless!

    1. Re:Did anyone else... by gregfortune · · Score: 1

      IBM should figure out how to make that into a commercial :)

  38. I, for one, don't think the US should be overlords by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What, South Korea doesn't want American overlords? Don't they realize that Americans are superior people?

  39. Re:WHY LINUX IS A FAILURE by tarquin_fim_bim · · Score: 2, Funny

    How the hell is anyone supposed to understand that? Where is your puctuation? Without punctuation its just looks like a mess of jumbled up letters.

  40. On the contrary by NineNine · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    OTOH you need to buy service instead.

    If you're saying that you have to spend on service for OSS what the price of commercial software would be PLUS their service, fine. That also indicates a shitty product if service costs that much. Assuming it's equally as easy to install and maintain as the off the shelf software, then there's a net loss in the development jobs.

  41. Ballmer won't be picking up Air Miles by burgburgburg · · Score: 1
    ...or is he en route for the Air Miles record?"

    That's just silly. Why would Ballmer need to use commercial aviation when he's Dancing Flying MonkeyBoy! As the Wicked Wizard of the Pacific NorthWest sends him aloft, cackling "I'll get those Ruby Hats yet, my pretties!!!! Eyy Hehehehehehehehehe!!!!"

    1. Re:Ballmer won't be picking up Air Miles by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Or he could just ring his friends in the government and have them threaten to move troops out of Korea.

      That would work.

  42. Language support. by Rimbo · · Score: 2, Informative

    One thing I have to give Microsoft credit for is their foreign-language support and Asian IME's. I had to set up a Linux box for a friend with both Traditional and Simplified Chinese support, and it was nasty to try and figure out. The final result was not quite as simple and easy-to-use as what you'd find in OS X or Windows.

    In the light of this, the decision of Eastern governments like China and Korea to go with open-source software is all the more significant. To me, it indicates that they are more than willing to deal with software that may not be as good to gain the benefits of OSS.

    1. Re:Language support. by SmallFurryCreature · · Score: 1
      Oops, you haven't been following this story completly have you?

      Foreign language support has always been a mess in MS software. Sure it may look good enough when as a primarly english user you occasianly have to use a foreign language. It just doesn't seem to be good enough when your english ehm sucks.

      Their unicode support blows for one, having once again ruined a standard. Try reading a simple text file with asian text on another OS. Good luck.

      The entire reason the asain countries like OSS so much is that it is very very simple, well simple when you are talking countries, to add real support for their language. The chinese already did so with Red Flag and India did so quit recently, story should still be on the frontpage infact.

      So wether OSS is better or not is not really the point. For them at least it is better in that they can alter it themselves and not have to depend on a company in america to please please support all the local languages.

      --

      MMO Quests are like orgasms:

      You may solo them, I prefer them in a group.

    2. Re:Language support. by Rimbo · · Score: 1

      "So wether OSS is better or not is not really the point. For them at least it is better in that they can alter it themselves and not have to depend on a company in america to please please support all the local languages."

      You're absolutely right about that. Application-level support in Windows is pretty bad. I was thinking more along the lines of the Chinese/Korean IMEs that were offered a year or so ago when I was trying to get it up and running. That was using RedHat 7.3, so that gives you an idea of when that was. Windows' IME was (still is) quite good and intuitive.

  43. RTFA by NineNine · · Score: 1

    20% of desktops and 30% of servers.

    1. Re:RTFA by overbyj · · Score: 1

      20% of desktops and 30% of servers in a country like South Korea is a significant number unlike the same percentage in a country like Peru or Brazil. Therefore, it is a worrisome issue for MS.

      --
      No trees were harmed in the composition of this; however, numerous electrons were inconvenienced.
    2. Re:RTFA by gregfortune · · Score: 1

      Tell you what, if I offered you 20% of my yearly income or 30% of the income tax the U.S. government collects this year, which would you take? It's all about the size of the pie and this one is pretty impressive.

    3. Re:RTFA by gregfortune · · Score: 1

      he he, meant to use 20% for both numbers... heck, might as well change the second number to 2%...

  44. christmas is coming! by flacco · · Score: 1
    i think ballmer would appreciate some knee-pads in his stocking this year. i say we chip in and buy him some, along with a Fodor's travel guide.

    and for billy gates? how about a buggy whip?

    i'm serious, btw.

    --
    pr0n - keeping monitor glass spotless since 1981.
  45. I'm really happy about this line: by Saint+Aardvark · · Score: 2, Interesting
    As a first step, organisations including South Korea's Industry Promotion Agency and Korea Association of Information and Telecommunication will switch to open source software such as the Linux operating system and Mozilla web browser for both desktop PCs and servers.

    I've just been to two websites in the last five minutes (www.iams.com and www.thefermentedgrape.com) that did not cooperate with Mozilla. Iams' had a text version; the other is a wine brewing store just down the street, so I'll be able to talk to them directly (gak! RealWorld!). Perhaps -- I'm the overly optimistic sort sometimes -- a country with 48 million people switching to Mozilla (yes, government != joe user) will make the odd web developer realize that not fucking everybody uses IE.

    (ObDisclaimers: I realize that two web sites are not a huge deal. Most of the time I'm happy to write off the site in question and move on. The instructions did specifically state that I shouldn't taunt Happy Fun Ball.)

    1. Re:I'm really happy about this line: by Unregistered · · Score: 1

      uh, thefermentedgrape.com worked fine in firebird .6

    2. Re:I'm really happy about this line: by gl4ss · · Score: 1

      uh, i was going to say that too but the pulldown lists don't do anything(like, a go button of some sort would be needed. seems just silly design for me.)

      anyways.. there's barely any ie users coming through to my site nowadays from my sig(~1000 hits per month from slashdot it seems), and one way to get even the general buffoons to switch to mozilla is to get them to learn that with mozilla their computers don't become owned by adware when vising pron sites..

      --
      world was created 5 seconds before this post as it is.
    3. Re:I'm really happy about this line: by Unregistered · · Score: 1

      oh, i didn't go that far. Most places can get a dropdown list right. Even hitting enter won't submit. That's kinda lame, and probobly real bad coding as well.

    4. Re:I'm really happy about this line: by jejones · · Score: 1

      I just went to www.iams.com, and have yet to see something that doesn't work for me under Mozilla (1.4, Gecko/20030701). Can you be more specific? I'll cheerfully send IAMS email about it, but precise info would help.

  46. No new loss for closed..... by PrimalChrome · · Score: 1

    .....considering that ~90% of the software in said country is pirated anyway. The big loss will be to the OSS community when they realize that more and more OS code will be incorporated into closed source apps with note even a by your leave given to the GPL.

    1. Re:No new loss for closed..... by gregfortune · · Score: 1

      Let's say your point about the pirating stands. It's still a huge real world example of how Linux can replace the Windows infrastructure of a country. I'm pretty sure this will be the largest public exodus from Microsoft in history.

    2. Re:No new loss for closed..... by iggymanz · · Score: 1

      I really don't think such a thing (use in other countries without including source or attribution) will hurt the Open Source movement. The *control* of open source is by those who openly contribute. The preferred type of software will be that which has available source code. Who is going to get the cooperation and help and support and updates from the OS movement worldwide, the company that steals open source and provides only binaries for their product? A perfect example is SCO. Will the rising young IT people by & large specify & purchase their goods ever again? Will gifted people want to work there? Heck, I'm an *old* IT specifier & purchaser, and I not only won't buy their products, I will actively evangelize against SCO to any of their current customers (which I've already done once already). If I'm again in a position to hire people, I won't hire anyone who's worked at SCO after May of this year (vindictive old bastard, aren't I) I think offshore OS thieves will find themselves in SCO's position as the world get smaller.

  47. You're crazy by NineNine · · Score: 1

    . Call me crazy but I really believe that government should always choose the least expensive option whenever possibe

    A government is not a business. I was once told that a business is run to maximize profits, and a government is run to maximize fairness. Governments don't run like this. If they did, things like the US mail wouldn't be guaranteed to everybody. It'd be too expensive to run mail out to people in the country. Paved roads? Again, only in populated areas where the tax money can support it. Education? Fuck the kids. They're too expensive.

    Sorry kid, but that's a pretty shitty topic for a thesis of any kind because you haven't thought it out more than deciding which candy bar to buy.

    1. Re:You're crazy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I don't think that they were suggesting no computers -- they were suggesting cheaper computers.

      In your example, it's not about whether everyone gets mail service, but more along the lines of which manfacturer will produce the truck that deliver the mail. The government will still exist, it's just a matter of whether they make economically efficient decisions

    2. Re:You're crazy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not all governments have the same plans.

      Socialist governments want to maximize equality.

      Capitalist governments want to maximize profits without getting overthrown by a million pissed off workers.

  48. false economy...for now by GCP · · Score: 1

    Yes, US states are suffering budget constraints, but the purchase price of software is small potatoes in the US compared to the cost of personnel. People costs such as training and support far outweight what you save in the initial software purchase, and I don't think open source benefits from simple-minded economic arguments ("it's free!") that lead to "policy mandates" from above that fail on the front lines and make everybody cranky.

    Over time, though, open source software will get easier to use and people will encounter it more and more often. More "killer apps" will appear for Linux, prompting the installation of Linux for those apps, leading to experimentation with other apps ("as long as we have this Linux box and the app is free for the download, why not check it out...?"), leading to more familiarity and more experiments, etc., from the bottom up.

    When the users instigate the experiments, they'll be a lot more patient with the inevitable obstacles than if the decision is imposed on them from above.

    --
    "Those who have never entered upon scientific pursuits know not a tithe of the poetry by which they are surrounded."
  49. This means... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    South Korea must be liberated because any country that uses non-MS software is a safe haven for terrorists, child pornographers, women rapists, Kennedys, and other forms of scum.

  50. actually, I'm thinking of just a few... by tokengeekgrrl · · Score: 2, Insightful

    ...distros build colloboratively by the IT departments from various state governments.

    I realize it would most likely have to occur on departmental levels, for example, I work for the courts and develop case management systems so I would work with the IT departments of other courts in other states.

    The current system in place for some of my appellate courts are based on a system that was developed by a vendor for a different state but since it's proprietary to the vendor, we can't enhance it so we have to re-write it so that we own the code and can make changes as needed. Imagine if we could create a baseline application for all the courts in the state and leverage all the programmers in those IT departments to work on it? Ok, so maybe it's just my fantasy.

    - tokengeekgrrl

    1. Re:actually, I'm thinking of just a few... by Strudelkugel · · Score: 2, Insightful

      so I would work with the IT departments ... in other states

      This is the thing I really wonder about with OSS. Will the various users of OSS create an Epseranto like landscape of compatible systems, or will the whole thing turn into a spaghetti code "platform of Babel?"

      People get all excited about "The Chinese/Koreans/Germans/Brazilians are endorsing Linux! Yeah!" What's not mentioned is the variation in distros. Knowing how bureaucrats love to create their own empires, I think the conditions for distro hell are well in the making. Odd as it may seem, the only way to avoid it will be vendor lock in, which of course is the opportunity that IBM senses and Red Hat / SuSE desire to exploit.

      --
      Imagine how much harder physics would be if electrons had feelings! -Feynman, maybe
  51. Re:He he he... by JVert · · Score: 1

    by the way.

    No one takes AC's seriously.

  52. The 30% solution by Stephen+Samuel · · Score: 1
    I'm not quite with the "governments should make laws forcing Open Source down people's throats",

    In this case, at least, the government isn't really forcing open source down people's throats. What they are doing with the 30% mandate is they're seeding the space with enough PCs running Open Source that the market can't just blithely ignore the existence of anything non-MS.

    At that point, people really have a choice. If OS turns their crank, then they know that the market will support most/all that they want/need to do. If MS-Windows really is better, there's still 70% of machines that can be left running Windows.

    Right now, with MS both owning the market and also coming up with all sorts of incentives for companies to build sites that only support Windows, there are a lot of people who don't thing that there's a real choice for them.

    A real free market requires choice, and I think that this provides that.

    --
    Free Software: Like love, it grows best when given away.
  53. The dumbing down of ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What's really interesting is how the United States used to be looked up to in terms of education. Funny how these "other" countries, who are now more respected than the US for their standards of education, are switching to Linux.
    What does that say about the U.S.?

    1. Re:The dumbing down of ... by nyseal · · Score: 1

      It's also funny how the majority of third world doctors, teachers and yes, terrorists are educated in the US.

      --
      [SIG] Remember Mattel handheld games?
    2. Re:The dumbing down of ... by gearheadsmp · · Score: 1

      It says the lobbyists have too much power in goverment.

  54. The price of a monopoly... by Dr.+Bent · · Score: 1

    One thing I've noticed is that many organizations and countries have been switching to open source software just because it's not Microsoft. They're sick and tired of Microsoft's ruthless and illegal business practices, and quite frankly I don't blame them.

    The problem is that OSS is not the golden hammer solution to every problem. Some systems are better off being built using propritary software, especially when you need someone who will "just fix it" if it breaks, or has a whole suite of solutions that work together. Unfortunately, Microsoft's violation of anti-trust law has ensured that there are few, if any, viable propritary alternatives to many software products (i.e. desktop operating systems). The result is that our options are limited to choices which, in some cases, are far less than optimal.

    Microsoft's business tactics may be driving people to open source, but if open source is not the answer to your problem, that is not a good thing.

  55. basic problem by trb · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Would you rather pay a bunch of money for an encumbered proprietary tool or get an approximately equivalent unencumbered tool for close to free? I don't see how MS can defend itself in this battle.

    1. Re:basic problem by overbom · · Score: 1

      Would you rather pay a bunch of money for an encumbered proprietary tool or get an approximately equivalent unencumbered tool for close to free? I don't see how MS can defend itself in this battle.

      Well... microsoft has more lawyers than SCO, and more money, too. If they can make Linux cost more $$, they've won. I'm guessing that's how M$ will (is) defend (ing) itself.

      That, or they'll compete on quality. /snort

  56. In other news... by Your+Worst+Fear · · Score: 0, Offtopic
    Mass reports confirm that upon hearing the above news story, geeks all over the world collectively and involuntarily jizzed all over themselves and their linux boxen, causing massive computer failures the scale of which has yet to be determined. RMS was unavailable for comment as the paramedics are too grossed out at the stench eminating from him and the sight of gallons of cum spread all over his residence.

    ewwww..

    --

    Cheers,
    Your worst fear

  57. Bill, is that you? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No? Must be Steve!

  58. I'm coming from the perspective... by tokengeekgrrl · · Score: 3, Interesting

    ...that I am currently re-writing proprietary applications bought from vendors, (one client-server app based on Oracle powerbuilder and another 32-bit windows-based). Once my team is done, we will own the code but the technology underneath (I'm thinking of Oracle specifically and other middleware applications) will still be owned by someone else. Once say Oracle decides to no longer support whichever of their products we are using, we have to upgrade and re-program it again if necessary, etc...

    Basically, I think the cost-effectiveness will be recognizeable in the longterm because of the total ownership over the technology and investment made into resources so I understand your point in regards to open source by itself not necessarily being cost-effective. I have worked in the state government for 5+ years which, while not an extraordinarily long period of time, has revealed to me the expensive process that is endured with throwing money into "current" technology only to have it fade away within a few years and require replacing.

    But you are quite right in that open source does not guarantee anything but it does offer great potential.

    - tokengeekgrrl

  59. Captain Archer by quacking+duck · · Score: 1
    For some reason that brought to mind that ridiculous Dance of Profuse Apology Archer had to make to the leaders of some planet in Enterprise's "A night in Sickbay".

    I wonder how many country's sacred trees Balmer's dog has relieved itself on...

  60. I hadn't prior to your posting... by tokengeekgrrl · · Score: 1

    ...but I have now, thanks! :)

    I think local control is as important as cost savings. From my experience, it is often overlooked as something desirable because some government managers don't want the full responsibility that brings, they always want to be able to point their finger at a vendor. I think the public deserves better than that.

    - tokengeekgrrl

    1. Re:I hadn't prior to your posting... by PBCODER · · Score: 1

      Thank you..
      I feel the same way about the public deserving better.
      I work for the Clerk of Court and am currently in a situation where we chose to pay a vendor to create a software package for court document imaging, storage , and retrieval. Essentially we are paying them to write the software and they own the code so they can re-sell it to other counties. This really really make me mad to see public money spent this way.
      I would like very much to see a public repository of government software available for use by anybody. The managers are just starting to come around to accepting SOME open source applications. And I'm keeping them informed on the open source issues to keep them thinking.
      A recent conversation revealed that we now spend over 1 million a year on software maintenance agreements. To which I replied that it is perfectly ok to pay someone to add features to an open source application.

  61. Re:He he he... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Whatever man. I'm not particularly fond of Microsoft, nor was I defending them. I specifically stated I was using the OpenSSH as an example of a recurring theme around here, yet you had to latch on to it and blabber about all that is evil and wrong with the world. Way to go.

    Read my post again, then read it again, and then again. When you understand what I'm saying, then reply. Otherwise keep your insight to yourself.

    This is interesting, considering you're an anonymous coward

    Yet you just had to reply, didn't you?

  62. maximize fairness = cost-effective, not profits by tokengeekgrrl · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Since there is only so much money to go around to fund IT infrastructure/application development, an integral part of my dept's mandate is to be cost-effective in order to be fair to all users across the state (which is a significant group since I'm in CA).

    In light of that clarification, I don't think your comparison to US mail or paved roads or education or my deciding which candy bar to buy (twixt is my current favorite) is really applicable. ;)

    - tokengeekgrrl

  63. Wow by MarkusQ · · Score: 1

    ...imagine if MS went away tomorrow, where would you be?

    I'd be in more trouble if the sun suddenly exploded tomorrow, which is about as likely.

    Wow. I hope your job doesn't depend on your ability to judge odds. Major US corporations go away on a regular basis (at least one a decade); their life expectancy is well under 10^2 years. G class stars explode--almost never. But even if we charitably count all failure modes as "explosions" they still last on the order of 10^10 years, a ratio of a hundred million to one.

    Thus, you are saying that a 1% chance is "about as likely" as 1 chance in 100,000,000, which is...well, wrong.

    -- MarkusQ

  64. But it is GOOD NEWS for Linux and Democracy by reporter · · Score: 0, Flamebait
    Finally, a large government has adopted this kind of standard.

    The Korean decision to move to open source was likely motivated by last week's surprise decision by NTT to migrate its server setup from Solaris to Linux and to aggressively develop Linux. NTT joined the Open Source Development Laboratory to improve Linux code, according to "NTT Mulls Joining Global Consortium For Linux Development".

    Despite all the racist Korean hatred against the Japanese, the Koreans habitually emulate the Japanese. For example, all the Korean chaebols like Samsung are duplicates of the conglomerates that operated in pre-WWII Japan. Samsung emulates most of the technological trends of its Japanese competitors. Further, NTT commands wide respect in Korea itself, and its decision to support Linux certainly spurred the Koreans to follow suit.

    The only losers in this whole affair are Microsoft and, of course, Sun Microsystems. As a company, Sun Microsystems may not survive past 2005, given that it is now expected to lose about $1 billion in FY2004. (reference: "Sun warns of hefty loss")

    On a side note, the Koreans supporting Linux is good news for democracy in Korea. Korea has been a totalitarian dictatorship up until about 10 years ago; Korea still has the largest and best equipped military force in Asia. Since Linux is open-source, it would be impossible for the Korean government (or any other government, for that matter) to arbitrarily stick a piece of spy software into Linux to monitor its citizens.

    Hopefully, the Koreans will abandon that conspiratory project with the Chinese to develop an independent operating system (OS) that is incompatible with Linux. (reference: "Asian trio to replace Windows") Such an OS would be a convenient place for the Chinese (including the Taiwanese and Hong Kongers) to stick a piece of spy software to monitor its citizens.

    ... from the desk of the reporter

    1. Re:But it is GOOD NEWS for Linux and Democracy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Fact Check. The conspiratory project with the Chinese appears to be development of Linux and other open source, not to create a new OS. Your reference clearly states that the project will be open source, and claims that it will be based upon Linux.

  65. Did they ever pay? by cerebralpc · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Asian nations never pay for software anyway. Most of there Windows software is pirate - its free now so why bother changing?

  66. Bank portals for browsers?? They should use HBCI by Schugy · · Score: 1

    HBCI is fine stuff that works very well. Maybe it's even secure. I just love my Moneyplex 4 Linux from http://www.matrica.de There's even open HBCI if you don't like commercial software. But I really think commercial software that uses open standards isn't bad. Schugy

  67. Sweet... by rampant+mac · · Score: 0, Offtopic
    I see this as an obstacle...

    Does Krecipes support canine weight in kilograms?

    I'm so ashamed... Hello SlashFark

    --
    I like big butts and I cannot lie.
  68. Not all good... by slamb · · Score: 0, Flamebait
    ...there's a downside to the fact that much of Asia has switched or is in the process to switching to Linux: it may damage Linux's reputation.

    Asia is filled with people who administer computers poorly. They may have poor English ability and thus don't understand the standards, they may just be apathetic, they may just be inexperienced with computers, etc. Whatever the reason, it doesn't take more than a glimpse at your logfiles to realize that a disproportional number of worm probes, virus emails, spam, etc. come from Asian IPs. (And then you realize it must be even higher, because most worms have algorithms that favor probing "local" IPs.) In the past, these people have been running Microsoft products poorly. Now they will be running Linux products poorly. This means Linux is likely to move up a lot in any list of most r00t3d systems, both by absolute numbers and by proportions.

    If you're optimistic, you might hope that Linux's open source culture teaches them something about running machines properly, writing documentation in their native languages, etc. Then these attacks would decrease. But I'm not optimistic. I've never gotten a decent response back from Asia when reporting these sorts of things to ISPs, and I do from elsewhere in the world. I have a very low opinion of their technical competence, and I don't think a switch to Linux will fix that.

    1. Re:Not all good... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not only are you prejudiced, you are also bigoted too. It's incredibly presumptious of you to believe that Asia is the sole source of all spam e-mail - as I remember, quite a few boxes get rooted in the U.S, Western Europe, Israel, Russia, what have you.

      Maybe if you were less arrogant and condescending, you would get a response.

    2. Re:Not all good... by slamb · · Score: 1
      I said: Whatever the reason, it doesn't take more than a glimpse at your logfiles to realize that a disproportional number of worm probes, virus emails, spam, etc. come from Asian IPs. (And then you realize it must be even higher, because most worms have algorithms that favor probing "local" IPs.)

      An anonymous coward said: Not only are you prejudiced, you are also bigoted too. It's incredibly presumptious of you to believe that Asia is the sole source of all spam e-mail - as I remember, quite a few boxes get rooted in the U.S, Western Europe, Israel, Russia, what have you.

      First, that's a straw man. I did not say that Asia is the sole source of all spam. Some of it comes from a lot closer to home. And it's also true that even when Asian open relays are used or Asian companies are employed to send it, it is often advertising American products. Read my original statement again. I was very precise, and you've ignored the distinctions.

      Second, it is never prejudiced or bigoted to believe something because the evidence supports it, no matter how politically incorrect the resultant statement is.

      Do you even know what "prejudiced" means? It means coming to conclusions without examining the evidence or in spite of good evidence to the contrary. That's what you've done.

      My statement is supported well by my logfiles and those of other people I've talked to. A lot more malicious traffic comes from Asia than could be explained by their proportion of Internet usage. It's as simple as that. If you run the statistics on your own machines, I believe you'll find the same thing.

      And bigoted? A bigot is "One who is strongly partial to one's own group, religion, race, or politics and is intolerant of those who differ." (American Heritage) Okay, I'm strongly partial to people who reply to polite emails, make some effort to understand what they're getting in to, and participate in the world community in general. I am intolerant of other people. That technically meets that definition of bigoted, but I don't think it meets the spirit of the word. I certainly didn't imply that all Asians have those undesirable characteristics; I noted that the noticeable ones do. Those are the ones who are important for affecting Linux's reputation, so that's sufficient to draw my conclusion.

      I said: I've never gotten a decent response back from Asia when reporting these sorts of things to ISPs, and I do from elsewhere in the world.

      An Anonymous Coward said: Maybe if you were less arrogant and condescending, you would get a response.

      No, I use the same tone regardless of which continent the ISP belongs to. I've politely pointed out that they have a spammer or open relay on their network. I've tried giving various levels of information - from assuming they know what I mean by just that to spelling everything out. Nothing works. The only responses I've ever gotten back were bounce messages don't have abuse addresses (contrary to some advisory RFC I can't remember off the top of my head) and don't have postmaster addresses (contrary to RFC-82[23]). When that happens, APNIC's contact addresses for the IP range are worthless, too.

      Flamebait away. The karma system exists for a reason. I have plenty of karma because I've said things in the past that people have found to be true, and so I can get away with saying unpopular things.

  69. I've said it once, and I'll say it again... by ShadowRage · · Score: 2, Interesting

    the next 10 years will be very interesting.
    I do not see how microsoft will survive..
    I mean they are and arent like IBM, see, IBM had much more going for it than an operating system.
    they had PC's, servers, and all kinds of hardware, they flopped in the PC and OS category, and microsoft and independent PC makers kicked them aside, IBM has thrived on helping opensource, manufacturing computer hardware, etc. they have a survival plan. now they back free software, because hey, it's just software, you gotta have a machine to run the software.
    microsoft is mainly software and stock shares, they do make computers, but they're just as shoddy as the software they make, when microsoft falls, they're going to fall VERY hard. IBM fell, but they had plenty of padding to help them surive, I suggest to Mr. Gates that he better start saving up his money and start looking for a place to retire, because his time is coming up.

    but then again, let's not too cocky, because you never know what will happen, thus why I say the next 10 years will be interesting.
    I bet in the end, all the other countries, except the US will have freedom to choose what software they want to use, while the us has to use microsoft as their operating system, the way special interest has a stranglehold on the government.
    it's gonna be a wild ride.

    1. Re:I've said it once, and I'll say it again... by debest · · Score: 1

      I'm no fan of Microsoft, but they have proven many times over that they can screw up with a strategic decision, course correct without flinching and keep going forward. Witness their ignoring the Internet in the mid-90's: they (wrongly) guessed that the Internet was just a minor offshoot, and that AOL-style online service was the way to go. When Windows 95 was released, MSN was a proprietary online service, not an ISP. They realized damn quick that this was an error, and threw considerable resourses into fixing this. Now they're more of a juggernaut than ever before.

      I see that over the next 10 years, the gap in polish and user-friendliness between open and MS products will continue to shrink, but will never be eliminated. The MS product will continue to be the more "end-user" friendly product (whether the user is home user, office drone, or administrator), simply because you really have to pay programmers to do that polishing job that OSS contributors will never be interested in doing.

      That gap (as narrow as it may eventually become), coupled with legacy applications and just plain fear of change, will always be enough be give Microsoft a very comfortable customer base for the foreseable future (certainly longer than 10 years). Hopefully, they will be in a substantially less dominant position, and as such may even be a company that positively contributes to the advancement of open standards (much as IBM does now, after being very closed in their not-so-distant, dominant, past).

      So don't go planning the "Microsoft bankruptcy party" anytime soon. They've got smart people: they've been adapting to the unique threat that OSS faces, and they'll continue to adapt as they have to.

      Just an aside, I believe that you may be correct about the US being somehow "forced" to use Microsoft software. Since OSS cannot be purchased or bankrupted, the only other way to make OSS "go away" (Microsoft's preferred state) is to litigate it into oblivion. The US seems to be the only country that would concivably be willing to let this happen.

      --
      Look at the tomato! Isn't it sad? He can't dance! Poor tomato!
    2. Re:I've said it once, and I'll say it again... by ShadowRage · · Score: 1

      and ironically, the US is the land of the free.
      wow, imagine that.

  70. Globalism vs corperatism by mabhatter654 · · Score: 2, Interesting
    Exactly opposite to what's going on right now! After all, It's OK for MS to have outsourcing to India and lay off US workers as long as the buck flow here. It NOT ok for us to buy BMWs or Hondas build in the US by US workers because the profit flows back to Japan...get the picture.

    After all, why should the asians buy from MS anyway. They are already using cheap asian labor to make the software then sell it back at inflated american prices. Why not just skip the MS middleman and "pay" their own people..and save a buck or two. When American companies pay cheap labor in asia it's "outsorucing", when Asian companies pay cheap asian labor in asia it's "unfair" competition...see.

    I think you're right on about Globalism though. American companies aren't making JOBS for americans, they're just using it as an excuse to get free work. OSS changes the focus [back] from buying a canned "product" to buying experience and know-how. Corporations like MS have spent years trying to "bottle" knowladge from others and sell it real cheap. OSS lets YOU use knowladge to improve your situation. MS is really in the same racket as the RIAA or MPAA. While they are really popular, they don't make anything people can't live without. That OSS is even an issue shows how quickly software became "Corpratist". After all, we don't have debates about independant music or film, yet independant [free] software is somehow inferior or wrong? It's a great brainwashing job!

    1. Re:Globalism vs corperatism by fitten · · Score: 1

      Yes, but for many people, buying the product is much cheaper than buying the knowledge. Buying a car is much cheaper than going to school to know all things car. In fact, many people do not want to know how to write/develop/maintain software, nor do they want to have someone on-staff to do this (a person's salary for a year is much higher than the cost of buying a shrinkwrap license). This is why there is a support model for those who take it upon themselves to buy support.

  71. The money is important but not main focus by spinel · · Score: 1

    300 Megabucks is big money to me or you but small change in this league. Korea, China, Japan and India running OSS on open standards protocols will make a huge difference for the world. A distro like Mandrake is already easier, faster and more reliable than closed source slop from Redmond. Add enough market and you will find much better device drivers, office suites and interfaces to all the home electronics. I don't think closed source should be outlawed though. There are some honest and reliable closed source vendors. If they use open standards it is not that bad to interoperate. Even if Microsoft was no cost it is too expensive for the quality and security. DC

  72. Where did IME for XP go? by mm0mm · · Score: 1

    One thing I have to give Microsoft credit for is their foreign-language support and Asian IME's.

    Not really. Up to 98 and Me, i18n capability of Winduws was a joke. You had to install half-ass IME on preinstalled IE and it worked only on a few apps, as far as I know.

    The current IME on 2K works OK, but apps written for a localized version of windows still DO NOT run on English version. You can't even install them. Localized versions of Win I believe handle apps for English version (I'm not sure) but localized versions of Windows has UGLY English fonts by default.

    As far as XP goes, I'm not sure, but it looks like it went back to dark ages again. I couldn't configure it to be i18n compatible. I may be missing something, but configuration offers much less than W2K did. MS offers downloadable IME for XP, but unlike IME's for 98/Me, the one for XP is botched and it doesn't work with Mozilla!!!!. It only works on IE, Office and so forth. You can dual boot both English and localized versions on one machine to solve ALL the problems, of course, but why do you have to pay twice for one OS? Besides you HAVE to install two versions on different partitions because if you install both on one partition, system files for the two versions will screw each other up.

    Linux's i18n capability depends on distribution. I first tried Redhat and it worked great. You need to re-login after you change language setup to switch default language, but switch is far more thorough than Winows. Not only IME, it switches desktop's language settings as well. Besides that, you don't have to worry about incompatibility between English version and localized version. Unlike Windows, OS by American monopoly, necessity for i18n has always been there during development of Linux, which took place world wide. Although there are some extra features on w2k ime (dictionary, etc), overall I find Linux language handling more thorough and trustworthy.

    My 2cents.

    1. Re:Where did IME for XP go? by Rimbo · · Score: 1

      An earlier post made similar good points, and you are both right. I do remember the Windows IME only working with certain applications. It worked well as far as those went, and was easy to install and set up. If a distro includes IME setup for the user already (the version of RH 7.3 I had didn't) then what I'm complaining about is a non-issue as well.

  73. hell yeah! by Ender+Ryan · · Score: 2, Interesting
    Now with foreign companies moving along while the U.S. is stuck on the Microsoft monopoly, I can spend thousands of dollars on foreign merchandise instead of buying things locally.

    I just love the business atmosphere here in the U.S. where everyone without high-paid lawyers gets to lick the shit off the Big Players' shoes, or get bullied out of business.

    Seriously, why is it that here in America people aren't more inclined to switch to lower cost solutions? I mean, if you think about it, with the money that companies and government spend on software, they could collaborate and develop their own software and never have to pay out the ass for software again.

    Everywhere else in the world, companies and government are realizing this.

    I just don't get it.

    --
    Sticking feathers up your butt does not make you a chicken - Tyler Durden
  74. Re:Which of S.Korea's state subsidized monopolies. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Don't forget Hynix... Korean companies just love to copy cat things... sometimes with better quality and sometimes with shit for quality.

  75. shit in a hole in the floor, eat their dogs, so... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0



    They shit in a hole in the floor, eat their dogs, so what the hell do you expect from koreans?

  76. Re:WHY LINUX IS A FAILURE by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Is this just random letters, or is it encrypted? It's obviously not rot13, and it doesn't look like there are enough short words for it to be some other substiution cipher. I'm too lazy to think about it any more, but I was hoping that someone else already figured it out.

  77. experts have expressed skepticism by blue_collar_man · · Score: 1

    However industry experts have expressed skepticism, saying that the country's software developers don?t have the resources to support both Windows and Linux.

    And now the 'experts' think the N. Korean programmers aren't smart enough.

    --
    -- Up to no good and lovin' it!
    1. Re:experts have expressed skepticism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      FUCKING IDIOT. IS THE ARTICLE ABOUT NORTH KOREA OR SOUTH KOREA? LEARN TO FUCKING READ. KTHX

      ---
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      # Try to reply to other people's comments instead of starting new threads.
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      Reason: Please use fewer 'junk' characters.

  78. The Evil Empire is losing by cabalamat2 · · Score: 1

    Looks like the Evil Empire is going to lose, and lose big, in the Far East. The Rebel Alliance is growing increasingly strong in Korea, along with Japan and China.

    Personally, I favour the domino theory: once Linux is being used in 10-20% of the computers in these countries, more and more countries will choose freedom with Linux and OSS. First in the government infrastructure, then business and home users.

    Microsoft will be unable to stem the tide in the server sector. They'll hold on longer on the business desktop. Possibly they will eventually re-position themselves as a home PC / games machine company.

    The increasing shrillness and implausibility of MS denunciations of Linux will show that in their hearts they know they're losing.

  79. forest for the trees by pangian · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The arguments that OSS causes a loss in job suffers from the same flaw as /. arguments that technology causes a loss of jobs and outsourcing causes a loss in jobs: looking at a particular piece of the economy rather than looking at the economy in the aggregate.

    Innovative endeavor is never a bad thing. OSS and motorized street sweepers both cost jobs for someone. But society as a whole is able to be more productive, and more jobs are created. Similarly free trade leads companies to move jobs abroad, but it also makes American businesses possible that would previously have been unprofitable and makes consumer good more attainable. Imagine how expensive products would be and how difficult it would be to run a computer store or a car dealership or a toy factory if all the parts were 4-20x as expensive.

    OSS, technology, and free trade really suck for some people. Real people lose real jobs. This is particularly hard on people losing low skill jobs, which are the most likely to be lost due to technology or globalization

    The answer isn't stopping innovation (I consider outsourcing a market/resource management innovation). The answer is making sure that there are systems in place that help the people who lose out due to innovation to get the skills to take advantage of the new jobs that are created by innovation.

  80. Overheard in Ballmer's office... by Provocateur · · Score: 1

    Bill G: er, Steve, where do you want to go today?

    G'nite folks!

    --
    WARNING: Smartphones have side effects--most of them undocumented.
  81. No, They're Not by Greyfox · · Score: 1
    They're saying they're going to switch to Linux. Anytime anyone says they're switching to Linux, Microsoft has a collective pants-crapping and offer heavy discounts to keep those customers. Everyone now knows that the best way to get the best discounts from Microsoft is to claim that they're switching to Linux. Hell if you string Microsoft along long enough, I bet they'd pay you to not switch to Linux. Didn't New York do that just recently? I seem to recall the Gates Foundation giving them a good chunk of money for high schools...

    So my prediction is that Microsoft will cut them a deal and the whole plan will be quietly dropped.

    --

    I'm trying to teach myself to set people on fire with my mind... Is it hot in here?

  82. time to invade! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Personally, I favour the domino theory: once Linux is being used in 10-20% of the computers in these countries, more and more countries will choose freedom with Linux and OSS. First in the government infrastructure, then business and home users.

    SSSSssssshhh!
    The "domino theory" has been used to justify war in Southeast Asia before. Don't give the shrub any ideas!

  83. You're thinking of the Lorax by Theatetus · · Score: 1

    The Onceler spoke for the thneeds he was making and not much else. The Lorax spoke for all the nice things you mentioned.

    Cheers...

    --
    All's true that is mistrusted
    1. Re:You're thinking of the Lorax by EugeneK · · Score: 1

      "I am the Lorax," he said. "I speak for the Trees!"

      "I am busy," I said. "Shut up, if you please."

  84. This hurts the whole economy not just MS! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This can have a ripple effect on the economy that will hurt everyone in this country not just Microsoft. Before making fun of Steve Ballmer, I highly recommend the Open Source fanatics take a crash course in Macroeconomics.

  85. That is only half the picture. by jotaeleemeese · · Score: 1

    In my company (big financial institution) we use alot of OSS: perl, apache, Linux and many utilities.

    We have a team of people that check that the code is kosher (checking that no trojan is introduced, that it does not do stupid or inneficient things, etc). Those jobs would not exists if we were relying on COTS (ought to love acronyms).

    And then we have all the programmers, developpers and SAs whose jobs require to know how to use these tools. More job creation.

    So in my opinion, OSS moves jobs from the producer to the consumer, greatly benefitting the second one.

    If pure software companies want to keep those jobs for themselves (thus remaining profitable) they will have to open their software and help their clients tailoring to their needs.

    The days of software companies bossing their clients aound may be over if software users take the oppportunities that OSS provides.

    --
    IANAL but write like a drunk one.
  86. Wow, it's over by HangingChad · · Score: 1
    We won. Isn't it weird, the moment you realize the outcome of the battle is no longer in doubt? There is joy but tinged with a little sadness. No more war. Sort of the way Patton felt when WWII was over. It's been an epic battle, David and Goliath all over again. Oh, the giant's not dead yet, but it's only a matter of time. Between India, China, Japan and Korea about half the world's population just switched to Linux. O-ver. Between Asia and Europe they'll back us into switching at some point.

    I don't feel a bit sorry for MS. I've never seen a company work so hard to fuck themselves since the AutoDesk days. Over the years they'll fade into the IT background. They'll probably survive in some fashion, look at Novel.

    Man, it was fun there for a while. Aren't you going to miss the battle, just a little?

    --
    That's our life, the big wheel of shit. - The Fat Man, Blue Tango Salvage
  87. Re:He he he... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I do. Therefore your comment is incorrect.

  88. Can't be done by zenray · · Score: 1

    According to Stephen Northcutt; SANS NewsBites Editor; in the latest isssue said: "However, there is usually a reason for monoculture; it is hard to
    imagine trying to do real business using open office on whatever version of Red Hat Linux is out this week." Therefore any attempt to convert to whatever flavour of GNU/ Linux can't be done. The great success in Hollywood and elseware using GNU/Linux must not be real.

    --
    zenray
  89. Just fix it.... by jotaeleemeese · · Score: 1

    If you are a big company, yeah, you can get the "just fix it" treatment.

    Or if you are a goverment, you may get that.

    But for the rest of the world you may just forget it, "just fix it" does not work simply because you can't afford it. "Just fix it" is a reality that very few dealing with software companies experience.

    Even big companies live under forced obsolecense: big companies with relatively stable (for Windows) set ups using NT4 are forced to migrate. The "just fix it" is a falacy that software companies perpetutate but that UT savvy people should dismiss as the half truth it is.

    --
    IANAL but write like a drunk one.
  90. geek pr0n by TLouden · · Score: 1

    $300,000,000 worth of computers? >DROOL

    --
    -Tim Louden
  91. With the war on terror and all that..... by mormop · · Score: 1

    I suspect that many governments particularly France, Germany and China probably took the "with us or against us" stance of the Bush administration rather more seriously than they could have and see closed source software from the US as, potentially, the ultimate spyware. Even with MS's shared source idea there's plenty of room to put a few backdoors in that'd be very difficult to find.

    That's not to say that Linux is guaranteed leak free but they will see it as being more under their control particularly when they can write their own distro.
    Whether there are any backdoors in Windows or not is irrelevant, Just the thought of the Dept. of Homeland Security being able to poke around a foreign governments files would be enough to tip the balance.

    It's a paranoid old world out there.

    --
    Hmmmmmm..... Deep fried and look like Squirrel.
    1. Re:With the war on terror and all that..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not just paranoia, but control and profit.

      People seem to be assuming that if a government creates some software that it will be released free (in either sense). It could be just as inaccessible as anything the US government ever procured, even with notionally good intentions (like the US). But there's no guarantee they have a regulation that requires them to make the software available simply because the government paid for it. They might even sell it -- a price that's 100% tax, how about that?

      Probably more importantly, not only can they perhaps avoid feared backdoors in US software, they can insert their own. Again, a government might be perfectly happy requiring their citizens to use the official government OS, and only the official government OS. The TCPA's got nothing on that.

  92. +4 facetious by Paul+d'Aoust · · Score: 1

    Dangit, why do I never had mod points? I loved this post! It was a very incisive and clever comment on people's stubborn scepticism and failure to think outside the box.

    --
    Standing at the very edge of my imagination, I peered into the inky void and realised -- I couldn't think up a new sig.
  93. Make way for the Detail Nazi.... by retro128 · · Score: 1

    The article summary says they are switching $300M worth of PC's, but actually that's what they plan on saving.

    --
    -R
  94. Funny by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Oh No!!! Not the gooks! /me runs.

  95. Here's a Link by Joel+Carr · · Score: 1

    For all those who haven't seen him dance yet, here's a link. Enjoy!
    Ballmer Dance

    ---

    --
    Any man who can drive safely while kissing a pretty girl is simply not giving the kiss the attention it deserves. -- AE
  96. Balmer figures once they start using it ... by konmaskisin · · Score: 1

    They'll want XP back ... big time and in a bad way ....

  97. Sorry but it is 4th by EvanDelay · · Score: 1

    Sorry dude, South Korea is 4th.

    Japan
    China
    India
    Korea

    http://www.australianpolitics.com/foreign/trade/ 03 -01-07_largest-economies.shtml

    --
    All your oil r belong to us.
  98. Your Dollars Spend there do not come back.. by Bruha · · Score: 1

    So you're now dumping 1 Billion dollars into workers in India! Great.. now how much of that comes back to US companies?

    Indians dont buy levi's, old navy. Many shun Coke and other similar products. They are not after the latest Jewel CD.

    Hopefully people get the idea. Money spent overseas does not come back the way companies say it will. Even if we bring up their standard of living and such they socially buy locally.

  99. Why don't you run Apache? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It would save you lots of money with your
    "XXX Midget Porn Sex with Midgets free oriental booty with asian teens xxx pics free xxx slut pics 2 nasty whores fucking" page.

  100. Axle of Evil by dusty123 · · Score: 2, Funny
    Oh, those awful Koreans.

    Anyway - North Korea is already member of the "Axle of Evil", so why not extend this to South Korea?

    Not using Microsoft Software should be enough proof that they are terrorists/mass destructors/atomic bombers/anarchists/communists.......

  101. Excuse me. by Jayson · · Score: 3, Informative

    I'd like to agree that JoeLinux appears to be a total loser. Geopolitics, indeed. What do you think this is, Kuro5hin?

    And what is this crap he says about no trustings at ACs? Comments like his are why /. can such giant monkey cock at times.

    1. Re:Excuse me. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Geopolitics, indeed

      I apologize profusely if I went a bit over your head there.

      Anyway, he's down to "-1, Funny". My work here is done. Have a great life.

  102. You're not very far off by Walkiry · · Score: 2, Informative

    I read on an onboard magazine in Icelandair a couple of years ago that many big corporations were purchasing aircrafts and putting pilots in their payrolls because it was cheaper than paying for all the flights some of their executives had to do. Not only that, baring certain high-traffic routes, it's also faster to travel with your own airplane than depend on pre-defined routes and connections.

    --
    ---- Take the Space Quiz!
  103. Re:shit in a hole in the floor, eat their dogs, so by hesiod · · Score: 1

    While the rest of us shit in a bigger hole in the floor, built into an immobile chair and we eat our cattle... and chickens and pigs... In the "grand scheme," we're not that much different, we just like to think we are.

  104. "based upon Linux" != Linux compatible by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "based upon Linux" does not mean "Linux compatible". Nearly all the UNIXes have some code from the original BSD UNIX. Yet, even though they are based on BSD UNIX, they are not compatible with each other.

  105. Office software is now also commoditised by midgley · · Score: 1

    Which is interesting given MS' apparent lack of profit from any other division but OS and Office.

    As the profit margin and profits fall, the risk of having unlicenced copies of MS software around (which medium sized organisations can easily do without meaning to) rises due to greater efforts at enforcing/wringing out the last drop of profit.

    As this happens the risk-reduction produced by moving functions to Open Source programs increases.

  106. ObSimpsons by Thing+1 · · Score: 1
    [...] its hard to convince people your OS is better when you dance like my grandmother after a bottle and a half of wine....

    Ralph Wiggum: (to Lisa, who fell asleep in class on top of her project) "You look like my mom after she's had her box of wine."

    Couldn't find the episode in snpp.com, but found a reference to it here.

    --
    I feel fantastic, and I'm still alive.
  107. The Mandate of Linux by kobukson · · Score: 1

    I believe that there are other reasons why the govts of China, Japan, and Korea decided form a Linux pact that go beyond simply saving money in the bureaucrasies or having an alternative to Microsoft. If those were the only reasons, then there is no need for such an international tripartite techno-alliance.

    Ever since Sony started marketing transistor radios back in the 60s, Asian manufacturers have dominated the electronics industries. This is not news to anyone. However, despite this, they always had to pay hefty royalty fees for certain key technologies developed by American or European firms that were protected by intellectual property laws (let's leave China out for now, since they are only in the initial stages of the development path that Korea and Japan embarked upon decades ago). Examples of such technologies include dolby noise filtering techniques during the days of cassette tape players and the semiconductor chips that implement the CDMA protocol developed by Qualcomm that go into every cell phone made by Samsung. Licensing fees for Microsoft software is only another example. Korea and Japan have traditionally been export-oriented economies and a big percentage of those exports is claimed by hi-tech products. Therefore, promoting the use of locally developed components or technologies has always been a issue of high importance, both politically and business-wise.

    This is not the first time Asian govts have intervened to guide private industry. In the 80s, the Japanese undertook a national VLSI project to develop their semiconductor industry when it was realized that electronics were destined to be more digital instead of analog. The Koreans implemented their own massive push into semiconductors on the heels of the Japanese in the 90s. I believe that something similar is happening now with Linux.

    Why Linux?

    Many devices that are designed today are essentially specialized computers. By that I mean, the architecture basically resembles that which is present in a regular PC, ie volatile memory, non-volatile storage, CPU, and optional interfaces all linked together by a system bus on a mainboard. A Cisco router is nothing more than a specialized computer whose architecture has been optimized and adapted for the purpose of routing IP packets. Same for cell phones and mp3 players. But any device that utilizes a CPU must also have an operating system. That's where Linux comes in.

    The design trend is leaning more and more towards embedded systems utilizing some form of Linux as a de-facto standard platform. Therefore Linux has an important role to play, even beyond desktops and servers. The open-source nature of Linux is appealing, esp to the Asians, because it helps mitigate the issue of having to pay royalties to foreign companies. By agreeing to cooperate in Linux and open-source, the three Asian nations are in a sense declaring independence from being constantly beholden to proprietary foreign technologies and perhaps even positioning themselves to seize leadership in setting technical standards in a key area which they think is crucial by leveraging the power of a huge combined marketplace that will include China.

    --
    -- I hereby announce, on behalf of my great ancester Oog, a retroactive patent on THE WHEEL.
  108. Last Post!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Nuff said