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Ask the Egyptian Installfest Organizers

The Linux-Egypt group recently held an amazingly successful installfest. This event was a milestone both for Linux installfests in general (was it the largest one ever held?) and for Linux in the Arabic world. Alaa Abd El Fatah, one of the organizers, has offered to answer your questions with help from other Linux-Egypt members. We'll post their answers to 10 or 12 of the highest-moderated questions as soon as we get them back.

43 of 281 comments (clear)

  1. Beowulf Look Out by nevek · · Score: 3, Funny

    Pyramid Cluster!!!!

  2. Which one is now more common in Egypt... by razmaspaz · · Score: 3, Funny

    Linux or pirated copies of Windows?

    --
    I tried for 5 years to come up with a clever sig...only to realize that I am not clever.
  3. English or Arabic by tindur · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Do egyptians install in English or is it possible in Arabic?

    1. Re:English or Arabic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

      It's possible in Arabic, but you have to format the disk from the outside in.

  4. Motives for switching by XCorvis · · Score: 5, Interesting

    What were some of the reasons that people gave for trying/switching to linux? Was it as simple as better language support or saving money? Or were there political motives as well, such as a resistance toward Microsoft because of its nation of origin?

    1. Re:Motives for switching by Rei · · Score: 4, Interesting

      On the subject of national origin:

      There is a widespread perception in the west that the Arab world is backwards in terms of technological knowhow, and in education in general. How do you, as a geek in Egypt, perceive this? Do you feel that the free software movement can help nations like Egypt achieve the sort of tech industry that nations like Israel have by increasing exposure to computers for the average person?

      --
      ..haven't missed the part where the three Chinese guys give perfume to the star baby. It's like the diaries of a madman!
  5. the competition by TeamLive · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I am wondering what the competition is for an operating system in the arab world. Is windows as big as it is here? Or do people use other operating systems (BSD, OSX, Solaris, Linux) most of the time?

    Also, what is the most widely used distro in that part of the world?

    --
    one world | many people
  6. Politics, religion and software by CdBee · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Have the recent military actions taken by Western countries in the Islamic world affected attitudes towards software, bearing in mind the US-centric nature (Microsoft, Intel, Adobe) of commercial, closed-source software?

    --
    I have been a user for about 10 years. This ends Feb 2014. The site's been ruined. I'm off. Dice, FU
  7. Popular Culture by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    How ingrained is technology/computing (including OSS) into popular culture in Egypt? In North America it is everpresent and accepted as part of the culture, as it were, but I seldom see the same side of other societies. Are geek topics common 'water-cooler' discussions?

  8. Obstacles? by I_am_Rambi · · Score: 4, Interesting

    What were some of the major obstacles that you expierence while organizing and during installfest?

  9. Native language support by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Are there any technical restrictions in current Arabic language support in Linux? Also, how big role do language support and translations play in adoption of Linux there? I suppose there are quite many people who don't speak English at all.

  10. International relations by ObviousGuy · · Score: 3, Interesting

    When choosing to use Linux, one makes a conscious decision to join together with other people from around the world in a salute to freedom. Egyptians join with Finns, Americans, Asians, South Americans, and Europeans when they install Linux. It is both very humbling and yet uplifting to know that the software you are using is a result of international cooperation.

    However, the history of the world, and especially North Africa/Middle East is full of wars and territorial animosities. Without trying to peg you as one who would necessarily hold these beliefs, but there are many in Egypt who would like nothing more than to have little to do with America and its allies. Do you think Linux has a calming effect on such feelings? Does it provide a means of exposing those who would not normally have exposure to such things a side of America and its allies that is not simply warmongering and anti-Egyptian?

    I'm not asking if Linux is going to come with a worldpeace.pl script or anything. I'm just curious as to the ability of Linux to provide a favorable view of Western society to your Egyptian Linux installbase.

    --
    I have been pwned because my /. password was too easy to guess.
    1. Re:International relations by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

      >When choosing to use Linux, one makes a conscious decision to join together with other people from around the world in a salute to freedom

      really? i thought they did it because it was cheap

    2. Re:International relations by p3d0 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      What a stupid question. What does Linux have to do with America?

      --
      Patrick Doyle
      I mod down every jackass who puts his moderation policy in his sig. Oh, wait a sec....
  11. Positive contribution? by acceber · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Do you feel events such as InstallFest have contributed positively to the growing awareness of computer technology in non-western countries?

  12. Hardware by dr_dank · · Score: 4, Interesting

    In terms of compatibility, were there any common stumbling points of getting hardware to play nice?

    In other words, how much hardware commonly available on the Egyptian market is unsupported by Linux?

    --
    Where does the school board find them and why do they keep sending them to ME?
  13. Distro? by lacrymology.com · · Score: 5, Interesting

    What is the most popular distro in Egypt?
    -m

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    #
    # Modus Ponens
    #
  14. Net access shop by carvalhao · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I've been recently to Egipt and couldn't help noticing the large number of shops that offer net access for a small (European standards) fee. Do these shops usually run Linux or Windows?

    I also know the government has it's troubles raising money to put computers in your administrative structure. Is the government setting up Windows (paying the required licences) or Linux?

    I would like to congratulate you on your initiative, as it may contribute to reduce the electronic divide.

    1. Re:Net access shop by kbahey · · Score: 3, Informative

      You must mean the internet cafes.

      Yes, they are everywhere, because many people do not have computers at home.

      They are almost exclusively Windows (did anyone here about a net cafe using Linux in Egypt?)

      The reason is that is what people are used to, and that is what supports Arabic the most.

      If they install Linux, then Yahoo Messenger and MSN Messenger and ICQ will not be able to do voice and video for example.

      I would like to hear the answer on what the government is doing too.

  15. Mirror Here by Pavan_Gupta · · Score: 3, Informative

    http://www.pug.bz:9876/~gupta_p/installfest/

  16. Women. by Mateito · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I didn't look through all the installfest photos, but I didn't see a lot of women there. Okay, so hanging out with a lot of geeks configuring network services isn't most chicks idea of a hot date. But, nevertheless, how many females are involved with the open source crowd, and in the IT industry in general, in Egypt?

    1. Re:Women. by dr_dank · · Score: 3, Funny

      How many women do you see at stateside installfests by comparison?

      I'd think you'd find Jimmy Hoffa in a chicken costume before you'd find two women to rub together at such a geekfest.

      --
      Where does the school board find them and why do they keep sending them to ME?
    2. Re:Women. by kbahey · · Score: 3, Informative

      how many females are involved with the open source crowd, and in the IT industry in general, in Egypt?

      I can answer that paritally at least.

      There are as many women as men (if not more) in Egypt in the IT industry.

      I know, because when I worked in Egypt back in the 80s, the IT department I was in had more females than males, from data entry to programming to management. About the only place that did not have females was the mainframe operations (requiring late shifts and such).

      This was a governmental organization, and they had more perks for women than men (nice vacation on giving birth, right to go back to same or similar position, leave early to nurse the baby, take unpaid leave to care for kids, ...etc.)

      Even in the private software development sector, their seem to be more women than men (I know because my wife worked at such a place, and that is again back in the 80s).

      In university, you see about a 50/50 gender split in computer science, if not more women.

      Yeah, this info is a bit dated, but at least provides some historical data. Don't think it has changed much since.

  17. Re:N/S by jamonterrell · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Parent has a very good question actually, even if they don't directly ask it. Hoes does the religion make-up of the install-fest compare to the religion make-up of Egypt? Are there fewer or more of any specific religion that attend? Was religion even present? What about nationalities? Did you find that natives or non-natives to Egypt were more likely to attend in comparison to the # of natives/vs non-natives in the general population?

    --
    I can count to 1023 on my hands. Ask me about #132.
  18. Pre-install questions or misconceptions by dkh2 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    What were the most common misunderstandings among new or potential Linux users? Did you provide a place for newbie questions and answers?

    --
    My office has been taken over by iPod people.
  19. LTSP question... by sheeny · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I am from the UK and find that pushing the idea of thin client computing using LTSP difficult to get across. I suspect one reason may be the fact that cost over here may not be a big issue and people still don't mind spending ridiculous money on computers. What is the LTSP climate like in Egypt and are there lots of Internet Cafe's/Community centres that use/or would show interest in using LTSP to set up inexpensive internet access like in Brazil or other countries?

  20. my question by hyperstation · · Score: 3, Interesting

    where can i get a tshirt with that kickass pyramid logo? :)

  21. American nerds want to know... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny



    What do Egyptian nerds wear? Black horn-rimmed kaffiyehs? And do you wear Star Trek robes, or wear the shirts underneath regular robes and stick a little Star Fleet pin on your lapel? Do robes *have* lapels? How do you say "bite my shiny metal ass" in Egyptian? What's the ancient heiroglyph for "FR15T P05T!?" How awesome would it be if you took that cord that holds your kaffiyeh on your head and modded it with EL wire? Do Egyptian nerds survive off of Cheetos and Mountain Dew, or is it more like big mouthfuls of qat and Pyramid Dew? When you're playing Tomb Raider what do you say - "Nice rack!" or "Dude! You can totally see my house in this level!" What kind of beer do Egyptian nerds drink? Do chicks dig Egyptian nerds, or are you all in the same boat as us? Do you guys freak out over Japanese chicks and pocky? How do you keep all the fucking sand out of your case mods? Do you have "Type-R" camels? Do you have low-rider camels with neon on their nuts? Do you guys know the Icy Hot Stuntaz? Do hot Egyptian girls come to LAN parties? Are you as excited about Half-Life 2 as we are?

    (And I'm only slightly kidding about these. We'll learn more about each other by talking like nerds than we will by pretending to be politians...)

    1. Re:American nerds want to know... by kbahey · · Score: 3, Informative

      I know you are joking, but here are some answers anyway.

      What do Egyptian nerds wear? Black horn-rimmed kaffiyehs?

      Most Egyptians wear western style clothes. Hollywood's stereotype of pyramids, desert, turbans, and camels not withstanding.

      What's the ancient heiroglyph for "FR15T P05T!?"

      By taking the English geekspeak letters FR15T P05T!? and translating them into the hieroglyph equivalent. We got a French guy called Champollion to help us there.

      Seriously, Egypt now speaks Arabic. Hieroglyphs have been out of general use for about 22 centuries or so.

      Do Egyptian nerds survive off of Cheetos and Mountain Dew, or is it more like big mouthfuls of qat and Pyramid Dew?

      Qat is not consumed in Egypt. It is almost exclusively a Yemeni thing. Confused Geography again?

      Is Pyramid Dew a new thing there that I missed?

      What kind of beer do Egyptian nerds drink?

      Most would not drink beer, because most do not consume alcohol. However, there is Fayrouz and all its flavors (non alcoholic beer like beverage, with many flavors).

      How do you keep all the fucking sand out of your case mods?

      By not living in the desert to begin with. That is why we have cities!

      Do you have "Type-R" camels? Do you have low-rider camels with neon on their nuts?

      Repeat after me: Camels are there only for retired American tourists who visit the Pyramids. Oh, and they are made into shish kebab as well!Not very common, but those who tried it say it is good.

  22. Linux installations on laptops, notebooks and PDAs by wehe · · Score: 3, Interesting

    How many installations were done on laptops, notebooks and PDAs? Are there Linux installation reports available for laptops, notebooks and PDAs in Arabic? Actually I would like to link to them from the TuxMobil - Linux on Mobile Computers database.

  23. What kind of computers? by Pavan_Gupta · · Score: 4, Interesting

    As often as I see people go through upgrade cycles, and especially in the wake of the news saying that Microsoft was suggesting using machine with 2 gigabytes of RAM, 1 terabyte of disk space, 6 ghz in speed, 3x faster video cards, etc., I have to wonder how Egypt is coping? What kind of computers were you installing linux on? And believe me, I've installed linux on things that should never of had linux on them! =)

  24. What is the killer app in Egypt? by eltoyoboyo · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Or more to the point, what is the first thing users want to do after the system is installed and running?

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    Have you Meta Moderated t
  25. Do you watch Stargate SG-1? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

    Eager minds want to know...

  26. Computers in Egypt? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Can you give us some idea of the state of computing in your country? For example, are computers common in general home use, are middle-class types able to afford them, and so forth. I'm also curious about how the heat and sand are handled - are they problems?

  27. Linux is free. What about the hardware? by solojony · · Score: 5, Interesting

    How much of an egyptian income takes buying a computer? What is the computer/population ratio? How is the average hardware? PIII? PIV?

  28. Any chance of a local distro? by Koyaanisqatsi · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Conectiva is the biggest linux player in Brazil and it also has some recognition around the world - you probably remember Marcelo Tosatti worked there, right?

    Well, being a Brazilian company and having a heavily localized distro has helped them get a strong hold in the market here, but it works twofold, as it also helped spread linux among people and business that would not try a non-localized distro.

    Any company in Egypt pursuing this marked opportunity currently? Or you think it would not work there (and if so, why?)

    Thanks!

  29. More particularly, by Dlugar · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I'm interested in: what's the best distro with regards to Arabic support? I've been studying Arabic for a year or two now and I enjoy tinkering around with Arabic on Linux, but sometime's it's so hard to get things to work! (I recently tagged some of my Arabic-language mp3s with Arabic Unicode in the id3 tags, and so far the only player I've found that will display the Arabic tags is the Beep Media Player (gtk2 fork of xmms).

    Dlugar

    --
    Computer Go: Writing Software to Play the Ancient Game of Go
  30. Distros by arvindn · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Being from an underdeveloped country myself, I find that due to the paucity of information, the first distro to get a foot in the door (Redhat) quickly acquires a monopoly. Have you observed the same thing?

  31. Complexity of RTL and Hebrew / Arabic Development. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

    A lot of work with Arabic in OSS relates to the complex RTL (Right to Left) layout of the language. Most development in this area was by Arab and Israely developers. Do you find yourself working together with Israely developers to reach the common goal of proper RTL support in Linux and OSS in general? Are there political problems working with Israeli developers?

    Thanks

  32. Re:Do you like the GPL? by Rosco+P.+Coltrane · · Score: 3, Funny
    Take a look at a few of the American nouns that make all of this possible:

    Linus Torvalds (CA)

    Oh yeah, great example of American technology right there...

    Hear here folks: the father of Linux is now American and, before you know it, he'll have created Linux when he was a student at Berkeley!

    --
    "A door is what a dog is perpetually on the wrong side of" - Ogden Nash
  33. History of Egypt motivation to switching to Linux by kbahey · · Score: 4, Informative

    Here is some background, based on experience of relatives living in Egypt. I am Egyptian myself, but have not been living there for 15+ years.

    In the 90s, Microsoft turned a blind eye to piracy. They simply did not care what happens in the Arab world (software wise). They ignored that market. Arabization of products normally followed a delayed schedule, with the latest product being not in Arabic. When Windows 3.x came out, there was a competing Arabization by Al Alamiah, a Kuwaiti company. The lead architect (cant' remember his name, but either Lebanese or Syrian) there was enticed into leaving Al Alamiah and join Microsoft. There was a brief law suit then. In the end Microsoft was dominant in the Arabization area. Product release in Arabic still lagged behind English and other Western languages.

    Then, in the mid 90s, Microsoft started to enforce licenses on businesses. In Egypt, a newly formed Shortet El Mosanafat El Faneyya (literally: Artistic Products Police, more like: "Intellectual Property Police") started raiding large, medium and small businesses to check if their software was licensed. They specifically looked for certain products and ignored others (e.g. Microsoft stuff, AutoCAD in Engineering firms, Oracle, but not Novel [if I remember correctly], nor Apple).

    Rumor at the time had it that some rich and powerful people (ruling elite) made a cut with Microsoft in all this.

    Remember that the US Dollar was around 3.4 Egyptian pound at the time. Making legal software very costly for the small business.

    This scared small businesses, and some relatives I know migrated from Microsoft Windows and Fox Pro applications to Linux and SQL-Ledger for example. There was so much resentment for Microsoft at the time for doing this, and the powers who enforced it.

    Now, the exchange rate is about 6.5 Egyptian Pounds to 1 US Dollar, so it has gotten even worse (more prohibitive cost of Microsoft software).

    However, in the internet land, another development was taking place around the turn of the Millenium. Many developers for the internet knew nothing but Microsoft, so they used its technologies to develop web sites (ASP, MS SQL, NT/2000/XP, ...etc.) More importantly, this led to many web sites showing correctly in Arabic ONLY when used Internet Explorer.

    This means that people at home or in offices who do not have Windows and IE will not be able to interact properly with web sites. Al Jazeera web site for example shows only the middle pane in FireFox, and the side menus are only visible under IE.

    Arabs are around 300 million, is supposed to be the 5th most widely spoken language in the world. For a company to gain a monopoly on an entire culture is simply wrong and unacceptable, but it did happen.

    the bright side is that Linux is making some inroads. But there are obstacles (e.g. Arabic web sites which are IE centric, as above).

    Yes, boycott of American products may have played a role since 2000 (with the Palestinian uprising, then the post-Sept 11 events). But more pragmatic factors were there far before any of this came into play, and Microsoft was (and still is) not liked by many (just like the rest of us Open Source advocates in the West do not like thm either).

  34. Which distributions support Arabic the most? by kbahey · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Is anyone in Egypt using Linux mainly for Arbaic stuff? Which distro do they use.

    I mean, programmers and techies will be fiddling with English apps most of the time, and only use arabic for the odd letter, or web site. What I mean is someone who does most of his work in Arabic (document editing, browsing, spreadsheets, ...etc.)

    I have tried Red Hat some time back (I think 7.2?) and Konquerer would work well displaying Arabic web pages correctly, but no other apps would work well.

    My current Mandrake 9.1 is a pain to setup Arabic to work (in KDE control panel), and even then, it does not work in all apps.

    Knoppix from Sept 2003 is far far better. You can switch to arabic by clicking the little flag icon on the bottom right of the screen, and many apps (cant remember which, probably Open Office?) can accept Arabic letters.

    Any one used Mandrake 10 CE or Final with Arabic? How is it?

    Can the non-CD distros emulate Knoppix in this regard?

  35. OT: Swedish English by Dr.+Cody · · Score: 3, Informative
    How is it that your English is so good? I am constantly amazed at how well some people who presumably have never lived in an English-speaking country can speak English. It's just amazing. Very impressive.

    I am an English-speaker living in Sweden. I can tell you it's a combination of:
    • Swedish and English are very similar
    • There aren't many Swedes in the grand scheme of things
    • American and British media saturate the place


    • Of course, you can't discount the fact that they spend their whole education studying it. However, as an English-speaker trying to learn Swedish, I find it intensely annoying that Swedes refuse to speak Swedish to you if they know you speak English.