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Israeli Gov't Begins Testing Mandrake Linux

DJStealth writes "According to this article on Arutz 7/Israel National News, the Israeli Gov't is beginning to move away from Microsoft and is testing localized versions of Mandrake Linux in the Treasury dept. as the contract with MS expires this month. This all despite a recent defense ministry contact with MS."

397 comments

  1. Is this a growing trend in business? by tx_kanuck · · Score: 5, Insightful

    FTA: "Microsoft heaped scorn on the Commerce Department's decision to abandon Office for the software alternative."

    From other places "We'll sue our customers so that they have no money to buy our products"
    "We'll charge everyone a licence fee for OSS that we don't own"

    Evidently the economy has become an exercise in how much abuse consumers will take. I wonder how long it will take before consumers sit up and go "WTF Mate?"

    --
    Now, if that makes sense to anyone, could you please explain it to me? I think I've confused myself.
    1. Re:Is this a growing trend in business? by Crypto+Gnome · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Unfortunately, in showing your surprise, you're also showing just how naive you have been to date.

      These are all aspects of "what the market will bear" which has been standard business practice since something like the 80s (or is that 70s?)

      There is zero concept of "fair market value" in the business world today, only "how hard can we screw our customers before they're no longer customers of ours?".

      Ask any economist, this is "the standard business model" today.

      --
      Visit CryptoGnome in his home.
    2. Re:Is this a growing trend in business? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The following part has absolutely no connection with this story but is very important. For some unbelievable reason it hasn't been reported on slashdot or many other IT-related news sites.

      IBM is outsourcing 4700 hitech-jobs to low-salary Asian countries. This is probably the most devastating news this year for people in the IT-industry. More companies will follow IBM's move and it will also drag third-party products and services with it. It's a huge disaster.

      http://edition.cnn.com/2003/TECH/biztech/12/15/i bm .offshoring.ap/index.html

    3. Re:Is this a growing trend in business? by KoolDude · · Score: 5, Funny


      Ask any economist, this is "the standard business model" today.

      Nope. We're talking about Microsoft here. They *never* stick to the standards. :)

      --
      getSexySig(); /* returns sexy signature */
    4. Re:Is this a growing trend in business? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Feh. It's bad news if you work for IBM in the US. It's fantastic news if you're an Asian IBM contractee. It's not necessarily a bad thing, and if they can do the job for less more power too them. If they can't, someone at IBM will get their ass kicked, and the next round of contracts will be given to US locals.

      I, for one, am sick of the anti-Asian xenophobia that rears its head on Slashdot fairly regularly.

    5. Re:Is this a growing trend in business? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I wonder how long it will take before consumers sit up and go "WTF Mate?"

      and isn't this an example of that? As computer hardware prices continue to decline, Microsoft had the unmitigated gall to boost their prices and restructure their licensing fees to increase profits during one of the worst economic times in history. Maybe if they actually offered better value for their increased prices, but, instead, it is still the same old shit served on a prettier platter with restrictive, time-consuming authorization schemes.

      This can only benefit all, Microsoft customers included. Microsoft is being forced to re-evaluate their pricing structure (the price can only go down), tighten up the security in their products and pay attention to the quality issues that have plagued their products for so long.

    6. Re:Is this a growing trend in business? by jsebrech · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I wonder how long it will take before consumers sit up and go "WTF Mate?"

      I wonder how long it will take before people will realise how insulting the word "consumer" is as a label for a customer. Businesses used to deal with customers, and treat them well, now they deal with consumers, and so all they feel they need to do is produce stuff for consumption (and are insulted when people refuse to consume it, as exemplified by the RIAA). This dehumanization of business is what makes the corporate world suck so much nowadays.

    7. Re:Is this a growing trend in business? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Employers do this kind of stuff to their employees all the time. Microsoft, and others need to remember that "The customer is always right", and start acting like any good provider of goods and services should. The heat is on, and the main thing everyone wants besides a secure system, is no more BSOD. I realize that the BSOD is a neater way of handling things rather than the mess one can get with linux when an application crashes. No, linux is not entirely bug free. My solution is to have several distros on each box, and if one goes sour for a while, reboot to another. Right now, I'm using RHL 7.1, KDE. Very nice on this older box.

    8. Re:Is this a growing trend in business? by AKnightCowboy · · Score: 1
      It's not necessarily a bad thing, and if they can do the job for less more power too them. If they can't, someone at IBM will get their ass kicked, and the next round of contracts will be given to US locals.

      These U.S. companies never did learn to think even 10 years down the road. If you start exporting high tech jobs to Asia then who is going to be left to buy your products over here?

      I, for one, am sick of the anti-Asian xenophobia that rears its head on Slashdot fairly regularly.

      I think people have very good reason to hate the exportattion of their jobs to Asians. The Asian workers who are willing to work for what in America is less than minimum wage only serve to drag down everyone along with them instead of demanding better salaries for themselves. The Asian countries never seem to have went through their industrial revolution and unionization era so they don't seem to have many of the laws that protect us against corporations looking for cheap slave labor.

    9. Re:Is this a growing trend in business? by drsmithy · · Score: 4, Insightful
      Ask any economist, this is "the standard business model" today.

      Uh, any economist should tell you that "what the market will bear" is one of the fundamentals of capitalism - it's hardly something that's just popped up in the last few decades.

    10. Re:Is this a growing trend in business? by Afrosheen · · Score: 1

      I, too, feel offended when newscasters or the public in general refers to myself or businesses as 'consumers'. It's really dehumanizing and makes one feel as though they're nothing more than a digit in a database, a statistic on a chart. Consumer is fundamentally insulting because it feels as though you're not afforded the same rights as you might have had under the customer label.

      The customer is never wrong, but the consumer is never right.

    11. Re:Is this a growing trend in business? by Afrosheen · · Score: 2, Interesting

      The main factor here in having lower wages for Asians in general is cost of living. When, in Thailand, you can get a fresh bowl of rice and seafood soup for less than $1 US, and a nice apartment with air conditioning and plenty of space costs you around $150-$200 a month (depending on region), how can US companies compete on labor costs? The US has a horribly inflated cost of living compared to asian countries and arguably the quality of life isn't that much better. At least in Thailand you can afford to get dental work done, some people fly there just for that reason. For the price of a root canal here you can fly to Bangkok and get all the work you need done professionally.

    12. Re:Is this a growing trend in business? by be-fan · · Score: 1

      Pick up a basic economics book to realize why you're full of shit. There are few things economists agree on, or are willing to make definitive statements on, but the "exporting jobs to furriners" is one of them.

      --
      A deep unwavering belief is a sure sign you're missing something...
    13. Re:Is this a growing trend in business? by be-fan · · Score: 4, Informative

      Interesting you should mention Thailand. I was actually born in Bangkok (my parents were living there at the time), and have been back many times since. You're absolutely right about the cost of living. At first, I was embarrassed about giving the bellboy a $0.50 tip, until I realized how cheap everything there was. The quality of life there certainly isn't as high as it is here, for the professional class (which anybody contracted to an American company would be a part of) in Bangkok its not that much different from parts of urban Europe. European standards of living might seem very low to Americans (most households only have a single TV!) but its an entirely livable lifestyle.

      Now, as for how the United States can compete with the price of living in other countries, the simple fact is that it doesn't need to. If the cost of living in Thailand is much lower than the US, than jobs that can be exported are exported. So the US does lose hi-tech jobs. On the other hand, that creates a demand for other types of jobs in the US. For example, you'll need new people to handle the communications between the company and teams located in other countries. Its a basic economic principle that the number of jobs lost because of such events is less than the number of jobs gained. Also, remember that Thailand and a number of other asian countries have very quickly growing economies. As an economy grows, the cost of living rises. Eventually, the economy will hit a state where it is no longer profitable to export jobs to the country, because the cost of living is so high. This happened, for example, with Hong Kong, where the per-capita GDP has approached 80% of that of the United States.

      Consider a real-world example (that I ripped from an economics text :) The United States has an international agreement to protect textile jobs in the United States. So far, it has saved about 79,000 textile jobs. However, adhering to that agreement costs the country about $16 billion dollars a year in lost revenue in other industries. That means for each job saved, it is costing the US economy $202,000 a year. Also consider NAFTA. When NAFTA was created, there were numerous complaints that it would destroy the US economy, because jobs would be sucked over to Mexico. While many jobs were indeed sucked over to Mexico, many new jobs were created here for Americans.

      --
      A deep unwavering belief is a sure sign you're missing something...
    14. Re:Is this a growing trend in business? by Minna+Kirai · · Score: 0

      If you start exporting high tech jobs to Asia then who is going to be left to buy your products over here?

      Do you know why sailboats don't have electric fans installed in the stern to blow wind onto the sails?

    15. Re:Is this a growing trend in business? by sean.peters · · Score: 1
      That means for each job saved, it is costing the US economy $202,000 a year.

      My heart bleeds for the CEO that would otherwise be making that extra $202k. What, you thought ordinary employees would otherwise be getting that money?

      Sean

    16. Re:Is this a growing trend in business? by be-fan · · Score: 1

      Its not the CEO's making that extra $202,000. Its workers in other industries that either are making lower wages or not getting hired at all.

      --
      A deep unwavering belief is a sure sign you're missing something...
    17. Re:Is this a growing trend in business? by be-fan · · Score: 1

      Let's try that again. Its not the CEO's who lose the $202,000, its workers in other industries that are either making lower wages or not getting hired at all. Most importantly, its an overall loss to the US GDP.

      --
      A deep unwavering belief is a sure sign you're missing something...
    18. Re:Is this a growing trend in business? by Artifakt · · Score: 2, Insightful

      It's a fundamental, but taking it out of a broader context is something that has been developing among MBAs and pro-capitalism speakers lately. It's like the principle that there is no cap on potential investment gains. That only makes real sense if two other principles are included - 1. There is no cap on losses either - 2. Even though gain can go arbitrarily high, there are always market forces trying to bring it into line with the rest of the economy.
      What the market will bear for a single quarter is not what the market will bear. What the market will bear with the government providing police to enforce it isn't what the market will bear (and isn't capitalism either once the government tries to supercede the invisible hand).

      --
      Who is John Cabal?
    19. Re:Is this a growing trend in business? by Artifakt · · Score: 1

      One of the posters I've noticed here has a sig that reads (aproximately) "I am not a Consumer, I am a Citizen of this country!". He could probably say this better than I could, but here goes.
      A recent /. story was about billboards that pick up on what radio station a driver is listening to, and fine tune advertising acordingly. Those drivers count as consumers for that article. "What makes them consumers?" is my question.
      If I turn on a TV, I know to expect commercials. The programs are paid for by commercials. So, unless I was ignorant of some rather basic facts, it could be argued that I have willingly entered a mode of being a consumer, or at least a potential consumer.
      Now what's the equivalent for the billboard? I got in a car and traveled. That billboard may or may not pay some tax that may or may not go to help make the road more affordable, given differing state policies, but it surely isn't adding much to the 38c/gallon in state and federal taxes I'm paying for gas.
      So, driving down the road is more like HBO than broadcast TV, but I still count as a consumer just the same. I don't purchase things 24 hours a day, but to the people who started calling me a consumer, I am one, 24 hours a day. The opposite of consumption is production. I lead a productive life, and create more than I consume (that's why I am worth taxing). Even when I am doing the opposite of consuming, to these people, I'm a consumer. Maybe that's why it's fundamentally insulting.

      --
      Who is John Cabal?
    20. Re:Is this a growing trend in business? by Sivaram_Velauthapill · · Score: 1

      These U.S. companies never did learn to think even 10 years down the road. If you start exporting high tech jobs to Asia then who is going to be left to buy your products over here?

      There is no such thing as a US company. All capitalism has are companies--international ones that are not basd on any country. Under capitalism, you don't care about countries. If anything, free trade will ensure that there is no such thing as an American or Canadian or Japanese or whatever corporation. Corporations will be able to move easily to other countries. It wouldn't suprise me if corporations move to another country overnight without letting anyone know (like has happened to some sports teams).

      The Asian countries never seem to have went through their industrial revolution and unionization era so they don't seem to have many of the laws that protect us against corporations looking for cheap slave labor.

      My theory is that unionization will not occur. There are several reasons for this but perhaps the most important is that unions can't fight for worker rights in the modern era. If you form a union in those countries, the corporation will, on top of trying to crush it, just move to another region/country/continent/etc.

      Speaking as a leftist, I don't think unions are the answer to the modern capitalists. Unions simply aren't designed to withstand multinational entities. Unions are very localized and require government laws to support them. When corporations aren't local, and when governments don't care about anyone, it doesn't work well. So what else is there for the workers? I'm working on it :) ...

      Sivaram Velauthapillai

      --
      Sivaram Velauthapillai
      Seeking the meaning of life... @slashdot of all places ;)
    21. Re:Is this a growing trend in business? by Swanktastic · · Score: 1

      I wonder how long it will take before people will realise how insulting the word "consumer" is as a label for a customer. Businesses used to deal with customers, and treat them well, now they deal with consumers, and so all they feel they need to do is produce stuff for consumption

      FYI, a huge number of companies use the terms customer and consumer to mean different things. A customer is a direct buyer of your product. A consumer is the business or person who "consumes" your product. Hence, if I'm making soap, the customer is a grocery store, and the consumer is the family/person that uses the soap. Businesses don't use the term consumer to "dehumanize," they use it for succinctness of communication when describing the buyers of their products. We can't just call everyone in the supply chain a customer regardless of whether we're actually dealing with them.

      Speaking of dehumanizing the "customer," probably every single person who posts here calls their customers "users." IMO, that's about the most dehumanizing thing ever.

    22. Re:Is this a growing trend in business? by Sivaram_Velauthapill · · Score: 1

      What you are saying is happening but not the way you imagine--or your capitalistic economic books talk about. When jobs are lost, other jobs ARE created. But these jobs are often worse than the previous ones. If engineers lose their jobs, they will get another job all right. It just won't be engineering or anything professional. When manufacturing laid off people, they got other jobs (often in the service industry) which were FAR worse (in terms of pay).

      Also, cost of living does not necessarily increase with increased trade. I can cite a ton of South American countries that have "benefitted" from trade yet their standard of living is the same (worse in some cases). What you fail to realize--something that capitalist books won't mention--is that the benefit does NOT accrue to the average worker.

      American wages, for example, have been almost flat over 30 or 40 years! (I can't remember the stats but they only grew like 4% or something like that--adjusted for inflation of course). In contrast, executive wages have skyrocketed. In the 70's, executives made something like 50x the average worker. Now they make 250x.

      There are benefits from trade--I'm not disagreeing on that. But your capitalist economic books will also point out how the benefit from trade can be allocated. If countries A and B are trading, A can get all the benefit, or B can, or they can share it in some manner. Unfortunately for the poorer countries, the benefit accrues to rich countries. Now, replace countries with corporation vs worker, and you'll note that the benefit does NOT accrue to the workers of the world. Instead, the benefit is more likely to accrue to the capitalists and coordinator class (eg. management).

      Don't get me wrong: I'm not anti-Asian (I'm originally from there anyway :) ). I'm just against capitalism and it modern incarnation called neo-liberal economics.

      My, non-capitalist view, is that USA severly overconsumes. I think USA will, at some point, have to devalue their currency. It is just overvalued and otherwise it won't remain competitive. For instance, if the oil producing countries switched to the Euro, from the "petral-dollar", USA will get hit. Gunpoint capitalism then becomes the norm...

      Sivaram Velauthapillai

      --
      Sivaram Velauthapillai
      Seeking the meaning of life... @slashdot of all places ;)
    23. Re:Is this a growing trend in business? by Sivaram_Velauthapill · · Score: 1

      I know you capitalists love to invoke everything, including ownership of the world, to defend yourselves...but can you PLEASE leave physics out of this?

      Sivaram Velauthapillai

      --
      Sivaram Velauthapillai
      Seeking the meaning of life... @slashdot of all places ;)
    24. Re:Is this a growing trend in business? by be-fan · · Score: 1

      What you are saying is happening but not the way you imagine... they got other jobs (often in the service industry) which were FAR worse (in terms of pay).
      >>>>>>>>>>>>>>
      That's not what happened here in the US. In the 1900's, most Americans worked on a farm. When the industrial revolution made farming unprofitable, those workers got better jobs in industry. When industrial jobs got shipped overseas, those people got better jobs in the services industry.

      If countries A and B are trading, A can get all the benefit, or B can, or they can share it in some manner.
      >>>>>>>>>>>
      No it can't. Its a product of the mathematical model describing trade. There is no such thing as uneven trade.

      Unfortunately for the poorer countries, the benefit accrues to rich countries.
      >>>>>>>>>>>
      Its not a factor of trade benifeting richer countries more than poorer countries, but growth being a function of the amount of capital, and richer countries having more capital to begin with.

      The problem with the United States is not the capitalist system, but the fact that the government does not do enough income redistribution. 70% of economists believe that the government has a legitimate role in redistributing income, and that the current US imbalance needs to be fixed. Those same economists realize that international trade benifets everyone involved.

      --
      A deep unwavering belief is a sure sign you're missing something...
    25. Re:Is this a growing trend in business? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, I am sick of the fucking Asians taking all the jobs. Why can't they make their own jobs? Useless fuckers.

      Every fucking Indian at my company drives the same fucking Toyota Camry, has the same haircut, and the same foul odor. Doesn't any one of them have any imagination? Or does Satyam have a damn cloning machine over there.

    26. Re:Is this a growing trend in business? by greenhide · · Score: 1

      When the industrial revolution made farming unprofitable, those workers got better jobs in industry.

      Well, they were better once the workers organized with unions and fought for issues like workplace safety, shorter work weeks, and ant-child labor laws. Or did you not hear the stories about young women losing their fingers to mechanical looms, or thousands of people sick and hungry, crowded 20 something to a room in tenement housing.

      Granted, I'm a little rusty on how miserable the lives of farmers were, but I think it's fair to say that being a worker in the USA has always sucked the big one. Most of them are better off than they were in the first half of the 20th century, but most (except women, who are now slowly bridging the salary gap) workers are not better off than they were in the second half of the 20th century. A big part of it has been ridiculous increases in health and other costs, accompanied by a lackluster increase in salary.

      I personally agree with you that economic redistribution would probably hep the plight of the worker. Incidentally, it's called socialism (not that there's anything wrong with that). Economic distribution is in direct opposition to capitalism, in which the emphasis is exclusively on private ownership.

      And you're not going to get economic distribution in the US, not as long as some opposing politician can slap the horrible label of "socialist" or "communist" to it. If Reagan, as president, was successful at one thing, it was making the idea of socialism and communism so abbhorent to the populace that now it is associated in the US with evil, death, etc. Clearly there are many socialist democracies that are doing just fine.

      I think the problem is that America is too productive. We create too many products, with too few workers. It means we can pay the workers more, but it also means we need fewer of them, which means that we can actually turn to the workers and say, "Hey, there's this out-of-work guy who'll do the same job you're doing for less money. Better stay in line, or else." So despite the glowing association some economists have with productivity, I don't necessarily think it leads to a better economic situation for all workers.

      What we really need to do is mandate a three week paid vacation. It isn't communist, it isn't socialist, and everyone could get behind it. The longer our vacation time, the less overall work hours, so more workers are needed. When those workers are on vacation, they spend their money on travel, so it goes back into the economy. Or, if they're not traveling, they might be spending that time working on their houses, which will raise property values in the area. Or, they might volunteer, which will improve the local community.

      A lot of people in this country say, "I'd love to do X, if only I had more time." I say, give them the time. More vacation time can't hurt the country, it can only help it. And I think most companies can afford it. I mean, somehow businesses in other countries muddle through profitably while giving out 4-6 week paid vacations (Yes, Australians, the lucky bastards, have 6 weeks paid vacation).

      --
      Karma: Chevy Kavalierma.
  2. Re:Good move. by AntiOrganic · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I really don't understand the need to mention Bush here.

  3. Office 97 functionality by MoonFog · · Score: 5, Interesting

    From the article:
    Microsoft heaped scorn on the Commerce Department's decision to abandon Office for the software alternative. The procurement decision relegated users to second best, said local Microsoft officials, comparing Open Office 1.1 functionality to Word 97

    First of all, like has been mentioned numerous times on /., the functionality in Office 97 is sufficient for most users. Very few people use, let alone need, the extra functionality added in the later versions of office.

    Second, this just makes Microsoft sound childish. "Our latest product is better, they're just a rip off from our old products"

    1. Re:Office 97 functionality by mccalli · · Score: 5, Interesting
      First of all, like has been mentioned numerous times on /., the functionality in Office 97 is sufficient for most users.

      Indeed. Here I sit in an Office of one of the worlds largest banks and what is my client box? NT 4, Lotus Notes, Exceed and Office 97.

      Though I'm no fan of Notes, the above is perfectly sufficent for me to do all the work required. You could switch it all to Linux underneath me and I'd barely notice.

      Cheers,
      Ian

    2. Re:Office 97 functionality by mpe · · Score: 1

      First of all, like has been mentioned numerous times on /., the functionality in Office 97 is sufficient for most users. Very few people use, let alone need, the extra functionality added in the later versions of office.

      The "extra functionality" may even get in the way.

    3. Re:Office 97 functionality by david@ecsd.com · · Score: 5, Insightful

      That's because--let's face it--the mine of the office productivity application has been emptied of its gold. It's gotten to the point where it's pretty damned difficult to screw up something like word processors and spreadsheets. The things have been around since nearly the beginning of the office PC and the wrinkles have been ironed out. What the hell more can a company add? Talking paperclips? Christ, if I were to put down a features table of the major office apps--MS Office, Star/Open Office, Wordperfect's bundle, and Lotus Smartsuite(does IBM even still sell it?)--you'd be hard pressed to find features in one that you can't find in another. Microsoft is milking the franchise; you know it, I know it, Microsoft knows it, and now their customers are starting to catch on to the fact that there are plenty of "just as good" applications out there for cheap, liscensed in such a way that you don't have to be a contract lawyer with 30 years experience to understand the terms. (How difficult is it to understand, "Oh, uhhh, yeah, it's free"?)

      Love,
      Dave

    4. Re:Office 97 functionality by term8or · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Frankly, as a software engineer VI, word 6, Mozilla and a compiler (GNU?) would give me everything I really need.

      As a writer / novelist I find that Word 2000 etc is so helpful that it gets in my way. My productivity is WAY higher using word 6. I've got everything set up just fine; why move all my macros?

      --



      "As a writer / novelist you might want to spellcheck your sig. :) " - AC
    5. Re:Office 97 functionality by term8or · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I'm not sure how a post about whether Office tools have actually improved enough for it to be worth upgrading should produce a post that argues that you "have" to use visual programming tools to produce good programs. Hint: I have been known to use visual programming tools.

      I have also worked on large-scale projects with little more than a debugger, compiler, and Visio (for basic design drawing). In order to say, "rich visual debugging and design tools are a MUST" you need to furnish us with some evidence, sir. You need to show at a minimum that programmer productivity has significantly improved as a result of introducing such a tool. This would be hard to do. Current evidence suggests that the value from a dollar spent on software has remained nearly static.

      http://www.j-bradford-delong.net/movable_type/arch ives/001084.html

      The productivity trends from the time that these tools started to be introduced showed a reduction in productivity

      http://ftp.starbase.com/pdf/productivitytrends.pdf

      And, as a general observation, advances in computing have not yet provided a substantial productivity increase. As Robert Solow says, "you can see computers everywhere but in the productivity statistics." One of the main hold-ups in benefits from computing seems to be software production. Simply put, current advances in tools have not produced a real advantage where it matters: software is still hard to construct, and no amount of tools will guarantee that the software you produce will actually work in a way that benefits the clients. You need good people to do that. Tools can help, but people can produce good programs without the tools, and tools won't produce good programs without the people.

      --



      "As a writer / novelist you might want to spellcheck your sig. :) " - AC
    6. Re:Office 97 functionality by MoonFog · · Score: 5, Funny

      What the hell more can a company add? Talking paperclips?

      SHHH! They might hear you! ;)

    7. Re:Office 97 functionality by primus_sucks · · Score: 1

      On my legacy Windows computer, I have Word 6.0 which was released in the early 90's! Still edits resumes and letters just fine.

    8. Re:Office 97 functionality by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

      My new job in a large corporation came with a brand new Dell desktop running Office 97. It's our corporate standard and nobody misses any of the features of the newer versions of Office.
      The only issues anyone has with Office 97 is that it has occasional incompatibilities with later version MS Word files and all of the later version MS Access files.
      Fortunately, Open Office can open all of these files and convert them to "standard" MS format. /Mark

    9. Re:Office 97 functionality by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Crap.

      VB kiddie!

    10. Re:Office 97 functionality by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

      My productivity is WAY higher using word 6. I've got everything set up just fine; why move all my macros?

      Not to mention the fact that, in order to move your macros, they would effectively have to be rewritten! I used to solve quite a few problems for my customers with macros in Microsoft's Office products. One customer, after going through two rounds of this, balked at the third round and started doing the procedures by hand again. How's that for a productivity tool?

    11. Re:Office 97 functionality by watzinaneihm · · Score: 1

      The procurement decision relegated users to second best, said local Microsoft officials, comparing Open Office 1.1 functionality to Word 97
      This is a ridiculos arguement to make. Its not as if the so called "users" come for free. The government pays them to do their job the way the government pleases to get the job done. If they want each form to be filled in triplicate, the employees better do it unless there is a cheaper way to do it. If the Software costs exceed the cost of manual labor, better put more employees and change the software.

      --
      .ACMD setaloiv siht gnidaeR
    12. Re:Office 97 functionality by Ed+Avis · · Score: 1

      Yes, Word 6 is the best version of MS Word IMHO. Even the old Windows 3.1 appearance has a certain retro charm nowadays, while older Win95 applications just look tacky. (Compare styling changes in cars to make last year's model seem undesirable.) The 32-bit version of Word 6 is best. I have that running on NT 3.51 and it never goes wrong. A shame that neither product is still sold by Microsoft.

      --
      -- Ed Avis ed@membled.com
    13. Re:Office 97 functionality by Zog+The+Undeniable · · Score: 1

      I'd be a tad concerned if my bank was running on an unsupported operating system :-P

      --
      When I am king, you will be first against the wall.
    14. Re:Office 97 functionality by Sire+Enaique · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I remember reading a novelist praising EMACS because it is the closest thing to a text-mode Wordperfect one can get today.

    15. Re:Office 97 functionality by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting


      Word 2000/xp tries so hard to auto-complete stuff for you, it will outright mess up what you are doing.

      When making lists for instance (with romon numerals, capital letters, numbers, lower case letters, etc). Man, it's almost impossible to format a list the way you want. It really tries to force a specific way down your throat...

    16. Re:Office 97 functionality by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, and that's why we use Common Lisp and avoid MS crapware like the plague!

    17. Re:Office 97 functionality by Pfhreakaz0id · · Score: 2, Interesting

      PLEASE don't mention Notes... I have to use this POS everyday. I don't mean to go on a rant here, but, well yeah I do :)

      It has, without a doubt, the stupidest "feature" I've ever seen in a software program in my 20 years of using computers. Sometimes, I have to enter my notes password to EXIT THE PROGRAM. And it's insistent about it, it gets really, really angry if I don't. I understand what it is doing (I have stuff marked for deletion and my session has expired and it is trying to delete mail on exit, but I'm not connected) and I fixed it (change the server timeout to near infinity) -- but it's still dumb.

    18. Re:Office 97 functionality by Anarke_Incarnate · · Score: 1

      I think I interned there a few years back in the IT dept of a check center. Does the bank name start with a D?

    19. Re:Office 97 functionality by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, in microsoft terms, they can add annoyances in one version, then take them away in the next version! Brilliant!

      You did mention the paperclip...

    20. Re:Office 97 functionality by mccalli · · Score: 2, Informative
      I'd be a tad concerned if my bank was running on an unsupported operating system

      The majority of banks I know both here in the City of London and also in New York use NT4. Some have recently moved to 2000. There are vague rumours of XP upgrades here, but nothing definite.

      It's worth bearing in mind that when you're the size these banks are, you don't just get the standard consumer deal. I've seen Microsoft engineers dragged in behind me to look at why an SQL Server installation was running so slowly, and patches came out for the product specifically to address the issues they found.

      Cheers,
      Ian

    21. Re:Office 97 functionality by mccalli · · Score: 1
      I think I interned there a few years back in the IT dept of a check center. Does the bank name start with a D?

      Nope. A J. These are the London investment bank offices, rather than a branch. I have no idea what the branches of this bank run - they don't actually have any in the UK.

      I'm not at all surprised you ran across the same combination though. Most banks seems to have that, though some run Outlook instead of Notes.

      Cheers,
      Ian

    22. Re:Office 97 functionality by uradu · · Score: 1

      > the functionality in Office 97 is sufficient for most users

      Office 97??? Dude, around here there are still people discovering the hidden powers and depths of Notepad. Word Wrap? Status bar? What will they think of next?

    23. Re:Office 97 functionality by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      Visio is actually a great product... I don't think there is anything like it for its price, and it really works well. You can even save the files as autocad drawings. This is one of the few programs I think microsoft did a really good job on.

    24. Re:Office 97 functionality by ccp · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Yes, Word 6 is the best version of MS Word IMHO.

      I believe that, in fact, Word peaked at 2.0.
      That version was lean and mean, and did everything an Office word processor should do.
      Each version afterwards just added cruft.

      Writing novels shouldn't be done in Word. It's a very different problem space.

      Cheers,

    25. Re:Office 97 functionality by BigGerman · · Score: 1
      >>What the hell more can a company add?

      You are right - as fas as basic edit-copy-paste word processing and spreadsheets there is nothing to add.
      However, look at what MS added in the newest Office - XML (for enterprise inter-op) and groupware (for sharing and collaboration). This is where the real innovation is. And I am afraid OO and friends are not even close and still trying to get to Office 97 levels.

    26. Re:Office 97 functionality by Anarke_Incarnate · · Score: 1

      Ahh,

      I wasn't talking about a branch location. I worked in a large Northeastern US check processing facility for a bank that's based in Germany. It sounded very much the same in what they used. We didn't handle accounts, but processed some nice checks and I got to see a 50 mil US check that was a fake. Somebody had brass ones to write that.

    27. Re:Office 97 functionality by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Novels should be written with a quill pen and whale-oil ink.

    28. Re:Office 97 functionality by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I would go with Word95 over Word6 -- the only feature change was the red squiggles, which I find useful. Although I will agree that the rounded buttons have a certain charm.

    29. Re:Office 97 functionality by STrinity · · Score: 1

      Christ, if I were to put down a features table of the major office apps--MS Office, Star/Open Office, Wordperfect's bundle, and Lotus Smartsuite(does IBM even still sell it?)--you'd be hard pressed to find features in one that you can't find in another.

      I can think of one -- in Word you can type special characters in an intuitive fashion -- ctrl-'+e gives you an accented e. As near as I can determine, in OOo you have to pull up the character map if you ever want to type a diacritical mark.

      --
      Les Miserables Volume 1 now up with my reading of
    30. Re:Office 97 functionality by ccp · · Score: 1

      However, look at what MS added in the newest Office - XML (for enterprise inter-op) and groupware (for sharing and collaboration). This is where the real innovation is

      You're joking. At least, i hope so.

      Cheers

    31. Re:Office 97 functionality by zymurgy_cat · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Not to mention the fact that, in order to move your macros, they would effectively have to be rewritten!

      That assumes your macros will even work in an updated version. I made the mistake of installing SP3 for Office 2000. It totally disabled the SolverSolve routine when called from a macro. Microsoft's response? "We're aware of the problem and have a fix, but we won't release it until we feel like it."

      This effectively killed my entire Excel workbook that performed some very complicated calculations and optimizations.

      --
      -- Fugacity: Confusing chemists since 1908
    32. Re:Office 97 functionality by mamer-retrogamer · · Score: 1
      Word 6 is the best version of MS Word IMHO.

      I'm assuming you've never used Word 5 for Mac.

      -Mike

      --
      Schrödinger's cat is not amused—maybe.
    33. Re:Office 97 functionality by Minna+Kirai · · Score: 1

      As near as I can determine, in OOo you have to pull up the character map if you ever want to type a diacritical mark.

      They (OpenOffice developers) may be taking the perspective that inputting characters is not their job.

      And they're right- how you input text should be handled by your OS, separate from the applications that use text. Anyone who wants to superimpose '+e should install an "international" or "european" keyboard configuration. That way, you just type "'e" and they're automatically joined into one symbol- and it works the same way for all your programs!

    34. Re:Office 97 functionality by Art+Tatum · · Score: 1

      Wasn't NeXTSTEP also big in the financial industry for a long time?

    35. Re:Office 97 functionality by Sivaram_Velauthapill · · Score: 1

      I haven't read the full report you cite but based on the first link, it doesn't prove ANYTHING. I have no idea what the cited report (in the first link) uses to measure the index but how can they possibly measure the software index? For computers (i.e. hardware), it's easy. You just look at performance, speed, memory capacity, etc. But how about software?

      The benefits of software are intangible. Therefore, they are likely to be undervalued.

      Also, YOUR points (as opposed to the links you cite) are just as vague. How can you say that a debugger does not result in productivity improvments? How about automated tools for generating GUI elements? ANd so forth. I have a feeling that you, as well as the guy you cite, are not adjusting for results. For instance, it might take a programmer 50 hours to create a "program" now, just like it took 50 hours 30 years ago. However, the results are vastly different. Unlike 30 years ago, now the "program" will have more features. I'll bet you are not counting soft things like that (features, appeal, ease of use, etc)...

      Sivaram Velauthapillai

      --
      Sivaram Velauthapillai
      Seeking the meaning of life... @slashdot of all places ;)
    36. Re:Office 97 functionality by mccalli · · Score: 1
      Wasn't NeXTSTEP also big in the financial industry for a long time?

      One bank only as far as I'm aware - Swiss Bank, now merged into UBS. Might have been used elsewhere - I'm not certain to be honest.

      Cheers,
      Ian

    37. Re:Office 97 functionality by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As a writer / novelist you might want to spellcheck your sig. :)

    38. Re:Office 97 functionality by Graabein · · Score: 1
      > I remember reading a novelist praising EMACS

      I remember reading in the foreword to some novel:
      "This novel was written entirely in WordPerfect, which is anything but".

      --
      And remember kids: Never trust a computer you can actually lift.
    39. Re:Office 97 functionality by Sire+Enaique · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The point isn't wether EMACS or Wordperfect or MS Word or GizmoWrite is the Ultimate and Perfect Word Processor, just that it's nice to have a choice.

      Different programs behave differently, and one person might prefer to work with one and another person with a different one, that's all.

    40. Re:Office 97 functionality by Simonetta · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I have found Microsoft Word to be the most frustrating program that I have ever used (with the possible exception of a Commodore 64 C compiler).

      Whenever I have to do something semi-serious in Word now, I always take a few minutes to get calm and detached from the anger that I know is going to come.

      It helped greatly to study repeatedly (on my own time and money) several thick manuals on the subject and the 'Word Annoyances' O'Reilly book.

      You just have to tell yourself "What you want to do, It can be done. Or, it's not important. Kittens, little children and blue skies are important; MS Word is not."

      But then I find graphics images that I carefully pasted in a certain place moving around by themselves to other locations. Strange characters and lines appearing with no way to find out what they are and, more importantly, how to get rid of them. A Help function that doesn't help and makes you feel stupid.

      And a boss (a German boss) who gives you a bad performance review because you haven't mastered this piece of absurd software. I've mastered a dozen compliers, assemblers, CAD , PCB and PLD design applications, but not the only program that the boss has ever had to learn. So, bad review.

      I used to deal with the frustration of working with Microsoft Word by making a detailed list of what was wrong and possible ways that it could be improved. But I realised that it was pointless. No one would ever read it. Nothing would ever get any better. Nobody cares....

      Now I spend a hour in the Daisy Kingdom after any major bout with using Microsoft Word. Calm, refocused, kittens, little children, the important things in the real world...

  4. Re:Good move. by asit+ler · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    Sorry. I just have problems with the way he manages the country, that's all.

    --
    This is not the sig you're looking for.
  5. Boom! by Channard · · Score: 0, Troll
    B) Not triggering an all-out nuclear war with anyone before the end of his term.

    And I for one will welcome our new linux-using sco-hating Gore-voting mutant cockroach overlords.

    1. Re:Boom! by asit+ler · · Score: 0

      Well, if you think about it, a cockroach's gotta have more neurons in there than our current chief executive, so a mutant ought to be able to talk, so......

      Call up the caterer, let's give 'em a rowdy, fully-catered, off-the-wall /. welcome!

      --
      This is not the sig you're looking for.
  6. Re:Good move. by asit+ler · · Score: 0

    Well, they're in that area. I guess I didn't quite do them justice, though. Sorry Israel.

    Generalizations suck, especially when overused. /me goes off and feels repentant for insulting the Israelis.

    --
    This is not the sig you're looking for.
  7. Poor quality gag. by Channard · · Score: 3, Funny
    I really don't understand the need to mention Bush here.

    Oh, come on - you can never have too much bush. Especially at Christmas. I mean holly of course - what did you think I meant?

    1. Re:Poor quality gag. by mattjb0010 · · Score: 3, Funny

      I mean holly of course - what did you think I meant?

      I thought you meant Holly, not holly. ;)

    2. Re:Poor quality gag. by sheriff_p · · Score: 1

      And what exactly does Holly think about this?

      --
      Score:-1, Funny
    3. Re:Poor quality gag. by radja · · Score: 1

      I still prefer less bush on Holly..

      --

      No one can understand the truth until he drinks of coffee's frothy goodness.
      --Sheikh Abd-Al-Kadir, 1587
    4. Re:Poor quality gag. by Glock27 · · Score: 1
      what did you think I meant?

      Mistletoe?

      Yeah, I know...it's not a bush. It's not a shrub, either, though... ;-)

      --
      Galileo: "The Earth revolves around the Sun!"
      Score: -1 100% Flamebait
    5. Re:Poor quality gag. by Guppy06 · · Score: 1

      "what did you think I meant?"

      Marajuana. The only way some of us can get through Christmas without going on a bloody rampage.

    6. Re:Poor quality gag. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's funny, I thought he meant Jenna.

  8. Re:I don't support Zionists. by reub2000 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Then it isn't free if you put that type of restriction on it. One of the disadvantages of oss.

  9. Bold move by jdifool · · Score: 1
    Hi,

    not just in the third world countries
    I guess you didn't read that much papers about Israel. So ironic.

    And spare us the all too naive 'this is a good thing, but people Linux is not worth it, this is WRONG' speech. You are preaching convinced people. /. wants new insights.

    Like this one :).

    Regards,
    jdif

    --
    Let's overcome our weakness.
  10. We should add the drama back into the testing... by mesach · · Score: 0, Funny

    We must move away from Microsoft or we're DOOMED...

    --
    moo.
  11. Re:I don't support Zionists. by Gilesx · · Score: 1

    Wow! What a BRILLIANT contribution to free speech you're making!

    --
    Sunday you're Thinking Different, Monday you're a huge tool, paying too much and waiting to think like everyone else.
  12. Re:I don't support Zionists. by Channard · · Score: 4, Funny
    What is the difference between a Zionist and a White Supremacist? Both believe that God has given them dominion over their land and right to kill anyone who resides on it that they don't like.

    Really? You must have seen the director's cut of The Matrix films. I thought the Zionists were more into have huge great rave scenes and then running about in powerloaders.

  13. Are you one of the MOSSAD ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Wrong. The GNU/GPL and other open aproved license modells allow restriction of software being used in certain countries.

    So it's a good right for one to say:

    'This program is GNU/GPL but I make usage of the paragraph (blah) which limits this software of being used in israel'.

    Now before telling me about restrictions spent some time into reading licenses.

    1. Re:Are you one of the MOSSAD ? by Gilesx · · Score: 1

      But why? Open source shouldn't just be free as in beer, but also free as in speech - free information for all to share. Just restricting your software to a group is only adding to the negativity that is felt throughout this delicate situation

      IMHO, if you allow political events to affect your emotions, and this begins to leak into your work, I dread to think what the state of your code looks like....

      --
      Sunday you're Thinking Different, Monday you're a huge tool, paying too much and waiting to think like everyone else.
    2. Re:Are you one of the MOSSAD ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah ? You are telling me ? Look in the Mozilla source code and read in which countries it is restricted to use Mozilla. That's nearly 1/3 of the muslim world.

      I only restrict my software from israel which is my good right without violating against the licensing modell offered by the FSF hence the Mozilla team restricted it for many more countries.

    3. Re:Are you one of the MOSSAD ? by Gilesx · · Score: 1

      Mozilla restricted code because they were required to by law.

      You are restricting code because you are a wannabe fascist.

      Can you spot the difference?

      --
      Sunday you're Thinking Different, Monday you're a huge tool, paying too much and waiting to think like everyone else.
    4. Re:Are you one of the MOSSAD ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wow! I never realized protesting the murder and torture of an entire society amounted to fascism!

      I will burn my dictionary at once, along with any other books that are equally misguided!

      Thank you, thank you, for setting us straight!

    5. Re:Are you one of the MOSSAD ? by Gilesx · · Score: 1

      You're welcome. Don't let it happen again.

      --
      Sunday you're Thinking Different, Monday you're a huge tool, paying too much and waiting to think like everyone else.
    6. Re:Are you one of the MOSSAD ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They are required to because some faggot Bush and his Zionist lover Sharon were forging huge cocksized conspiracies.

    7. Re:Are you one of the MOSSAD ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Do you really belive what you write ?

    8. Re:Are you one of the MOSSAD ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Does it not conform to your leftist ideas? *Gasp* He should be shot.

      Now how 'bout writing a rebuttal. Dismissing it only makes you look wrong... which of course, you are.

    9. Re:Are you one of the MOSSAD ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Are you mad? There is nothing TO rebutt! How can I say it? It's bollocks. Great-grandparent obviously has a chip on his shoulder and it shows in his post. Kindly come up with some facts to support aforementioned allegations. Thankyou.

    10. Re:Are you one of the MOSSAD ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you're going to protest "the murder and torture of an entire society", you'd better restrict your software from pretty much every society on earth. Very few of them were the first people in their country, and in most cases, there ain't many of the natives left. Or maybe it's only *recent* genocide that you want to protest?

    11. Re:Are you one of the MOSSAD ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      Or maybe it's only *recent* genocide that you want to protest?

      Close.

      It's ongoing genocide that must be protested.

      (you see, that way we can save lives.)

    12. Re:Are you one of the MOSSAD ? by adrianbaugh · · Score: 1

      As I recall that is to permit odd cases like crypto code which, if it is to be distributed in the US, cannot legally be exported to certain countries (as I recall, currently North Korea, Iran and Taleban-controlled areas of Afghanistan). It is not intended to indulge developers' whims for political point-scoring. Obviously you can license your software however you like, making your own license that's similar to the GPL but with restrictions if you wish[0]. However, I would regard a license containing arbitrary restrictions as non-free in just the same way that Microsoft's licenses are non-free, and refuse to use it -- just because it's legal doesn't make it a "good right".
      Consider what Linus has said in several interviews: he doesn't necessarily like everything that Linux has been used for, but to restrict it would be more damaging than good.

      [0] Once you've altered it, it isn't the GPL any more though.

      --
      "'I pass the test,' she said. 'I will diminish, and go into the West, and remain Galadriel.'"
      - JRR Tolkien.
    13. Re:Are you one of the MOSSAD ? by sniggly · · Score: 1
      Let's make sure we ban the use of OSS in all of Russia because the tens of thousands of people being killed in Chechnya.

      I don't understand people who continue to moan about Israel when there are areas on this planet where people get killed by the bushel for what they believe in or what ethnicity they belong to, and nobody complains. We (in the west) don't care about the Muslem Chechnyans. Neither do the muslems in the mideast. No, it's all about how those Israelis kill poor defenseless Palestinians. It's because Israelis are mostly Jews, and it's fashionable to be a bigot again.

      I remember this Palestinian Authority TV broadcast where they taught kids that blowing up Jews would get them to heaven. Arab propaganda teaches the older palestinians that blowing up Jews gets you laid in heaven (with virgins!). That's terrorist propaganda often paid for through oil revenue, paid for by our money!

      Israel is the only place in the middle east where Arabs have the right to vote. It's often forgotten that Israel is the only democracy in the mideast, that there are Arabs in the Knesset, that Ariel Sharon is the elected prime minster of a people where everyone knows someone who has been killed or injured by terrorists.

      --
      Of those to whom much is given, much is required.
  14. OSL - licence ? by HansF · · Score: 5, Insightful

    That's what you get with that new business model of OSL-license. The lease expires and your customer has to make a decision wether to renew the lease or to go to the competition.
    It's not like in the days a staff decided that since the budget was tight, they'll do another year with their NT4 servers.
    Now, it's pay or bug off.

    --
    --> Insert Funny Sig Here
    1. Re:OSL - licence ? by martin-boundary · · Score: 1
      You know, that's quite insightful. In the old days when companies bought software, nobody could take it away from them. So you ended up with legacy software 7, 10 years old. Halfway through that time, when somebody decided to upgrade hardware or software, they had to choose titles which worked with the legacy stuff. So they ended up locked into a vendor, unless they wanted to risk upsetting their whole IT infrastructure.

      But now, with leases that expire, those 7 to 10 year old pieces of software can't exist. So the need for legacy-aware software buying decisions is no longer there. Microsoft's marketing dept basically shot themselves in the foot.

    2. Re:OSL - licence ? by weave · · Score: 1

      Wow, that's a real professional web site design. If the browser won't accept cookies, serve a blank page instead. I guess that is innovation for you.

    3. Re:OSL - licence ? by Proudrooster · · Score: 1

      I can't view that OSL page with my Mozilla or Firebird web browser. I must need to upgrade to IE, NOT! Also, OSL sounds a lot like an acronymn for Open Source License :)

    4. Re:OSL - licence ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It gets better - I tried opening the page in IE, and it came up in German. I couldn't find any way to get the text in English...

    5. Re:OSL - licence ? by Minna+Kirai · · Score: 1

      when companies bought software, nobody could take it away from them.

      The funny thing is, if you read the EULAs that have been issued with Microsoft(tm) software from about 1995 onwards, they could take it away, at a whim.

      The "agreement" states that either party could terminate it at any time (by sending back either the money or the software). If EULAs were valid... (and that's a big "IF")

  15. Re:Mixed emotions by asit+ler · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Wonder what a Linux-powered suicide bomb would look like.

    My mind's eye sees people with Tux sandwich boards on running around saying "DIE PALESTINIANS!!!" followed by loud "BANG"s and people screaming.

    --
    This is not the sig you're looking for.
  16. Re:Good move. by chadm1967 · · Score: 1

    I agree. Why mention Bush?

  17. Re:I don't support Zionists. by Channard · · Score: 1, Funny
    Well I would vote for free bombs as in freely blowing up jews. Unfortunately blackpowder (which is required to make bombs) costs money. I haven't found a store which belives into free giving away blackpowder.

    Perhaps if you tell them you're planning on taking it to a disused warehouse, and engaging in a dangerous experiment to clean up the gene pool which will, in all likelyhood, end your own existence, but harm no-one else, they might be willing to help.

  18. Re:Good move. by chadm1967 · · Score: 1

    Actually, I want to add to what I wrote above....

    What does you not liking how Bush is running the US have to do with Israel testing Mandrake Linux?

  19. Re:I don't support Zionists. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    "Which is curious. What is the difference between a Zionist and a White Supremacist? Both believe that God has given them dominion over their land and right to kill anyone who resides on it that they don't like."

    That's not a difference.

  20. Re:I don't support Zionists. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yes, interesting bit of propaganda there, isn't it?

    I wonder how many other people will come to associate the term Zionist with dancing in the dark.

    So how bad could it be?

    It's not like they're committing genocide or anything. Oh, wait...

  21. OSS Good by fmlug.org · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Its interesting where I go to school lots of people are only intersted in useing Microsoft products. Because they believe thats all that used so its the only thing worth using. Some people even get very upset that they have to use a term on a unix box to learn how to program and think that the Linux lab is a complete waste of time and space. I happen to tell then that Microsoft probably only has the majority share of users in the US. There are other countries where users dont have money to spend on an OS. I for on think that all governments should use Open Source software because gov's are for the people Y should they not use an os written by the people they protect. I see this as a good thing and hopefully someday the US will wake up and see the light. Now this post makes me seem like I am saying windows sucks and Linux/BSD rocks, well maybe it is. I believe in using the app the does the best job. Ok if you read this and like it good if not sorry about the rant. :)

    1. Re:OSS Good by Adam9 · · Score: 1

      I think the thing that annoys me the most is when certain classes require or exclusively teach certain Microsoft products. (Like Office)

    2. Re:OSS Good by mpe · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I happen to tell then that Microsoft probably only has the majority share of users in the US. There are other countries where users dont have money to spend on an OS.

      Possibly the most interesting thing happening here is that the country in question is has very strong links with the US, is probably the US's strongest ally on the planet and would probably have little problem getting the US Government to give them whatever money they asked for.

    3. Re:OSS Good by Asic+Eng · · Score: 1
      I happen to tell then that Microsoft probably only has the majority share of users in the US.

      That would be nice, but I doubt it is true. It's only recently that some countries start to switch from MS to OSS. I don't think there is a single country were MS has a minority share yet. (Certainly not Germany, which for some reason is often named in that respect.)

    4. Re:OSS Good by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, it's not just the US where Microsoft has a majority share. Over here (Holland) they're firmly at no. 1 too and I have every reason to believe that the situation is the same in the rest of western Europe, if not the world.

      I do believe that a *nix term is pretty inconvenient though, when compared to the windows GUI if that's al you're used to. The first couple of times I had to use Unix it annoyed the heck out of me. It was only after I discovered shell scripting that I realised what wonderful possibilities it offered.

      Anyways, not to criticize you or anything, just my 2 cents :)

    5. Re:OSS Good by superyooser · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      You would think so, but Israel is having trouble getting loans from the U.S. government (which it has a perfect record of repaying), much less gifts.

    6. Re:OSS Good by weave · · Score: 2, Insightful
      I think that can be defensible depending on the type of class or curriculm. For a community college, for example, that teaches hands on office skills, using what the student is likely to find in the work place is probably a good idea. For other types of curricula, like programming concepts, using a certain IDE on a particular platform with a specific API doesn't seem too wise.

      Then again, I work for a community college and I remember in the 80s we taught Lotus 1-2-3 and dBASE III+ in the data processing degree program. I used to bitch that it was stupid to put a particular vendor's program into a degree program. "What if 10 years from now, no one has ever heard of Lotus or dBASE?" The reply was basically that I was an idiot. Those programs have their markets sewn all up, businesses love them, businesses don't tend to change, there is no way anyone could unseat them.

      When I went for my CS degree, I was all excited when it came to assembler class because I had a Mac and the University used Macs and I wanted to learn how to code assembly on the Mac (68000 at the time). Well, I got in the class and they had loaded some program that turned the Mac into a text-only console and we only learned the basics of the assembler language itself, absolutely no toolbox calls.

      I was pissed off, but it turned out to be a good thing in the long run.

      So, I'm agreeing with your statement, just saying I can see some (but not many) exceptions.

    7. Re:OSS Good by zenpiglet · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Its interesting where I go to school lots of people are only intersted in useing Microsoft products. Because they believe thats all that used so its the only thing worth using
      It is the best bet given that 95% of PCs run MS software. It would be a pretty poor school that taught its pupils to use software that was used by a tiny fraction of the world. Now software who's main use is to teach something else (say learning French) is ok, but if your aim is to teach IT skills, then surely using the most widely-used and widely-available software is best for the student as they will have some useful skills when they leave.

      I happen to tell then that Microsoft probably only has the majority share of users in the US
      Well, no. They are the global leader in software and as I mention above near every PC runs their software. Just because you see a lot /.'ers from around the world using something different, doesn't mean that they are in any way representative.

      I believe in using the app the does the best job
      Actually, everything else you say clearly indicates that you don't. What you believe in is using the app you like/approve of/use/wrote, etc to do the job. Microsoft apps often are the best for the job, but with your policy they'd be disregarded just because they aren't OSS.

      If you did believe what you say then you wouldn't insist the Government use OSS, Linux, etc and not closed-source (which is largely taken to mean Microsoft, but actually covers many software vendors) - having favourites is not a good way to run a governemnt.

      I know it's hard to believe but Microsoft developers (and other staff) are also 'the people the government protects'. MS is a very American company, so your statement is doubly wrong because recommending MS software would protect US interests more than recommending OSS, which could potentialy be written and distributed without any American input at all, or any gain for America(ns) because no money comes into the country.

    8. Re:OSS Good by Azghoul · · Score: 1

      It occurs to me that as an academic institution, you better be teaching your students how to program, period. As opposed to your plan of "how to program using MS tools".

      For CS, a variety of tools, languages and programming styles would seem to be the smartest way of going about it. Then 15 years from now when MS has gone Enron, you can still get a job.

      Unless you're at someplace like Devry where they're just trying to give you some job training.

    9. Re:OSS Good by sgtrock · · Score: 2, Insightful
      It is the best bet given that 95% of PCs run MS software...

      ...but if your aim is to teach IT skills, then surely using the most widely-used and widely-available software is best for the student as they will have some useful skills when they leave.

      They are the global leader in software and as I mention above near every PC runs their software...

      I know it's hard to believe but Microsoft developers (and other staff) are also 'the people the government protects'. MS is a very American company...


      Your first statement is probably true. The trend, however, is for Mac OSX and Linux combined to reach 10% penetration worldwide in a year or two. Server growth has been nothing short of spectacular. They've already reached that mark for servers. Merrill Lynch estimated that revenue for Linux server installations grew by 46% to $817 million. Not exactly pocket change. :

      Your second statement is sort of valid. However, IT skills that are limited to a single computing environment are a serious mistake. Education at most institutions should be geared towards teaching you the basics and giving you the tools to learn the advanced stuff wherever you end up. This is true for all education, not just IT.

      Your third statement is misleading. I will stipulate that Microsoft is the world leader in installations. I must disagree, however, if you mean that they are the leaders in technical innovation. Microsoft has been sort of successful in borrowing and stealing ideas from others. They've never really done much in the way of truly unique R&D. In fact, I can't think of a thing off hand that they came up with first. They didn't even invent customer lock in through technology. AT&T did that.

      Finally, IMO Microsoft does not even come close to being a 'good' American company. By that I mean that they show no loyalty to the principles that this nation was founded upon. Intead, Microsoft represents some of the worst of America's flaws. Bill Gates is comparable to J. D. Rockefeller, a man who destroyed every competitor he had by illegal, immoral, and unethical means. The government should be treating Bill like Al Capone, not Albert Schweitzer.
    10. Re:OSS Good by ccp · · Score: 1

      I happen to tell then that Microsoft probably only has the majority share of users in the US. There are other countries where users dont have money to spend on an OS.

      Is there any country besides the USA where people actually pays for software?
      Instead of just copying or borrowing a friend's copy?

      In what planet?

      Cheers,

    11. Re:OSS Good by AtheismIsGood · · Score: 1

      Well, it isn't Israel's debt history that is the issue here...

    12. Re:OSS Good by superyooser · · Score: 1
      First link: Amnesty is using a tortured definition of torture to call those acts torture. The people being interrogated are not exactly jaywalkers or petty shoplifters; those kinds of people were caught trying to blow up innocent Israelis. I know because I follow the news over there very closely. Israel is at WAR for its very existence, and if subjecting prisoners to annoying music helps Israel to acquire intelligence and save lives, it's more than worth it. Even if those acts were torture, it shouldn't be an issue with the U.S., because the U.S. does the same things.

      Second link: I didn't read it. I don't care what the U.N. says. It has no credibility.

    13. Re:OSS Good by Minna+Kirai · · Score: 1

      Israel is at WAR

      Why yes, when you start a WAR, it should be no surpise to be at WAR.

    14. Re:OSS Good by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's not the Israelies who blow themselves up in buses and kill many innocent children.

      It's not the Israelies who contribute to charities to fund terror groups.

      It's not the Israelies who have a dictatorial government.

      It's not the Israelies who have vowed to wipe their neighbor from the face of the earth.

      It's not the Israelies who are teaching both in schools and mosques their children to hate.

      So, it should be no surpise that Israelies are at WAR.

    15. Re:OSS Good by WNight · · Score: 1

      I'd disregard Microsoft apps for many jobs, not because they're closed source, but because they're non-standard and MS intentionally makes them this way.

      If there's ever a chance that you'll want to change platform, or change software, you don't want to get locked in with one vendor.

      At my work we aren't switching everyone to Linux, but we're switching away from MS Office and Outlook to allow some desktops to be switched to Linux. We wanted to be able to build $250 PCs for use in the warehouse, for reception, etc. Anyone who doesn't need a full business suite, but who might be required to open a document every now and then. If we'd stuck with Windows we'd have been paying as much for the OS as the hardware on these PCs. If we'd stuck with MS lock-in apps, we'd have been stuck with MS.

      Besides, there's no MS app I've *ever* seen that was the best in the market. The most consistent, maybe, but there are better word processors, better database creator apps, better page layout programs, better web servers, better SQL servers, etc. If you had to pick a single vendor to buy software from, MS might look good. If you get to pick and choose, their "Best for the job" status is quickly shown to be an illusion.

    16. Re:OSS Good by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      un has no crediblity? you ought renounce the un resolution that reconized israel and started this whole mess - the un resolutions on Israel are totally fair and consistantly applied around the world - i.e you can't move your citizens to land you occupy as a result of a war. drop your bias and look at it honestly - occupation is bad & the occupation causes terrorism

    17. Re:OSS Good by pro-evil · · Score: 1

      I think the Jews should've been given Madagascar after WW2. That would have kept violence to a minimum. Although it might annoy the locals and the lemurs.

      --
      Why frag? Can't we all just pose for a screenshot?
  22. Re:Good move. by asit+ler · · Score: 0

    Okay, so sue me; I ranted. Rants have their own little minds; they go all over the place. At least they do when I have one.

    --
    This is not the sig you're looking for.
  23. Re:I don't support Zionists. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Insightful

    Why do you suppose that is?

    Because they stole their land? Or because they destroy their homes?

    Because they murder and torture their citizens?

    Why on Earth would anyone not want people who do such things?

  24. Re:Good move. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    W.'s admin is busy pushing Windows everywhere except where the group can say that security matters. Then and only then, does a non-windows get in.
    The interesting thing is I would have thought that with W's admin pushing a need for security, that MS would be the exception not the default.

  25. Re:One-way economy? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    It's like Poland, but in the other way : they want to join Europe and get the money, but on the other hand they preferred buying Falcons aircrafts instead of EADS.

  26. In other news... by davidstrauss · · Score: 5, Funny

    Palestinian officials respond by rejecting Mandrake in favor of *BSD.

    1. Re:In other news... by Thomas+Miconi · · Score: 2, Funny

      Palestinian officials respond by rejecting Mandrake in favor of *BSD.

      About an hour later, the Hamas and the Islamic Djihad made a joint statement in which they condemned the Palestinian Autority's decision on the ground that *BSD was "wholly anti-Islamic". The Hamas spokesman commented that "people who put pictures of smiling devils all over their software should be stoned to death - twice !"

      Twenty minutes later, the Palestinian Authority cancelled the previous announcement and made public a million-dollar contract with a major French company specializing in the production and the commercialization of Abacuses. "In order to leverage our most abundant resources, the PA finance minister said, we will investigate the possibility to use vast quantities of stones and rubble to build abacuses. If massive Beowulf clusters of abacuses are feasible, we may eventually outpower the computational capacities of the occupying forces by several orders of magnitude !"

      Thomas Miconi
      BTW, Mandrake is French, isn't it ?
      BTW2, There was a story on The Onion some time ago. I only managed to find shortened versions of it, e.g. here. I just love the last paragraph. Long live the 'nion.

    2. Re:In other news... by watzinaneihm · · Score: 2, Funny

      Oh no they wont. They are planning to make it their official OS. Did you look at the mandrake logo? Its a crescent and a star. It surely has won support in the middle east (and surely in soviet russia). They even used it in their flags.

      --
      .ACMD setaloiv siht gnidaeR
    3. Re:In other news... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well when you buy a boxed edition of Mandrake and open it, it doesn't explode in your face, so of course it's anti islamic.

    4. Re:In other news... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That just goes to show you that the average middle eastern arab is a serious shit eating moron. They want to drag the entire region kicking and screaming back into the 12th century like some uncivilized savages.

    5. Re:In other news... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And in Iraq, there is tension between the FreeBSD users and the NetBSD users, not to mention those KurdOS users.

    6. Re:In other news... by ccp · · Score: 3, Funny

      Palestinian officials respond by rejecting Mandrake in favor of *BSD.

      Well, when they discover VI vs. EMACS then they'll have a REAL war.

      Cheers,

    7. Re:In other news... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Need to give them computers with GNU systems, and tell them to bring down the Microsoft devil...

  27. Interview on linuxquestions.org ? by vierja · · Score: 2, Informative
    Anyone knows if this is related to what was mentioned in yesterday's interview with Mandrake's founder Gael Duval:

    As for MandrakeSoft, the future looks very good because we recently got our first good successes in local administrations (details will be announced later), so at least we will have business in this field and in the corporate field.

    1. Re:Interview on linuxquestions.org ? by dollar70 · · Score: 1
      Yeah, I was wondering about the connection myself. After all, Mandrake hasn't gotten a lot of air-time on Slashdot lately (not that it's a bad thing necessarily), but two articles in two days? I was thinking, "Wow!" And what do I find? A lot of polarizing bigotry here in the comments.

      I also find it disturbing that it's being associated with my preferred distro, Mandrake. I'd like to see more upbeat conversation of how Mandrake is helping people make the switch to Linux and open source, and not to argue over old political diatribes that should have been settled long ago.

      I think it's great if any coutry wants to look into Open source, Linux, GNU/Linux (regardless of distro) because it can only mean better developement for all Linux platforms in the long run.

  28. Re:Mixed emotions by Technician · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I know it's off topic and feeding the troll, however;

    Wonder what a Linux-powered suicide bomb would look like.

    In all reality, it would be much simpler than a windows box. It could be run without a keyboard and monitor. It could easly be operated remotely via wireless LAN or dialup via telenet. Remote kind of defeats the suicide portion of the troll.

    Most important, It would be very cost effective. No need for an expensive OS for a simple job.

    No need for expensive hardware to run the expensive OS for the simple job.

    An old ISA based PC with a modem (real modem- ya got me on that point) or a NIC and small RAM and HD or CD without a HD would suffice. The Windows solution will not run on a minimual configuration. The NIC or Modem is safer than the sucide option mentioned.

    However you could trade the NIC or Modem for a keyboard and your life for the true sucide option mentioned.

    --
    The truth shall set you free!
  29. What if MS goes for code review? by kautilya · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Many governments are going for Linux saying it is free of cost, "open software", etc etc. But, the real reason I think is they believe Linux/Open Software has less chance of any "back door". They don't want every desk in their department to get electronically bugged. Now, imagine the scenario when MS offers for some sort of international code review/certification saying that it is as "safe" as open source (I don't mean "secure" and "bug free" but intentional sabotage..). It would be interesting to see if they still adopt Linux. Now, before all this happens, this is the opportunity for Linux to grab the opportunity and establish itself. Linux should market itself hard so that in the future linux too becomes enough ubiquitious, the only strength windows has. Instead of tamely imitating windows (desktop) time to get more creative and make the OS more usable to the average clerk/secretary who wants a good mail client, a word processor and a browser. Strength builds upon strength. If Linux companies can capitalise on opportunities by skeptical governments, and establishes itself, it shouldn't to be too difficult before we see linux too as an option for an average user. Windows gets its strength from those average users.

    1. Re:What if MS goes for code review? by KoolDude · · Score: 3, Funny


      Linux should market itself hard

      That's why we have the Advanced Linux Marketing System included in 2.6. It elevates the Linux Marketing to an all new level without compromising TCO, IP, ROI, .NET, XML and all other buzz words.

      --
      getSexySig(); /* returns sexy signature */
    2. Re:What if MS goes for code review? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Code reviews by themselves are insufficient. If you want to trust your software you have to not only review the code but also compile it yourself.

      I doubt any governments are dumb enough to swallow a pre-compiled binary even after seeing the supposed source for that binary, and I doubt Microsoft is going to let their customers compile their own binaries of MS products any time soon either.

      Thus, verifiable/trustworthy software will continue to be a key advantages of free software for some time to come.

    3. Re:What if MS goes for code review? by gurumeditationerror · · Score: 3, Insightful

      But, the real reason I think is they believe Linux/Open Software has less chance of any "back door". They don't want every desk in their department to get electronically bugged. Now, imagine the scenario when MS offers for some sort of international code review/certification saying that it is as "safe" as open source (I don't mean "secure" and "bug free" but intentional sabotage..). It would be interesting to see if they still adopt Linux.

      Yeah, I've thought that myself before. But for microsoft to get a government to trust the code review they'd have to give said government all the code that has been reviewed plus the means to compile it and distribute it themselves.
      Other wise it is pointless. "Here are our black boxs and here is the code it runs, honest. No, you can't open them - We've showed you what's in them, really!"

    4. Re:What if MS goes for code review? by Glock27 · · Score: 1
      Mod parent up. Exact same point I was going to make.

      I doubt the Israeli government has the time to get the Windows build process right... ;-)

      --
      Galileo: "The Earth revolves around the Sun!"
      Score: -1 100% Flamebait
    5. Re:What if MS goes for code review? by tuggy · · Score: 1

      ...they'd have to give said government all the code that has been reviewed plus the means to compile it and distribute it themselves. Other wise it is pointless. "Here are our black boxs and here is the code it runs, honest. No, you can't open them - We've showed you what's in them, really!"

      yeah, i agree with that. and because of it, i dont think it will happen.
      Micro$oft wont be stupid enough to open the code only to government.. that is an impossible thing to do. Once the code is open to someone, it will be open to all :>

    6. Re:What if MS goes for code review? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hello?!? MS have opened up their source to many companies/agencies. I work for a major UK Financial company who has significant portions of the NT4 and 2k source code and it won't find it's way into the public domain, because the confidentiallity agreement that we signed basically says that Bill can put our CIO's (and probably CEO's) testicles in a blender if it does.

    7. Re:What if MS goes for code review? by Imperator · · Score: 1

      Because it would leak. Let's face it: after they've given out a dozen copies of the full "build this and burn it and install it yourself" source to certain countries, there'll be copies all over the net. It won't be OSS people either; it will be crackers. I mean, why bother cracking the latest copy prevention in an MS product when you can simply comment out a few lines and recompile?

      --

      Gates' Law: Every 18 months, the speed of software halves.
    8. Re:What if MS goes for code review? by Minna+Kirai · · Score: 1

      and I doubt Microsoft is going to let their customers compile their own binaries of MS products any time soon either.

      They might. Microsoft would never let someone compile binaries and then use them, but if a large customer was insistent enough, they coudl arrange something.

      For example, the customer's IT staff could visit Microsoft, watch WindowsXP compile (which takes probably 50+ hours), and then compare the just-compiled files with the contents of a store-bought disk.

      That'll give them a greater sense of security (not enough, really, because we all know compilers can't be fully trusted)

  30. Re:Mixed emotions by phntm · · Score: 0

    Wonder what a Linux-powered suicide bomb would look like.>
    Dude: you are such an idiot

  31. Sounds a lot like the recent Powerpoint article by Kjella · · Score: 5, Insightful
    The procurement decision relegated users to second best, said local Microsoft officials, comparing Open Office 1.1 functionality to Word 97
    First of all, like has been mentioned numerous times on /., the functionality in Office 97 is sufficient for most users. Very few people use, let alone need, the extra functionality added in the later versions of office.

    Indeed. It sounds much like the Powerpoint article, where the main argument is "blame the tool". In this case "blame the office suite". Of course you need the rudimentary features required to make it look like you want, but it's still the content that matters.

    I really don't see why so much focus is on the tool. Your average run-of-the-mill business letter will look pretty damn near identical if written in OpenOffice, KWord, Word 97 or Word XP. The tool can't do any better than the man wielding it. In case of a word processor, I'd say that nothing the word processor will do makes a significant impact, even with Clippy ;). All the work goes into forming the letter, not formatting the letter.

    Kjella

    P.S. All karma generated by this post dedicated to Opera 7.20. I never could have done it with any other browser. Yeah. Right.
    -
    --
    Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
    1. Re:Sounds a lot like the recent Powerpoint article by cerberusss · · Score: 2, Informative
      I really don't see why so much focus is on the tool

      It's not the tool, it's the file format that the tool uses. OpenOffice 1.1 still can't flawlessly im/export MS Office 2000 which is 3 year old software.

      --
      8 of 13 people found this answer helpful. Did you?
    2. Re:Sounds a lot like the recent Powerpoint article by gnu-generation-one · · Score: 2, Informative

      "It's not the tool, it's the file format that the tool uses. OpenOffice 1.1 still can't flawlessly im/export MS Office 2000 which is 3 year old software"

      If your priority is opening MS-Office documents, you should consider using OpenOffice. Not only is it often better at opening Word documents than Word itself, but when the file format is upgraded, it will be more likely to support the new format without additional cost.

      There are people asking for "completely the same" as if they can't find anything else that OOo lacks. It's like hearing someone moan that it's not fully compatible because it doesn't have the same Microsoft logo on the box. Yeah, we embedded a video in a powerpoint presentation in a spreadsheet in a document, and now it doesn't work. Duh!

      At university, there were plenty of course materials posted on the intranet in MS-Office format. I could always reliably open them with OpenOffice, whereas people with MSOffice had problems. Example: the title pages that we had to use for the thesis, a .DOC document. Half the class came back the next week to complain that they coulnd't read it, using their latest copies of MS Office. I never noticed a problem, it opened just fine in OOo.

    3. Re:Sounds a lot like the recent Powerpoint article by cerberusss · · Score: 2, Interesting
      It's not the tool, it's the file format that the tool uses. OpenOffice 1.1 still can't flawlessly im/export MS Office 2000 which is 3 year old software
      If your priority is opening MS-Office documents
      Well, it's not. Otherwise, I'd have asked for "opening MS-Office documents". No, I asked for "flawless im/export". I want to be able to receive a word-document from a customer, edit it, and send it back.

      For some people, OOo does the job just fine. For me it doesn't. So I paid $55 for Crossover Office.

      --
      8 of 13 people found this answer helpful. Did you?
    4. Re:Sounds a lot like the recent Powerpoint article by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      In case of a word processor, I'd say that nothing the word processor will do makes a significant impact, even with Clippy ;).

      Not true. Newer word processors have "intelligence" that causes them to reformat or rewrite sections of your content or enforce non-pertient rules. In many cases you can disable the behavior (if you can find the approriate setting), but in many cases you cannot.

      I personally find that later versions of Word, in particular, have become so intrusive as to be burdensome. Sure, in theory any word-processor will be able churn out a similar looking document, but in some cases the the software actively tries to format that letter per its own (frequently ill-conceived) rules rather than your own. It eliminates the need to think, but with increasing frequency it does so at the cost of clarity or proper form.

    5. Re:Sounds a lot like the recent Powerpoint article by tomknight · · Score: 1
      Exactly.

      I've recently had to either buy licences for MS Office or find an alternative. Neither Star Office or Open Office retained the formatting of an existing MS Word document. This sadly made them unusable.

      I have no problem with using Open or Star Office, I actually like them, but until they deal with MS Office formats perfectly, I can't justify their use in my company. Sad really, especially as we'd get Star Office free. Hey, at least the educational licence for MS Office is lower than the full pricing.

      Tom.

      --
      Oh arse
    6. Re:Sounds a lot like the recent Powerpoint article by Sivaram_Velauthapill · · Score: 1

      All you guys (you and eveyrone on Slashdot with the same argument) are looking at it from a non-user point of view. What you guys use a word processor for differs from the real users. Typing up a letter or just entering some numbers into a spreadsheet might be ok for you but the real users need more features. For example, Excel is still better than anything in OOo. In particular, the plotting in OOo sucks compared to Excel. And I'm not even an Excel "user".

      With your line of thinking, there is no difference between an old word processor, say Wordperfect 5.1 for DOS and a modern one, say MS Word XP. I'll bet the real users can point out a million things that are better in the latter product.

      One of the reasons Linux is not popular is because it just doesn't have the same features as Windows. For a programmer, or a systems admin, everything might look the same. But for an end-user things can be very different.

      Sivaram Velauthapillai

      --
      Sivaram Velauthapillai
      Seeking the meaning of life... @slashdot of all places ;)
    7. Re:Sounds a lot like the recent Powerpoint article by cerberusss · · Score: 1
      at least the educational licence for MS Office is lower than the full pricing.

      Yeah, and some companies/organizations have an MS Office license which permits home usage. So when people want to use Wine/Crossover to run MS Office, they don't even have to buy the license themselves, or pirate a copy.

      --
      8 of 13 people found this answer helpful. Did you?
  32. Re:Free as in Free Jew ..... by Gilesx · · Score: 2, Funny

    But you're only about 14 - that's far too young to be giving *anyone* a BJ, Jewish or not...

    --
    Sunday you're Thinking Different, Monday you're a huge tool, paying too much and waiting to think like everyone else.
  33. Re:Mixed emotions by azzy · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    It not only blows up and kills your victims, but it also gives your victims the right to also blow up and take some others with them.

  34. Re:Mixed emotions by jondaman21 · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    In other news, the palestinians who blow israelis to bits still use Microsoft Office. Damn shame.

  35. Re:Mixed emotions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Haven't you read the bible? I think you'll find that land was given to us by god personally, and we have a right to remove any filthy unwashed non-jews killing our people and building their filthy settlements on our land.

    If you read Exodus a little more closely you will find that the land was given, by God, to some very specific people. Specific pieces of land were assigned to specific groups of people. Not to some people called "Jews", a term which probably didn't exist in the Bronze age.
    Indeed "God Gave Us this Land" is a claim which the Palestinians could make most strongly. They are a Semitic people, who have lived in that part of the world for a long time thus are quite likely to be the descendents of Middle Easten and follow a religion which is derived from that followed by the "Israelites".
    Zionism, dating from the late 19th century, let alone the modern state of Israel Is a relative newcommer here. Let alone that most people currently claiming to be "Jewish" are from the Caucasian Ashkenazi. Claiming "God gave us the Land" is a rather silly claim when there is no requirement for someone to believe in God to become an Israeli citizen. Things get even sillier though, some of the people most critical of the modern Israeli state being Orthodox Rabbis.

  36. Re:One-way economy? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Don't forget that the majority of Linux developement comes from the USA. And since the government is a government of the people and I am a citizen of the united states, I realy think Microsoft sucks and any sort of use of Linux over MS products is a big win in my corner of the world.

  37. Re:One-way economy? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    I find it quite interesting how the US government makes a dedicated effort to importing stuff from Israel

    It's actually illegal to boycott Israeli goods, even to ask "Is this made in Israel" in the US.

    - and pouring millions and millions of dollars into the country every day,

    It really isn't clear who "wears the pants" in the US-Israel relationship. Nothing similar appears to exist between any other pair of countries. You are more likely to find critisism of Israeli government policy from the Kenesset than from the US Congress. More likely to find such a thing printed in an Israeli newspaper than a US one.

    and it might just be my sick sense of humour, but it seems like a bit of a slap in the face that the Israelis decided to go away from american corporation Microsoft's software.

    Compared with some of the other things Israel has done, this is minor. It's not as if they are killing MS sales reps or bombing Redmond (then claiming they though it was an Egyptian Horse Carrier)...

  38. Not just more neurons, a lot more! You I.C.! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I have a lot of cockroach friends, and I resent you comparing them to George Bush, you insensitive clod!

  39. Re:Good move. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
  40. One more year... by horcy · · Score: 2, Funny

    ... and even Microsoft will see the light and switch to *nix

    --
    Check my site: http://pixel.pagina.nl
    1. Re:One more year... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Microsoft will see the light and switch to *nix

      That would make the sh*t hit the fan.

      MS Xenix was a licenced version of AT&T Unix (edition 6 or 7, certainly prior to System III). At the time SCO was a contractor to MS and a reseller. MS sold Xenix to SCO which eventually brought it up to date as OpenServer. The UnixWare branch came from AT&T via Novell.

      As part of the sale of Xenix, MS included a note to the effect that MS would not release another version of Unix. Imagine SCO's glee and averice if MS Linux was released. They may have bought a licence to use bits of Unix code, but that note would have to be worth, what, 10 billion ?

  41. 1 more year and... by horcy · · Score: 0, Troll

    ...Microsoft will see the light too and make the switch to *nix

    --
    Check my site: http://pixel.pagina.nl
  42. Re:One-way economy? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Funny
    Compared with some of the other things Israel has done, this is minor. It's not as if they are killing MS sales reps or bombing Redmond (then claiming they though it was an Egyptian Horse Carrier)...
    Hmmm, now there's an idea....
  43. Nobody believes this shit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    OK? Just stop already.

  44. Re:Good move. by Savage-Rabbit · · Score: 5, Funny

    This is a wise move for Israel that I hope will be duplicated all over the world,

    Which would really piss off the US intelligence community..... Which in turn is probably one of the Israeli's motives. I bet the CIA gets a small collective panic attack every time they lose track of what the Israelis are upto.

    AAAHHHHHHHHH......There is nothing like a good conspiracy theory to start the day!!!!

    --
    Only to idiots, are orders laws.
    -- Henning von Tresckow
  45. Re:Israeli Gov't Begins Testing Zyklon-B by mrsev · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I know I shouldnt respond but I cant resist.

    I am not jewish and my grandmother was even a muslim....before you start ranting about me being a zionist..blah blah balh.

    Many I suggest that you go and post somewhere else where there are more of your "kind". Manybe you can dream of your world free from all the things out there that scare you. Frankly I dont care. This is discussion site for tech news and geek stuff. There are many places where people like you can meet and share your bigotry.

    In conclusion, you are a sick and twisted individual. May I remind you that the NAZIs killed not only jews but many other people too. British, american, french, greek, dutch, russion, polish, christian, jew, arab, gay, straight, german, ukraininan..... I have wasted enough of my time on you.

  46. Ahh by xorta · · Score: 1

    Ahhh they use *nix everywhere even in our treasury, good on them for moving away from microsoft its a lot cheaper and a lot more flexiblie, hoorar for israel.

  47. Re:Good move. by CreatorOfSmallTruths · · Score: 5, Informative

    The fact that Israel is in Asia doesn't mean a
    thing...

    Israel has all major companies R&D centers: IBM, Intel, M$.

    Israelies are contributing to linux distributions, open source projects etc. (why else would a birocratic office like the treasury be interested in linux?? someone there thought it was a good idea to pitch the offer)

    Israelies invented ICQ, PHP, the UAV, A couple of smart bombs and some other "low tech" toys you might have heared of (currently they have a missile vs. missile resembling the patriot, a lazer-targeting system designed to target low orbit missiles)

    Don't refer to Israel as third world country. Please.

  48. Re:One-way economy? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's actually illegal to boycott Israeli goods, even to ask "Is this made in Israel" in the US.
    How is that law compatible with the First Amendment? Anyway, you could always just ask "where is this made?" to everything and conduct your boycott covertly.
    It really isn't clear who "wears the pants" in the US-Israel relationship.
    Really? I think, if you consider Israel's response to recent US requests about its behaviour in the West Bank, that the US is Israel's bitch.

  49. I've got a better one by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    The medical school at which I am affiliate faculty (University of South Florida) stipulates(http://hsc.usf.edu/is/standards/student s_med.html ) that students must have a copy of MS Office ("must be purchased") as a condition of attending medical school. No mention is made of "or compatible". From what I can tell from asking the students, the main impetus seems to be that the lectures for the first two years are all given as PowerPoint presentations.

    I don't have any problem with companies deciding to use only Microsoft products if that is their choice, nor do I object to University support policies that focus on MS because they have to use their resources to support the most students in a cost-effective way, but I strongly object to making ownership of MS software a condition of attendance, particularly at a public institution in a state that sued MS for antitrust violations.

  50. Re:Good move. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yeah, I know. It makes me sick just thinking about him.

  51. yea.. propaganda.. yea.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And Bob Marley was a Jew because he sang about Zion in many of his songs? ...no

    The concept of Zion is multifaceted. It is the fabled homeland, not shorthand for state sponsored killing. It's use in the Matrix was not propaganda.

  52. What? A Month? by sirReal.83. · · Score: 3, Funny

    They're only giving themselves a month to decide? It usually takes me a week to iron out the config on my own box after a fresh install. Squid this, adzapper that, make a GPG key, why won't iptables block Zope's port...

    1. Re:What? A Month? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If they are only giving themselves a month to decide, this implies that the decision has been made already and that the IT boys are just being thrown a bone to keep them quiet.

  53. Re:One-way economy? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Interestingly, Mandrake is a French company. France is often portrayed in (some) US and Israeli media as anti-Israel leaning on the side of anti-semitism.

    Maybe these guys don't let such considerations cloud sensible business decisions. Or they realize that you can oppose (some) decisions from a given government without hating their people.

  54. Subsidy by pigpilot · · Score: 1

    Does anyone else think it strange that the Isreali defence department signed their Microsoft deal in New York? I can't think of any other deal where you buy $20 Million in software but have to travel half way around the world to sign the contract, unless of course the deal was a small part of a deal very benificial to the buyer.

    The real deal probably went along the lines of "I'll accept $1 billion of aid to buy attack helicopters from you, and as a thank you I'll spend $20 million on software from Microsoft."

    This isn't the type of deal that Microsoft can rely on to sustain itself because where the finance ministry had to make a choice without the benefit of a large subsidy/bribe they dropped Microsoft.

  55. Zealots by tehanu · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Personally I would use the term Zealots rather than Zionists.

    The Zealots were a bunch of militant religious nuts who dragged the majority moderate Jews to war with Rome, leading to the destruction of Jerusalem, the burning of the Temple and the final destruction of what remained of Israel, leaving the Jews without a homeland for the next 2000 years. They refused to abide any foreign rule because Israel could only be ruled according to the strict word of God and believed that any violent means were acceptable, to achieve their aims. The Jews bitterly regretted the Zealots during their wandering years, but obviously they haven't learnt not to allow their interactions with their neighbours to be ruled by violent militant religious nuts who believe they are on a holy quest from God to maintain the sancitity and purity of the Jewish state.

    Zionism used to be quite secular and was actually despised by Jewish fundamentalists. Then it got hijacked by militant fundamentalists who want to recreate the Israel of Solomon and David. Never mind that particular Israel hasn't existed for over 2000 years and other people settled in the region over the last couple of millenia. While the majority of Israelites just want to live their lives and don't give a damn about Greater Israel, the rantings of the settlers involve lines like "God gave us this land so it belongs to us. The Palestinians should acknowledge us as the rulers or they should just get out." The fact that most people don't seem to realise that *both* sides are driven by religious nuts who are perfectly willing to use force against innocent civilians to achieve their aims and don't care a whit about the suffering of their own people just shows that the Jewish Zealots have a better PR machine.

    The funny thing is now the Jews are coming to realise that if they keep the Palestinian lands, they will soon no longer be a Jewish state because the Arab birthrate is much higher. So the options are to either reliquish the land and remain small, but democratic and Jewish. They could keep the land, and remain Jewish by not allowing the Arabs to vote in a sort of apartheid system therefore no longer be a democracy (what do you call a country where the majority are not allowed to vote because of their race?). They could keep the land, and remain Jewish by driving all of the Arabs out ie. ethnic cleansing (Israel could be the first democracy to do ethnic cleansing...). Or they could keep the land, remain a democracy and the Jewish nature of the state will be wiped out in a decade when Arabs form the majority of the population,and vote in an Arab PM. Personally I'd choose (1) but somehow I have a feeling the zealots are going to drive Israel to (2) or (3). If (4) happens I'd consider it karma.

    1. Re:Zealots by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Israel could be the first democracy to do ethnic cleansing

      Trail of tears? That was pretty much ethnic cleansing. Except of course you could argue that there wasn't such a thing as a democracy until everyone had the vote regardless of colour or gender...

    2. Re: Zealots by Black+Parrot · · Score: 1


      > Zionism used to be quite secular and was actually despised by Jewish fundamentalists. Then it got hijacked by militant fundamentalists who want to recreate the Israel of Solomon and David. Never mind that particular Israel hasn't existed for over 2000 years

      s/2000/2900/
      And according to some recent Israeli archaeologists, that particular Israel never existed at all - at least not on the grand scale portrayed in the Bible. Naturally, that claim isn't very popular among the fundamentalists.

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    3. Re:Zealots by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Zionism used to be quite secular and was actually despised by Jewish fundamentalists. Then it got hijacked by militant fundamentalists who want to recreate the Israel of Solomon and David. Never mind that particular Israel hasn't existed for over 2000 years and other people settled in the region over the last couple of millenia.

      So you're saying Mandrake Linux rocks right?

  56. Re:Good move. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I bet the CIA gets a small collective panic attack every time they lose track of what the Israelis are upto.

    Because they're usually up to no good. And it'll probably end with us marching another army of Mexicans into some other god-forsaken part of the world in order to make it safe for Zionism and Evangelical Christian missionaries.

  57. Re:I don't support Zionists. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Uh... what about them?

    We should like.. kick the fuckers out? Because like, when the very survival of your country is questioned there's no time and resources to be devoted to treason disguised under freedom of speech, civil rights and democracy?

  58. Re:I don't support Zionists. by adrianbaugh · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Well, it seemed to be Zionists you wanted to get at, rather than Israelis in general. It seems a case of "hammer to crack a nut". Have you ever wondered whether the freedom of your country would be threatened if you had freedom of speech, civil rights and democracy (for all)?
    Someone once said: "If you sacrifice freedom for security you deserve neither." I think you eloquently prove his point; moreover, I suspect that if you sacrifice freedom for security not only do you deserve neither but you will get neither.

    --
    "'I pass the test,' she said. 'I will diminish, and go into the West, and remain Galadriel.'"
    - JRR Tolkien.
  59. Nope. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Didn't you see 'Wag the Dog'? I wouldn't be suprised if the entire Israeli gov't were run out of a Manhattan office.

    1. Re:Nope. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      Actually that's the United States gov't being run out of a Tel Aviv office.

      All your base are belong to us.

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

      Please adjust your tinfoil hat

  60. There are only 364 Earth Days left.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If they do, they'll make the most popular and usable distro. And nothing will have changed.

    But I did learn something from this thread, on Slashdot, Microsoft is more evil that Israel. I'd join in with the chants of "LINUS, Linus Linus" but I'm off to fire my drill missile at the Yamato and my restrictive and unecessarily pointy flight helmet makes such revelry impractical if not impossible.

  61. Yes, but why? by Futurepower(R) · · Score: 1

    Yes, but think further. Why did they seemingly shoot themselves in the foot? Maybe because they realize they won't be around much longer. Maybe they're trying to get as much money as they can before Linux takes over.

    1. Re:Yes, but why? by Monkelectric · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I wish I had the link, but there is a paper out there about how Microsofts income is primarily derived from pension plans and tax breaks, and has very little to do with software. The author claims that when MS goes belly up it will make enron look like nothing.

      --

      Religion is a gateway psychosis. -- Dave Foley

    2. Re:Yes, but why? by orlord · · Score: 3, Informative

      http://www.billparish.com/presslist.html

    3. Re:Yes, but why? by Monkelectric · · Score: 1

      thanks my good man!

      --

      Religion is a gateway psychosis. -- Dave Foley

  62. You mean our money? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That's U.S. money, dude.

    Israel doesn't spend a dime on these armaments. We give them what they want... for free.

    Free, as in, freeing a Palestinian child from his arms and legs.

    1. Re:You mean our money? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Worse the tax money we send them to spend on our weapons all goes into private US arms companies usually owned and operated by ex-government officials, Carlyle Group for instance.

      So basically it's a way to put tax money directly in the pockets of the Bush family...

      And the conservatives bitch about "wealth redistribution" when you try to give old people free pills but then when billions of tax money gets stuffed in Bush family coffers they think it's jolly good! At least free pills make old people's life better unlike free bombs for Israel that just makes more people dead ON BOTH SIDES.

      Oh well fuck it, stupid military-industrial capitalist governments, sooner or later they are just going to destory the world anyways...

    2. Re:You mean our money? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Uh, yeah, free as in the weapons and armaments we send to many Middle Eastern nations. The same amount of money has been spent on Egypt, Jordan, Palestinians as has Israel, just not all for military spenditures. However, we have both donated and sold rather large military items to totalitarian regimes in exchange for little more than fierce anti-American vitriol and even the funding of terrorist organizations (Saudi Arabia).
      For example:
      Egypt:
      $1.2 billion - 24 F 16C/D Block 40 aircraft; 28 F110-GE-100B engines; 24 AN/APG-68 radar; Block 40 upgrade configuration to include integration capability to employ the HARPOON, Heads Up Display, Multiple Boresight Indicator, Egyptian Identification Friend or Foe, and Tactical Airborne Reconnaissance System. Associated equipment, support, training, and services. (4/12/1999)

      Saudi Arabia:
      $9 billion - 72 F-15XP aircraft, 24 aircraft spare engines/modules, 48 sets of navigation and targeting pods, 900 AGM-65D/G MAVERICK missiles, 300 AIM-9S and 300 AIM-7M air-to-air missiles, 600 CBU-87 bombs, 700 GBU-10/12 bombs, missions planning systems, spare and repair parts, support equipment, technical documentation, technical and logistics services, personnel training, design and construction of supporting infrastructure and other related elements of logistics to ensure complete program support (9/14/1992)

      United Arab Emirates:
      $6.4 billion - 80 F-16 Block 60 Desert Falcon combat aircraft, with AMRAAM, HARM and Hakeem (UK) missiles (7/10/2000)


      In contrast, Israel was the first nation to down a MiG fighter jet and promptly turn it over to our government. Israel also provided and continues to provide valuable intelligence on Arab nations and paramilitary groups (see Eli Cohen and his role in Syria). After 1967, Israel was used by our government as a Cold War tool to counter the increasing Soviet influence in Arab nations - especially Syria. Israel also contributes substantially to American military technology - many items that are sold to Israel are upgraded by one of the most technologically advanced armies in the world and those upgrades are shared with the US.

      For example, a great deal of the technology used in Iraq is of Israeli origin. Of course, expertise with terrorist and guerilla warfare also come in handy in Iraq.

      These are just a few of the military benefits afforded the U.S. from aid that accounts for a fraction of a percent of U.S. GDP. I could go on and mention the thousands of other contributions, such as medicine, physics, mathematics, etc. (see here, but somehow I feel you it would all be wasted on you. You've already bought into the rantings of some totalitarian thugs hook, line, and sinker.
  63. Re:Free as in Free Jew ..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ok, that's one for not a Catholic....

  64. Re:Tight-fisted jews by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    because you're reading slashdot with your threshold set too low

  65. Power to tha Duck by capn_buzzcut · · Score: 3, Insightful
    I think it's great not only that they're looking at Linux, but also that they're considering Mandrake.

    To go along with their recent financial success, a win here would be absolutely huge for them.

    --
    "And now, Frank N. Furter, your time has come. Say 'goodbye' to all of this, and 'hello'... to oblivion!"
    1. Re:Power to tha Duck by sniggly · · Score: 3, Interesting
      I agree, I like mandrake and wish them all the best.

      Redhat spawned fedora, fedora is "unsupported" and what remains are high priced RHELs. Fedora has a very strong community around it but its stated purpose is to be a labrat for RHEL.
      Suse never had ISOs for download which is their right as a company but a linux distribution usually is more than the company doing the distributing. Now that suse is a Novell company we'll have to see how true to the OSS Suse remains.
      Sun is a new linux distributor and we'll just have to see how true to the community they will be. After all they could have called it the Sun Gnome Desktop (which it is) instead of the Sun Java desktop (which it isn't as much)...

      Mandrake is the one remaining big linux distribution (still the biggest in terms of desktop install base) that is tightly interwoven with its supporting community.

      --
      Of those to whom much is given, much is required.
    2. Re:Power to tha Duck by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, but Mandrake is French. Definitely not something you would want to use in the Defense Department. ;)

    3. Re:Power to tha Duck by cayenne8 · · Score: 1
      "Mandrake is the one remaining big linux distribution (still the biggest in terms of desktop install base) that is tightly interwoven with its supporting community."

      I hate to mention Gentoo here, but, in this case I think it is appropriate...

      :-)

      --
      Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
    4. Re:Power to tha Duck by Minna+Kirai · · Score: 1

      I hate to mention Gentoo here, but, in this case I think it is appropriate...

      Why? Gentoo isn't "big". Not many people use it.

      Distributions with more users than Gentoo include: Redhat, debian, SUSE, Mandrake, and Slack.

      Prehaps Gentoo seems more popular than it is, because it's users tend to be involved. Gentoo is not the "most supported big distrib", it is the "most vocal small distrib".

  66. Re:I don't support Zionists. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    that is exacly the reason why the left-wing govrement that was in power in israel in the 1990s didn't manage to get a lasting peace accord with the PA - a lot of the plastinian people suffer from the same brain-washed notions of what zionist are.
    The assassination of Rabin wasn't entirely helpful either.
    you mean like bulldozing the house of suicide bombers?
    Only about 1 in 20 houses demolished are that of suicide bombers, the rest are removed to make way for projects such as expansion of Jewish settlements, roads, etc., or because they are built "illegally" (that is, without consent of the occupying forces).

    I refer you to Articles 33, 53 of the Fourth Geneva Convention. Also, Article 49, paragraph 6.
    thats not true. please provide proof.
    You're right. Grandparent is a retard (I'm not the same AC).
    The stuff that is done - is done for survival.
    Don't give me that "survival" crap. Israel is not endangered anymore. You are a retard.
  67. 1 month? by blanks · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Doesn't matter, 1 month isn't enough time to switch over a small office over to Linux, let alone an entire governments structure and closed source software.

    They may decide to switch over, but it will be over a few years, and will continue using their existing OS.

  68. Screenshots/Pictures/Documentation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Here the realism about these Zionists. The Hizbollah made a lot of Pictures for demonstrating the law and order of these israeli motherfuckers.

  69. Re:Mixed emotions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


    If you read Exodus a little more closely you will find that the land was given, by God, to some very specific people. Specific pieces of land were assigned to specific groups of people. Not to some people called "Jews"



    On the contrary: God gave this land to people who worship Him, to the Jews. It is a common mistake to treat the Jews as an ethnic group. A Jew is anyone worshipping The One and preaching Judaism, as well as her descenadnts along female line up to fourth generation. That is the definition. Although conversion to Judaism is a lengthy and complex process, it is open to anyone, regardless of sex, ethnicity or other such criteria.

  70. Again? by SmallFurryCreature · · Score: 1

    Surely you mean switch back to unix? Seems the world has forgotten xenix. Although having heard from people old enough to have used it this is a good thing. Look at the SCO case if you want to learn more about the history of xenix.

    --

    MMO Quests are like orgasms:

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

    1. Re:Again? by nuser · · Score: 1
      I used xenix, running on a 286 in the mid/late 1980s.Windows 3 might have been available but I don't think so. In any event xenix was far more capable for the task. (Overnight dialup of ~400 shops, collection and consolidation of takings and then upload to mainframe).

      My first experience of a *nix system that didn't belong to someone else...

  71. Talk About a Cluster LOL by burdicda · · Score: 0, Troll

    The Israeli Minister of Defense signs a three year
    contract for $21 Million dollars with Microsoft.

    The entire deal is subsidized by the United States
    (We are paying for it!)

    Two weeks later the Israeli Treasury walks away
    from renewing their previous two year contract
    with Microsoft to start using Linux.

    Talk about some mixed up Motherfuckers
    hehehehehahahaha lol....

    1. Re:Talk About a Cluster LOL by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Israel screwing over the United States? Nothing new. Remember the USS Liberty!!

  72. GNU/Linux? Where? by Pope+Raymond+Lama · · Score: 1

    We better get another article to link here. Because the one I F. Read has almost zero about anything Linux, and is covered top to botton with microsoftish stuff.

    Mandrake linux is mentioned but once, and in this context: " and the ministry is testing localized builds of Mandrake Linux. ".

    I mean....there is by no ways a contrac, or anything. The only contractes mentioned on the F.A. are the ones signed to microsoft, both old and new.

    Nowere in the article it is said anything about money saving in changing into FLOSS. Actually, by reading it one gets the impression that FLOSS alternatives will cost far higher than current deals with microsoft.

    Open office itself is mentioned three times, one of them in a quote from m$ spokespersons saing it is worse tah microsoft office 97.

    To sun it up, IMO, either this article is pro microsoft, or there is nothing going on over there - move along.

    --
    -><- no .sig is good sig.
  73. So go on, convert to Judaism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Then we just need 100mg more Zyklon-B for you. Minor expenses...

  74. Re:Mixed emotions by TheLoneCabbage · · Score: 1

    I can't believe some idiot moded you insightfull. This is a fake quote. And you took the bait. Who's the bigger fool? The fool with the idea, or the fool who follows him (Obi Wan Kanobie Z"Tzl)

    Why is it that every time someone mentions Israel, doing some technological feet, be it adopting Linux (about bloody time) or curring cancers (yeah they have), some flaim bate comes on and thinks it's funny to start spewing filth.

    Not everything you hear on the news is true. And certainly not everything you think about another is relevant for posting here!

    I'd debate your "facts" but I'd run the risk of giving you some kind of bizare validation.

    Stop trolling and stay on topic you shmuck!

  75. It already get a David star on it by La+Gris · · Score: 0

    Good choice Israel. Mandrake already get the David star on it.

    Did this logo weight somehow in favour of Mandrake ?

    --
    Léa Gris
    1. Re:It already get a David star on it by palutz · · Score: 1

      Mandrake has a five pointed star ( think one hand) and the star of david has six ( think one hand plus another finger , unless you are you have some weird birth abnormality we should know about).

  76. Re:Tight-fisted jews by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Coupled with the fact that Jews are notoriuosly cheap and get bonus Jew points if they screw you in a business deal.

  77. When Diplomacy Fails by ReadParse · · Score: 4, Funny

    WASHINGTON, DC - Only minutes after Secretary of State Colin Powell this morning announced that computing talks with Israel had broken down, Communications Minister Reuven Rivlin held a press conference to declare that Israel intended to go ahead with this week's planned Mandrake Linux testing.

    Minister Rivlin downplayed the computing tensions that might result along the Lebanese border. "Israel's computing sovereignty will not be challenged. If we want to move to BeOS, HP-UX, Solaris, PC-DOS... we cannot yield to world opinion when it comes to protecting our right to compute as God promised us we would be able to do."

    Israel's testing of Mandrake Linux comes on the tails of a 7-month period of testing of FreeBSD by most of that countries Arab neighbors. Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon had instructed Minister Rivlin in recent weeks to begin preparations for Linux testing, despite President Bush's calls for restraint.

    A Microsoft spokesman expressed sadness in a telephone conference call with the press this morning. "This is about more than a contract between the government of Israel and Microsoft," he said with a cracking voice. "It's about the stability of computing standards in the Middle East. I can't stop thinking about those kids." It is unclear at press time what in the world he was talking about.

  78. Re:Mixed emotions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Do you call people defending themself terrorists? They are freedom fighters and should be quite high on everyones ranking especially freedom loving nations.

    While the zionists who are occuping and oppressing the nation should be called terrorists especially with their targeted killings, and all the suffering they are giving the palestinians.

    PMWatch

  79. Re:Mixed emotions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Funny how those defenders amassed an army from Egypt, Syria, Jordan, and Iraq to ethnically cleanse the entire region of Jews (3 times) and finish the work their close Nazi allies had attempted only decades earlier.

    Best defense is a good offense?

    Yeah, blowing up some 12 year old girl's birthday party is one hell of a way to get at those prepubescent invaders.

    But since you believe that lie, I'll assume you think 2 years residence [definition of a Palestinian refugee according to the UN] gives Palestinians the eternal right to that land, huh? Seems Israelis are 27 times more deserving of the land by your reasoning.

    FOAD.

  80. Life in the day of an Israeli by TheLoneCabbage · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Sorry for the off topic, but I'm sick of this nonsense. If I can put some sense into one pea brain then I hve to . Mod me as you will.

    As we know all Israeli's are evil. After living here for a year, I thought I'd translate a days activities to you:

    Avi a dark skined man walks out of his mansion, onto a street filled with mansions, and climbs into his car. A 50 ton armourd bulldozer. Suddenly his cell phone rings.

    Avi: Shalom! (hi/peace/goodbye)

    Yitzak: Hey Avi, how's it going?

    Avi: Well it was a rough day yesterday. I was too busy studying the King James Bible in english to get any real work done.

    Yitzak: You know Sharons going to get really upset with you if you don't get your quota in.

    Avi: How am I supposed to kill 10,000 arab children a day and still have time to spend with my wife and kids?

    Yitzak: Well I was just calling you to let you know I'm building a new settlement.

    Avi: Don't you already have 5 already?

    Yitzak: Yeah, but I already drove the arabs out of those areas, so I thought I'd build another one. I could have chosen any of the thousands of hecktars of land that are empty, but it's just no fun without destroying a fellow human beings life.

    Avi: Oh that reminds me, did you get the buliten in the mail about the last Elders Meeting?

    Yitzak: Yeah, wow, were doing great! Bush even came this time! Even bowed down for Sharon. It was a real crowd pleaser. I'm telling you it's been gravey train ever since the Holocost. Best thing that ever happend to us.

    Avi: Ok I gotta go, and meet quota. Catch up latter at the cafe?

    Yitzak: Sure thing budy! The "Childrens Blood" is on me!

    Avi: Shalom!

    Yitzak: Shalom!

    Wake up call.

    Fact:

    * Israeli's don't drive bulldozers to work.

    * Israeli's are no fonder of seeing children die needlessly than anyone else.

    * Jews don't drink human blood, and if you believe this it's also a fact your a moron.

    * 50% of Israelis are from Iraqi, Syrian, Moraccan, Yeminite, Egyptian, Iranian, Jordainian, Afgani, Saudi, Lebanesse, and/or local descent. They tell no plesent stories from their home lands.

    * No arab village has ever been raized to make way for a jewish one, except in cases where the land was owned by "Israelies" pre-48, or in cases of tacticle need. In which case it's eminant domain, and the arab land owners are compensated.

    * 25% of Israelies are not jewish

    * 80% of Jewish Israelies, don't practice any religion. And half of those profess radical secularism. Despite the fact that they actualy speak hebrew, most have never read any section of the Torah (old testament), and have at best a vauge idea of what it is.

    * Most Israelies would rather just get on with thier lives. They neither hate nore care what happens to the "Palistinians" any more.

    * Arabs can and do, walk in Zionist shopping malls, grocerie stores, parks, and public schools. Jews who walkin Arab neiboorhoods are likley to be shot/stabed/beaten etc...

    If you've never been here, you have no right to comment and certainly no right to condemn. If you do live here, you still have no right to condemn, and certainly no right to spread lies and half truths.

    There, now I feel better.

    1. Re:Life in the day of an Israeli by Gramie2 · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      * Most Israelies would rather just get on with thier lives. They neither hate nore care what happens to the "Palistinians" any more

      This says a lot. Ever heard "The opposite of love is not hate, but indifference"?

      No, I haven't lived in Israel. I have, however, lived inside South Africa (but not in South Africa; bonus points for anyone who figures that out), and the similarities to the Apartheid state are illuminating. Maybe that's why Israel and S.A. were such good allies in the pre-Mandela days.

      P.S. Setting up straw man arguments on behalf of those opposed to you doesn't advance the debate .

    2. Re:Life in the day of an Israeli by ajakk · · Score: 1

      P.S. Setting up straw man arguments on behalf of those opposed to you doesn't advance the debate . I totally agree. It is just like comparing Israel to South Africa without putting any justification behind your statements.

    3. Re:Life in the day of an Israeli by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Offtopic
      * No arab village has ever been raized to make way for a jewish one, except in cases where the land was owned by "Israelies" pre-48, or in cases of tacticle need. In which case it's eminant domain, and the arab land owners are compensated.

      Bullshit. Numerous arab villages have been confiscated post-1948 and not one shekel has been paid to those who were expelled.

      This eviction is documented in several different books by different people including David Ben Gurion who personally ordered the expulsion of arabs from places they had lived in for decades, if not longer, immediately after 1948. In fact, he had to convince Shimon Peres, a colonel at the time, that it was acceptable to do so.

      Further, simply because you evict someone does not make it eminent domain. By your logic the germans were perfectly within their right to confiscate property owned by jews since the jews had been evicted or run out.

      * Arabs can and do, walk in Zionist shopping malls, grocerie stores, parks, and public schools. Jews who walkin Arab neiboorhoods are likley to be shot/stabed/beaten etc..

      Double bullshit. You claim to dispel myths about Israelis yet find no problem in perpetuating myths about the Palestinians. The documented cases of an Israeli walking into an Palestinian/arab-owned shop and being attacked are few and far between. In fact, as you are probably aware but don't want to admit, many Israeli shop owners 'sell' their shops to Palestinians on friday night so that come saturday the shop can remain open on the sabbath since they don't 'own' the shop. On saturday night the process is reversed.

      Your comment about the gravy train since the Holocaust is, however, fairly close to the truth. Everytime someone brings up something about how Israel is violating international law by confiscating more land for its settlements (which no one, including the United States recognizes as legitimate) the old song about how the jews suffered under Nazi rule is brought out to justify the actions.

      Point in fact, those who had property confiscated under Nazi rule have sued various banks and companies claiming they are owed compensation for their loss of property. Fair enough. It's theirs, give it back. However, when Palestinians/arabs talk about going back to their land from which they were expelled, Israel, particularly Sharon, won't even entertain the thought including giving some kind of compensation. Nice double standard.

      Guess what folks, just because it happened to you does not justify you doing it to someone else.

    4. Re:Life in the day of an Israeli by TheLoneCabbage · · Score: 1

      I was going to actually argue back. But then you ran up the colors.

      Your comment about the gravy train since the Holocaust is, however, fairly close to the truth. Everytime someone brings up something about how Israel is violating international law by confiscating more land for its settlements (which no one, including the United States recognizes as legitimate) the old song about how the jews suffered under Nazi rule is brought out to justify the actions.

      Yet another conspiracy freak, lunatic. It's people like you who make me want to gauge out my frontal lobe with a spoon so it can all just start making sense some how...

    5. Re:Life in the day of an Israeli by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "The opposite of love is not hate, but indifference"

      How much do you care for, let's say, the pakistani community living perhaps the other side of the city from you? You don't? Then probably you feel the opposite of love for them. Or not, because the cliche you quote is out of context.

    6. Re:Life in the day of an Israeli by TheLoneCabbage · · Score: 1


      I'll leave the South Africa response to ajakk, who I think hit the nail on the head.

      But while your right, that it's no great compliment to say their indifferent... It is when you consider the context of the last 4 years. And the Israeli indifference is stark when you compare it agains the other side of the negotiating table.

      It's not much, but it's really all that's left.

    7. Re:Life in the day of an Israeli by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't see you denying what I said. All I do hear is the same "See, another conspiracy freak who hates jews!"

      For the record, I don't hate jews. I don't hate Catholics, Protestants or any other religion.

      What I do hate is the policy of certain countries. What I do hate is when people try to justify their acts because it was done to them.

    8. Re:Life in the day of an Israeli by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      While I agree that "The old song" is rarely actually sung, fact remains that usually critisism of Israel is written off as antisemitism. Much like the arab kids at my school would write off the teachers as racists if critisised for not behaving.

      I know arab people and jewish/israelis and they're nice and friendly people. If only more of them would be friendly to eachother...

    9. Re:Life in the day of an Israeli by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I have, however, lived inside South Africa (but not in South Africa; bonus points for anyone who figures that out)

      Lesotho?

    10. Re:Life in the day of an Israeli by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      * No arab village has ever been raized to make way for a jewish one, except in cases where the land was owned by "Israelies" pre-48, or in cases of tacticle need. In which case it's eminant domain, and the arab land owners are compensated.

      Man those arabs are getting a GREAT deal!

      * 50% of Israelis are from Iraqi, Syrian, Moraccan, Yeminite, Egyptian, Iranian, Jordainian, Afgani, Saudi, Lebanesse, and/or local descent. They tell no plesent stories from their home lands.

      Well duh! If their home lands were all fun and games, they wouldn't have moved to Israel.

      If you've never been here, you have no right to comment and certainly no right to condemn. If you do live here, you still have no right to condemn, and certainly no right to spread lies and half truths.

      So basically people should only make favorable or indifferent comments concerning Israel?

    11. Re:Life in the day of an Israeli by Umber+Hulk · · Score: 1
      the similarities to the Apartheid state are illuminating.

      Well,then, the similarities between the Arab states and South Africa should be even more illuminating.

      Going after Israel for its "apartheid" is like dragging someone with 5 speeding tickets to court, and ignoring all that person's neighbors with 2 counts of DUI.

      Arabs in Israel have orders of magnitude more rights than corresponding Jews in Arab countries. Maybe the equality isn't perfect, but it's damn better than Jews.

      Look at Jordan. What is it's Jewish population? ZERO! Not even a few Jews scattered about. NO JEWS AT ALL! Talk about ethnic cleansing. In fact, Jews are explicitly forbidden from becoming citizens of Jordan.

      But hey, lets instead argue that Arab neighborhoods in Jerusalem don't have as well-tended streets as rich Jewish neighborhoods. Yeah, that's it.

    12. Re:Life in the day of an Israeli by TheLoneCabbage · · Score: 1

      Man those arabs are getting a GREAT deal!

      Emenent domain is a basic concept of gov't. For the case of public good the gov't can force you to sell your land. IE for a road, a water main, a military base. Happens all the time, and in every country in the world.

      Well duh! If their home lands were all fun and games, they wouldn't have moved to Israel.

      Thankyou for conceding to the point of Israel's existance. To provide an safe haven not just for WW2 jewish refugees(6million out of 40million were jews, most war refugees were actually ethnic Germans), but also for the jewish refugees of arab lands.

      So basically people should only make favorable or indifferent comments concerning Israel?

      Well let's start with something simple, like consistancy. For instance if you were against the latest invasion of Iraq, favoring the world not be involved in another countries politics. I would imagine you should say nothing about Israel at all.

      I dont' advocate that. People need to become aware of the situation here, and of the middle east in general, and prepared fully to understand that there is nothing WESTERN or CIVILIZED about this situation. Most people have no idea what goes on here, besides what they see on CNN or what they here from the choir at "peace" rallies.

      If what your really asking is "How can anyone critisize Israel without being labled and anti-semite?" it's easy. If your American just replace "Jews" with "Blacks".

      Example:
      "I have lots of Jewish and Arab, I'm not biased"
      "I have lot's of black and spanish friends, I'm not a bigot"

      See how bad that sounds?

      Example2:
      "Jews should leave israel to the arabs and go back to where they came from"
      ... nah not even worth it.

      Example3:
      "Israelies should not assume all Palastinians are bombers"
      "Blacks should not assume all white people are in the KKK"
      Wow it's not racist!!

    13. Re:Life in the day of an Israeli by TheLoneCabbage · · Score: 1

      hey, I'm totaly with you here but.. which rich neighboorhoods are those? Ramat Beit Hakerim and ....

      It's a huge joke. People think jews are all rich, but Israel is so frigging poor that they buy used underwear for their soldiers (I'm not kidding).

    14. Re:Life in the day of an Israeli by Umber+Hulk · · Score: 1
      hey, I'm totaly with you here but.. which rich neighboorhoods are those? Ramat Beit Hakerim and ....

      I was expressing sarcasm because the concept of 'rich Jews, poor exploited Palestinians' is perpetrated so often many 'enlightened' folk actually believe it.

    15. Re:Life in the day of an Israeli by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Israel is a "thunderously failed reality" that "rests on a scaffolding of
      corruption, and on foundations of oppression and injustice."

      anti-semitic???

      nah..
      so sez former speaker of knesset Avraham Burg, someone who has been there and has the right to comment and condemn

    16. Re:Life in the day of an Israeli by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      * Israeli's don't drive bulldozers to work.

      some of them do. Others shoot children....

      * Israeli's are no fonder of seeing children die needlessly than anyone else.

      could have fooled me. if they're not fond of killing children then why continue to do so ?

      * 50% of Israelis are from Iraqi, Syrian, Moraccan, Yeminite, Egyptian, Iranian, Jordainian, Afgani, Saudi, Lebanesse, and/or local descent. They tell no plesent stories from their home lands.

      I'm sure the jews who came from germany don't tell pleasant stories either...

      * No arab village has ever been raized to make way for a jewish one, except in cases where the land was owned by "Israelies" pre-48, or in cases of tacticle need. In which case it's eminant domain, and the arab land owners are compensated.

      what about the land owned by the arabs pre-48 ? no compensation, no right of return, nothing... another case of where its ok for Israel but not for the arabs.

      * 25% of Israelies are not jewish

      and thery're treated as second class citizens, and are not really considered "Israelies".

      * 80% of Jewish Israelies, don't practice any religion. And half of those profess radical secularism. Despite the fact that they actualy speak hebrew, most have never read any section of the Torah (old testament), and have at best a vauge idea of what it is.

      then why let the religious idiots run the country ? why call it a Jewish state and deny rights to people who are not Jewish ?

      * Most Israelies would rather just get on with thier lives. They neither hate nore care what happens to the "Palistinians" any more.

      just look the other way while their goverment commits horrific acts on their behalf ? kind of reminds me of a certain dictator in Germany.

      * Arabs can and do, walk in Zionist shopping malls, grocerie stores, parks, and public schools. Jews who walkin Arab neiboorhoods are likley to be shot/stabed/beaten etc...

      more bs.

    17. Re:Life in the day of an Israeli by TheLoneCabbage · · Score: 1

      trust me. being in the keneset is no proof of not being israeli.

      but that same quote could apply to most any country in the world. Wellcome to the paradox of beurocracy. Can't live with it, can't run a gov't without it.

    18. Re:Life in the day of an Israeli by TheLoneCabbage · · Score: 1

      correction:
      trust me. being in the keneset is no proof of not being israeli

      should read

      trust me. being in the keneset is no proof of not being anti-semetic.

      heheeheh (fingers faster than brain... must find coffee)

    19. Re:Life in the day of an Israeli by arikb · · Score: 1

      Heck, Arabs in Israel have orders of magnitude more rights than corresponding Arabs in Arab countries.

    20. Re:Life in the day of an Israeli by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ssshh! If the Arabs realize that, they might actually try to improve their own governments, rather than exterminate Jews and Americans!

    21. Re:Life in the day of an Israeli by Minna+Kirai · · Score: 1

      Arabs in Israel have orders of magnitude more rights than corresponding Jews in Arab countries.

      Percentage of adult Jews born in Egypt who can vote: 100%
      Percentage of adult (non-Jewish) Arabs born in Israel who can vote: 19%

      Look at Jordan. What is it's Jewish population? ZERO!

      That's something Zionist Israel encouraged. They wanted to be the sole concentration of Jews in the Middle East. This was a goal both to increase their own population, but also to curry favor with the nonadjacent Arab states.

      In fact, Jews are explicitly forbidden from becoming citizens of Jordan.

      And non-Jews, born in Israel, are explicitly forbidden from becoming citizens of Israel. Until Israel stops giving special preference to one certain religion, that nation deserves no respect from any modern democracy.

    22. Re:Life in the day of an Israeli by Minna+Kirai · · Score: 1

      'rich Jews, poor exploited Palestinians'

      The average Zionist Israeli is more than 10x as wealthy as the average Palestinian.

      70% of the fresh-water used by Israel comes from Palestine. The daily water use of a Zionist is six times that of a Palestinian. If the Jews had to pay for it, instead of taking it by force, the economic disparities would be reversed within a decade.

    23. Re:Life in the day of an Israeli by Umber+Hulk · · Score: 1
      The average Zionist Israeli is more than 10x as wealthy as the average Palestinian.

      so, what's your point? The average Palestinian is richer than the average aboriginal Bushman tribe member.

      I guess the difference between Palestinians and Israelis is that when the Israeli immigrants came who were kicked out of their homes in other Arab and European countries, they got on with their lives and worked hard.

      Most Palestinians, it seems, would rather destroy their own lives wallowing in sewage mudholes, hoping to get back arbitrary land most of them have never lived in, than move on with their lives.

      Jordan has offered citizenship to any Palestinian, but most choose not to get on with their lives.

      The daily water use of a Zionist is six times that of a Palestinian. If the Jews had to pay for it, instead of taking it by force, the economic disparities would be reversed within a decade.

      Interesting, you only compare Israel and Palestine. Why not Jordan and Palestine, or Egypt and Palestine, on this same statistic?

      Anyway, Israelis are paying Egypt for water in new agreements. But I wouldn't expect clueless leftists who hate Israel more than they love Palestine to actually be interested in real news.

    24. Re:Life in the day of an Israeli by Umber+Hulk · · Score: 1
      And non-Jews, born in Israel, are explicitly forbidden from becoming citizens of Israel.

      What?

      Uggh, this is what happens when people get all their Israel/Palestine news from electronicintifada.com.

      And please justify your statistic that 19% of Arabs in Israel can vote, it seems highly misleading to me (yada yada yada lies damn lies statistics).

      I hope you hate Saudi Arabia as much as Israel, because they are even more pro-Islam than Israel is pro-Jewish. In fact, other religions cannot be legally and openly practiced there.

      But hey, why criticize any other country, Israel is the only bad player in the Middle East.

    25. Re:Life in the day of an Israeli by Umber+Hulk · · Score: 1
      What I do hate is the policy of certain countries. What I do hate is when people try to justify their acts because it was done to them.

      Oh, you mean like Palestinian suicide bombers?

    26. Re:Life in the day of an Israeli by Peaker · · Score: 1

      could have fooled me. if they're not fond of killing children then why continue to do so ?

      Why don't you include some references so we know what the heck you're talking about?

      what about the land owned by the arabs pre-48 ? no compensation, no right of return, nothing... another case of where its ok for Israel but not for the arabs.

      Compensation? Those arabs left those villages on order from their own leaders, promising "ethnic cleansing" of the region's Jews. Should they be allowed back after they left of their own free will, and given back all of their property?

      and thery're treated as second class citizens, and are not really considered "Israelies".

      Second-class citizens in what way? Sure, its harder for them to get a job, and its hard for the army to trust them with all the hostilities going on. Hell, regarding the mandatory army service they get a choice whether they want to volunteer.

      Arabs and all other citizens of Israel are equal by law and any inequalities are a result of inter-citizen relations. In a non-perfect hostile situation problems amongst citizens arise (See the status of Japense citizens in the US during WWII).

      then why let the religious idiots run the country ? why call it a Jewish state and deny rights to people who are not Jewish ?

      HUH?! How many in the government are religious? How many were religious in the last 5 governments?

      Calling it a "Jewish State" is because its main purpose is to be a sanctuary for Jews from around the world -- what rights exactly are being denied from non-Jews?

      just look the other way while their goverment commits horrific acts on their behalf ? kind of reminds me of a certain dictator in Germany.

      You see, most Israelis get their information from better sources than you - for example, they serve in the territories during their reserves or they have friends that do. And thus, they see exactly how bad the situation is and what Israel is doing there.

      With their vastly superior (to yours) source of information, they decide what Israel is doing is not worse than required in the situation (Putting roadblocks is bad, but far from genocide).

      more bs.

      Ah, now that I know its BS maybe I should try to go for a trip in an Arab city? Oh, right, it was already tried.

      How many counter-examples are there?

    27. Re:Life in the day of an Israeli by dvk · · Score: 1

      > > Arabs in Israel have orders of magnitude more rights than corresponding Jews in Arab countries.

      > Percentage of adult Jews born in Egypt who can vote: 100%
      > Percentage of adult (non-Jewish) Arabs born in Israel who can vote: 19%

      OK, first of all, that 19% figure is not true. Have any facts to back it up? AFAIK, there are NO special restrictions on voting that apply to Israeli Arabs vs Israeli Jews.

      Now, how about real figures:
      ====
      [ for baseline numbers: Arab population of Israel is 20% ]
      ====

      Number of Arab parties in Knesset (Israel's parlament):
      3 out of 12 (25%).
      This doesn't include a couple of ultra-liberal parties that aren't Arab but often take pro-Arab views.

      Number of Jewish political parties in any Arab country legistlative body: 0.

      Oh, and for historical reference, the first Arab to be elected to Knesset was in the Second Kneset, in 1951. 3 years and 1 election after the formation of the State of Israel.

      ====

      Number of Arab political parties that ran for Knesset recently (includes the numbers above plus all the parties that got less than 1.5% of the vote and thus didn't gain any seats in the Knesset):
      5 out of 27 (~20%), not including several ultra-left parties taht take pro-Arab positions.

      Number of Jewish political parties in any Arab country: 0.

      ====

      Number of Arab Knesset members who openly and vocally claimed taht they want the destruction of the State of Israel: at least 2. If you doubt, google for some speaches/statements from MK Ahmed Tibi or especially MK Azmi Bishara.

      Number of parlament members of ANY other country with similar views about their country: none I'm aware of. In a lot of countries, such would be considered state treason.

      ====

      OK, you can now put on your tinfoil hat.

      --
      "The right to figure things out for yourself is the only true freedom everyone shares. Go use it"-R.A.Heinlein
    28. Re:Life in the day of an Israeli by Minna+Kirai · · Score: 1

      they got on with their lives and worked hard.

      Worked hard at invading other's homes with military equipment donated by the US.

      Worked hard at narcissistically drenching wheat to coax it from the desert, while Palestinians haven't even enough to drink.

      hoping to get back arbitrary land most of them have never lived in, than move on with their lives.

      You're talking about the Zionists there, right? Because they're the ones who invaded arbitrary land that neither they, nor their ancestors for 50 generations back, had ever lived on. While by now, most Palestinian's who'd lived in Jerusalem have been killed, it's not 100% yet. And their parents certainly lived there.

      Anyway, Israelis are paying Egypt for water in new agreements. But I wouldn't expect clueless leftists who hate Israel more than they love Palestine to actually be interested in real news.

      That's not news. Nor is it mildly relevant. Even if they pay Egypt, they're not paying the Palestinians. (It's also unlikely to be significantly true, since Egypt is forbidden to sell their water)

      The single gravest offense Israel is committing is refusing to allow adults who were born in their nation to vote, without a conversion certificate signed by an Orthodox (not Reform) Rabbi. Until they change this theocratic policy, they will never deserve support.

      Their second-worse offense is government-ordered assasination (including, but not limited to, foreigners in their homelands)

    29. Re:Life in the day of an Israeli by shachart · · Score: 1

      You're comparing apples and oranges here, as sibling posts state.

      An average jewish family in Israel has 2 parents and ~3.5 kids.
      An average arab family in Israel has 3 parents (Man is married to two wives), plus an average of 8 kids from EACH wife, amounting to 14-16 kids.

      Now you see the reason for Arabs being relatively poor.

      As for water, 90% of Israeli water come from the Kinnereth, which is 100% Israeli territory. Have any evidence to the contrary.

      --
      Those who can, do. Those who can't, consult.
    30. Re:Life in the day of an Israeli by shachart · · Score: 1

      Calling it a "Jewish State" is because its main purpose is to be a sanctuary for Jews from around the world -- what rights exactly are being denied from non-Jews?

      A correction: The State of Israel was not declared as a "Jewish State", but as "State for the Jews", as in sanctuary from prosecutions (before, during, after WWII). The Israeli Independence Bill of Rights (Megilat Ha'Hatzmaut) states that "no person shall be descriminiated by religion, gender, profession ..." etc., and it has become a Foundation Law in Israel (Chok Yesod), sort of like a quasi-consitution.

      So Israel does not, as a country, promote descrimination. But, in a state of war, you cannot prevent inter-personal relationships from skewing from the norm.

      Personally, before the Intifada has started, I visited many Arab cities and villages. Today, if I go there, I'd probably be beaten to death or something.... I guess the same would go the other way around, though Israelis will NEVER beat to death an Arab who wanders off into an Israeli city or village.

      --
      Those who can, do. Those who can't, consult.
    31. Re:Life in the day of an Israeli by Gramie2 · · Score: 1

      Bingo! 1988-91 as a volunteer. It's, er, character building for a computer geek to live in a hut (no water or electricity).

    32. Re:Life in the day of an Israeli by Gramie2 · · Score: 1

      Not supplying a complete bibliography is not exactly the same as using a specious argument. The previous response carried a good quotation.

      In a nutshell, both countries have used law and military might to exclude large portions of their populations from basic rights. In both cases, the oppressed people fought back. I won't try to justify suicide bombings, because I think there is no justification, but I do believe that the Palestinians feel they have NO CHOICE.

      The word "apartheid" simply means separateness. The whites in South Africa decided that they would have their land, and the blacks would have theirs. Never mind that 15% of the population enjoyed 80% of the land (leaving the parts with not agricultural, mineral or economic value).

      If you really are interested, there are dozens of excellent books and movies to help you understand what was going on in South Africa.

      And then of course, S.A. and Israel were cooperating in the development of missiles (supplied by S.A.) that could carry nuclear warheads (supplied by Israel). Yes, they understood each other.

    33. Re:Life in the day of an Israeli by Gramie2 · · Score: 1

      The opposite of love is not hate, it's indifference. The opposite of art is not ugliness, it's indifference. The opposite of faith is not heresy, it's indifference. And the opposite of life is not death, it's indifference.
      --Elie Wiesel

      What do you mean "out of context"?

      And what do you know about how I feel or what my city is like?

  81. So SCO will claim ownership of Israel... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ... because it contains code that they claim to own. Everyone doing business with Israel has to pay a license fee.

  82. Re:Good move. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Informative

    If by UAV you mean unmanned automomous vehical then you are wrong. The UAV was "invented" at CMU in Pittsburgh, PA.

  83. Re:Mixed emotions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    But Windows is already a suicide bomb...

  84. Re:Good move. by uradu · · Score: 2, Interesting

    > Israelies invented ICQ, PHP, the UAV, A couple of smart bombs and some [more killing tech]

    That's "developed" more than "invented", though one might argue where one stops and the other begins.

    > Don't refer to Israel as third world country. Please.

    Well, South Africa is very similar to Isreal in those areas, yet it's also still struggling to get some respect.

  85. Re:Good move. by escallywag · · Score: 1

    I bet the CIA gets a small collective panic attack every time they lose track of what the Israelis are upto. I think you have that the wrong way around...

  86. Microsoft's mistake by Sire+Enaique · · Score: 3, Informative

    The Israeli decision probably stems from Microsoft's faux pas last year when they announced that Office XP for MAc would not be localized in Hebrew.

    See _Microsoft's Mac Hebrew snub prompts Israeli AntiTrust complaint_ from the register:
    www.theregister.com/content/archive/296 92.html

    Even if they apparently subsequently reversed their decision the damage was done.

    An important factor here is Israel has a buoyant IT industry and Microsoft's initial decision highlighted the danger of relying too heavily on one single software supplier.

    1. Re:Microsoft's mistake by arn0n · · Score: 1
      " The Israeli decision probably stems from Microsoft's faux pas last year when they announced that Office XP for MAc would not be localized in Hebrew."

      Apple's share of the market is tiny in Israel. The small amount of people actually using a mac don't really expect hebrew support. This is because Apple's representatives in Israel could never be relied upon to drive localization efforts, or give good support for localized software.

      "An important factor here is Israel has a buoyant IT industry and Microsoft's initial decision highlighted the danger of relying too heavily on one single software supplier."

      Microsoft's representatives, however, are doing a relatively good job at localizing software, and an excellent job at marketing it. It is enough seeing that the IDF uses it for desktops almost exclusively, and to my great horror, also uses it on servers (I guess this is due to the blanket contract that they signed with microsoft).
      Furthermore, although this is a good point that is raised here, we're talking about the government; nobody in the government cares about being tied to a single supplier, and proof of that is the telephone monopoly, energy monopoly, airline monopoly, sea-ports monopoly, and I can go on and on...

    2. Re:Microsoft's mistake by Sire+Enaique · · Score: 1

      I do not doubt that Apple's market share is very limited in Israel - like everywhere else. What is important here is the symbol, not the number of affected pepople.

      Besides, I don't see the government having any trouble with the monopolies you mentionned because they're state monopolies in Israel. Microsoft is an entirely different animal.

    3. Re:Microsoft's mistake by arn0n · · Score: 1
      Well, this is quickly getting off-topic, but I just can't resist:
      In israel, the state has almost no control over state monopolies, and the fact that the entire country is on strike for several months now is a testament to that... Compared to that, a multinational corporation like microsoft, is less transient.
      As to depending on it - Microsoft is an American corporation. Israel relies on many such corporations to the point of almost exclusivity, mainly in the military sector.

      It is largely known here that the wink in Mandrake's direction (and OOo) is merely a posture for the upcoming renegotiation of the contract between the govt. and MS. The govt. is pissed off that a large Israeli health organization got the same deal for a 1/3 of the price per license.

  87. Switching Protects Also by Bruha · · Score: 1

    Many companies still have yet to forgive MS for not sufficiently fixing bugs and they suffer from all the virii that have been criscrossing the internet. It's not enough to take any and all precautions becuase there's still the human element that can always get a virus past the best firewalls. Code red and friends have cost businesses millions and if I'm a IT consultant I would be quick to point out that Linux is free and the virii have cost us more than the license fees.

  88. Re:China and Israel by zakkie · · Score: 0

    Come on moderators - the parent needs modding up.

  89. Re:Good move. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The get ready for another 4 years of his presence ...

    Dems are completely inept and won't have a chance in 2004.
    You don't win elections by staging Bush hate fests and hanging with the ANSWER crowds.

  90. Re:One-way economy? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Good for them ...

    I would make the same choice.

  91. Re:One-way economy? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Claim 2: pouring millions and millions of dollars into the country every day

    Without US aid Israels economy would collapse. Proof? Go the CIA Factbook on Israel and see how much aid Israel gets from the US. It is the largest receiver of US aid in the world. A few billion dollars a year in both direct and indirect including being a co-signor (as it were) for the loan guarantees which Israel uses to free up money which is then used to confiscate more Palestinian land.

  92. Corrected Link by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
  93. Re:Good move. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    L0L U uSez TEH M$!~@#

  94. Sharon, Mandrake by Quantum-Sci · · Score: 1

    I've used/put up with, Suse for 3 years. Its gone from terribly buggy to fairly good, and back to terrible. I have never had printing, faxing, PIM & PDA functions working in Suse, because I knew from experience that it'd take 3 days to hunt down each of the hidden errors and get each little function working; and these were usually dumb errors too... distro errors. My conclusion is, the guys at Suse must hate their job. I had given them chance, after chance, after chance. Got absolutely fed up when Suse9 recently fell apart into a steaming pile.

    See, what is really happening is, something's bad wrong at Suse, and they are effectively transferring their costs to the customer. To all who have tried Linux and failed to get it working satisfactorily, experienced people have this problem too. Assuming you hate M$ like I do, it's a question of how you want to spend your time: bit-twiddling, or with family/friends.

    In desperation I tried Mandrake9.2, about two weeks ago. I was skeptical because I'd heard bad things about Mandrake8.x, and of their financial problems. But man, 9.2 works.

    I can actually print on my beloved Alps MD5000, I can capture photos from a camera, capture video and compress to DivX... IOW stuff just works. Only problems I've had with Mandrake were because my bios was set to Legacy (for the benefit of Suse), and the weird abstracted (Debian) menuing. But nothing does not work -- a very functional, fast tool to actually get work done.

    Thank you Mandrake. May you continue this trend.

    Re: Israel -- In my opinion, Israel is now perpetrating its own Holocaust, and has been so for years. God will damn you, Gen. Sharon. 'Nuff said.

    --
    Campaign finance reform is national security.
    1. Re:Sharon, Mandrake by Umber+Hulk · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Israel -- In my opinion, Israel is now perpetrating its own Holocaust, and has been so for years. God will damn you, Gen. Sharon. 'Nuff said. [ Reply to This ]

      Where are the death camps?

      If you think Israel is perpetrating its own Holocause, are you man enough to admit also acknowledge that Palestine, Syria, Lebanon, and Jordan are as well?

    2. Re:Sharon, Mandrake by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >Re: Israel -- In my opinion, Israel is now >perpetrating its own Holocaust, and has been so for >years. God will damn you, Gen. Sharon. 'Nuff said.

      Funny, make me wounder why arabs keep running away from countries like Jordan and Eqypt, where you can get killed for looking crocked at the govt, into israel where they can get into in the gouverment...

  95. Nice try, but is that really a priority by Elie+De+Brauwer · · Score: 0, Troll

    Who cares about what operating system they are using in Israel ? How can they possibly manage to control a Linux or a Windows machine if they can't even control their own state. Let them first do some peace talks and accomplisch something maybe then I might be interesting. But if their conflict is going to take much longer I won't even care less in the future that I do now.

  96. Re:Good move. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Israel is a third world country speaking about human rights.

  97. Yes, but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    France is a terrorist-supporting nation.

  98. Re:Israeli Gov't Begins Testing Zyklon-B by DJBanaan · · Score: 1, Informative

    This kind of thing makes me sick to my stomach. I'm not even going to argue on this, because I know your probably some 13 year-old twat who thinks he's being funny. Let me clear up the misunderstanding: this is pretty fucking far from funny.

  99. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  100. subsidized by the US?!---WTF by Ensign+Nemo · · Score: 1

    "An Israeli Ministry of Defense procurement delegation signed a framework agreement with Microsoft in New York and the deal will reportedly be subsidized by the United States."

    The US gov. is subsizing MS software for another country?! Good grief! It's bad enought Bush made the anti-trust suit go away; now this?

    1. Re:subsidized by the US?!---WTF by rock_climbing_guy · · Score: 1

      Expain to me how the Bush Administration made the anti-trust suit go away, please.

      --
      Wh47 d1d j00 541, 31337 15n't t3h r0xor5 ne m0r3???
  101. Re:Good move. by wiresquire · · Score: 1

    CreatorofSmallTruths said:
    The fact that Israel is in Asia doesn't mean a
    thing...

    Must post reply.....Aarrggh!...too many jokes.....brain exploding....

    --

    So does Anonymous Coward have good karma?

  102. Re:I don't support Zionists. by Umber+Hulk · · Score: 1
    What is the difference between a Zionist and a White Supremacist?

    You're demonstrating your great ignorance here.

    Zionism is merely the belief that Jews have a right to have a Jewish state.

    Zionism in itself is absolutely no more racist than the belief by Muslims that there can exist Muslim states, or Christians for a Christian state, etc.

    As the subsequent poster said, zealots have hijacked Zionism, so now general people such as yourself think it means the right to create a Jewish state, kick out anybody else who's not Jewish, etc. This is NOT what Zionism is, please don't confuse these two.

    And while you're making comparisons to White Supremecism, let's acknowledge that this is what many Arab Supremacists do. Look at Hamas. They will not let any non-Arab outsider immigrate to their land, and will wear masks and terrorize them until they're either dead or gone. Exactly the same as the KKK.

    The interesting thing is that while liberals strongly denounce the KKK and its efforts to create an ethnically-pure free-of-outsiders white Christian culture. But at the same time many liberals strongly support xenophobic Arab supremacists that won't let non-Arabs immigrate to their land and contaminate their ethnically-pure Arab culture.

  103. Re:Mixed emotions by Umber+Hulk · · Score: 1

    most people currently claiming to be "Jewish" are from the Caucasian Ashkenazi.

    Are you from the US?

    There are more Sephardic Jews in Israel than Ashkenazic. And there's a significant population of Israeli Jews that are Arab Jews, ie from Iraq, Syria, Jordan, etc.

    And your comment about Orthodox Rabbis being critical of the modern Israeli state, I wouldn't count on them being your anti-Israel allies. In most cases, these Rabbis are just as fanatical as the pro-settlement Rabbis. The difference is how the two interpret one section of Jewish scripture. The anti-Israel Rabbis interpret it to mean that Jews should wait for G-d's return in the diaspora, instead of the holy land. If they interpreted the scripture to mean to remain in Jerusalem, you'd bet all these Rabbis would instantly change their opinion.

  104. Re:Good move. by startxxx · · Score: 1

    Yeah... only we, Israelis may call our country a third world country ;-)

  105. Fixed, marginal time costs by 4of12 · · Score: 1

    In case of a word processor, I'd say that nothing the word processor will do makes a significant impact, even with Clippy ;). All the work goes into forming the letter

    I agree.

    But don't forget the costs to the letter composer in initial training and learning of the application, as well as the time it actually takes to compose a letter.

    I believe the single largest impediment to more widespread adoption of Open Office is fear of having to climb yet another learning curve.

    --
    "Provided by the management for your protection."
  106. What the market will bear by Morosoph · · Score: 2, Interesting
    Uh, any economist should tell you that "what the market will bear" is one of the fundamentals of capitalism - it's hardly something that's just popped up in the last few decades.
    Not quite. First level analysis, yes, but then customers tend to buy what they did last time, so greatest immediate profits may not be synonymous with long-term profitability.

    I was going to make a pun about "bear markets", but it seemed rather poor, and thought that slashdotters would "correct" the joke, po-faced, so I won't.
  107. Does anyone else notice all the Anonymous going on by TheLoneCabbage · · Score: 1

    I'm just noticing that not one anti-israel poster has been anything other than anonymous. Of course by posting this I invite contridiciton.

    kay sara sara.

  108. Conspiracy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    conspiracy
    1. An agreement to perform together an illegal, wrongful, or subversive act.
    2. A group of conspirators.
    3. An agreement between two or more persons to commit a crime or accomplish a legal purpose through illegal action.
    4. A joining or acting together, as if by sinister design: a conspiracy of wind and tide that devastated coastal areas.
  109. Israel and Chechnya by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I for one am more concerned about Israel's abuses in the occupied territories because my tax dollars are financing those abuses.

    1. Re:Israel and Chechnya by sniggly · · Score: 1
      Your tax dollars are being used to dismantle russian nukes, to pay off russian NBC scientists. If these dollars weren't available less money would be on the russian budget of which the war in Chechnya is a serious item.

      How is that any different?

      --
      Of those to whom much is given, much is required.
  110. Evil is OK as long as it's a lesser evil. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You should feel free to murder people, as long as you're careful to murder fewer people than your neighbors do.

    1. Re:Evil is OK as long as it's a lesser evil. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      At this rate Israel will be empty pretty soon. Maybe within the next 10-20 years.

  111. At least SOMEONE is testing Mandrake, finally! by TrekCycling · · Score: 0, Troll

    Because Mandrake sure isn't.

    1. Re:At least SOMEONE is testing Mandrake, finally! by TrekCycling · · Score: 1

      It's not a troll, it's the truth. Mod me back up.

    2. Re:At least SOMEONE is testing Mandrake, finally! by reub2000 · · Score: 1

      Very, very true. When in mandrake 9.2, if I try to logout, instead of going to mdkkdm, it logs me back in imeditatly. The only way to shutdown was the command halt. So I installed fedora core 1 and I've been happy since. I do home that mandrake 10 is stable. Life without urpmi is very, very misirable.

    3. Re:At least SOMEONE is testing Mandrake, finally! by TrekCycling · · Score: 1

      I'm on Fedora also. Same reasons. Didn't want to do SuSE and Mandrake is a mess right now. Thus this wasn't a troll, but a joke. :-)

  112. No right to comment and no right to condemn by Rupert · · Score: 2, Insightful

    How about the hundreds of dollars I personally pay each year that pays for the tanks and bulldozers that aren't demolishing the homes of those deemed insufficiently jewish to be citizens of the country in which they live? I'd say that gives me a right to comment.

    --

    --
    E_NOSIG
    1. Re:No right to comment and no right to condemn by TwinkieStix · · Score: 1

      The major problem we see here is the definition of occupation. What is an occupation. How long must you occupy before it's not longer an occupation. Israel is occupying Palestine? Perhaps. Most would agree that the US is occupying Iraq, but most would argue that the US is not occupying California, which was stolen from Mexico a little over a hundred years ago. So,
      1 year=occupation.
      150 years=ownership
      What's 50 years? Maybe this'll all be over in another 100 years? Probably not.

      Maybe in 150 years, Mandrake will still occupy the Israeli desktop.

      I am happy Mandrake is being used globally. It's only good for my favorite Distribution.

    2. Re:No right to comment and no right to condemn by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wow, what propaganda rags you been reading?

      Insufficiently Jewish? Like the 1 million Arab-Israeli citizens with full citizenship rights? Like the various Arab political parties in Israel? Like the Arab supreme court justice in Israel? Like the Druze community in Israel? The only difference is that Israeli-Arabs are exempt from having to serve in the army for obvious reasons. Not bad for a 55 year old country - run a quick comparison with any other country in the region or even in Europe and you'll see just how amazing it is.

      If you mean land that was always intended to be returned for some true peace, then you can obviously see why turning it over to a terrorist thug would have to opposite effect. That is why, although they wanted to trade the land for peace with all her neighbors in 1967, Arab mentality prevented it and continues to prevent peace to this day:

      "On June 19, 1967, scarcely ten days after the cease-fire, the Israeli government decided in a secret cabinet session to return all of the Sinai Peninsula, all of the Golan Heights, to Egypt and Syria respectively in return for full peace treaties. At the same time, the Israeli government launched a clandestine operation to canvass 80 Palestinian notables on the West Bank about the possibility of creating an autonomous Palestinian entity, leading potentially to an independent Palestinian state. The Egyptians and the Syrians rejected this overture. They convened at Khartoum at the end of the summer, and they passed the infamous Three No's: no negotiations, no peace, no recognition of Israel. The Palestinian notables in the West Bank, the protocols of the discussions, all said they'd be interested in having an autonomous entity. They certainly wanted independence. But they were afraid if they concluded any peace treaty at all with Israel, they'd be executed. A historic opportunity was lost that summer, and we've lived with the consequences ever since"

      I hope you're as concerned with your tax dollars going to the direct indoctrination of Palestinian children or the funds going to corrupt NGOs or to support Palestinian apartheid.

      You have a right to comment. In fact, you even have a right to that incredibly stupid and uninformed comment you just made, but repeating mindless lies just makes you look all the more incompetent.

  113. Re:Does anyone else notice all the Anonymous going by MrPink2U · · Score: 1

    Why would you expect anything else from a group that is so desperately searching for their identity?

  114. Re:Mixed emotions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    An old ISA based PC with a modem (real modem- ya got me on that point) or a NIC and small RAM and HD or CD without a HD would suffice.


    Which is why you see so many terrorists running around with 386's strapped to their backs!

  115. Ha! Arutz 7... by hendrix69 · · Score: 1

    For those of you who don't know, Aruz 7 is a pirate radio station owned and operated by and for the exteremly religious parties in Israel. Kind of like the christian evangalist channels that operate in the US - only jewish and with less money. This "news" radio station was shut down recently by an injuction for broadcasting over illegal radio frequencies that disturb flight and ship navigation systems. The station broadcasts to the exteremly religious minority of Israel, the kind that is not allowed to listen to other "secular" radio and TV channels because they are considered by that community Obsene and Immoral. :)
    Funny this tech-news piece should come from Aruz 7, as it is the least respectable news source in Israel (unless you consider Hamas and Fatah (Arafat) broadcasting as Israeli media).

    --
    The power of Christ compiles you!
  116. Re:I don't support Zionists. by powerbarr · · Score: 1

    Wow an anonymous coward is actually going to deny Israeli's his software. I am sure they are so sad. What did you write "hello world?"

  117. Re:I don't support Zionists. by fermion · · Score: 1
    Which is curious. What is the difference between a Zionist and a White Supremacist? Both believe that God has given them dominion over their land and right to kill anyone who resides on it that they don't like.
    The reason that such things should not be included is that it is hard to quantize. For instance, if I included the clause 'This software should only be used by people who believe that all humans are equal', which is a much less bigoted statement than yours, how would i enforce it? it arguable that some Jews who believe they are the children of god are arguable out of this catagory. It is arguable that some catholics who believe that certain people cannot be priests are out of the this catagory. it is arguable that certai companies do not function as if all workers are potentially equal.

    The reason that this discussion is pointless is because almost every religion, at least in the west, is bigoted. Many demand conformity. Many say that others are less than they are. Many have arbitrary restrictions on leadership. You are subjected one group to individual scrutiny that is not applied to the population in general. That is the definition of a bigot.

    --
    "She's a scientist and a lesbian. She's not going to let it slide." Orphan Black
  118. Re:Mixed emotions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Let's settle this. Palenstinians are the terrorists. No, the jews are. No they aren't. Yes they are. Ok? All clear?

  119. Huh? by Peaker · · Score: 1

    What "genocide" are you talking about exactly?

    Do you have any evidence? Are you even following up on anything that's happening or just having the typical knee-jerk reaction in favor of "the underdog"?

  120. Correction by Rayonic · · Score: 1

    You're forgetting your history. Think, what world-wide event could have bolstered the Zionist case among the Jews? That's right, WORLD WAR 2!

    That you would pass over such a huge event puts a shadow of doubt over your entire summary.

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

      zionism started 60 years before wwII and the Palestenians weren't fighting in WWII - the palestenians shou;dnt pay for the crimes of Hitler

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

      The holocaust(TM) is a fraud perpetuated by the Jewish powers to sell movies, museums, guilt, and the belief of eternal Jewish innocents so they can kill arabs at will and force integrate the entire world with them as the leaders.

    3. Re:Correction by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 1

      Anonymous Coward, you are a sick fuck. Just ask my father's friends about their starring role in the Holocaust. Featured scene: as they hide in a Polish attic from the genocidal gestapo, their infant begins to scream. ...pause for effect... they suffocate the baby, saving them all from a much slower death by starvation or gas in a concentration camp. Spotlight on their agonized faces, enduring a greater torture than you can probably imagine, to avoid the only greater torture possible.

      Only it's not a movie. It's just something that some people forced on some other people 50 years ago in Europe. And the spectre of its repeat lurks beneath the civilized veneer of everyone who says that such things cannot, did not happen. Your denial betrays your barbaric bloodthirst, dehumanizing the persecution of others. It is not necessary to deny the Holocaust to defend Palestinians from a new genocide. In fact, it is essential to recognize just how inhuman humans can be. Nor is it necessary to perpetuate nonsense like a preposterous Jewish media conspiracy for world domination. For perspective, look at the relative media ownership by Arabs, vanishingly few of whom are Jews. Before you spout insane, childish libel about the Holocaust and its children, take advantage of your last chances to talk with a living survivor about just what can happen when racism is used without bounds for political control. Future generations won't have our advantage of direct connection to that crucial lesson.

      --

      --
      make install -not war

  121. ISRAELI GOVT IS ON TEH SPOKE!!!!!111 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    n/t

  122. Re:Happy citrus day! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Mod parent up, +5 Insightful. Remember the Jewish boycott of Germany in the 1930s that started it all!

  123. Re:Good move. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Its always appropriate to mention Bush. Some people need to be reminded what a piss poor president he is. How's that Help Desk job working out, Mr. MS in CS? Have fun training Srinivas?

  124. Re:Good move. by rhuntley12 · · Score: 1

    Laser also takes out artilery. And isn't broadband more available there? Look at the literacy rate And third world country with nukes is scary.

  125. Re:Good move. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    I refer to Israel as a shitty Arab-killing country. I hope the Palestinians drive it into the sea.

  126. Re:Good move. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Of course, SA hasn't done much of anything important since the collapse of Apartheid due to Jewish media pressure.

    Its funny that the first Heart Transplant done in SA is listed as an "African" accomplishment at the Field Museum in Chicago. Too bad it was done by a White guy.

  127. Re:Tight-fisted jews by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Since to them, the goyim are cattle.

  128. Re:Israeli Gov't Begins Testing Zyklon-B by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Those fucking Jew Soviets killed the Poles... read about the Kaytan forest massacre. Fuckin' kikes tried to blame it on the Nazis but the Red Cross knew better.

  129. Re:Israeli Gov't Begins Testing Zyklon-B by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The holocaust(tm)is fiction. Get over your guilt.

  130. Re:I don't support Zionists. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    (now this is going to get modded right out of here but it will make me feel better).

    You, sir, are a cunt and i hope you die very soon.

  131. Context is key by PsiPsiStar · · Score: 1

    The situation was a little different in Germany. The Jews in Germany never waged a war to "push the Germans into the sea." If German Jews had gotten millitary aid from the French, the British and the Russians and had united with them to wage an agressive war against Germany, bombing German shopping malls and churches on Christmas and Easter and vowing to take over all of Germany's land and slaughter its citizens there would be more people ready to defend Hitler's actions. I can't imagine many Germans would be eager to allow Jews back to their homes if even a slim majority of Jews had attempted this. Maybe if the minority had stayed and helped defend the country (like the Druzes stayed and helped defend Israel), but not if they had sided with the agressors.

    Israel has been put in some difficult moral situations. When you're attacked by armies from literally all directions with soldiers ten times yours in number, what do you do?

    Or, when you're attacked by soldiers who don't wear uniforms and hide in the civilian population demanding the destruction of your nation and murdering your citizens, decade after decade, how do you fight them?

    Every 'peace offer' put forward by the Palestinians has included the 'Palestinian right of return.' No nation in history has voluntarily allowed such a large number of hostile immigrants into its country in proportion to its population and survived as a nation. We can find Israel's response distasteful or excessive. We can condemn them and feel better. But I'm curious what nation has ever been in such a threatening situation and maintained as many civil liberties. Maybe the Native Americans, or some other people who saw their nation destroyed. Returning captured land is the only tactic which has ever secured any kind of peace for Israel. Measured responses might eliminate attackers, but they are not deterants. Appeasement is never sufficient if some of those murdering your people believe that only the destruction of your nation is a moral outcome.

    The present day conflict is not a snapshot in time. A person witnessing the end of World War II might see an allied invasion of Nazi Germany and consider it unjust.

    The people opposed to Israel's policies are most often those who don't think it's important that Jews have lived in the territory of Israel for the better part of three millenia, often under foreign occupation and as second class citizens. For once, they are fighting for their own nation. The PLO attacked Israel first, demanding Israel's destruction and not the other way around. The PLO demands 'the Palestinian right of return' which is, for all practical purposes, the same as allowing an invading army into your territory. Many Palestinian millitant factions still demand the total destruction of Israel. There are not enough police in the world to solve the crisis that the "Palestinian right of return" would create.

    >Fair enough. It's theirs, give it back.

    German Jews didn't get their property back. They got compensation. A small but significant difference, since we're dealing with holy land here. What's that worth?

    >Everytime someone brings up something about how >Israel is violating international law by >confiscating more land for its settlements
    >(which no one, including the United States
    > recognizes as legitimate) the old song about >how the jews suffered under Nazi rule is >brought out to justify the actions.

    You're right. Whenever someone brings somthing up about Israelis violating international law, the Israelis should instead point out how a number of other nations in the middle east (or elsewhere) are violating international law or how that law is applied hypocritically.

    In 1975, the U.N. General Assembly passed Resolution 3379, proclaiming "Zionism is a form of racism and racial discrimination." Never mind that pre-1948, a large number of Jews were violently forced out of their homes in various Arab nations with no compensation given. Even today, it's still illegal to

    --

    ___
    It's the end of my comment as I know it and I feel fine.
  132. Are you an idiot? by AtheismIsGood · · Score: 1

    Hello superyooser.

    It's not the Israelies who blow themselves up in buses and kill many innocent children. ...but it is the Israelis who form death squads, torture palestinians and kills civilians in refugee camps.

    How do you suggest palestinians should defend themselves? Their land is occupied. They have no army or military capacity that is even a fraction of Israel's. Bear in mind that killing yourself is not an easy choice.

    It's not the Israelies who contribute to charities to fund terror groups.

    Are you crazy? That would be the United States that is pouring in billions in military aid to Israel.

    It's not the Israelies who have a dictatorial government.

    The palestinian people have been denied a government for a long time. How do you expect palestinians to organize when Israel denies them that right?

    It's not the Israelies who have vowed to wipe their neighbor from the face of the earth.

    But the Israelis certainly are in the lead:

    ________________Israelis____Palestinians
    Children Killed _____106____________494
    Civilians Killed_____632__________2,317
    Assassinations _______1____________297

    Bystanders killed
    in the course
    of Assassination____________________145


    It's not the Israelies who are teaching both in schools and mosques their children to hate.

    According to a 1977 UNESCO report, Israeli authorities systematically doctored the textbooks on history, geography, and literature used by Palestinian children to eliminate references to Palestine.

    So, it should be no surpise that Israelies are at WAR.

    It should be no surprise Palestinians are pissed when their country is invaded and occupied!

  133. Are you really an idiot? by AtheismIsGood · · Score: 1

    I know because I follow the news over there very closely.

    It comes as no surprise to me that you are following Fox news very closely. Do you really find it strange that the Palestinians would like the Israelis to leave?

    If you denounce UN resolutions and claim they have no credibility, what right do you think Israelis have to claim land in Palestine?

    And please don't point at obscure bible quotes. There are a lot of othodox Jews claiming the that the current state of Israel has no foundation in the bible. What you need to do is take a bath, relax and start thinking outside of the little box full of pre-fabricated bible-study group propaganda. If you need help and want to challenge your own thinking, please have a look at this website.

    1. Re:Are you really an idiot? by superyooser · · Score: 1
      It comes as no surprise to me that you are following Fox news very closely

      That's awfully presumptuous of you. I don't even have cable TV. I listen to Israel National Radio. I also follow the Jerusalem Post and various other sources.

      If you denounce UN resolutions and claim they have no credibility, what right do you think Israelis have to claim land in Palestine?

      The Bible is the title deed. The U.N. merely served as a terrestrial instrument to establish the modern state.

      There are a lot of othodox Jews claiming the that the current state of Israel has no foundation in the bible.

      Yeah, and there are some "Christians" who hold the views of the Ku Klux Klan. Many Greek Orthodox "Christians" supported Saddam Hussein. There are crackpots in every group. That site says, "We see Zionism as a violation of the Creator's decree that we remain in Exile." This is 100% balderdash. God commands Jews to live on the land. It is promised to the children of Israel forever. These people are illiterate. Read Genesis.

  134. the french are at it again... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    first they assist iraq with rocket propelled grenades and nuclear power plants, now they are supplying israel with mandrake linux... once again went behind our backs ... fsck them!

  135. I, for one,... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    welcome our new Zionist overlords.

  136. read a book sometime by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 1

    You can hide your ignorance behind your Anonymity, but your Cowardice leeches through. What don't you believe? The civilized approach of most of Israel's 50 year history, or the barbarity of the Arab tyrannies, especially their cynical abuse of the Palestinians? Join the civilized people who support an end to Arafat and Sharon's partnership in apocalypse, and suggest something constructive, rather than cowardly anonymous sniping that just brings everybody down.

    --

    --
    make install -not war

  137. complexity beneath the media surface is important by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 1

    Israelis, Palestinians and the rest of us are threatened by insane warmongers who wage apocalyptic brinksmanship for worldly power, and sick dreams of glory in the afterlife which is breathing down their septuagenarian necks. Rabin's murderer was a "settler" from a sicko jewish sect in Brooklyn, breeding terrorists in a mirror image of Arafat's Al Aqsa Brigade. Sharon is responsible for most of the bulldozed houses referenced in your link (implicit in even their numbers). As well as the most bloody, counterproductive "counterattacks" in the half-century Arab-Israeli war in which the Palestinians are one theater. Anonymous Coward, as Arab states increase in power and organization, tilting global allies like France, Russia and China to counterbalance the increasingly unpredictable USA, Israel's security is increasingly threatened. The growth of the international arms market in countries with active campaigns against Israel, like Syria and Iran, shows the economic value of the threat to Israel's survival. And the propaganda value to Arab kings (and many other medieval Muslim governments) of Israel's destruction, distracting their people from tyranny at home, is ever more pressing, even as those kings gain nuclear bombs and Jeremiah high priests. To say nothing of Al Qaeda and their proximity to controlling Pakistan's nuclear missiles. Just visit Israel, or any of the other (antidemocratic) mideastern countries, and rethink whether Isreal is endangered. And the depth of the threat to all of us, as the destroyers move from strength to strength, sending us all to a fiery hell on Earth.

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    make install -not war

  138. suicide by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 1

    Where's the genocide, Anonymous Coward? There's a guerilla war inside Israel, with a truly demented Arab named Arafat directing his people to kill themselves one by one, taking out as many Jews (and sympathetic bystanders) as possible. Arafat has made a hard definition of "Palestinist" as genocidal terrorist, to the everlasting discredit of his inheritors. While Sharon's zealot sullying of Zionist merely overshadows a century of definition of "self-determination". Focus your venom on Arafat and Sharon, the criminals, rather than an entire people, lest you betray your own racism, and its likely genocidal lusts.

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    make install -not war

  139. Lonely Anonymous Coward bigot by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 1

    Reading this thread, it looks like at least most, if not all, of the sick posts targeting Jews in the name of a perverted "antizionism", are the work of a single childish fool. Who is coward enough to remain anonymous as they spill venom through their keyboard. It is interesting to note that all the posts attacking Jews and "zionists" are anonymous (and cowardly). And the few posts which are named all make the reasonable distinction between zionism (belief in Jewish self-determination/homeland) and the zealot militarism of Sharon's amok government. This would be a near-flamewar to take seriously if more posters showed their "faces" (usernames). Otherwise, you're just fanning the cold flames of paranoid propaganda, regardless of your point.

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    make install -not war