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France Considers Open Source

joestar writes "Reuters today announced that the French Government is considering Open Source Software adoption as an excellent alternative to reduce their IT costs. A cost reduction of several hundred millions dollars is planned by replacing proprietary licenses by Open-Source solutions. 'Microsoft must return to being one supplier to the state among others', declared a government Minister. France's culture, agriculture and finance ministries had already signed deals with Mandrakesoft for first Linux deployment tests. After Munich's new move in Germany, it seems that Open Source Software is currently a major movement in old Europe."

370 comments

  1. I think France got it by SeanTobin · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Well, they almost get it. Example:
    Open-source software -- uncopyrighted software which has no license cost -- like Linux, OpenOffice, Mozilla, Apache, MySQL and Evolution -- was "very credible," Dutreil said.
    Well, there is a license cost, and it most definately is copywrighted. But monitarialy they are correct. Now, the very cool thing they said was:
    "This will also help us sell our solutions to other governments," he said, adding that he believed the German, Israeli and Malasian governments also envisaged shifting to open-source software.
    BINGO! We have a winner! Evil country A develops software for a fraction of the cost it would normally take in the closed-source land, sells it to Good Countries B through T and V through Z, and makes more money than they would have been able to otherwise.

    Now that is what the GPL is about. Saving money&time in development, making money in sales & support (of course I probably wouldn't want France supporting my KMissle Launch Control System), and giving back to the world an improvement on what they borrowed.
    --
    Karma: SELECT `karma` FROM `users` WHERE `userid`=138474;
    1. Re:I think France got it by Jad+LaFields · · Score: 1

      Wait, now France is evil? When did this happen? I thought that as an American I was supposed to consider the French as snooty and insulting, but now they're evil? Neat.

      Of course Linux and even Mandrakelinux (my distro of choice, good job Mandrake!) is not developed by one country, and recieve contributions by hackers in countries of that cover the whole spectrum of evilness...

      --
      [SIG] It's like putting a moose in the blender -- a recipe for disaster!
    2. Re:I think France got it by kryonD · · Score: 1

      "uncopyrighted software which has no license cost -- like Linux"

      C'mon Slashdot crowd, let's all forward this article to sales@sco.com!!!

      --
      I've dirtied my hands writing poetry, for the sake of seduction; that is, for the sake of a useful cause. --Dostoevsky
    3. Re:I think France got it by arvindn · · Score: 2, Informative

      No, they didn't say that very cool thing. The second quote was from Mandrakesoft.

    4. Re:I think France got it by kevlar · · Score: 2, Funny

      Why you have problem with France? We aid in world war deux and we aid in NATO.

      We french persons are good people!!

    5. Re:I think France got it by pavon · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The licence cost part is correct depending on how you look at it. When most people talk about software licences they are thinking of EULAs, which are supposed "licences to use". So what they are saying is that you don't need to pay someone to get a licence to use the software. Which is absolutely true - there is no cost, monitarily or in source, to use open source software.

      Of couse we all know that you don't need a license to use software, just to redistrubute it, so those EULAs aren't really licences at all. They are just notices that say you have no licence to distribute, as well as an attempt to get you to agree to a bunch of things that probably aren't legaling binding anyway, since EULAs are not valid contracts.

      Open source licences on the other hand are real distribution licences. But the only cost is when you want to redistribute derivitives works, in which case, the cost is the source to those derivative works. In the standard user's perception of "software license" there is no cost.

      Just splitting hairs :)

    6. Re:I think France got it by kevlar · · Score: 1, Funny

      SELECT `DorkFactor` FROM `users` WHERE `userid`=138474;

      MySql returned 1 row(s):
      [DorkFactor]
      99.99

    7. Re:I think France got it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful
      According to a comment over at lwn.net, that's the translator's fault:
      A gross misunderstanding caused by the English translator. Same paragraph in the original French article:
      Il précise qu'il a rencontré de nombreux acteurs du secteur et estime que les logiciels libres, de type Linux, OpenOffice, Mozilla, Apache, MySQL, Evolution, constituent aujourd'hui une "solution très crédible", "en particulier en terme de sécurité", portée par des entreprises "solides et innovantes".
      Roughly translated, ``He [Dutreuil] states that he has met many stakeholders of the sector and founds that free software --as Linux, OpenOffice, Mozilla, Apache, MySQL, Evolution-- conforms `a very credible solution' nowadays, `particularly in terms of security', supported by `solid and innovative' companies.''
    8. Re:I think France got it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Insightful

      Well, I'll give France props for helping us out in that nasty revolutionary war business we had back in the day.. but that's about it (oh, and that statue oxidized rather nicely... way to go with a long-term solution there).

      Oh, and thanks for giving Sadam all that money in the oil-for-food program. $100 bags of flour sure helped the citizens of Iraq, and the $50 per bag kickback to Sadam never went towards military use.

      Then there is world war deux, remember back to the afternoon of June 22, 1940. That whole armistice treaty you signed with germany to protect your collective french butts? Yeah, thanks for standing strong with us there.

      Oh, and thanks for sticking by us in the UN by vetoing our plans for stepping up enforcement on Sadam and Iraq. I'm sure it had nothing to do with the whole flour deal. Too bad we had to go to war with them instead of actually enforcing the sanctions.

      Don't even bring up NATO. Remember some important french guy named Charles de Gaulle? Well, in 1966 he told NATO to buzz off so he could build a nuclear missle system. Of course, after it was built we let you back in again - our mistake.

    9. Re:I think France got it by Ploum · · Score: 1

      Ximian has announced a release of GMissle Launch Control System.

      RMS has agreed that he didn't use KMissle because he don't like KDE but he will now enjoy GMissle for his daily launch of WMD.

    10. Re:I think France got it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      damn you, you stole my SQLspeak, and I never got a chance to use it. oh well.

    11. Re:I think France got it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful
      remember back to the afternoon of June 22, 1940. That whole armistice treaty you signed with germany to protect your collective french butts? Yeah, thanks for standing strong with us there.

      Leaving you standing strong where?

      Ok, if you're a Brit you might have a point.

      If you're American, you don't know history. In 1940 when France was occupied, America was trying hard to keep out of the war and the Naziesque ideas were in fact rather popular amongst the rich and powerful.

      In any case, signing armistice was common sense. When you've been outfought and outgunned you don't fight to the last man and woman unless you've got your back against the wall (like in Stalingrad; first the Russians then the Germans). That'd be just insane.

    12. Re:I think France got it by Rostin · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Something tells me this post would be +5 insightful if he had been criticizing Bush.

    13. Re:I think France got it by aralin · · Score: 1, Insightful
      I think that they actually looked at FOX News and saw in the no spin zone how O'Reilly called french president the enemy of united states and promoted stickers calling to boycot french products.

      Let me tell you, nothing promotes the good image of United States and american companies and goods as a bunch of ultra-right religious fanatics that scream on top of their lungs: "Who is not with us is our enemy!"

      --
      If programs would be read like poetry, most programmers would be Vogons.
    14. Re:I think France got it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Insightful

      When you've been outfought and outgunned you don't fight to the last man and woman unless you've got your back against the wall (like in Stalingrad; first the Russians then the Germans).

      Yes, instead you bend over and take it up the ass like a Frenchman...

    15. Re:I think France got it by ultranova · · Score: 1
      SELECT `DorkFactor` FROM `users` WHERE `userid`=138474;

      Shoudn't that be: SELECT DorkFactor FROM users WHERE userid = 138474;" ?

      I'm not sure about MySQL, since I use PostgreSQL, but I don't think you need to quote column or table names.

      --

      Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

    16. Re:I think France got it by kevlar · · Score: 0

      You are so mean to French persons!

      Why do you call me 'frog'? I do not know this.
      We France people are very nice... besides Paris, Frances are mean there.

    17. Re:I think France got it by Hydrogenoid · · Score: 1

      Hmmm, the second statement is from MandrakeSoft president, though, not Dutreil. And as far as I know, Mandrake isn't a country, let alone an evil one. :-)

    18. Re:I think France got it by saforrest · · Score: 5, Informative

      Then there is world war deux, remember back to the afternoon of June 22, 1940. That whole armistice treaty you signed with germany to protect your collective french butts? Yeah, thanks for standing strong with us there.

      Um, what the hell are you talking about?

      First off, France had been invaded, its supposedly foolproof Maginot Line had been completely circumvented, and the population was fleeing before the German advance. Sure, they should have planned better, but at that point, what else was there to do? The later collaborationist actions of the Vichy government were dispicable, but to go on actively fighting would have been bloody ridiculous.

      And 'standing strong with us'? You admit with the reference to the Revolutionary War that you're an American. So how hard were the Americans fighting against the Germans in 1940?

      Oh, right. They weren't in until Pearl Harbor, a year and a half later. (In fact, Prescott Bush, whose last name you may find familiar, had his assets seized after the Americans entered the war because comparies in which he had an interest had funded Nazi Germany.)

    19. Re:I think France got it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We, we, we? Who made you king of the world, idiot?

    20. Re:I think France got it by Trelane · · Score: 2

      Some americans are as rude as some french persons. "Frog" is a derogatory term for French people, due to, iirc, eating frog legs. Same as 'Kraut' for a German.

      Pardonnez-nous, s'il vous plais. [Je ne parl pas francaise, so please forgive my horrible spelling and writing and grammar and such. ;]

      Both sides of the hate are getting annoying. Sorry this person is such a danged unevolved monkey. Sorry you had to see this side of the 'states. We're not all butt-munches! :)

      Heh. Maybe as punishment for being a jerk to another country in a public forum, maybe the penalty should be having to read opposite-leaning media from and live in the other country.... ;)

      --

      --
      Given enough personal experience, all stereotypes are shallow.
    21. Re:I think France got it by Rei · · Score: 1

      What "flour deal" are you talking about? And may I ask, was French trade with Iraq even *remotely* close to the value of French trade with the US? No? Gee, I wonder what that means....

      BTW, I'm sure the French were really happy with us in WWII for sitting on our collective arses while they were massacred by German forces. At least we made up for it with Normandy... but you've got to love a friend who, whenever you disagree, shoves last big thing that they did for you in your face time after time.

      --
      You know when it's okay to shout fire in a crowded theatre? When it's on fire.
    22. Re:I think France got it by saforrest · · Score: 3, Insightful

      France is evil because they were singlehandeldy building Saddam's arsenal and tunnels.

      Single-handedly? I seem to remember seeing an old picture of Saddam warmly shaking the hand of a certain war^H^H^Hdefense secretary.

      A better reason to think that France is evil is that the French helped shelter the génocidaires in the 1994 genocide in Rwanda, in which over a million people died.

    23. Re:I think France got it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Remember Petain my friend..You did help yes when the war was over...
      Remember De Gaulle my friend..In 1966 de Gaulle withdrew France from the integrated military command of NATO....

    24. Re:I think France got it by cshark · · Score: 1

      Now that is what the GPL is about. Saving money&time in development, making money in sales & support (of course I probably wouldn't want France supporting my KMissle Launch Control System), and giving back to the world an improvement on what they borrowed.

      Usually when countries make big announcements like this, it's usually a ploy to get microsoft to "cut their software bill in half." But I think it does point to the idea that there is going to be a standard for govermental use of open source softare eventually. And there could be huge or at least modest money in it for those that create it. Even if this doesn't result in france moving to oss, at least the dialog is opened. I have a feeling we'll see more of this from governments trying the waters of open source software, and the tides of change.

      --

      This signature has Super Cow Powers

    25. Re:I think France got it by rspress · · Score: 1

      How hard were the Americans fighting in 1940? Depends on how you look at it. There was lend/lease, Americans in England fighting over France and Germany, Americans in China fighting the Japanese. Americans dying to get supplies to said countries. All of this happening in 1940.

      Actually a lot of people in the U.S. either funded or supported Nazi Germany. Henry Ford and Charles Lindburg are a few more. Early on Hitler turned his country around during the big depression and he started many projects which put Germans to work and put money in their pockets. FDR did many of the same things Hitler did. Of course this was to further his plans that were to take place latter but at the time he was respected around the world.

      There were a lot of people in the U.S. that supported what Japan was doing as well but we never hear much about them. There was also Stalin, who had many supporters in the U.S. and Stalin killed more people than Hitler did.

    26. Re:I think France got it by psetzer · · Score: 1

      Yeah, but you end up with all the French Missiles being launched because someone forgot that /dev/nuke0 was just an alias for /dev/lpt1.

      --
      "Anyone who attempts to generate random numbers by deterministic means is living in a state of sin." -- John von Neumann
    27. Re:I think France got it by Tony-A · · Score: 1

      Just splitting hairs :)

      Important hairs to split, methinks.
      The French language is not comprehendable in terms of the American English language.
      The Open Source phenomenon is not comprehendable in terms of the Closed Source phenomenon.
      The French care about their language in ways that are totally foreign to us Americans.

      What means this term "free"?
      The French Language is free. I am free to speak French if I choose. I don't have to pay tribute to France to speak French. It's almost as if I own the language.
      (However, I speak French and the French get incensed about how I'm murdering the language. Yes, I'm really that bad;)
      Open Source is nothing like public domain, even if it's hard to make a distinction from a Closed Source perspective. Vive la diference!

    28. Re:I think France got it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sure, they should have planned better

      That's certainly an understatement. The Maginot Line covered the border of France and Germany, but it left open the borders between Belgium and France and Belgium and Germany, effectively leaving open the hole that the Germans had pushed through in World War I.

      I agree with you, though, France didn't really have a choice in surrendering.

    29. Re:I think France got it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But that secretary took care of the problem when he saw the errors of his ways. The French though, never learn. Once again, they are on the evil side. They're at it again in Sudan. Like its not enough to have a genocide in Rwanda. Now, they are doing everything in their power to prevent intervention in another genocide.

    30. Re:I think France got it by lombre · · Score: 2, Informative
      uncopyrighted software which has no license cost

      This is an error of the reports/translators (i.e. they almost got it - as usual), the original quote from (reuters.fr) is

      "La concurrence est ouverte", souligne le ministre. "Mon estimation est que l'on peut au moins diviser par deux la facture logiciel de l'Etat."

      Il précise qu'il a rencontré de nombreux acteurs du secteur et estime que les logiciels libres, de type Linux, OpenOffice, Mozilla, Apache, MySQL, Evolution, constituent aujourd'hui une "solution très crédible", "en particulier en terme de sécurité", portée par des entreprises "solides et innovantes".

      "Ce qui transparaît clairement, c'est que les solutions bâties sur des logiciels libres sont aujourd'hui devenues une alternative crédible à l'utilisation de logiciels propriétaires, aussi bien en terme de prix que de fonctionnalités", dit-il. "Je pense que ces logiciels méritent une place plus importante sur les postes de travail de l'administration."

      This mentions nothing about uncopyrighted software

    31. Re:I think France got it by HermanAB · · Score: 1

      Hells bells, 'over a million' died in Rwanda massacre.

      I guess they are still dying and in a few years it will be 5 million.

      So, who's counting? Or do people just keep adding all the numbers from all the different newspapers?

      --
      Oh well, what the hell...
    32. Re:I think France got it by FrenchyinCT · · Score: 1
      I'm sure glad the United States has never supported genocidal dictators!

      Frenchy, ROTFLMAO

    33. Re:I think France got it by WNight · · Score: 1

      You mean the president?

    34. Re:I think France got it by Alexis+de+Torquemada · · Score: 1

      Oh, and thanks for giving Sadam all that money in the oil-for-food program. $100 bags of flour sure helped the citizens of Iraq, and the $50 per bag kickback to Sadam never went towards military use.

      And who are these two good ol' friends?

    35. Re:I think France got it by dago · · Score: 1

      No, the numbers goes from 600.000 to 1 million dead people in the '94.

      Just because you didn't see it on TV doesn't mean it didn't happen that way.

      This has been one of the worst case of non-intervention, Belgium forces fled, US & France didn't came until tool late ...

      This is also one of the reasons why NATO has been so prompt to go into kosovo.

      --
      #include "coucou.h"
    36. Re:I think France got it by mschaffer · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      How long before the little evil frogs rename these things to something froggie-sounding. Do I see weapon systems in the future being exported to Middle-eastern countries with embedded Lineaux?

    37. Re:I think France got it by saforrest · · Score: 1

      I'm sure glad the United States has never supported genocidal dictators!

      That was the reason I mentioned the bit about Rumsfeld.

    38. Re:I think France got it by FrenchyinCT · · Score: 1
      I was thinking of more than just Rumsfeld. There's, um, Saddam "Of COURSE we know he once had WMD, we GAVE them to him!" Hussein, and Allende in Chile, and the Shah of Iran, and Batista in Cuba, and the right-wing extremists in Nicaragua...

    39. Re:I think France got it by arturs · · Score: 1

      It's strange that you've been modded up as obviously you haven't understood the article. The last quote you provide doesn't come from the French minister, but from a Mandrake representative. And it _does_ make sense -- if the French succeed with Mandrake, the company will have enough experience to be choosen by the governments of some other, especially French-speaking, countries.

    40. Re:I think France got it by ccp · · Score: 1


      Leaving you standing strong where?

      Ok, if you're a Brit you might have a point.


      No, he doesn't.

      Because the Brits, backstabbing bastards as always, really did evacuate their army without warning the French. With its left flank mysteriously gone, the French Army was overrun quickly and attacked from behind.
      What could they have done except surrender?

      The Brits are good at many things, but really great at one: rewriting history, in order to appropiate merit and shift blame.

      Cheers,

  2. In case of Slashdotting.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    France Challenges Microsoft in Software Re-Fit Fri Jun 18, 2004 10:47 AM ET By Emmanuel Jarry and Jean-Baptiste Vey PARIS (Reuters) - France's cash-strapped government is giving alternative software firms the chance to win state business from Microsoft in a pioneering drive to challenge the U.S. software giant in the public sector. Civil service minister Renaud Dutreil told Reuters France wanted to use "open-source" software providers to resupply part of the almost one million state computers under a government cost-cutting drive designed to trim a bulging public deficit. "We are not starting a war against Microsoft, or against American companies in the software sector," Dutreil said in an interview. But he added that Microsoft "must return to being one supplier to the state among others." "The competition is open," he said. "My estimate is that we can cut the state software bill at least in half." At stake, in the case of office suite software alone, is around 300 million euros ($362.5 million) worth of software to be introduced to state computers over three years. Savings on operating systems could be of a similar order, officials said. France's conservative government is trying to cut costs as it seeks to rein in a public sector deficit which is set to bust the European Union limit of three percent of gross domestic product (GDP) in 2004 for the third year running. Open-source software -- uncopyrighted software which has no license cost -- like Linux, OpenOffice, Mozilla, Apache, MySQL and Evolution -- was "very credible," Dutreil said. Microsoft, which is appealing a European Union fine for breaching antitrust law, said it would seek to show the French government it could offer software at a competitive price. "In fact, open-source software is not free. It is very expensive because it shifts the cost to maintenance, services, integration and training," Microsoft France chief Christophe Aulnette said. Open-source software suppliers welcomed the news. "This decision will allow us to increase our presence in France," said Jacques Le Marois, president of the French open-source software company MandrakeSoft. "This will also help us sell our solutions to other governments," he said, adding that he believed the German, Israeli and Malasian governments also envisaged shifting to open-source software. France's culture, agriculture and finance ministries had already signed deals with MandrakeSoft, the company said. ($1=.8275 Euro)

    1. Re:In case of Slashdotting.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bit unlikely that Reuters will be slashdotted... but hey if it makes more people RTFA then great.

    2. Re:In case of Slashdotting.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Dude... It's REUTERS.

    3. Re:In case of Slashdotting.. by john_sheu · · Score: 0

      Yo, I don't realize why this article re-post is modded "informative." It's friggin REUTERS, they ain't gonna be slashdotted any time soon.

  3. Well, shoot. by BitwizeGHC · · Score: 4, Funny

    Now that the french have got their mitts on it... I propose we rename it to "Freedom Source"! ... What? Too Stallman-esque?

    --
    N4st0r, trixx0r h0bb1tz0rz! Th3y st0l3 0ur pr3c10uzz!
    1. Re:Well, shoot. by Patrik_AKA_RedX · · Score: 1

      Considering they came up with the word "micro-ordinateur", the thought of learning what word they'll come up with for "open source" scares me.

    2. Re:Well, shoot. by kfg · · Score: 5, Funny

      There's always "Liberte, Egalite, Fraternite the Source," which is quite a mouthful, so we'll just call it "LEFtS" for short, but that might be a bit too Dantonesque for some.

      KFG

    3. Re:Well, shoot. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Kinda funny that the English and French terms for computers came from a title used for a person. Of course the peace loving French chose their from artillery calculators and the war mongering Americans named theirs after financial calculators.

    4. Re:Well, shoot. by thomasdelbert · · Score: 1
      "Open Source", as the name of the movement, is a proper noun, so it may not be translated in France. Quebec, with their silly language laws may though - they once banned the apostrophe-s on public signs because it was an english construct - So Kowalski's had to be called "de Kowalski" or something like that.
      "Source Ouverte"
      or
      "Code Ouvert"
      I could be wrong about the subject-adjective agreement for "Ouvert(e)" though, "Source" is femenin, "Code" is masculin. Typicly you add an "e" for adjectives of femenin nouns.

      - Thomas;
      --
      ___ This sig is in boldface to emphasize its importance!
    5. Re:Well, shoot. by chris_mahan · · Score: 3, Informative

      perhaps "source libre"

      Libre in french (i'm french I know) means free as in speech.

      Free as in beer is "gratuit", which is where the english word gratuity comes from. A freebie.

      the advantage of "source libre" is that the english speaking world can understand it perfectly well.

      --

      "Piter, too, is dead."

    6. Re:Well, shoot. by kigrwik · · Score: 1

      Actually, I attended a lecture by RMS a few years ago and he used those very same words to describe Free Software: "Liberte, Egalite, Fraternite" (would that be Freedom, Equality, Brotherhood ?).

      And that's a fine motto to live by in my [admittedly biased] opinion. :)

      --
      -- don't discount flying pigs until you have good air defense
    7. Re:Well, shoot. by kfg · · Score: 1

      would that be Freedom, Equality, Brotherhood ?

      Why yes, yes it would.

      It might better be summed up in the single word "Ohana" though, typically translated as "family" in the extended sense, but I prefer "kinship" in the sense that doesn't require close blood relation, and we are all, ultimately, kin, even by blood (or DNA).

      Since the release of the movie Lilo & Stitch not only has this word become more commonly known, but so has it's underlying meaning of "No one gets left behind."

      I also like the way Cooper phrased it, in The Last of the Mohicans when Heyward claimed debt to Uncas for saving his life:

      "Life is an obligation which friends often owe to each other in the wilderness." -Hawk-eye

      KFG

    8. Re:Well, shoot. by Seidoger · · Score: 1

      We do call it "Logiciel libre" (liberated software, kinda) here in Quebec. Well me and people i know do.

  4. Ya know what Microsoft? by tekiegreg · · Score: 4, Interesting

    You just quoted in the article:

    "In fact, open-source software is not free. It is very expensive because it shifts the cost to maintenance, services, integration and training," Microsoft France chief Christophe Aulnette said.

    The scary part is, I highly agree with that statement. Price alone is not a factor for people going to open source, perhaps I should enlighten you people.

    1) The upgrade trap, perhaps if people could upgrade on their schedule instead of yours.
    2) The whole OPEN SOURCE part, or if I need a feature added or changed, I'll find a developer to do just that...

    Yes, to the Slashdot community, I know you all know the best reasons for going open source, however I'm worried that MS doesn't :-p and that could do them in (like it would be a loss???)

    --
    ...in bed
    1. Re:Ya know what Microsoft? by shis-ka-bob · · Score: 4, Insightful
      The fact is Microsoft software requires more maintenance. At least on servers, The Robert Francis group found that Linux requires far less admin time. This is discussed at zdnet . For a 'server unit' (defined in the report), the admin costs for Linux was $12,010 annually. The cost to administer Windows was $52,060 annually.

      Microsoft likes to say "Linux is free like a puppy". I say, yes and Microsoft is like the purebred (add the 'b' word here if you wish) that costs a lot upfront and has congenital defects from generations of inbreeding. Sure, she is pretty, but shie is high strung you will spend way too mutch time and money fighting infections. Give me a mutt anyday; the mutt is not only cheap to aquirer, but more robust and better tempered. Saving money up front is only the start of your savings, the real savings is found in the maintenance costs.

      --
      Think global, act loco
    2. Re:Ya know what Microsoft? by thetoastman · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Hmmm, I suppose you've never looked at the cost of software maintenance, training, and software integration of Microsoft products.

      Maintenence . . . . you have forced upgrades, required reboots (translates to downtime), and prohibitively expensive maintenance support costs.

      Services . . . . I have yet to find Microsoft services capable of answering even the simplest of questions. For this I can pay a huge amount of money.

      Integration . . . The key to any software integration project is the adherence to well-defined, published, and freely available standards. This is why the Internet works so well. This is why you can run SOAP and web services between competing vendors. This is why you can use XML-RPC and accomplish an amazing amount of integration. This is why EDI worked well in the transportation and distribution industry. This is one of the reasons OSI failed (standard costs were expensive).

      The challenge with a Microsoft-centric solution is that it adheres to standards poorly if at all. And of course, like Cabletron (remember them, the networking company that eschewed standards for a proprietary management system) this will only be cost-effective in a single vendor solution.

      Training costs for Microsoft are every bit as high as training costs for open source products. Many organizations don't train their users on Microsoft products, which is what Microsoft then uses as a training cost baseline.

      If you have ever had to work with a reasonably complex Word document that someone else has created, you know what disaster this lack of training can be. Often it is easier to create a properly (?) structured Word document and paste in the contents rather than attempting to fix the original work.

      In short, capital costs are lower, maintenance costs and schedules are business-driven instead of vendor-driven, services are better (would be difficult to be worse), integration is better, and training is a wash.

      Another clear advantage with open source is that you can train your IS staff on principles and concepts instead of vendor-specifics. This means that when the next IT revolution hits, your staff will be in a position to take advantage of it.

      It also means that your IS staff and business are insulated from capricious vendor changes that REQUIRE specialized and expensive training.

    3. Re:Ya know what Microsoft? by tekiegreg · · Score: 1

      Well, I never said that cost is NOT a factor. In my parent post I never so much as said that Linux is cheaper than Microsoft or vice versa. Granted that there are studies that go both ways. With all the information (and probably dis-information) that I have gleaned, I dare not make a claim that one OS is cheaper than the other at this time.

      However price alone should not be a decision in going open source. Rather weigh it with all the other factors and make a well-reasoned decision. For many who have gone open source, I'm sure price alone wasn't the only factor...

      --
      ...in bed
    4. Re:Ya know what Microsoft? by GypC · · Score: 3, Insightful
      Hey, I like that mutt analogy. Nice one.

      My experience has always been that MS servers are a huge pain in the butt and expensive to keep licensed and running.

      Linux and BSD servers much less so; they're not quite as stable and exploit-free as Novell servers or mainframes, but much better than Windows and much more flexible than any of them.

    5. Re:Ya know what Microsoft? by jeblucas · · Score: 1
      Give me a mutt anyday
      You can get mutt in any number of ways.
      --
      blarg.
    6. Re:Ya know what Microsoft? by mrchaotica · · Score: 1

      Actually, Linux is more like a bitch - Windows can't compile puppies, but Linux (unless she's had her GCC spayed) can.

      (sorry for butchering the analogy)

      --

      "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

    7. Re:Ya know what Microsoft? by kraut · · Score: 1

      Well, aren't there maintenance, services, integration and training costs for non-open-source software as well?

      --
      no taxation without representation!
    8. Re:Ya know what Microsoft? by Tony-A · · Score: 1

      One thing that I haven't seen in any of the TCO studies.
      You can load up a lot of services on one Linux box and expect to survive rather well. If you load up a lot of services on Microsoft Windows they tend to mess with each other. Incremental upgrading has to be a nightmare.

    9. Re:Ya know what Microsoft? by PeteQC · · Score: 1

      Open Source Software for Governments is a question that is higher than cost.

      The fact is that Open Source Software use STANDARDS that are PUBLISHED. Not closed-try-to-guess standards a la Microsoft.

      From this point, if your government use Microsoft software to store his data, it's putting your data in risk? Why? Because you don't know HOW they are saved.

      Not a bad deal for a single user, but a read danger for a government. What is the electoral list (or the income tax files) got a problem that is hard to recover? You'd be shaking because you don't know the format of that damn file. How could you wish to recover your file and be SURE that the data are still RIGHT?

      Yeah, there is backups, but count on that 1-on-a-1000000 chance that the backups got the same problem? Man, we're talking about highly-confidential information here?

      What if the government can't recover his nuclear arm inventory?

      --
      Montreal - Best city to live in!
    10. Re:Ya know what Microsoft? by ignavus · · Score: 1

      Microsoft is to software what various fastfood franchises are to nutrition. Convenient and flashy interface, but causes all sorts of health problems ...

      --
      I am anarch of all I survey.
    11. Re:Ya know what Microsoft? by Alexis+de+Torquemada · · Score: 1

      Plus, fast food can be quite expensive. Take McDonald's, for example, at least that's my experience from Germany. They don't charge much for each cheeseburger (for example), but you get so little in return that you have to eat 4 or 5 of them to be satiated. The bigger burgers are even more expensive per pound. For the same amount of money you can get a hot meal in a real restaurant, which tastes much better than McD and consists of actual food.

      If you happen to be in Germany and looking for a snack, I'd recommend a Turkish Döner Kebap over McD at any time. They're often only 2 Euro a piece, they're delicious, and they are much more satiating than the stuff McD sells.

  5. MS should make the customer the designer by aim2future · · Score: 4, Insightful

    What MS need to assure is that MicroSoft finally will become a company that provides what the customers want. Today MS is among that line of companies pushing the customer to buy and not asking the customer what the customer want (I've heard from insiders how this works). A policy which will never work in the long run.
    In the free software development the customer is also the designer, for the skilled ones, but why could not the customer also be the designer for the less skilled ones?
    The reason that the free software development has been so successful is that the providers are also the customers and can continue develop the products. I'm not sure that MS has understood this simple fact yet.
    MicroSoft should adopt to this idea, and in the long run they can become a very successful supplier of wanted software, designed by the customer for the customer.
    /AIM

    1. Re:MS should make the customer the designer by Tarantolato · · Score: 3, Insightful

      What MS need to assure is that MicroSoft finally will become a company that provides what the customers want. Today MS is among that line of companies pushing the customer to buy and not asking the customer what the customer want (I've heard from insiders how this works).

      The Joel on Software article yesterday pointed out that during MS's big growth leaps in the 80's and early 90's, the number of new PCs sold every year typically exceeded the entire installed base. Now that's no longer the case.

      Because they rely primarily on OEM licenses for revenue, MS has to somehow artificially stimulate hardware upgrades in order to acheive acceptable growth without a major change in business model. (A change to what?, one wonders.)

      The places where you're seeing movement to Open Source desktops are not coincidentally the places that tend to be most resistant to hardware upgrades. In the end, if MS withers, it'll probably be because users won't stomach Dell et al.'s reasonably low prices, rather than MS's own inflated ones.

    2. Re:MS should make the customer the designer by agent+dero · · Score: 2, Insightful

      What MS need to assure is that MicroSoft finally will become a company that provides what the customers want.

      I don't think you grasp the type of monopoly that MS has on most of the market.
      First, they don't _need_ to care about their customers, as long as 85% (or whatever) of the OEM machines from Dell, HP, Gateway, that get sold to regular old consumers, they will have plenty of money.

      A policy which will never work in the long run.

      Most consumers don't understand or want anything customized, that just want 'what they're used to' and for a long time since, and to come, it's beem microsoft

      MicroSoft should adopt to this idea, and in the long run they can become a very successful supplier of wanted software, designed by the customer for the customer.

      They're already insanely rich, they don't need to do crap

      --
      Error 407 - No creative sig found
    3. Re:MS should make the customer the designer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Microsoft has always been about customers, that's why they are the number one sofware company. RedHat doesn't get this, and that's why it is not the number one software company.

      Would you rather go with a company slashdot recommended or Microsoft for your company? Linux is replacing Unix at the moment, once all Unices are replaced, Linux will start to lose market share, because Microsoft offers better value and there are not enough developers for Linux.

    4. Re:MS should make the customer the designer by aim2future · · Score: 1

      Linux is replacing Unix at the moment
      This is my point. I never considered MS myself because it simply didn't provide what I wanted. I'm a unix guy and these my needs Linux certainly provided. When I'm in a MS system I'm just hitting a wall, but as we have seen with e.g KDE and GNOME this will certainly not always be the case. Free software is also more valuable than commercial software because if the software is not successful it won't survive but if you like it you can continue the track anyway. How about those that actually liked the MSW 3.* metaphor what choice do they have today?
      MS policy is about trying to adopt a whole world thinking in the most simplest way, and make money on it. There are, however, geeks out there who don't accept the MS way. These people want their way to survive, that is, they will also hopefully provide SW for those who are not thinking too deep about what they really want.
      Is it really impossible to make aunt Bessie ask what she really wants?

    5. Re:MS should make the customer the designer by aim2future · · Score: 1

      They're already insanely rich, they don't need to do crap
      Error 407 - No creative sig found
      So, you mean that free software and open source is crap? Explain you better! Your reply doesn't make sense for me. MS business model is soon outdated.

    6. Re:MS should make the customer the designer by 16K+Ram+Pack · · Score: 1

      Microsoft have a number of revenue problems coming up... a) PC Install base is maxed out. No new PCs, just replacements. I'm generalising - there are undoubtedly people buying a new PC, just not many. So, virgin OS sales are down. b) Applications are "good enough". Most people don't use anything in Office post-97. In the 90s, those apps improved considerably, and upgrading was worth it. Not now they're not. So, they don't need new machines for the new software, because they aren't buying it.

    7. Re:MS should make the customer the designer by 16K+Ram+Pack · · Score: 1

      But if consumers just want "what they are used to", why would they get a new machine?

    8. Re:MS should make the customer the designer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Judging by your grammar I assume that you're not a native English speaker, so you probably just got tripped up on a figure of speech that the grandparent post used. The phrase "They're already insanely rich, they don't need to do crap" means the same thing as "They're already insanely rich, they don't need to do anything", just with a swear word added in for emphasis.

    9. Re:MS should make the customer the designer by ModMeFlamebait · · Score: 0

      because their old one is too spyware infected and they don't really know any better?

      --
      Pavlov. Does this name ring a bell?
  6. Reuters: You Fail It! by JohnGrahamCumming · · Score: 4, Insightful
    From the article:
    Open-source software -- uncopyrighted software which has no license cost
    Wrong! Free and Open Source Software absolutely relies on a strong notion of copyright because of the need to protect (in this case preserve the freedom to modify) the software itself. Without copyright you have no way to actually license the software to someone else, and hence impose your specific licensing requirements (e.g. GPL).

    That's partly why the term "copyleft" is so dangerous and should be stamped out. It's absolutely vital that people realize that F/OSS is copyrighted and under the control of an individual, or group or a corporation. The strength of F/OSS comes from the underlying copyright and the fact that it enables us to control the code.

    John.

    1. Re:Reuters: You Fail It! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      From a comment over at lwn.net:
      A gross misunderstanding caused by the English translator.

      Same paragraph in the original French article:
      Il précise qu'il a rencontré de nombreux acteurs du secteur et estime que les logiciels libres, de type Linux, OpenOffice, Mozilla, Apache, MySQL, Evolution, constituent aujourd'hui une "solution très crédible", "en particulier en terme de sécurité", portée par des entreprises "solides et innovantes".

      Roughly translated, ``He [Dutreuil] states that he has met many stakeholders of the sector and founds that free software --as Linux, OpenOffice, Mozilla, Apache, MySQL, Evolution-- conforms `a very credible solution' nowadays, `particularly in terms of security', supported by `solid and innovative' companies.''
    2. Re:Reuters: You Fail It! by Fnkmaster · · Score: 1
      "Copyleft" isn't the only potentially confusing term. "Free Software" itself is a potentially confusing term, especially when spoken to journalists in phone interviews and the like, where the distinction between "Free" and "free" isn't clear. Richard Stallman, whatever you may think about him, clearly isn't good at packaging or marketing concepts in a way that will communicate effectively with regular people.


      "Open Source" may not be a perfect term, because it doesn't distinguish between the right to just look at the source, and actually change it (of course, OSI-compliant means much more than just looking at code, just as Free means much more than just free). But it's ludicrous that RMS has been known to attack the Open Source camp with ridicule about how "Shared Source" and the like are just doing exactly what the Open Source people tell them is important.


      It seems that some better, more appealing and more clear terminology is needed. I'm sick of "Free as in beer", "Free as in herpes", "Free as in Freedom", "Free as in libre"... jesus christ, this is confusing for me and I know what I'm talking about. No wonder the journalists get screwed up.

    3. Re:Reuters: You Fail It! by Srin+Tuar · · Score: 1
      Wrong! Free and Open Source Software absolutely relies on a strong notion of copyright because of the need to protect (in this case preserve the freedom to modify) the software itself. Without copyright you have no way to actually license the software to someone else, and hence impose your specific licensing requirements (e.g. GPL).

      OTOH, free and open source software could survive just fine in a would without copyright restrictions or DCMA type laws. Proprietary software could not. So in that sense, copyright is not mandatory for the existence of free software.

    4. Re:Reuters: You Fail It! by JohnGrahamCumming · · Score: 3, Insightful
      OTOH, free and open source software could survive just fine in a would without copyright restrictions or DCMA type laws. Proprietary software could not. So in that sense, copyright is not mandatory for the existence of free software.
      How?

      Without some basis under which I can state that I control the code I write (the current incarnation of which is copyright) then you could just take it, I'd have no legal recourse, and there'd be no way for me to _force_ my code to be open.

      The entire point of copyright is that it grants to the holder of the copyright the right to license the work and it prevents you from taking it without a license. So copyright is the bedrock for F/OSS. I use it to grant you the right to modify my software under certain conditions (namely that it remains "open"). Without copyright you can just walk off with it, start some closed-source company, make modifications and be done with it.

      John.

    5. Re:Reuters: You Fail It! by Srin+Tuar · · Score: 1


      Without copyright you can just walk off with it, start some closed-source company



      As I said above: there would be no incentive to create said closed-source company. Since anyone could legally copy, reverse engineer, and unravel anything you came up with- then distribute it for free on the 'net.

      (companies which go to great lengths to obscure the origin of code can still get away with it with copyright around)

      In reality, the only "control" you have over ideas is whether or not to share them with someone else. And as soon as you do, you lose said control over that idea. Eliminating copyright would only be a concession to reality.

      Copyleft is a great antidote to Copyright. But without the disease, the cure becomes redundant.

    6. Re:Reuters: You Fail It! by firewood · · Score: 1
      The entire point of copyright is that it grants to the holder of the copyright the right to license the work and it prevents you from taking it without a license.

      Copyleft prevents someone from distributing your software without a license. But people can still take it for their own use without complying with the license.

      you could just take it, I'd have no legal recourse, and there'd be no way for me to _force_ my code to be open.

      You can always force your own code open by redistributing it, even if some company has taken it for its own internal use and modified their own version.

    7. Re:Reuters: You Fail It! by firewood · · Score: 1
      Free and Open Source Software absolutely relies on a strong notion of copyright because of the need to protect (in this case preserve the freedom to modify) the software itself.

      However it doesn't protect your software from a national government, since the government can always limit your standing to sue for infringement by changing copyright law or various other legal codes.

    8. Re:Reuters: You Fail It! by Sepper · · Score: 1
      From the article:
      Open-source software -- uncopyrighted software which has no license cost
      Actually, it's the translator at Reuters that mis-translated the article. The actual bit is not present in the french reuter article (which was published about 5-6hours before)

      Another note, The 'original' article doesn't mention "Open Source" anywhere: it's all "Logiciel Libre" which translate to Free Software. (RMS would be proud)...

      Take note that the quote from Microsoft was taken from Another article on Microsoft's reaction to the news. (also from Reuters, but I can't find it on www.reuters.fr)
      --
      I live in Soviet Canuckistan you insensitive clod!
  7. Heh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Funny

    I can see the headline on CNN next month -

    "Richard M. Stallman goes to France. France surrenders."

    Then again, with his BO, he'd probably fit right in...

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

      I wonder if this guy will protest the tired old anti-French jokes... Somehow I doubt it.

    2. Re:Heh by Freon115 · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Slashdog moderation is going way down the hill. +5 for the same old anti-french joke. Nice job. Anyway, RMS came to France last month, he was invited by my school for a open source day or something like that with other famous-ish people.

    3. Re:Heh by kfg · · Score: 1

      Then again, with his BO, he'd probably fit right in...

      Take shower. Soak in a bath for an hour. Scrub yourself with a towel until you glow red.

      Now go to Japan and watch people wrinkle their noses as you walk past them.

      BO is a relative, not an absolute. You stink. Get used to it, it's just that if you stink the same as your neighbors you don't notice it.

      KFG

    4. Re:Heh by endeitzslash · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I wish I had some mod points, because these tired old French jokes need to be modded down. What the hell is wrong with you people?

    5. Re:Heh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If the French ever start bathing regularly, stop eating cheese, stop surrendering at the drop of a hat, and stop thinking they are still a great power then maybe it will be time to stop trotting out these hoary, old chestnuts and come up with some new French jokes.

      I for one don't see that happening any time soon and I for one never expect to welcome our smelly, cheese-eating surrender-monkey overlords.

  8. Not just use - develop with open tools by xtal · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Microsoft development tools can cost some big money, and it costs money to stay on top of things. Countries that invest once in open source tools can use those open tools to develop their own in house software - for example, Le KMissile Destructo Fumer 5000. All of this can run on open platforms, some the KMissile system can have more resources put into the APPLICATION and USE of the tools, instead of getting new hammers and nails all the time.

    Open source gives free tools to everybody. World class, kick ass tools. Do you know how much something as good as FFTW would cost to buy? More than my car! This lets you focus on using those tools to create value in the market - sucks to be in the tool making business, but overall it represents a boon. This is why so many people in the industry have problems; the value is not IN the IT, but what the IT enables you to DO.

    --
    ..don't panic
    1. Re:Not just use - develop with open tools by xanadu-xtroot.com · · Score: 4, Interesting

      If you want higher quality, pay up for visual studio.

      This is an obvious troll, but I'm going to reply anyway. What can you do with VS that you can't do with kdevelop? I've had considerably less problems with kdevelop (even ugly versions of old...) then I ever have with VS. OK, I've said in previous posts and I'll say again, I'm no code guru, but, I've had a MUCH easier time with GNU utils then anything from Redomd...

      --
      I'm not a prophet or a stone-age man,
      I'm just a mortal with potential of a super man.
    2. Re:Not just use - develop with open tools by Tony-A · · Score: 3, Interesting

      This is why so many people in the industry have problems; the value is not IN the IT, but what the IT enables you to DO.

      After 30-40 years seems like maybe, just maybe, some people are finally catching on. You measure cost inside IT. You measure value outside of IT.

      Open source gives free tools to everybody. World class, kick ass tools.
      This is slightly contrived, but the same principles apply to Open Source software. The French language is free. Anyone is free to use it. Now if the French were unwilling to make any expenditures the language would stay free but become whatever time and the Germans or whatever happen to make of it.
      To oversimplify, the software is free but an opinion (that matters) is not.
      Just try to have an opinion of what OpenBSD should be/do.
      Compare a whim of Linus versus IBM's agenda regarding Linux.
      Don't let the apparent low cost fool you. It can be had for cheap, but it is really exorbitantly expensive software that is affordable. For a ridiculously large range of definitions of affordable.

  9. We shall call it... by NanoGator · · Score: 3, Funny

    ... freedom source!

    --
    "Derp de derp."
    1. Re:We shall call it... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Someone tell me why this is flamebait? It's on topic, although it is redundant (someone said it already, got modded funny).

      To the moderator who modded this: Have fun at metamod.

    2. Re:We shall call it... by NanoGator · · Score: 1

      "Someone tell me why this is flamebait?"

      Eh... well you have to consider that I referred to a moment in American history that is a bit touchy. I really kind of wish I hadn't posted it. I don't think I took it as seriously as a lot of people did. That was a bit inconsiderate of me.

      --
      "Derp de derp."
    3. Re:We shall call it... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      pffft. fuck the americans and their freedom fries. political satire has always had its place.

    4. Re:We shall call it... by Tony-A · · Score: 1

      French fries --> Freedom fries.
      French --> Freedom.

      From the "Land of the Free".

      So the French intend to take their rightful place as one of the world's leaders?
      Why not? The USA is still at that awkward adolescent stage as a world leader.

  10. Open as in source. by frodo+from+middle+ea · · Score: 3, Insightful
    Yes, Somehow that statement does sound wierd.

    All those products they mentioned are not cedible because they don't have license costs (which btw some of them have) or are not copyrighted (which they most definitely are), but because of the extensive testing and through code checking these products receive by the very fact that they are open source.

    I guess it's time we stop giving the anology of open as in beer or open as in speech. We should start using "open as in source". which I think most aptly describe these products than the beer (mmm beer..ok ok back to issue) or speech.

    --
    for the last time people, I am "frodo from middle eaRTH", not "middle eaST".
    1. Re:Open as in source. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I guess it's time we stop giving the anology of open as in beer or open as in speech. We should start using "open as in source". which I think most aptly describe these products than the beer (mmm beer..ok ok back to issue) or speech.
      Never was. It's *free* as in beer/speech, and it's always been open source.

    2. Re:Open as in source. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's "free as in beer" and "free as in liberty" because of shortcomings in the english language. In many other languages they have two different words for free, so the analogies are not needed.

    3. Re:Open as in source. by GypC · · Score: 3, Funny
      Really? I always thought it "open as in beer" like, you open a beer, right? Just like you open up your source code... they both go "FSSSHHH" and have that wonderful yeasty aroma.

      MMMMM. Nothing like a tall, cold glass of source code after mowing the lawn on a hot day.

  11. Ouvrez la source? - Mon Dieu! by pauly_thumbs · · Score: 3, Funny


    Je jette le gant - Prepare to taste cold steel Monsieur Gates!

  12. France Surrenders! by FortKnox · · Score: 2, Funny

    I woulda titled this article "France Surrenders to Open Source Software!"

    But that's just me.

    --
    Good quote, too many chars. Seriously, the slashdot 120 char limit sucks!
    1. Re:France Surrenders! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      By your logic, the US wouldn't use Open Source software until everyone else had been using it for some time, and would then say that without their using of it (OSS), the entire world would be running MS.
      If you weren't there in the late 30s/early-to-mid 40s, it might be an idea to keep your trap shut, eh?

    2. Re:France Surrenders! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nah, it should be Microsoft Surrenders!

  13. Can anyone quote accurate statistics... by Dagny+Taggert · · Score: 3, Interesting

    ...concerning MS in Europe? I'm just interested to see how deeply entrenched they are there financially. It may be just the stuff I'm reading, but open source seems to have a stronger foothold there than in the States.

    --
    Don't be a looter...and yes, I know that it's spelled with an "A" instead of an "E".
    1. Re:Can anyone quote accurate statistics... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Dunno, but I would guess we have a lot more open-source stuff, what with not being so fat and stupid, and falling into M$s gluttonous money swallowing trap.

    2. Re:Can anyone quote accurate statistics... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ...or having that problem with being socialist pigs who get dominated by Germany twice a century. You must be French.

    3. Re:Can anyone quote accurate statistics... by Tarantolato · · Score: 1

      ...concerning MS in Europe? I'm just interested to see how deeply entrenched they are there financially. It may be just the stuff I'm reading, but open source seems to have a stronger foothold there than in the States.

      As usual it's difficult to get statistics on client software, but web-servers are easy. securityspace.com keeps statistics on web server breakdown by top-level domain. Of course TLD isn't a great indicator of where a box is actually located, but to my knowledge it's the best we've got to go on.

      Breakdown across all domains is around 70% Apache, 20% IIS, 10% other. (This is broken down by number of domains served, not number of servers running). It's about the same for .com, Apache does a bit better on .net, IIS does a lot better on .edu and .gov.

      .fr (France) has a slightly higher than average score for IIS (~28%). In fact, based on my admittedly incomplete survey of the statistics, IIS seems to run about even with or ahead of Apache in most Western European TLDs. IIS seems to clean up in Latin America, the Middle East, China, and Southeast Asia. Apache seems to have near-total dominance in South Korea, Japan, Germany, and practically the entire former Communist East Bloc.

      Again, disclaimer: TLDs aren't a very good measure, and I haven't studied the results exhaustively. But based on what I've seen of it so far, I'd say that:

      1. The idea that Europe and the Third World are the natural hotbed for Open Source looks less certain. Right now they're pretty happy with pirated MS products, and are likely to stay so for a while.

      2. In general, the higher a country's historical commitment to technical education, the higher its uptake of Open Source. Which suggests to me that MS is indeed doing something very right with ease-of-use (surprise to OSS zealots, perhaps), while at the same time OSS is doing something very right with technical solidity (surprise to not really anyone).

    4. Re:Can anyone quote accurate statistics... by iwadasn · · Score: 1

      It has a stronger foothold everywhere the GDP is lower. The more expensive M$ licenses are compared to the cost of a worker, the more enticing opensource is.

    5. Re:Can anyone quote accurate statistics... by Hatta · · Score: 3, Informative
      ...concerning MS in Europe?

      Sure, there are about 350,000 adult europeans afflicted with MS. By country it varies from between 5 and 150 cases per 100,000. Cultural and ethnic factors probably play a large role in this.
      In Europe, MS is common in southern Scandinavian but not the north, in the Orkney and Shetland Islands but not the Faroes or Iceland, in Sardinia but not in Greece or Spain, and in Sicily but not in neighboring Malta.


      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    6. Re:Can anyone quote accurate statistics... by Tarantolato · · Score: 1

      It has a stronger foothold everywhere the GDP is lower. The more expensive M$ licenses are compared to the cost of a worker, the more enticing opensource is.

      I don't believe this is true at all. For one thing, anti-piracy efforts tend not to go as far in lower-GDP countries. Also, Open Source products tend to be more knowledge-intensive to use (even just to know about) and more bandwidth intensive to get. If your country's technical education and network infrastructure have less equipment, it's not going less of an option.

      Remember the Egyptian Linux guy from a few weeks back? He said that to most Egyptians "computer" means "Windows" and "email" means "Hotmail". I'm becoming increasingly doubtful about this "less-rich countries are natural friends of FOSS" line.

      I'd put my biggest bets on middle-tier countries like Japan, Korea, and Germany; who have had widespread broadband adoption earlier than their neighbors and are historically strong at technical training.

    7. Re:Can anyone quote accurate statistics... by value_added · · Score: 1

      Maybe someone else can provide statistics more relevant to the discussion?

    8. Re:Can anyone quote accurate statistics... by Scarblac · · Score: 1

      Generally speaking, MS is more entrenched here than in the US, because in the US there is at least Apple, and here that is something a friend of a friend has heard of. These governments thinking about OSS are nice, but they're just a start.

      That said, I think that at least in the Netherlands, where I am, the percentage of illegal copies of Windows is much larger.

      --
      I believe posters are recognized by their sig. So I made one.
    9. Re:Can anyone quote accurate statistics... by NoMaster · · Score: 1

      Don't despair, Hatta. I got the joke...

      "+5, Informative" indeed...

      --
      What part of "a well regulated militia" do you not understand?
    10. Re:Can anyone quote accurate statistics... by Jeedo · · Score: 1

      I beg to differ, MS is (sadly) very widespread in Iceland, the few schools that dont have Microsoft software use, MacOS, but even then they probably use office for mac.

      Nearly every company you would find uses it, the only area where GNU/Linux and BSD services are dominant are routers/servers and ISP stuff in general.

      Hell, the Icelandic Minestry of Education even paid through the nose to have Windows98 translated to Icelandic, and i know they're considering the same with WindowsXP right now. Pretty sad when KDE is avalible in Icelandic already and they could easily set up their own distribution to fit their educational needs.

      Icelandic politicians have no vision in this regard, the head of Microsoft in iceland is even some kind of advisor to the minister of education. hell will freeze over before the Icelandic goverment makes any kind of switch in this regard, i attended an official meeting where they were considering OpenOffice officially and it went very badly ( rumblings about "Industry standards" and such ).

      And i have seen no difference between the spread of Microsoft software in Denmark ( S-Scandinavia ) and Iceland, and i've lived there.

      Hope that set things straight;)

  14. Re:France Would Save More Costs by JohnGrahamCumming · · Score: 5, Informative
    if they scrapped their massive welfare state, their coddling of workers, and protectionism that hurts their citizens overall.

    Switching to Open Source would be the least of the economic problems.

    So how do you explain that France is a member of the G8, one of the largest economies in the world, a major player in aerospace (ever hear of Airbus or Ariane), major player in the oil industry, pharmaceuticals, an independent nuclear power, has a far better life expectancy than the US, lower obesity, a superb health-care system?

    You roll out the old "big government" argument without considering the fact that France is not going the way of the Soviet Union, but is in fact a very healthy economy.

    John.

  15. not asking the customer what the customer want by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Open source by and large does not listen to actual end users.

    This is obvious in the
    low quality documentation, if any,
    configuration process,
    usability
    ongoing support

    Business users are not going to continuously fight the 'geek needed to install and operate' mentality of open source software.

    1. Re:not asking the customer what the customer want by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      the problem is, its good enough for the techies who use it. its not good enough for aunt bessie simply because there arent enough aunt bessies asking for it yet. this is compounded by the techies who think its good enough as it is, along with those who wont help alleviate those problems.

      theres only so much bread and fish, now all we need are a few jesuses..

    2. Re:not asking the customer what the customer want by aim2future · · Score: 1

      Yes, that is correct, there are not enough aunt Bessies around asking for this yet!, lets assume that we can make aunt Bessie to ask for something more, to start her thinking... "what do I really wan't this so called computer to do for me?, and... then tell some "jesus"!
      theres only so much bread and fish, now all we need are a few jesuses..
      What limits You to become a "Jesus"?
      I intend to become one of those jesuses myself, with my business (based upon open source and open ideas)
      /AIM

    3. Re:not asking the customer what the customer want by idiot900 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Open source by and large does not listen to actual end users.

      This is obvious in the
      low quality documentation, if any,


      The major OSS projects have third-party published books out.

      configuration process,

      Which is why a business would use a distribution instead of rolling their own.

      usability

      The big-name OSS projects meant for the end-user (i.e. KDE/GNOME/Mozilla-spawn) are very usable - they are just a bit different than the closed source competitors. I'd venture to guess somebody who hasn't seen any desktop before would learn an OSS desktop just as easily as a Windows one. Switching over to OSS couldn't be any worse than switching from Windows 3.1 to 95.

      ongoing support

      Businesses would buy a support contract.

      Business users are not going to continuously fight the 'geek needed to install and operate' mentality of open source software.

      Ditto with the support contract. (And since when has running a non-OSS shop been a walk in the park? You need competent IT staff, period.)

    4. Re:not asking the customer what the customer want by codemachine · · Score: 1

      You can't really avoid the "geek needed to install" in a corporate environment. If you want to run even a half-assed environment, you need either some internal IT staff or some outside contractors. Businesses that try to be too cheap in this regard tend to have crappy IT infrastructures, and probably don't realize the money they're losing due to poor efficiency and lowered capabilities.

      A coroprate Windows environment needs the geeks as much (actually more according to most studies) as a UNIX or open source environment. You just don't have your 15-year old nephew installing pirated Windows on to all your business machines.

      You're line of thinking is more appropriate in the home desktop scenario, although even then most people aren't capable of installing or supporting Windows by themselves. When they have problems, they either happen to have family or friends that can help them out, or they take their PCs in to a computer store where they charge a good amount of money to do the magic the home user cannot. Often the store is just running adware and virus removal software, and maybe doing a re-install of Windows if necessary.

  16. Isn't it obvious? by Three+Headed+Man · · Score: 5, Insightful

    All these countries are considering open source not so much because they may use it, but because they know they'll get some leverage against Microsoft. As soon as Linux was offered in Thailand, Windows cut prices on XP and office to $35. The best way to drive someone's price down is make them think they have to compete against a serious threat.

    --
    I'm probably at the karma cap. Mod up a funny troll instead, it lightens the mood :)
    1. Re:Isn't it obvious? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As soon as Linux was offered in Thailand, Windows cut prices on XP and office to $35.

      Ehm... Linux has been available in thailand since Linux was created. A long time ago, in a country far far away...

      They cut the cost because of piracy. At that price people might actually buy the original instead of a copy for 50 cent from the guy on the corner...

    2. Re:Isn't it obvious? by kfg · · Score: 1

      The best way to drive someone's price down is make them think they have to compete against a serious threat.

      In other words, winners all around, right?

      KFG

    3. Re:Isn't it obvious? by smootc-m · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Price competition is but one factor in the European interest in OSS. The other is nationalism - they do not want to be beholden to a foreign company for their critical software needs.

    4. Re:Isn't it obvious? by McDutchie · · Score: 1
      The other is nationalism - they do not want to be beholden to a foreign company for their critical software needs.

      That isn't nationalism -- that is plain common sense.

  17. Go Mandrakesoft! by Air-conditioned+cowh · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I, for one, am happy to see this happen because,

    1) If France & Germany's governments become more patriotic & supportive toward Mandrake & SuSE respectively then perhaps they will be less inclined to pass silly laws to make open source difficult such as broad software patents etc. And, if it's already too late then maybe they will push the EU to dilute the silly laws over time so they don't affect open source.

    2) If Mandrake are taken seriously by more businesses then they will have to increase their end of life from 2 years to at least 5 years or even 10 years (to compete with MS) for their enterprise releases. The short EOL is the one reason I can't use Mandrake on a mail server I am setting up, otherwise it would have been perfect.

    3) We don't have a really major distro here in the UK so I can feel patriotic about France in the meantime.

    1. Re:Go Mandrakesoft! by ErichTheWebGuy · · Score: 4, Funny

      You can NEVER say, on slashdot, "I, for one" without welcoming some type of new overlord.

      For example:

      I, for one, welcome our new open-source overlords.
      I, for one, welcome our new penguin overlords.

      There. Now you know, hopefully you won't make the same mistake again :)

      More info here

      --
      bash: rtfm: command not found
  18. Doesn't make sense. by Rhys · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Why are all these governments endorsing and planning to use OSS on one hand, and then passing retarded laws that could cause serious problems for OSS on the other? Hello Mr. Foot this is Mr. Hand and his gun to shoot you.

    --
    Slashdot Patriotism: We Support our Dupes!
    1. Re:Doesn't make sense. by gosand · · Score: 1
      Why are all these governments endorsing and planning to use OSS on one hand, and then passing retarded laws that could cause serious problems for OSS on the other? Hello Mr. Foot this is Mr. Hand and his gun to shoot you.

      As opposed to the completely fucked up US system. Jebus, give them some credit! At least they are making some kind of progress.

      --

      My beliefs do not require that you agree with them.

    2. Re:Doesn't make sense. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well...

      1) Many pro software-patent-proposition MEPs are in fact anti softwarepatents. They just dont understand the importance of defining some words. Read more here: http://www.ffii.se/dokument/spelet_politik_eng.htm l

      2) The EU parliament voted against software patents last time, they will vote on the new proposition later this year. I guess it will be a "no" again.

      3) After this years election the non-governing parties in europe won. Many voters see the EU parliament voting as a way to make a "non important protest vote" against the ruling party. Therefore even if the government in country X is pro OSS, the same countrys MEPs might be against OSS.

  19. Why? by Luscious868 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Why is it considered news when some entity considers Linux? It's not news. It would be news if the decided to go with Linux, not if there considering it. Are they considering Microsoft as well? Yes. Then why isn't the story titled "France Considers Open Souce and Microsoft"?

    Right now, I'm considering taking a shit, but it wouldn't be an actual event unless I took a shit.

    I'm sure this will be marked as a troll or flamebait, but it's a valid point. I'm tired of reading articles about what some country or some city is considering. I don't care and I'm pretty sure that most people who read this site don't care either. Now when said country or city actually makes a fucking decision then that would be news and by all mean report it.

    1. Re:Why? by goldspider · · Score: 1
      And to take your (good) point a step further, would Slashdot report it if France ultimately decided to go with Microsoft?

      I know that I'd want to know what happens in a head-to-head involving Mandrake vs. Microsoft, but somehow I don't think anything but a win for Mandrake will make the headlines.

      --
      "Ask not what your country can do for you." --John F. Kennedy
    2. Re:Why? by Prien715 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Newsflash: This is an open-source advocacy site. Perhaps you don't remember years ago when Linux was considered a hackers-only OS. While it's not mainstream, the mere fact that it is seriously considered by a member of the G8 as a serious contender is news, as it shows further heading toward that direction.

      --
      -- Political fascism requires a Fuhrer.
    3. Re:Why? by Fidelis · · Score: 1

      A dog bites man is not a news, a man bites dog is. Considering dominance of MS in goverments and corporations, any considersations of going to other than MS is news.

      By the same token, any large bank or insurance company staying with DB2 or Oracle is not a news, announcing that they are considering MySQL is.

      My $.02. No doubt anti US sentiment is a factor in this announcement.

    4. Re:Why? by brysnot · · Score: 1

      Don't keep us all in suspense!
      Did you or did you not take a shit?
      And please say you washed your hands afterwards.

    5. Re:Why? by MalikChen · · Score: 1

      Why is it considered news when some entity considers Linux? It's not news. It would be news if the decided to go with Linux, not if there considering it. First off, everything is news. You considering taking a shit is news, just not important news. It would not be important news if they were changing from IIS to Apache, or switching chips in their servers. But, they are considering revamping their entire computer system to open source. Just considering it is a great step for OSS.

    6. Re:Why? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I thought /. was a news site for nerds? If I am not an advocate of OSS, does that mean I can't read and post?

      You sound like an OSS NAZI

    7. Re:Why? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Funny, i would have said an MS-NAZI
      Only MS Fanboys think that Slashdot is an OSS advocacy site, that makes them feel elitist praising Microsoft

    8. Re:Why? by Alexis+de+Torquemada · · Score: 1
      Right now, I'm considering taking a shit, but it wouldn't be an actual event unless I took a shit.

      <flamebait>If they were taking a shit, they would be taking Microsoft.</flamebait>

  20. Translation issue by loolgeek · · Score: 4, Insightful

    SeanTobin wrote:
    -----------------
    "This will also help us sell our solutions to other governments," he said, adding that he believed the German, Israeli and Malasian governments also envisaged shifting to open-source software.

    BINGO! We have a winner! Evil country A develops software for a fraction of the cost it would normally take in the closed-source land, sells it to Good Countries B through T and V through Z, and makes more money than they would have been able to otherwise.
    --------------------

    I think it is bad translation. "To sell" ("vendre" in french) could also mean "to convience" or "to promote", it does not mean necessary that money is involved.

    1. Re:Translation issue by kupci · · Score: 1
      BINGO! We have a winner! Evil country A develops software for a fraction of the cost it would normally take in the closed-source land, sells it to Good Countries B through T and V through Z, and makes more money than they would have been able to otherwise.

      I think it is bad translation. "To sell" ("vendre" in french) could also mean "to convience" or "to promote", it does not mean necessary that money is involved.

      I'd tend to agree, especially from working with State governments here in the U.S., where software written for one state, can actually be used for free by other states, although obviously the installation, training etc is not free, and there may be other restrictions. So I'd imagine federal governments would work in a similar way.

  21. Well, maybe France got one right by Gr8Apes · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I've not been a France fanboy for quite some time, but I'll have to grudgingly give them their due here, they're making a step in the right direction by not giving MS automatic license fees.

    With a few more current government clients joining this wave, MS might actually become a company again instead of the software dictator it is now. It will have to compete for business. This could only help software. (I still laugh at Sun and MS's statement that software will be what people pay for, and hardware will be free. Duh. Hardware is what you can hold in your hand and has real costs. Software will be free, the service/maintenance of that software is where the money is)

    --
    The cesspool just got a check and balance.
    1. Re:Well, maybe France got one right by 16K+Ram+Pack · · Score: 1

      Do Microsoft have much of a "consultancy" arm? IBMs is huge, as are those of some other ex-Mainframe companies.

    2. Re:Well, maybe France got one right by Gr8Apes · · Score: 1

      Yes, Microsoft has a consultancy arm, has since at least 96, they're called, originally enough, Microsoft Consultant Services.

      --
      The cesspool just got a check and balance.
  22. Keyword: "Considering" by nysus · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The article fails to mention that France would also "consider" Microsoft if the company counteroffered with a 75% discount. I think this is merely a bargaining ploy on the part of the French government. It's a smart thing to do, though, and anything that sucks cash out of Microsoft's warchest has to be a good thing.

    --

    ---Technology will liberate us if it doesn't enslave us first.

    1. Re:Keyword: "Considering" by B2382F29 · · Score: 1

      and anything that sucks cash out of Microsoft's warchest has to be a good thing.

      Microsoft sells licenses. They would still have a profit if all they got from the whole french government was 1 single Euro.

      --
      Move Sig. For great justice.
    2. Re:Keyword: "Considering" by Alexis+de+Torquemada · · Score: 1
      It's not that simple. Sure, Microsoft could be offering a 75% discount or even give their software away for free, but then:
      1. They would be asking for an anti-trust investigation. After all, if they can still make a profit giving 75%-100% discounts, how do they justify their regular prices towards less powerful customers than France?
      2. In no time, everyone would be pressing them for massive discounts, taking France as an example that Linux is competitive and forces Microsoft to lower their prices.

      This would be stupid and an enormous risk. They will rather repeat their usual canon that while the Linux licensing costs are much lower, the TCO is much higher, and that France, in their eyes is not motivated by cost savings, which only Microsoft could offer them (TCO, productivity increase, compatibility with future highly innovative Microsoft technologies (tm), yadda, yadda, yadda). Instead, France is just doing this for political reasons because they hate freedom, capitalism and of course the USA, those evil frog leg eaters! First they say no to the Iraq war, then Chirac refuses the invitation to Reagan's funeral, and now they're going open source...

  23. Mod parent up by kilimangaro · · Score: 0, Troll

    This is a joke... not a troll

    --
    "Insanity in individuals is something rare, but in groups, parties, nations, and epochs it is the rule." - Nietzsche
  24. Open Source by pete-classic · · Score: 3, Insightful

    If the article is about Open Source, why does it have a GNU on it? Why not use the OSI logo?

    Or, if the article is about GNU, why not say Free Software?

    Unless, of course, there is some advantage to creating confusion between the two that I am simply unaware of.

    -Peter

  25. France already uses open source by danfairs · · Score: 4, Informative

    For any of those out there who were at Europython in Sweden a couple of weeks ago can testify, Nuxeo have a large presence in the French public sector. Nuxeo's product, CPS, fulfils a similar role to Plone as a CMS. Like Plone, it's based on Zope.

    In fact, I hear that it's got to the point where if you're planning a CMS project in Public-Sector-France-Land and you *don't* have a Zope-based product on your shortlist, questions are asked why... Corroborations, anyone?

    1. Re:France already uses open source by jalet · · Score: 1

      > Corroborations, anyone?

      Well, not a complete corroboration, but Zope and its add-on products are really big in France, especially at the top of public sector. Not so big in Universities though AFAICT.

      --
      Votez ecolo : Chiez dans l'urne !
  26. has anyone else noticed... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    that the icon for this story looks like the french?

  27. This is stupid.... by rwrife · · Score: 1, Insightful

    I think it really shows how stupid some governments and corporate managers are when they actually have to form committee to decide whether or not to use open source. Instead of trying to decide whether to use open source why not try to figure out what problems you have, if and how a computing solution can solve those problems, what software is available to solve the problems, and then finally, and only if there are multiple solutions, decide which one offers the most benefit for the TCO. What'll end up happening is that France (and others) will move to an open source only solution and they'll end up spending more money trying to integrate an OSS solution than if those cheap asses just would have bought the commercial equivalent (eg Microsoft Office).

    1. Re:This is stupid.... by loolgeek · · Score: 2, Informative

      I think it really shows how stupid some governments and corporate managers are when they actually have to form committee to decide whether or not to use open source. Instead of trying to decide whether to use open source why not try to figure out what problems you have, if and how a computing solution can solve those problems, what software is available to solve the problems, and then finally, and only if there are multiple solutions, decide which one offers the most benefit for the TCO. What'll end up happening is that France (and others) will move to an open source only solution and they'll end up spending more money trying to integrate an OSS solution than if those cheap asses just would have bought the commercial equivalent (eg Microsoft Office).


      I agree with you OSS solution are not the silver bullet.

      But, they did not say they will move to an open source only solution (or even partial solution). They just said they will now consider open source.
      Microsoft solutions will still be considered.

      The real stupid thing was to only consider close source (mainly Microsoft) before...
    2. Re:This is stupid.... by rwrife · · Score: 1

      I agree with what you said, but my point is that why should they even be discussing open source or closed source vs discussing what is going to meet their needs. It's almost like it shouldn't even come up in the conversation on whether or not it's open source (well maybe) when they're trying to decide what they need.....if they select a product that just happens to be open source, then that's a plus for them....but if the solution they need is not open source, then oh well.

    3. Re:This is stupid.... by ultranova · · Score: 1

      Except that open source has inherent benefits to governments.

      With open source, you see excatly what you get - you can download the source, check it for backdoors, build and install it. With Microsoft products, you can not do this.

      Yes, I know that Microsoft might nowadays allow you to see parts of the source - but can you guarantee that what they show you is the actual source to the product they gave you ? Or, in other words, can you compile that Microsoft-provided source yourself and only use these compiled self-versions, as opposed to prepackaged Windows, which could have all manners of backdoors built in ?

      And are you guaranteed to get the source for each service pack and other bugfix in a timely manner ? For that matter, is it guaranteed that every security bug will be fixed ?

      With open source, even if the original project ignores the bug for some reason, you can always hire a programmer to fix it for you. With closed-source products, this is impossible.

      Furthermore, hiring local people for support and maintenance will keep the money in the local economy, benefitting local populace, and ultimately the government will regain it through the taxes. Paying Microsoft will send the money overseas.

      And finally, of course, there is the little issue of depending on foreign company and thus a foreign country versus using your local companies...

      So yes, governments should depend on open source whenever possible, and start new projects when no good open source tool can be found. It is a matter of national security, as well as economically sensible. Never should a government use a closed-source tool, except in the direst of emergencies - and even then not on data storage. I, for one, don't want my governments computers to become US governments remote-controlled spy network...

      --

      Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

  28. Re: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I can't help thinking that the motive really is anti-americanism. I don't believe for a moment that he will manage to cut costs in half. Even if the total figure looks big it is almost certainly small per seat, and the training required to change will probably absorb any savings at least in the first few years. I'm afraid the Microsft guy is right.

  29. EU VS US Trade War by CHaN_316 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I'm thinking the decision to move to OSS by France could be a geopolitical strategic move as well. A trade war between the US and the EU is almost certain to come, and it'd be in Europe's best interest to NOT be locked into software vendors from America. We are already seeing signs of the trade war, be it farm subsidies, technology standards (CDMA VS G3) (Galileo VS GPS), and genetically modified foods. In addition, we all know that the American-French relationship has seen better days.

    Just because Chirac complimented Bush about American hamburgers (3rd paragraph) at the G8 summit doesn't mean all is well between the two.

    --
    "There is no spoon." - The Matrix
    1. Re:EU VS US Trade War by danharan · · Score: 1

      Chirac is one shrewd asshole... er politician.

      Anyhow, you're absolutely right to point out the geopolitical implications. You could have also mentionned Chirac's attempts at getting more military might, getting the ability to produce weapons in the EU, space exploration... Basically, France's right-wing uses a "Realist" analysis, and this thing has been going on for a while. While the Truman doctrine defined the US's ability to intervene in the Middle-East, around the same time the French had decided they were going nuclear to be independent of oil, and remain a big power.

      In fact, trade war or no trade war, no country that seeks power can allow another to be its sole supplier for a strategic resource- economic, military, etc... All the more so if the other country has imperial ambitions (it takes one to know one).

      Old rivalries die hard... in the mean time, we little ones in "civil-society" ought to make the most of these conflicts.

      --
      Information: "I want to be anthropomorphized"
    2. Re:EU VS US Trade War by praksys · · Score: 1

      A trade war between the US and the EU is almost certain *not* to come. Both sides have far too much to lose from a trade war. What's more their global trade interests are almost identical. Both have extensive farm subsidies and want to keep them, both are major intellectual property producers and favour strong IP laws, both depend heavily on imported oil.

      A trade war is about as likely as the US invading France again. Fun to joke about yes, but still obviously just a joke.

  30. hey dick by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    rated funny? only on the bigotted slashdot.com

    and go fuck yourself, nazi douchebag

  31. this will be seen as an afront to capitalism by xutopia · · Score: 4, Interesting
    No, the French aren't doing this to piss of the USA. They're doing it for the same reason many people use Open Source :
    1. licence cost
    2. mandatory and costly MS upgrade cycles
    3. proprietary lock in
    4. piss off Bill Gates
    1. Re:this will be seen as an afront to capitalism by goldspider · · Score: 1
      You are correct on 1, 2, and 3. However I don't really think that pissing off Bill Gates is a real priority here.

      Maybe it is for 5kr1p7 k1dd33z, but I think that France's legislature has better things to do than sticking it to The Man.

      --
      "Ask not what your country can do for you." --John F. Kennedy
    2. Re:this will be seen as an afront to capitalism by SoTuA · · Score: 1
      1. licence cost

      2. mandatory and costly MS upgrade cycles

      3. proprietary lock in

      4.piss off Bill Gates

      You forgot:

      5.- Get a kickass discount from MS.

      And then:

      6a.- Accept discount, tell OSS comunity to go hump or they shall taunt OSS again.

      OR

      6b.- Tell MS to piss off and get extra-strength number 4 (

    3. Re:this will be seen as an afront to capitalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      1. License cost is quite low, even Mandrake is more expensive
      2. You are a liar. Upgrades are not mandatory. You clearly lie about that. The upgrade cycles are smaller than Linux upgrade cycles which is higher in quantity.
      3. Open source lock in is worse, since you have to deal with many number of individuals. XFree86 problem? France can not deal with such stupid issues.
      4. "Pissing off Bill Gates" This is only something an idiot like you will consider. Governments are not losers like you, they have a real business.
    4. Re:this will be seen as an afront to capitalism by jalet · · Score: 0, Troll

      G.W. Bush, is that you ?

      --
      Votez ecolo : Chiez dans l'urne !
    5. Re:this will be seen as an afront to capitalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Of course they do. They even dub American films. And a computer is called "ordinateur" in french.
      They hate Americans. They hate the English.
      They think "french" is the most sophisticated language in the world.
      You have some exceptions : their food is excellent, les femmes and the french soccer team (they are all black now- not a sign of a white player).
      I know what i'm talking about. I live near the french border. I don't hate the french. My sister-in-law is french and she is gorgeous...But they do hate Americans, that's for sure...Hahahhahahha

    6. Re:this will be seen as an afront to capitalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They even dub American films.

      Well, they probably dub all the other non French films also...

      And a computer is called "ordinateur" in french.

      And your point being exactly what?

      They hate Americans. They hate the English.

      It isn't just the French who don't like Americans. Nobody likes Americans! English got nothing to do with this since Americans don't speak it.

      You have some exceptions : their food is excellent, les femmes and the french soccer team (they are all black now- not a sign of a white player).

      Ha! Their food isn't that good! I prefer Italian food. Les femmes, yes. Ok, you called football soccer, which means you don't know nothing about it.

      I know what i'm talking about. I live near the french border. I don't hate the french.

      Good for you!

      But they do hate Americans, that's for sure

      As I said, it isn't just the French who don't like Americans. Nobody likes Americans!

    7. Re:this will be seen as an afront to capitalism by killjoe · · Score: 1

      Many large corporations have a person or a group of people whose sole job is to count licenses. There is tremendous cost involved in simply trying to stay legal with proprietary software.

      --
      evil is as evil does
    8. Re:this will be seen as an afront to capitalism by Alexis+de+Torquemada · · Score: 1
      Of course they do. They even dub American films.

      And Americans don't dub non-English films? Or watch them all with subtitles? Or not at all? What a stupid argument for "hate" when they just want to make the films understandable to their own viewers, which are, as you may be surprised, not native English speakers. Almost all non-German films and TV series are dubbed in Germany as well. So fscking what?

      And a computer is called "ordinateur" in french.

      So fscking what? Given that the computer was invented by a German, should I be upset that it has an English name in most countries?

      They hate Americans. They hate the English.

      Hardly any more than you hate the French. D'oh. What they really hate is Bush and Blair. And for good reasons.

      They think "french" is the most sophisticated language in the world.

      Ok. Imagine someone did a quick survey among US-Americans what the most sophisticated language in the world was. How many % do you think that the answer "English" would get?

      You have some exceptions : their food is excellent, les femmes and the french soccer team (they are all black now- not a sign of a white player).

      They are all black? WTF is this then? Sure, they have more blacks in their team than any other European nation I'm aware of. But no whites? Get a clue.

    9. Re:this will be seen as an afront to capitalism by Alexis+de+Torquemada · · Score: 1
      1. License cost is quite low, even Mandrake is more expensive

      Err, does that mean that you can download Microsoft Windows for free and actually get money in return?

      2. You are a liar. Upgrades are not mandatory. You clearly lie about that. The upgrade cycles are smaller than Linux upgrade cycles which is higher in quantity.

      You do not get support for Windows NT 4 or even security patches anymore. For some new hardware devices, there are no NT drivers either. You're not forced to upgrade, but it's a necessity. It would actually be ok if they didn't charge that much money for it.

      3. Open source lock in is worse, since you have to deal with many number of individuals. XFree86 problem? France can not deal with such stupid issues.

      Guess what? Last week I fixed a bug in Gentoo Portage without ever having looked at the source before. Isolating the problem and fixing it too me less than an hour. Before that, I fixed a number of trivial bugs in other OSS. It's not really difficult, any capable developer can make use of the source code, although naturally it's easier for those experienced with the project. And you did notice that XFree86 has actually been forked because of a licensing dispute? OSS allows you to do that. Try it with MS Windows.

      4. "Pissing off Bill Gates" This is only something an idiot like you will consider. Governments are not losers like you, they have a real business.

      Glasshouse. Stones.

  32. They're going open-source for the wrong reasons by l33t-gu3lph1t3 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Open-source software like Linux, BSD, etc is currently great for developers and for systems administrators - it's easy to automate a lot of the backend open-source programs. However, when you do a cost-benefits analyis of open-source software as a whole, you have to take into account user training and support costs.

    While widescale windows site licenses may be expensive, the productivity lost in having to retrain all your users in the intimate details of office software surely makes up for the nominal cost-savings of going with "free" software. This is how Microsoft is making its pitch vs open-source solutions, and it's not FUD - it's a damned good argument.

    This isn't an attack on the open-source development process - I actually hold it in high regard. However, converting to open source because it's free on the surface speaks is quite short-sighted.

    --
    ------- "From bored to fanboy in 3.8 asian girls" ----------
    1. Re:They're going open-source for the wrong reasons by Peyna · · Score: 1

      Unless you're replacing something with a $50-100,000 per user license with something open-source and 'free', then it's probably going to end up costing about the same in the long run.

      --
      What?
    2. Re:They're going open-source for the wrong reasons by l33t-gu3lph1t3 · · Score: 1

      yes but every one of those 100,000 users has to learn how to use the new software. And that lost time could definitely be worth more than $50.

      --
      ------- "From bored to fanboy in 3.8 asian girls" ----------
    3. Re:They're going open-source for the wrong reasons by Zapdos · · Score: 1

      Do you believe what you said? Read the studies and please stop saying the world is flat, when it is round.

    4. Re:They're going open-source for the wrong reasons by ultrabot · · Score: 4, Insightful

      However, when you do a cost-benefits analyis of open-source software as a whole, you have to take into account user training and support costs.

      Don't forget the cost of lock in - it can't be measured on short timerange, but having competition on the market is going to buy you, and the rest of the industry, a lot.

      Going for Linux is a no-brainer at least for us europeans. It frees us from an oppressive US monopolist, creates local jobs and generally opens up new business opportunities because, well, Linux doesn't yet have all the software Windows has.

      It's time to be a little bit patriotic, people! Asshats that can't learn the few Linux apps they need with a little bit of tutoring could just be fired (now there's a motivation that gets people moving), you should have the best minds working for you in the first place...

      --
      Save your wrists today - switch to Dvorak
    5. Re:They're going open-source for the wrong reasons by Servo · · Score: 1

      Linux, and *nix in general, has never been a "good" choice for general desktop deployment.

      For those in task-oriented positions that have a high number of users, having an X terminal of some sort attached to centralized computer/application servers makes much more sense though.

      The beauty of the standard desktop PC or Mac is that it is simple enough to use yet powerful enough to do all sorts of unplanned tasks.

      "Right Tool for the Job."

      The problem with both Microsoft and Linux is they seem to want to dominate all aspects of computer usage. It is more obvious in Windows but not limited to them. They took which started out as a GUI to text based general task oriented OS and have tried to scale it in from tiny handhelds to midrange systems. Linux has done the same thing though. It started out as a *nix clone for PC hardware and now runs on everything from embedded systems to mainframes.

      Personally, I see Windows as trying to do too much complicated tasks in a round about simplified manner, making it unstable and confusing in the long run for high end functions.

      --
      A slip of the foot you may soon recover, but a slip of the tongue you may never get over. -Benjamin Franklin
    6. Re:They're going open-source for the wrong reasons by Rupert · · Score: 1

      Apparently you are still using the same versions of Windows and Office as you started with. Life cycle of a Microsoft product, from release to totally unsupported, is typically about 8 years. That means mandatory retraining at least that often.

      --

      --
      E_NOSIG
    7. Re:They're going open-source for the wrong reasons by danharan · · Score: 1

      You're absolutely right. It's not FUD: training for a different platform is expensive.

      In fact, that's exactly why a lot of companies are still using Windows 98. It works, and the cost of switching just isn't worth it.

      However, as security issues add up and we decide we want new features, we're soon going to have the choice between Longhorn and Linux. I'm betting a lot of people, when forced to upgrade, will consider Linux.

      --
      Information: "I want to be anthropomorphized"
    8. Re:They're going open-source for the wrong reasons by Peyna · · Score: 1

      I wasn't say 100,000 user license, I said $50,000-$100,000 per user license.

      --
      What?
    9. Re:They're going open-source for the wrong reasons by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, that's the two-week view of TCO. Consider TCO over a span of 5-10 years.

    10. Re:They're going open-source for the wrong reasons by ultrabot · · Score: 1

      You are a short sighted idiot.

      I have been called stupid by people with less agile minds previously, so I have learned to take it as a compliment.

      The open source itself is a lock in since you rely on some developer in some part of the world that you never see. If that person decides to change the license you have nothing to do about it.

      If the project is of any global importance, it will be forked (just look at xfree86, oops, x.org). If it is only of importance to your company, you can fork the bugger yourself. Or pay someone to maintain the old version. If a closed source company changes the license you have nothing to do about it.

      Linux reduces the number of jobs, since you can't make money off the GPL software directly.

      Eh? Linux-the-kernel being GPL has nothing to do with the license of applications that run on it. I've always wondered how some morons actually believe this particular kind of FUD.

      Migrating to Linux on Desktop will only affect MSFT bottom line adversely (due to reduced Windows / Office revenues). I can't believe anyone here would mourn falling MSFT revenues. You are either astroturfing, or reading the wrong forum.

      Thus only few companies with strong connections can make money.

      That's still better than only one company making money, especially when that company is MSFT.

      Patriotism means making the best decision for your country.

      Indeed it does. Let's not let corrupt officials and lobbyists prevent that.

      --
      Save your wrists today - switch to Dvorak
    11. Re:They're going open-source for the wrong reasons by jalet · · Score: 1

      G.W. Bush, you again !

      --
      Votez ecolo : Chiez dans l'urne !
    12. Re:They're going open-source for the wrong reasons by swv3752 · · Score: 1

      What training? They weren't trained in the use of MS Office. For most Office users, the could use Wordpad equally well if it had spellcheck.

      --
      Just a Tuna in the Sea of Life
    13. Re:They're going open-source for the wrong reasons by jdavidb · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I love your post, and I love that I can do this:

      Going for Linux is a no-brainer at least for us US-ians. It frees us from an oppressive US monopolist, creates local jobs and generally opens up new business opportunities because, well, Linux doesn't yet have all the software Windows has. It's time to be a little bit patriotic, people!

    14. Re:They're going open-source for the wrong reasons by ultranova · · Score: 1
      You are a short sighted idiot.

      Did that make you feel good ? Did it make you feel like a real man ? Good, now that we have that out of the way, let's get to business.

      The open source itself is a lock in since you rely on some developer in some part of the world that you never see.

      Nothing forces you to depend on him, thought; you can always take the source and do the maintenance yourself or hire someone else to do it for you. That's one of open sources main advantages for government use: no need to rely on a foreign company (and thus a foreign government). And you can check the source (or hire someone to check it for you) for backdoors, and only build from such certified source.

      With closed source, if the original vendor goes bankcrupt, thought luck.

      If that person decides to change the license you have nothing to do about it.

      Fork the project. That means that you take the last acceptable version and continue development with it, hiring new developers as needed.

      It should also be noted that unreasonable changes in major projects will usually generate forks without you needing to do anything.

      You lose the developer and the project, since you can't find quickly a new developer to pick it up.

      It is amazing how fast people are to pick things up when paid enough ;).

      Linux reduces the number of jobs, since you can't make money off the GPL software directly.

      You can sell GPL licensed software, you can sell support contracts for it, you can get hired to add features to it or fix bugs, and, if you happen to be the copyright owner, you can even distribute it for free under GPL and for a fee under a different license.

      All these activities bring you money.

      Thus only few companies with strong connections can make money.

      Actually, GPL'd software offers great opportunities for small local companies, since they can sell support and customization/bugfixes independent of the original developer.

      GPL destroys programming jobs, it doesn't create them.

      Wrong. See above. I also want to stress this: GPL allows local companies and programmers to be used for maintenance, thus benefiting local economy, whereas closed-source products can only be maintained by their original developer, usually an US company, meaning that the money spend on maintenance will benefit the USA and not the local economy.

      Patriotism means making the best decision for your country. Slashdot is certainly the last place to make that happen.

      I'm a bit unsure of what you mean here. Are you trying to say that Slashdot has very little influence on any country's policy ? If so, then you are probably correct; if not, then what did you mean ?

      --

      Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

    15. Re:They're going open-source for the wrong reasons by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You don't know what you are talking about.France is problably the worst country in Europe to run a succesfull company. How could Linux benefit local economies in a country where leftist trade-unions are doing everything to prevent to run a succesfull company.
      Remember : not the french governement is going to decide what software their agencies will use but those same leftist unions.
      Unions want big companies because in the smaller companies they don't have the power.
      So the CGT (french communist trade union) could be the biggest ally of Microsoft.
      hhahahahhahahahh...Have a good meurning from well near France (luckely not in)

      I am the walrus (oasis live on BBC2)
      I am the eggman

    16. Re:They're going open-source for the wrong reasons by Alexis+de+Torquemada · · Score: 1
      While widescale windows site licenses may be expensive, the productivity lost in having to retrain all your users in the intimate details of office software surely makes up for the nominal cost-savings of going with "free" software. This is how Microsoft is making its pitch vs open-source solutions, and it's not FUD - it's a damned good argument.

      It is FUD since your argument mostly amounts to repeating an old fairy tale. First of all, Windows to non-Windows migration is not the only thing that causes training costs. Windows NT to Windows XP migration, for instance, is most definitely not free in this respect either. Every new Office version requires the user to learn new things and change their habits, which of course takes time.

      Second, the real-world migrations hardly ever have anything to do with "from Outlook to mutt". It's "from one reasonably intuitive GUI app to another reasonably intuitive GUI app". Sure, there will be friction, and, as they say, the devil is in the details. However, these can usually be handled very well by in-house communication. To increase efficiency, it can help to provide some asynchronous and publicly viewable communication medium. This can include things like an FAQ, and an Intranet bulletin board, newsgroup or Wiki, if you don't already have one. Otherwise it may happen that e.g. the single person who's knowledgeable about the new software is busy just answering the requests of co-workers for days.

      Given these aids, the cost for user training is, while not negligible, not a major obstacle. What matters more is typically the cost involved in porting specialized applications. This is to a significiant part owned to yesterday's shortsightedness, where things like portability and platform-independence were often overlooked, or treated as an unnecessary luxury. Also, good portability solutions were often missing, so the cost involved was considered too great.

    17. Re:They're going open-source for the wrong reasons by Alexis+de+Torquemada · · Score: 1

      You're contradicting yourself. If this company using GPL software depends so badly on the original developer(s), SHIT (she/he/it/they) can make money out of their jobs by simply charging this company for their time.

      And if it doesn't, then your customer lock-in claim is moot, because there just is none. So which of the two applies in practice? Actually, it's something in between. Yes, there is some dependency on the original coder(s), because they have the experience, and since you need coders anyway if you want to add features or fix problems. But it's nowhere near the magnitude of "use MS Word and have your documents stored in a format that's more secret than the Pepsi recipe".

  33. Re: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I can't help thinking that the motive really is anti-americanism.

    So what if it is? It's only natural that a foreign nation would not want to be dependant on another nation's corporation for things like this. And if the French have a problem with America, so what? Mindless France-bashing among right-wing types in America is still a top activity.

  34. Re:I'm not surprised by this. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Are these the same "slimy no-good French" who helped you win your revolutionary war against the british? Without who's help you would have never won?

    I love American's "selective" memories. You forget anyone who helps you out, and only remember the people who point out "hey, you aren't always right".

    PS Do you take full credit for winning BOTH world wars, despite showing up 3 or 4 years late for BOTH of them. Your like a pitcher showing up for the last out of a game, and then proclaiming "My team couldn't do it without me, despite our 6-0 lead after 9 2/3's innings"

    PPS Are you really GWB? You seem to have his level of knowledge of history and world politics, yet you are able to spell tough words like "the" "put" and "red", so I am not sure.

  35. Europe vs. America by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Interesting

    from wsj.com June 18, 2004; Page A10

    The growing split between the U.S. and Europe has been much in the news, mostly on foreign policy. But less well understood is the gap in economic growth and standards of living. Now comes a European report that puts the American advantage in surprisingly stark relief.

    The study, "The EU vs. USA," was done by a pair of economists -- Fredrik Bergstrom and Robert Gidehag -- for the Swedish think tank Timbro. It found that if Europe were part of the U.S., only tiny Luxembourg could rival the richest of the 50 American states in gross domestic product per capita. Most European countries would rank below the U.S. average, as the nearby chart shows.

    The authors admit that man doesn't live by GDP alone, and that this measure misses output in the "black" economy, which is significant in Europe's high-tax states. GDP also overlooks "the value of leisure or a good environment" or the way prosperity is spread across a society.
    [Germany and Arkansas]

    But a rising tide still lifts all boats, and U.S. GDP per capita was a whopping 32% higher than the EU average in 2000, and the gap hasn't closed since. It is so wide that if the U.S. economy had frozen in place at 2000 levels while Europe grew, the Continent would still require years to catch up. Ireland, which has lower tax burdens and fewer regulations than the rest of the EU, would be the first but only by 2005. Switzerland, not a member of the EU, and Britain would get there by 2010. But Germany and Spain would need until 2015, while Italy, Sweden and Portugal would have to wait until 2022.

    Higher GDP per capita allows the average American to spend about $9,700 more on consumption every year than the average European. So Yanks have by far more cars, TVs, computers and other modern goods. "Most Americans have a standard of living which the majority of Europeans will never come anywhere near," the Swedish study says.

    But what about equality? Well, the percentage of Americans living below the poverty line has dropped to 12% from 22% since 1959. In 1999, 25% of American households were considered "low income," meaning they had an annual income of less than $25,000. If Sweden -- the very model of a modern welfare state -- were judged by the same standard, about 40% of its households would be considered low income.

    In other words poverty is relative, and in the U.S. a large 45.9% of the "poor" own their homes, 72.8% have a car and almost 77% have air conditioning, which remains a luxury in most of Western Europe. The average living space for poor American households is 1,200 square feet. In Europe, the average space for all households, not just the poor, is 1,000 square feet.

    So what is Europe's problem? "The expansion of the public sector into overripe welfare states in large parts of Europe is and remains the best guess as to why our continent cannot measure up to our neighbor in the west," the authors write. In 1999, average EU tax revenues were more than 40% of GDP, and in some countries above 50%, compared with less than 30% for most of the U.S.

    We don't report this with any nationalist glee. The world needs a prosperous, growing Europe, and its relative economic decline is one reason for growing EU-American tension. A poorer Europe lacks the wealth to invest in defense, a fact that in turn affects the willingness of Europeans to join America in confronting global security threats. But at least all of this is a warning to U.S. politicians who want this country to go down the same welfare-state road to decline.

    1. Re:Europe vs. America by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      What a bunch WSJ hogwash.

      Yes the GDP per capita in the US is higher BUT:
      - that GDP is really not well distributed among the population in the US. A few are super-super rich (and don't pay taxes), and many are very-very poor (and pay taxes).
      - France is a much better country to be poor in than the US (at least you get health insurance).
      - the GDP per hour worked is about the same in France and the US. It's just that those damn Frenchmen prefer 6 weeks of vacation, a 35 hour week , guaranteed health insurance, free eduction, and a bit less money to 2 weeks vacation (when you are lucky), a 50 hour week (unless you have to work 2 jobs, in which case it's more like 80), no benefits, 15-40K$/year for higher education, and still not much money.
      - sure houses are smaller in the Europe, but IT'S BECAUSE THE POPULATION DENSITY IS HIGHER YOU MORONS. The average house in a French suburb is way larger than the average appartment in New York. Doeas that mean anything about relative wealth? no.
      - Life expectancy in France is way higher than the US, teenage pregnancy way lower, murder rate way-way lower, incarceration rates way-way-way lower, infant mortality way-way-way-way lower.

      Don't believe anything the WSJ says when they are trying to push their political agenda.

      -- Anonycous Moward

    2. Re:Europe vs. America by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A few are super-super rich (and don't pay taxes), and many are very-very poor (and pay taxes). This is just hogwash and a flat out lie. You could trot out a few isolated examples where the wealthy have dodged taxes, but the US tax code clear on this: the rich, the super rich, the super-super rich(to you that must be anyone making over $100,000 US) all pay taxes like almost everyone else. Everyone else that is, except the very-very poor. In fact, the very-very poor pay no income taxes at all. Why don't you get for facts straight before shooting your mouth off?

    3. Re:Europe vs. America by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      - France is a much better country to be poor in than the US (at least you get health insurance).

      This about sums up the difference between US and France. People who want to become rich should choose the US, people who want to be poor should choose France.

      Sorry to shred you apart like that, you walked into that one.

    4. Re:Europe vs. America by JohnGrahamCumming · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      Right, and that's based on a single report by a "free market think tank" as interpreted by the WSJ.

      I much more informed view of "Europe vs. USA" can be found in the current Economist. There's a multi-page special on the subject that boils down to:

      1. USA has higher GDP/capita than EU, but
      2. USA and EU have similar GDP/capita growth rates (in fact the same if you eliminate Germany which is having to cope with unification). How about the US tries merging with South America?
      3. GDP/work hour is similar in USA and EU
      4. US citizens have higher disposable income than EU citizens because US citizens work 40% more hours, i.e. EU citizens have same productivity than US, but work less hours, hence lower GDP/capita. Or to put it another way EU citizens have traded GDP/capita for leisure time, US citizens work much more and hence buy more stuff (TVs, cars, ...)

      So there's no fundamental difference in GDP/work hour or productivity between the two federations. Europeans just take more time off, which might have a lot to do with the better health and better life expectancy in the EU. US citizens work like crazy and hence can afford houses stuffed with electronics, appliances and multiple cars.

      I assume, Anonymous Coward, that you are a US citizen, perhaps you'd like to spend some of your disposable income buying the article here: http://www.economist.com/printedition/displayStory .cfm?Story_ID=2765877

      John.

  36. open source is great by Gastoner · · Score: 0, Troll

    And the french know it!
    Open source is great! It's like having an army of slaves from all around the world working for us. And you know what? They don't take a buck!
    I love open source. It allows me to take the hard work of other people and sell it without my company spending money on development costs. That way, everyone benefits from it. Well, everyone but the original developers.
    But hey, they will continue the development of those open source products. They don't care, my wallet don't care :D
    They're happy, i'm happy!
    Everyone's happy!!!

    go go open source.

  37. Re: by MissTuxie · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I think it's much more interesting to spend money on training and end up having people with more skills, more able to get better jobs than spend it all in M$ crap and keep people in an ignorant state. Not that you can't learn from using M$ products, but isn't it best if we can get more people "unafraid" of open-source software?

  38. Re:I'm not surprised by this. by agent+dero · · Score: 1, Informative

    Keep in mind that for both World Wars, the 'Allies' were losing until shortly after the U.S. showed up ;)

    Food for thought

    --
    Error 407 - No creative sig found
  39. Re:I'm not surprised by this. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Are these the same "slimy no-good French" who helped you win your revolutionary war against the british? Without who's help you would have never won?


    It's not about what you did, it's about what you do (currently).

    Someone could have given me $1,000,000 in the past, but that doesn't keep me from thinking that they are an asshole now because they pissed on my dog.

    France is just pissed off that they are no longer the center of the world's culture, so they do whatever they can to draw attention to themselves, even if it means just being pricks.

  40. Ironically, OSS could greatly assist libertarianis by ShatteredDream · · Score: 3, Interesting

    In quasi-Socialist America, corporations benefit greatly from a close relationship with the government. The more the government spends, the more money they make. Therefore OSS could actually do a lot of good in upsetting that relationship.

    Microsoft made $521M in sales from the US Army a procurement cycle ago. Imagine if by switching to Linux for most of that, the US Army could cut down the market by $450M. If the government's contract values go down significantly because of Linux then the major companies will have less interest in selling to the government.

    In the long run this will reduce the reasons for why we are taxed so heavily by our Congressional overlords who at present cannot account already for approximately at least 1/22 ($100B) of the federal budget. To put that in perspective, that is approximately 1/80 of the wealth generated by Americans that is wasted by government bureacracy. That is not even counting the waste at the state level and the good old boy/girl networks commonly known as your average municipal "public service."

  41. You forgot the "GNU"! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You forgot the "GNU" in the KMissile system!

  42. "old Europe" by Infonaut · · Score: 3, Interesting
    Ah, the irony! If anyone thinks that technology decisions are immune to international politics, this development should serve as a wakeup call. Whatever the stated reasons, a desire to avoid dependence on an American company is at least partially behind this move.

    I suspect that a great many European Slashdot readers are happy about the French plan not only because it could be a victory for Open Source, but also because it sends the message that America and American companies have come to expect blind acquiescence from the rest of the world.

    Action, meet Reaction.

    --
    Read the EFF's Fair Use FAQ
    1. Re:"old Europe" by lfourrier · · Score: 1

      As an european, I'm very happy with the move,( if it is not only for rebates (and having read some time ago about some administratives people, there seems to be a real will to use OSS),) because it will oblige France to stand strongly against abusive software patents.

  43. Re:France Would Save More Costs by Freon115 · · Score: 1

    Well our economy (especialy employment) is not that good, otherwise our governement wouldn't try to save a few $ with OSS :P

  44. just great... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Seeing as the US will not follow the French in anything, it's safe to say Bill will keep the US in his pockets...

    thanks again France for ruining another oppertunity for the US.

  45. Protectionism/Nationalism? by Prien715 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Perhaps I'm just being naive, but anyone else notice a pattern here? Suse, a German OSS distro, is being considered as a candidate in Germany. Mandrakesoft, a French OSS distro, is being considered in France. The American government is using an American-based proprietary OS.

    Anyone else see a pattern? Perhaps it's not open-source ideals that's driving this move, but good old-fashioned protectionism, at least in part.

    --
    -- Political fascism requires a Fuhrer.
    1. Re:Protectionism/Nationalism? by Programmer_In_Traini · · Score: 1

      Well, I don't know about France and Germany but I don't think the states should be putted in the equation.

      They're just not part of the equation yet, when they realize how much they lose in hard cold cash compared to those who made the switch, they'll follow. US, like any other country, are trying to lower their cost to make more money.

      MS will just follow or die.

      about that protectionism thing, its quite normal a country take a software made by its citizen, there are many good reasons for this.

      As long as they don't slow down or block its distribution, i think its more like encouraging your own citizen than protecting your product. Heck, it may even help the citizen feel safer toward their governmental organization, have them feel they have a part to play.

      --
      If you look like your passport photo, you're too ill to travel. - Will Kommen
    2. Re:Protectionism/Nationalism? by timothy · · Score: 1

      Maybe so: but if things are under the GPL, so what? :)

      There may be jingoistic reasons to support a particular software company (SUSE, so very German! Mandrake, so very French! Red Hat, from the good ol' US of A!), but if the software is under licenses which encourage sharing / reuse / improvement, then it's all for the best. It's not like Mandrake and SUSE are immune from borrowing bits and ideas from each other; the different distros have different approaches and details, but there's a useful cross-pollination on all fronts.

      timothy

      --
      jrnl: http://tinyurl.com/c2l8yr / foes: http://tinyurl.com/ckjno5
    3. Re:Protectionism/Nationalism? by HermanAB · · Score: 1

      Uuuhhh - last I checked, Suse belongs to Novell, an American company...
      I, for one, welcome our new American overlords - sieg heil!

      --
      Oh well, what the hell...
  46. What will French geeks be like I wonder? by The+Ultimate+Fartkno · · Score: 4, Funny



    Qu'est-que c'est 'command line'?

    Apres moi, le r00t!

    Je pense, donc je hax0r.

    Bonjour, mademoiselle. Parlez-vous php?

    Le b0x. Les b0xen?

    BSOD? MERDE!

    1. Re:What will French geeks be like I wonder? by Freon115 · · Score: 1

      Ok. Let's read the article together. Just because the french _government_ _may_ use _more_ OSS doesn't mean nobody has been using linux here in France. Ever heard about Mandrake?

    2. Re:What will French geeks be like I wonder? by Artifakt · · Score: 1

      FreeBSD le morte!

      --
      Who is John Cabal?
    3. Re:What will French geeks be like I wonder? by TheBAFH · · Score: 1


      Le root c'est moi!

      --
      http://www.grcrun11.gr - MUDA tribute
  47. Re:I'm not surprised by this. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You know, I think that most of the French angst towards the US stems from the fact that the US bailed them out of both World Wars. Man, that has to suck: admitting that you couldn't stop the German invasion on your own, twice, in the span of 30 years.

  48. another european country by mattyrobinson69 · · Score: 1

    first Germany
    second france
    (apparently) hopefully the UK's NHS

    where next?

    1. Re:another european country by Advocadus+Diaboli · · Score: 1
      where next?

      Working at a computer manufacturer in Europe I get a lot of questions concerning Linux from Spain. So maybe Spain is the next country to get a Linux article on Slashdot. :-)

    2. Re:another european country by mattyrobinson69 · · Score: 1

      YEAH!!!

      Is this the first time for ages that Japan is behind in adopting something (or were they using it in the 80's, and now theyre using something that wont be written until 2010?

      Maybe the "year of linux on the desktop" crowd were right this year (they had to be right eventually.

    3. Re:another european country by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
  49. Re:France Would Save More Costs by CHaN_316 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I'm not sure how healthy the French economy is these days. France (and Germany) have been exceeding the EU's limit of deficit spending which is 3% of GDP. France is at risk of getting sanctions from the EU. In addition, it doesn't look like Europe's education system is fairing too well either, and it's generally agreed that education is required for a healthy economy. This Time article talks about overcrowded classrooms, underfunding, etc, etc.

    --
    "There is no spoon." - The Matrix
  50. Just... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Maybe they want to get away from proprietary file format lock-in that MS Office specializes in. And maybe they don't want their government records at the mercy of a US company who bottom line is in the interest of its share holders in lieu of that country's citizens.

    In short, there are lots of reasons to kick the MS habit and clean up all those needle marks in your arm.

  51. Re:I'm not surprised by this. by jalet · · Score: 2, Funny

    > Are these the same "slimy no-good French" who
    > helped you win your revolutionary war against the
    > british? Without who's help you would have never
    > won?

    Yes, I agree 100%.

    If the French wouldn't have helped you, you certainely would still be speaking english at this time !

    Fortunately, they came to help you.

    --
    Votez ecolo : Chiez dans l'urne !
  52. Re:I'm not surprised by this. by Morologous · · Score: 1

    While I would agree that without the French, the revolutionary war would have been a very different situation, I would also not fail to note that it was in the best interests of France at the time to oppose or thwart the stable continuation of Britain's colonization efforts -- keep in mind that when America was a British colony the French had limited to -no- trading partners or rights (in the British colonies).

    This is a fundamental tenet of the economical theory of mercantilism. First you colonize and populate an area, then you trade with it (It's the original 1..2..3 Profit).

    Clearly the parent coward is misinformed as to the historical context of France's involvement in the Revolutionary War.

    I would further contest the statement regarding: "My team couldn't do it without me, despite our 6-0 lead after 9 2/3's innings" Considering especially that France's government was in exile when the US became involved and continental France was govered by the Vichy regime, I would definitly not cast the aspersion that the US came in at the end to mop up the situation but instead to turn the tide (admittedly, WWI was a different situation).

  53. Patent Open Source? by aapold · · Score: 1

    As long as no one patents the idea of switching to open source....

    --
    "Waste not one watt!" - CZ
  54. Re:I'm not surprised by this. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    this is bullshit history as written by the U.S.

    Do some actual studying of World War Two before parotting your country's bullshit propaganda.

  55. Uh oh, I sense a black hole forming. by geminidomino · · Score: 1

    France considering going open source, on the mostly American slashdot? This is gonna be fun. Bash, or laud? Insult, or praise?

    This is gonna be like a platoon of Imperial Stormtroopers going up against a squad of Starfleet Red-shirted ensigns.

    1. Re:Uh oh, I sense a black hole forming. by frank_adrian314159 · · Score: 1
      This is gonna be like a platoon of Imperial Stormtroopers going up against a squad of Starfleet Red-shirted ensigns.

      They're ALL dead, Jim!

      --
      That is all.
    2. Re:Uh oh, I sense a black hole forming. by PrimeNumber · · Score: 1

      This is gonna be fun. Bash, or laud? Insult, or praise?

      Nah, just be like the French, surrender and accept it.

  56. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  57. Re:I'm not surprised by this. by jalet · · Score: 4, Funny

    > France is just pissed off that they are no longer
    > the center of the world's culture

    Well, by listening to your president talking, I'm pretty confident that the USA are not either.

    --
    Votez ecolo : Chiez dans l'urne !
  58. Re:France Would Save More Costs by rbolkey · · Score: 1

    From what I've heard (which I could be wrong) Airbus receives some pretty major governmental subsidies that their US competitors like Boeing don't receive--or at least not at the same scale.

  59. Re:I'm not surprised by this. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I suppose I can give you that point. However, waiting for two (actually three) big bruisers to nearly beat each other to death, then stepping in and kicking the less bloodied one in the nuts is hardly a victory won "on your own". Also, by the time you all decided to get on board, the soviet meat grinder was starting to make sausage out of the german infantry, so the tides were turning considerably before you ever got on board. I am not debating the value of the US contribution, just the historical blinders worn by most americans. You remember what you like, as well as the version that you like, and ignore the facts, and in many cases the truth. Current US foreign policy is a great example of this.

    PS When are you sending back the statue of liberty? I thought y'all hated ANYTHING french, but the green lady is still in New York harbour. Oh, I guess its another case of selective memory. "I don't know where it come from son, I think it was there when the mayflower arrived. Story is its a statue of an indian princess, holding a cob of corn up to the sun god, with a dinner plate in her other hand"

  60. Freesoftware as in freedom by freeduke · · Score: 1

    Microsoft Bus should better have a stop in France before other countries! Free software allows people to train by themselves, because you have got the source code, ok, if you can't read it,or you are too lazy, nope, you will use those software like any proprietary ones, but, freesoftware exists thanks to a community, and so, by nature people are willing to help the ones who need it. They are not reluctant people held in a call center in a country where work ing time is cheaper.

  61. Re:I'm not surprised by this. by jalet · · Score: 1

    > Considering especially that France's government
    > was in exile when the US became involved and
    > continental France was govered by the Vichy regime

    The Vichy regime WAS the Official government of France.

    Not that I like to admit it, however.

    --
    Votez ecolo : Chiez dans l'urne !
  62. Whats the trend? by Greenisloved · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Ok it loooks like
    SUSE -Germany
    Mandarke -France
    RedHat -USA
    Are we going to have classification of countries by operating systems that they use majorly????

    --
    Hello , this is my way.
    Which way is yours ?
    btw there is no right way
    1. Re:Whats the trend? by jrutley · · Score: 1

      You forgot a couple:

      Conectiva - Brazil
      Turbolinux - Japan

  63. Re:History of surrender for loud mouthed americans by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ironically, it was the French themselves that drove them to their fate in WW 2. Yes, it was horrific that 4.3 million Frenchmen died in WW 1. The politics of appeasement to Hitler and the lack of enforcement of military restrictions on Germany resulted in an even more horrific war after that, however, and IIRC France had a lot to do with both actions.

  64. Re:not really by jalet · · Score: 0

    Please mod this up as +5 Funny !

    and I'm French !

    --
    Votez ecolo : Chiez dans l'urne !
  65. Re:History of surrender for loud mouthed americans by cryms0n · · Score: 1

    +1 Interesting.

    I'd give you informative, but I have no idea if your numbers are correct.

  66. Re:History of surrender for loud mouthed americans by Freon115 · · Score: 1

    Don't bother, we're on /. here. The place where you're ranked a +5 funny for this kind of joke. This whole discussion is full of that shit. I even complained in another post, and the incriminated post only went from +5 to +4. *clap clap* Thanks /., thank you for showing us once more that you don't give a horse shit to your European (and french) readers. -- conner_bw, I don't think the demographic loss of WW1 has so much to do with the WW2 defeat than the general dislike of frenchmen for war after centuries of nearly uninterrupted war.

  67. No damned wonder you Frogs lose wars by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Thus, at the time, 11% of France's entire population were killed or wounded

    You guys measure success by how many of your own people get killed.

    To quote a semi-famous American general: "The object of war is not to die for your country, but to make the other bastard die for his." No damn wonder the Germans get to march through Paris every 50 years or so. It just that now, instead of soldiers driving tanks, it's bankers in BMWs....

  68. Calm down guys... by XeRXeS-TCN · · Score: 1

    I think it's getting just a little off topic to start ragging on (or on behalf of) the French.

    Granted there's some debates about some of those issues, and I agree with previous statements that the relationship between the US and France isn't exactly at an all time high, but that's no reason to start making broad generalisations, one way or the other.

    That aside, I think that it's a good idea that they are at least considering different software alternatives, and not just because of open source.

    When the first antitrust problems came up, it was then said that Microsoft software was on 95% of home computers, and I would say that the current figure is still extremely high. Microsoft is, and always has been, an almost total monopoly, and I don't think that it is by any means the best way to be. It is never a good idea to be utterly at the mercy of a monopoly, whether it's for support, or patches, or upgrades.

    Open source is simply the best way to achieve this. The "Release early, release often, and listen to your customers" mantra of the open source movement *generally* ensures that software is patched quickly, and updated often. If you want to make changes to that code in the interim period, you are more than free to do so, either yourself, or by hiring people to do that for you.

    And for the people claiming that the price is not in the license fees, it's in educating people... Well that's certainly true to a degree, but there's also another important point. Someone who is moving from a standard office job using Microsoft Word, to an open source alternative like Abiword or OpenOffice, is *not* going to require a lot of training to use alternative packages. You open the word processor, you type your document in an application which is intentionally set out *very* similarly to Word, and you click File -> Save, and you save your document. If you are running these programs on windows, it's practically identical to normal, you just save it in your "My Documents" directory, and you're finished. It's not rocket science. Even on a full switch to Linux, if they are provided with a customised KDE/Gnome desktop, the process is also much the same. You click the "Start" button, you go to applications, your office tools, and you click on the application you want to run. This is not going to involve going on a week long course to learn, even for the least technically minded people on staff. Yes, some people will need training, especially in the more technical roles, and it will take some getting used to, but I think that on occasion, the "training" arguement is pulled out a little too readily.

    I think it's ultimately a good idea that it's being considered, even if not adopted, because even if they don't choose it, it can simply be thought of as it not being right for their own personal needs. Linux has started from a single person, distributing it for free, and has grown into an operating system which can be considered alongside Microsoft, and that is an astonishing achievement.

  69. Re:I'm not surprised by this. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Lend-Lease. It would all have been over without it.

    (And I'm not an American)

  70. French approach to war by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    I don't think the demographic loss of WW1 has so much to do with the WW2 defeat than the general dislike of frenchmen for war after centuries of nearly uninterrupted war.

    Dontcha think just maybe the French should perhaps reconsider their approach to war? Like maybe appeasement of dictators is a bad idea because it only encourages them?

  71. Save a Franc or two? by Stonent1 · · Score: 2, Funny

    Don't you mean Euro?

  72. What if he has a tapeworm, or is King somewhere? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    And he doesn't mean to speak for his parasite, or in the royal sense?

    Then he would be appropriately using "I, for one,...".

  73. Re:not really by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hey, I've got one: didn't they defeat the English in 1066? You didn't mention that.

  74. Re:RETARDED STATMENT by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Thank you for that insightful opinion. But it doesn't speak highly of your character. Your mentality is a product of your environment. And you are unable to rationalize that people and beliefs are different world-wide. Because they are different than yours, they obviously *must* be bad or wrong. What a closed, confined mind (the worst kind).

    Imagine if you grew up in some other country in the world if you can. Would your attitude, religious and political views be the same as they are now? Most likely not! So keep an open mind... it will serve you well and the red off your neck.

  75. Fun: Microsoft software running under Linux by Theovon · · Score: 4, Interesting

    What would be fun to watch is if some country decided to switch to an Open Source OS, and then did a separate bid for office software.

    Microsoft would be in a position where it could compete for the position of supplying office software, but only if it ported their office software to the Open Source platform.

    I wonder what they would do.

    It would fun just to watch what they do in that predicament.

  76. France: the new axis of evil. by Pig+Hogger · · Score: 1

    Remember, if you're not with us, you're against us.

  77. Re:RETARDED COUNTRY by jalet · · Score: 0, Troll

    > their girls don't shave because french like hairs

    Unlike the girls in your country, who shave and because they have beards.

    --
    Votez ecolo : Chiez dans l'urne !
  78. Re:History of surrender for loud mouthed americans by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Just a few years later" I think you mean a few decades later.

  79. Re:History of surrender for loud mouthed americans by cluckshot · · Score: 1

    Just as a curious fact or two comes up, the reason US soldiers during WW-I were called "Dough Boys" was because the French General in charge thought they were uneducated worthless as soldiers and only good for messages and cooking. (Making Dough)

    After his army was destroyed and Paris was threatened, the general had a thought, "Why not let the Americans die with us." Well he sent under US Command 5,000 into the forrest against 500,000 advancing Germans. He figured they would make a modest speed bump.

    In two and one half hours the German Generals were writing in their logs that the only issue remaining was the terms of the surrender... not of the Americans but of Germany! Those poorly armed Americans were described by the Germans as "Shock Troops!" The Americans drove the Germans back 12 miles in the next week! This was hell on earth for the Germans. Slaughtering Frenchmen and Brits was a daily thing to them. Americans slaughtered the Germans!

    Just reporting what happened nothing else.

    --
    Never Politically Correct ~ I prefer the facts If you don't like what I say, get a life, or comment yourself.
  80. Re:France Would Save More Costs by xutopia · · Score: 1

    some say the strenght of capitalism is that it is a system that sorts through all the strategies to find the better one. Seems like a little bit of healthy socialism beats a load of capitalism strategies.

  81. Re:History of surrender for loud mouthed americans by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    delusional much, americunt?

  82. Re:History of surrender for loud mouthed americans by FortKnox · · Score: 0

    Hey assholes: no one keeps bringing up VIET NAM, a war the USA lost with nothing near 11% of the population killed before making the decision to pull out.

    Vietnam was a police action, not a war. And if it was a war, and it was on our land, I'm sure we'd stay in for over 11%. Keep that in mind... they are invaiding your country, not the other way around.

    Conclusion, STFU.

    No need to get testy. It was a simple joke to get a giggle. Of course, I'm "flogging a dead horse" with this, but you have no problem not getting your panties riled up when people claim java is slow, or linux is the answer to the desktop, or how all geeks are nerds that can't get dates, etc...
    No, you get upset at a silly joke france surrendering (which they did).

    I refuse to STFU, pal :-P

    --
    Good quote, too many chars. Seriously, the slashdot 120 char limit sucks!
  83. Don't forget 1871. Or the Prussians in 1815. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    France's history of getting a German butt-kicking goes back way before World War I...

  84. Re:History of surrender for loud mouthed americans by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    With france becoming more modern / trying to rebuild and the women not doing their "patriotic duty" of birthing enough men, these decades still don't give enough time to repopulate with well trained soldiers.

  85. Now anyone can surrender! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well, first take a nap, ZEN FIRE ZE COPYRIGHT LAWYERS!

    (Yes Mr. Lameness filter, using all caps is like yelling.)

  86. The French Government Said... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Be careful what you believe from the French Government. They tend to tell you what you want to hear and then do the exact opposite. Draw your own conclusions.

    1. Re:The French Government Said... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And this is different to any other government because ... ?

  87. Re:History of surrender for loud mouthed americans by Frizzle+Fry · · Score: 1

    You're trying to refute the people who make fun of France for being compltely unsuccessful at war by pointing out that they managed to get a lot of their population killed or wounded in war? That's not very convincing.

    --
    I'd rather be lucky than good.
  88. Re:France Would Save More Costs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That is, without a doubt, the dumbest thing I have ever heard.

  89. Re: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Mindless France-bashing among right-wing types in America is still a top activity.

    WHOA WHOA WHOA!!
    Mindless France-bashing is the still a top activity on both sides of the isle.

  90. Re:History of surrender for loud mouthed americans by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In WW2, the jews weren't very successful at not getting exterminated yet the joke

    "Through another jew on the BBQ"

    isn't very funny.

  91. Re:I'm not surprised by this. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And we have paid them back many times over.

    Done deal.

  92. Re:France Would Save More Costs by Pig+Hogger · · Score: 1

    Boeing receives plenty of government subsidies. The only thing is that they are hidden under obscene military aircraft pricing.

  93. Re:France Would Save More Costs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You hear only one side of the story. Take care of the US gouvernment and media. They do lie you constantly. In europe know for a while that the bush administration is just incompetant and corrupted. US people just start to see the truth.

    Of course, Boeing has the excact same advantages. Boeing group is a huge military group and it's easy to fund civil projet under the cover of heavy military budget.

    Take care.

  94. Re:I'm not surprised by this. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well, by reading your post, it's clear you are an idiot. "USA are not"

    Don't post in a language unless you can use it properly.

  95. Re:I'm not surprised by this. by jalet · · Score: 1

    Well, it was supposed to be a joke.

    --
    Votez ecolo : Chiez dans l'urne !
  96. Re:RETARDED COUNTRY by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    /. at it's finest.

    Trading insults about female body hair, this really is a site for nerds.

  97. Not the first ones-- definitely not the biggest... by dalillama · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Slashdot has for some reason ignored some big articles on Governmental Open Source. This is what I mean: Brazil has a government department bent on migrating all of the government's software into Open-Source software. This department already has 2,000 employees DEDICATED for migration operations. It's estimated that over 300,000 computers will migrate to Linux. As it stands it still is the largest government-backed program for Open Source. This is nothing new. This dept. was created back in December of 2003 and was covered by Wired. In any case, the most amusing consequence of this was Microsoft's response calling this program "ideologically motivated" in a veiled allusion to President Lula's left-leaning socialist tendencies. But of course, an instant loss of 6% in revenue for Microsoft makes them a bit, uhm, "twitchy". A few links if anyone's interested: Wired Article The Register Folha de São Paulo (in portuguese)

  98. It's also a political statement by HangingChad · · Score: 2, Insightful
    France can wave the nationalistic flag, reduce their dependence on an American brainshare product and thumb their nose at MSFT all in one event.

    We've worked hard at making ourselves abhorrent to the rest of the world the last four years, so efforts like these get a boost from political ill will. The fact they're getting a more stable and secure OS platform with a lower overall TCO is merely a bonus. I don't think the political climate alone would justify the transition costs, but that coupled with MSFT's own corporate malfeasance is enough to get them over the hump.

    I could be wrong but I'm guessing there's more than technical considerations playing into this.

    --
    That's our life, the big wheel of shit. - The Fat Man, Blue Tango Salvage
  99. Re:I'm not surprised by this. by jalet · · Score: 1

    It seems you can't even spell the name of your own country, but like insulting people. This is : united stateS of america.

    You know, there are several of them, at least this was the case last time I heard of this country.

    --
    Votez ecolo : Chiez dans l'urne !
  100. Re:France Would Save More Costs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    France's economy is doing well becuase they haven't had to spend as much as other countries (i.e. USA) on defense. All during the cold war they hid behind the US's shield.

  101. Re:RETARDED COUNTRY by jalet · · Score: 1

    Is that what is called a "Trade war" ?

    --
    Votez ecolo : Chiez dans l'urne !
  102. Re:History of surrender for loud mouthed americans by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Just as a curious fact or two comes up, the reason US soldiers during WW-I were called "Dough Boys" was because the French General in charge thought they were uneducated worthless as soldiers and only good for messages and cooking. (Making Dough)

    Just a curious fact or two comes up, doughboy as applied to the infantry of the U.S. Army first appears, without any precedent that can be documented, in accounts of the Mexican-American War of 1846-47. One theory is they were called this because of the dust that clung to them as they followed the cavalry in Northern Mexico. This is a few decades before WWI, so you are probably incorrect.

    You might check out http://www.worldwar1.com/dbc/origindb.htm for some of the ways "doughboy" was applied to U.S. troops.

  103. Re:I'm not surprised by this. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You are still not making sense!

  104. Re:I'm not surprised by this. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And you do think was sending the raw material to the Soviets so they could get this done, it wasn't Santa Claus.

  105. Re:I'm not surprised by this. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And don't forget the US was fighting a two front war. Japan had a "meat grinder" of their own working in the Pacific that needed to be smashed.

  106. Re:History of surrender for loud mouthed americans by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    >>Hey assholes: no one keeps bringing up VIET NAM, a war the USA lost with nothing near 11% of the population killed before making the decision to pull out.

    If we were fighting for the survival of our country and foreign troops got any farther than Long Island, I think you'd see a bit more fight in us than in Viet Nam. Check the Civil War out for examples, and that was just us fighting among ourselves -- a foreign invader would pay in blook for every inch of ground and you'd a quarter billion firearms brought out to do so.

  107. Re:History of surrender for loud mouthed americans by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    no one keeps bringing up VIET NAM

    Defending the French military by bringing up Vietnam? You do realize that the French lost Vietnam well before we showed up there (even with massive amounts of US aid) -- google Diem Bien Phu, as well as the French Indochina war that lasted from 1945-1954 (after the French bent over for the Japanese during WW2!).

  108. Re:not really by MoneyT · · Score: 1

    Well of course it isn't funny dipshit, you didn't spell it right.

    --
    T Money
    World Domination with a plastic spoon since 1984
  109. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  110. Re:History of surrender for loud mouthed americans by daniil · · Score: 1
    Makes me wonder, how the history would have turned out if Joe Stalin had thought "Oh my, we lost many people in The Great War and i have killed even more over the last decade, i think we'd better surrender to the Germans or they'll kill even more." Fact is, however, that he didn't.

    Let's face it: all this "Any tactician with an ounce of intelligence..." nonsense is just to hide the fact that France wasn't prepared for the war.

    --
    Man is a slave because freedom is difficult, whereas slavery is easy.
  111. Insight-- already processing French taxes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    I seem to remember hearing that much of the online income tax infrastructure in France is now already supported by Linux boxes, with an Oracle database.

    The general overhaul of the tax IS towards Linux and open source was a huge shift, in a governmental agency traditionally bent towards mainframe and proprietary vendors.

    It was mainly done under the impulsion of one "open-source ayatollah" at the French tax department..

  112. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  113. Re:History of surrender for loud mouthed americans by ultranova · · Score: 2, Insightful
    Vietnam was a police action, not a war.

    Oh. Does the American police often use napalm bombardment from helicopters, then ? And do they often use army uniforms ?

    Is losing still such a sore point to you, that you have to revise history to try to confuse the issue ? Kinda reminds me of the Soviet Union...

    No matter, whether it was a police operation or a war, you lost anyway.

    It was a simple joke to get a giggle.

    The joke would be funnier if it wasn't told every time someone mentions France.

    --

    Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

  114. Re:History of surrender for loud mouthed americans by daniil · · Score: 1

    Well, i've heard that some French "intellectuals" did it all the time, so why the hell not?

    --
    Man is a slave because freedom is difficult, whereas slavery is easy.
  115. Re:History of surrender for loud mouthed americans by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm pretty sure they supported Bolshevism, not Stalinism.

    Stalin is a great example of insane unrelenting warlord (In fact, Sadam Hussein is an admirer of Stalin to give an example of his policy style in post-modern context) but not really the best example of intelligence.

    Try again.

  116. Re:Not the first ones-- definitely not the biggest by bersl2 · · Score: 1

    There was a story on that here. I guess most people thought that Brazil was just going for the MS discount. Now that we take governmental use of OSS seriously...

  117. Re:WTF are you talking about? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Again, an american misses the point that THE REST OF THE PLANET WAS ALREADY INVOLVED, remember, it wasn't just the French and the Germans, I seem to remember Aussies, Kiwis, Canadians, Brits, Indians, Russians, and a whack more countries who decided to get involved prior to the END of 1941. Shit, the rest of us had been at it for almost 4 years before any of you showed up. Your right, the Germans did take France in 6 weeks, but by the time the first German stepped on French soil, the rest of us were on board, and had been since Poland was invaded. Did your invitation get lost in the mail?

  118. where's their choice? by zogger · · Score: 1

    what's to do when your two biggest free world business competitors make a habit of sticking in puppet government dictators all over? Appeasement? Why should they deign to notice there's much difference? Saddam was an american CIA creation, so was Osama bin Laudin. Hitler got heavily bankrolled by british and US big money interests. The house of saud making it to despotism and control over the arabian peninsula was due to the british finally settling on one particlar warlord to support after supporting a bunch of them for awhile. The shah in iran was put in by the americans, after the spooks helped off his predecessor who wasn't as friendly towards having his nation get ripped off, and he was so dismal to his own people while we supported him and SAVAK that it was a cake walk for the nutjob mullahs like khomeini to take over. On and on, what are the french to do,nowadays the oil is WHERE IT'S AT, they have to deal with those nations, dictators or not. Little to no choice. They already run the worlds largest amount of nukes for their national electric grid, they tried there to be independent, but when it comes to basic transportation and manufacturing, you got oil, then there's your oil, or you can always use *oil*. They ain't got any, and they need some, so they got to play with the dictators that other nations stuck in. In ww2 they fought a lot, just got beat by vastly superior technology and tactics. It's hard to stop getting sucker punched. They got out of the colony business a long time ago and learned their lesson, so they don't do that much any more. What else now are they supposed to do? They've played along with the US in well over 90% of our foreign policy, they disagree 10% so that's enough to completely condemn them and cuss them out.

    No wonder the world in general, not just france but all over, is starting to seriously dislike the US, because that's our offical policy now, back us 100% no matter what we say or do no matter how cuckoo it is, or get cussed out and turned into an enemy or get declared a rogue state or something.

  119. Re:I'm not surprised by this. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I would also not fail to note that it was in the best interests of France at the time to oppose or thwart the stable continuation of Britain's colonization efforts

    The same could be said about every single american military action in the 20th and 21st century: it was in their best interests - no that it's a bad thing, but that's how it works.

    The French government was not in exile, the french congress granted Petain full command of the country before realizing he had a thing for nazis AND he also happened to be an idiot who thought Hitler would give him something in return for his cooperation. The Vichy government was the official one.
    De Gaulle was just a general then, he was in UK for some reason i can't remember (something like "hey brits help us out were fscking screwed") and he coordinated the french civilian resistance from there - he was later elected President because of this.
    Posting anon cuz' already moderated.

  120. Re:History of surrender for loud mouthed americans by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Vietnam? Hmmm, who started all that ... could it have been the French? Why yes it was. Started back December of 1946 when Ho Chi Minh decided to run your add out of their country. The states came in to save the people to the south and France quickly bailed.

    And did the US give Israel nukes ... No it was France, (and Sweden for the heavy water) because Guy Mollet thought "[they] owed it to them" after the Suez Crisis. So part of the big problem is the Middle East is Israel going wacko and nuking their neighbors all thanks to the French.

  121. Re:History of surrender for loud mouthed americans by daniil · · Score: 1
    How come there's always someone who just has to spoil all the fun i'm trying to have?

    I know Stalin is not exactly an example of a bright mind. This is something you don't need to tell me. He did have an ounce or two of intelligence -- otherwise he wouldn't have gotten as far as he did --, but i doubt that he was the mastermind that some people would like him to have been.

    As to French intellectuals and Stalinism: Stalinism had quite a lot of influence on the French Communist Party, especially before the war. Louis Althusser is perhaps the most influential post-war Stalinist (i think he was considered one even in 1968). Other intellectuals (quite a few of them, actually) were influenced by Maoism, which they had a pretty skewed picture of.

    --
    Man is a slave because freedom is difficult, whereas slavery is easy.
  122. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  123. And after hearing this news by Cnik70 · · Score: 4, Funny

    Microsoft canceled plans for it's latest product: Microsoft Surrender Suite. Freshmeat.net was soon overwhelmed with new releases of kSurrender, gtk-surrender, and gSurrender. Mirrors should be available for all French citizens to download the latest releases.

    --
    -Cnik
    1. Re:And after hearing this news by Maljin+Jolt · · Score: 1

      You missed some qt-surrender, xsurrender, Jsurrender. You also didn't mention pySurrender supporting curses and tix.

      --
      There you are, staring at me again.
  124. Re:not really by Petrol · · Score: 1

    It's not really very funny though.

    --
    ...and that's the end of our show. Donk!
  125. Re:Fun: Microsoft software running under Linux by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well that's what would have happened anyway if either the US or the EU antitrust authorities had got it right and decided to impose the only meaningful sanction on Microsoft: breaking it between an OS company and a software application company.

  126. Re:History of surrender for loud mouthed americans by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    >> Quote: a foreign invader would pay in blook for every inch of ground and you'd a quarter billion firearms brought out to do so.

    >Unlike Europe, you're surrounded by oceans.

    True, and we live in a nicer neighborhood as well.

    >FYI if there is ever another "Great War" and it is fought on American soil, your guns won't save you from nuclear and chemical attack.

    No, but chemical weapons have limited military effectiveness and nuclear weapons would invite certain retaliation. We were willing to go the nuclear "Mutual Assured Destruction" route with the Soviets. There is no enemy out there at present that is as scary as they were in their heyday, and I don't see any reason why our nuclear weapons would become less effective (unless SDI/"Star Wars" actually works, in which case it's a whole 'nother argument).

  127. Re: by Jim_Maryland · · Score: 1

    Can't argue with you on the advantages of learning open source, but agencies/companies do need to exercise some caution in switching completely to open source software. In general, use of open source software can have many benefits but groups must be careful about too much internal software development. This may sound like an odd approach, but developing internal applications can be very expensive, particularly when you look at maintenance and upgrade cost. Using Commercial Off The Shelf (COTS) applications provides some benefits including product maturity, lower cost (spread over high volume of units), a predictable support cost, and regular software upgrades.

    I'm not saying not to use open source software, but rather that proper evaluation must be done. Organizations choosing to use open source must understand that they could be taking additional risk (as I mentioned above) in exchange for the flexibility. Certainly some open source products are more mature and these are better candidates for adoption but I'd encourage careful evaluation of the less mature projects out there.

    As you said, organizations shouldn't be afraid of open source. They must evaluate it similar to the commercial products to see if it meets their needs.

  128. Merde alors.. by Jakosa · · Score: 1

    The vietnamese army seems to RULE! What was it again.. Has mandrakesoft declared the third world war or was it The Bush administration? How is Stallman and fox news involved? Why havent anybody mentioned the yellow threat from china and india?

  129. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 0, Troll

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  130. I say this with absolutely no irony: by chadjg · · Score: 1

    Go France, Go! WooWooWoo!

    I hope this works, and that they do it right. And that they don't forget where the software came from. I really don't care if they are doing this just to spite $((the)us), just as long as they remember where their software came from. My local government needs all the help it can get. Hopefully they'll share the wealth.

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    Why do I have this? I don't smoke.
  131. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  132. Re:WTF are you talking about? by beakburke · · Score: 1

    Bzzt. The Russians only got involved after hitler broke the non-aggression pact he signed with them. He broke it by invading Russia (the USSR).

    --
    ----- Question authority, but not ours. Hate the man, but we're not him.
  133. Re:I think France got it : history, cimetaries. by chro57 · · Score: 0

    Dear slashdotters, at 50 km of were I live there is Verdun. Here, there are militaries cimetaries with 600000 little white crosses. German and French sometime mixed. In 1914 we fought over coal and iron mines. Alsace and Lorraine. Then in 1930 Hitler had this fantastic idea of building weapons and massives armies to employ the overpopulation, while we were engaged into softer socialism. (1936 : payed hollydays.) As Hitler invaded Pologne, France declared war with Germany. Germany invaded France and win the war in no time. Some french collaborated with the germans, saying they were of better moral, some get out in the south of France (free France), some resisted (and get sometimes tortured then killed), and some get to work for free in Germany as slaves. Many people of this time were racists, xenophobes, egoists, rancunniers. They didn't saw the big picture, and they pay the big price for it. Both France and Germany had colonial empires. At this time socialist were integrists that destroyed the christian religion which united europeans. Nationalist were here to defends their "race". Owners wanted to defend their possession. Everyone wanted a farm and ten childs to exploit. social research, artists, intellectuel, were regarded as inefficient, a cost to the system. Useless. Young were to be trained to obey. People took proud in obeying the system and sacrifying themself for "the good of the nation". They believed than their god was better, bigger, than the one of the other nation of sinners who would go to hell afterdeath. I pray for you. Pray for all of us ! If you want to make a better place of this world, go, travel, talk with everybody, everywhere. Publish. Create communication systems. And places for tired and angry people to rest. Organise feast for people to talk together. Work less for material. Study art, science, history, religions, medicines, ecology. Doubt of everything. Breed less, educate more, not only your children, but all children and adults. Let's pray/think all for all the poor guys that don't have enough to get housing, to eat, are sick, angry, or without hope.

  134. Make a project by tjstork · · Score: 1

    I installed KDevelop and it doesn't work. I installed Visual Studio.NET and it does.

    The intellisense on VS.NET is infinitely better than that in KDdevelop.

    --
    This is my sig.
    1. Re:Make a project by killjoe · · Score: 2, Funny

      Wow. If I was a developer and I was unable to install Kdevelop I would be ashamed to admit it. You apprently are proud enough of your failure to broadcast it to the world.

      --
      evil is as evil does
  135. Re:France Would Save More Costs by kisak · · Score: 2, Insightful
    France (and Germany) have been exceeding the EU's limit of deficit spending which is 3% of GDP.
    Well, under Bush the surplus under Clinton has turned into a deficit that increases with 4.2 % of GDP a year. Much of this deficit is caused by tax cuts for the rich, and the deficit is basically a tax increase for everyone (through weaker dollar, higher inflation, cuts in government programs, etc etc) which of course hits the poor and the middle classes hardest.

    In addition, it doesn't look like Europe's education system is fairing too well either, and it's generally agreed that education is required for a healthy economy.

    It is hard to compare directly education between different countries, but it seems like Europe and the rest of the world has catched up a lot when it comes to science after US has dominated in science since WW II (for understandable reasones). And you do realise that even for top universities in Europe the students don't have to pay much or anything in tuition fees, so that even middle class families can send a bright kid to a top university (something like Bush being sent to Yale because he was so bright).

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    --- guns don't kill people, people with guns kill people ---

  136. Oh really by beakburke · · Score: 1

    And airbus doesn't get these "military subsidies" because the EU doesn't make miliary aircraft?? Yeah right. I'd also like to point out that Boeing has to bid for it's military contracts, against Lockheed-Martin, etc, so this "military subsidy of civilian industry" can't work the way you say it does.

    --
    ----- Question authority, but not ours. Hate the man, but we're not him.
  137. Vietnam was not a military defeat by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hey assholes: no one keeps bringing up VIET NAM, a war the USA lost with nothing near 11% of the population killed before making the decision to pull out.

    Sorry, the US did not experience a military defeat in Vietnam. Contrast Khe San with Dien Bien Phu for example. Look at the Thet Offensive a little closer. The Viet Cong was comitted in an attempt spark a rebellion, the Viet Cong was anihilated, the population did not rise up. There was moderate to heavy fighting around the country and the US won. Ironically the US Media portrayed Thet as a defeat. The US went on to force North Vietnam to recognize the South's right to exist and the North agreed not to conduct offensive operations against the South. The US packed up and went home. When the North violated the Paris Peace Accord and invaded the South it was politics that prevented the US from assisting the South in repulsing the attack. Again, incredibly ironic since this attack was much more conventional in nature and far more vulnerable to US forces, in particular air forces. The US was defeated politically, not militarily.

  138. Re:I'm not surprised by this. by kisak · · Score: 1
    Stalingrad and the US entry into the war both came in 1942. Still the German army was not defeated until 1945. Both France and UK knew that the Nazis controlled the strongest army in the world in 1939, but still declared war since they saw that the Nazi treat had to be challenged head on. That is real courage. A lot of French and British soldiers together with the other allied countries had to give their lives because Hitler had to be stopped. France (and almost UK) had to suffer years of harsh occupation and bombing both from allies and foes. It is a disgrace when the AWOL Bush tries to compare bombing a third world country for all kinds of phony reasons to fighting the horrors of the Hitler war machine.

    France was a friend in the Revolutionary War and a friend in advising against the failed invasion of Iraq, and has been a close ally in the years between those two wars. Think about that next time you eat your freedom fries.

    --

    --- guns don't kill people, people with guns kill people ---

  139. The truth about the american military machine ww2 by GuyFawkes · · Score: 4, Interesting

    OK, I live in england, I'm celtic by ancestry, you might refer to me as "a Britisher"

    My parents generation fought ww2, on my mums side 5 kids, all of them signed up, their father, my grandad was torpedoes three fucking times and lived to tell the tale... he was a bosun on the murmansk run on oil tankers, he used to chew tobacco (can't smoke on tankers) and that's what eventually killed him, colostomy and bowel cancer.

    Of his five children the eldest was a telegrapher, RN, was ordered to stay behind at the fall of singapore and report on the nips, was mia for 9 months and eventually made his own way overland to india, next eldest was another RN telegrapher (the radio shack was a prime target btw) my mum was a wren who was a plotter in devonport, plotted the d-day practices in which thousands of americans died through the sheer incompetence of their commanders, going to cut a long shit load of history short here, not much point going on about a thousand years of clanging swords with someone or other which is basically what english history is, let me tell you how WE see american military in first hand observations from ww2 (my father etc) through korea (before you lot went into nam properly) to the present day.

    in 1943 when the british army couldn't even get a pair of boots and 20 rounds of ammunition to every soldier, the american military machine could get chocolates to every soldier, and all the boots they could wear and ammo they could carry, "over sexed, over paid, and over here" was a 1943 sentiment about americans here in the southwest training for d day, but EVERYONE was in absolute awe of american logistics.

    Similarly, from 1943 through korea etc to present day, nobody ever thought american soldiers lacked courage.

    While american logistics were awesome, most people rated american military hardware as sub-standard, when germany had tiger tanks you were running around in shermans, worst thing about a sherman was the motor, 2 stroke detroit diesel was NOISY bastard, made it real easy to shoot at... similarly because supply of bullets was never a problem american weapons and soldiering were much more automatic fire than semi automatic, times where supply chain breaks everyone shit themselves if americans on the flank, waiting for them to expend all ammo and then fall back.....

    no, BY FAR commonest sentiment about american military machine was the soldiers were not as highly trained or versatile as ours (this is still true, simply because US military budget is so fucking huge we HAVE to be better at everything, on a per platoon basis) and american brass were by and large grandstanding assholes, just like we used to shoot in the back when going over the top in WWI....

    americans go on patrol in iraq in armoured vehicles all toting fully automatic weapons and more importantly crew-few medium calibre automatic weapons, anything tougher than a columbine schoolkid pops up and you hunker down and call in an airstrike.... such tactics are inevitable when you have a HUGE military machine with awesome logistics and vast numbers of under trained cannon fodder troops.

    british go on patrol in iraq in open backed landrover (4wd, a british "technical" really, often minus the 50 cal) response is very short ammunition conserving short bursts of 3 or 4 rounds at most, of not single shot mode, if it turns bad retreat and regroup, or die there, we just don't have that kind of air support or even heavy armour.... such tactics are inevitable when you have a small military machine with shite logistics (remember, we had to canniballise our biggest liner just to get troops to falklands, and she was built that way just in case too...) so every soldier must be a minimum of proficient at many tasks and bloody good at one or two.

    same thing is true of bar fights, in american bar fights there is much pre fight posturing and strutting, like bears in some mating ritual, much opportunity for both to mutually cool it off without losing face according to some strange set of rules...

    --
    http://slashdot.org/~GuyFawkes/journal
  140. Freedom by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Unlike the Bush administration, Freedom government finally supports free (as in freedom) OSS softwares and tells Microsoft Freedom to kiss their ass. Unfortunately for Freedomese employees, Microsoft Freedom retaliates by banning Freedom fries, Freedom toasts and Freedom bread in their cafetaria. Instead, it only serves proprietary food with mysterious meat and swiss cheese (with quadruple holes - in fact, it has more holes than cheese).

  141. Re:I think France got it. by lombre · · Score: 1
    BINGO! We have a winner! ... blah blah blah ...

    If you RTFA (english), this is a quote from the president of Mandrakesoft hoping to sell his product (Mandrake Linux?) in other countries.

  142. Re:In case of Slashdotting.. of Reuters? by lombre · · Score: 1

    The parent should be marked funny.

  143. Re:France Would Save More Costs by This+is+outrageous! · · Score: 1
    it doesn't look like Europe's education system is fairing too well either

    It depends whose education you're talking about. For instance, the European system is such that George W. Bush could never have graduated from a top school (the criterion is merit, not money).

    Now, whether this is 'good' or 'bad'...

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    This is...

    O
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    !

  144. Shocking by RoboRay · · Score: 2, Funny

    France will even retreat from Microsoft!

  145. Re:Ironically, OSS could greatly assist libertaria by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Okey son, it's nice that you know such a big words. Good for you! Now run along and leave the discussion for the adults.

    And for a side note, every time someone mentions libertarians, he should be taken behind the barn and shot!

  146. Old Europe? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    There is not "old Europe" or "new Europe" just because zoo's head monkey says there is!

  147. Popularity and freedom -- two different goals. by jbn-o · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Because the open source movement pursues popularity and taking credit for the works of others is a convenient way to attain that goal without having to do the hard work of actually writing the licenses and defining the concepts that helped define and build our now 20-year-old community. Consider the GNU General Public License which was written well before the Open Source Initiative began and speaks of a different philosophy than that which the open source movement speaks to. The OSI defined the terms of license acceptance such that they could add the GPL to their approved license list. The Free Software Foundation wrote the license and started the free software community about 2 decades ago.

    Mark Webbink, counsel for Red Hat, wrote an essay on licenses used in the open source movement. Webbink, like Red Hat, is a proponent of "open source". In this essay Webbink goes to some effort to reinvent the concept of copyleft without once calling it by that name. He obviously finds value in breaking up licenses into groups along those that are copylefted and those that are not, but nowhere is any credit given to the people that invented this concept and assigned that name to it about 20 years before his essay came out.

    Eric Raymond responded to AdTI's error-riddled argument about the Linux kernal. Raymond cited a number of "open-source projects" to bolster his argument, unfortunately one of them was Emacs co-written by founder of the free software movement -- Richard Stallman -- years before the OSI existed. I've written here about this before, so I won't repeat the details. It's safe to assume that RMS does not do any of his work for the benefit of the open source movement.

    He, and others (myself included), are grateful that open source proponents do so much work helping to bring users to software freedom by increasing the use of free software licenses (chiefly the GNU GPL). But there's no honor in taking credit for someone else's work. And there's no sense in conflating placing a license on a list of approved licenses with writing a license and creating a community. Building on the work of others is not the same as appropriating it. Given the number of times I've seen "free software" mistranslated or inaccurately conveyed as "open source", particularly when describing the endeavors of those outside the US, I would not be surprised if the Reuters article was completely wrong in its summary (as well as its statement about what "open source" is, which has been partially debunked elsewhere in this thread). Software freedom is something worth pursuing, helping business more efficiently find and use unpaid labor is not something many are eager to help with doing.

  148. Dilemma for Retard-Americans by FrenchyinCT · · Score: 2, Insightful
    Wow, this is going to be a problem for the sort of retards who think France is evil because they were right about not supporting a particularly stupid war...

  149. Read My Lips by ewe2 · · Score: 1

    It's called lip service How to look FOSS-friendly without actually having to support it.

    Or what we down here in the great south land of the penguins (australia) call "Clayton's FOSS", after a famous advert for a non-alcoholic beverage. It's the FOSS you have when you're not having a FOSS :)

    Our federal government is very much into Clayton's FOSS, and most of the state governments, except ironically the ACT, are the same.

    --
    insecurity asks the wrong question irritation gives the wrong answer
  150. Re:History of surrender for loud mouthed americans by mvdwege · · Score: 1

    Hmmm. Poorly armed troops sent into the forest eh? Described by the Germans as 'Shock Troops', eh?

    Would that forest by any chance be Belleau Wood?

    The poorly armed description would fit, as those troops were always armed with the cast-offs of the other services (until after WWII), and they tended to compensate for that with their superior training and discipline.

    If you are going to try to belittle the French, please do so without belittling the value of your very own US Marine Corps, a force that could be described as 'Shock Troops' even when they were still the red-headed stepchild of the US armed forces.

    Mart
    --
    "I know I will be modded down for this": where's the option '-1, Asking for it'?
  151. Re:The truth about the american military machine w by aixou · · Score: 1
    Wow, we're playing something along the lines of geek-RP(role play)-Risk.


    Now all we need are dice and a board.



    I see your British ability to conserve ammo, and raise you an airstrike.

    Just kidding, the DoD hasn't gotten back to me yet. ;)

  152. Open Source is anti US by algoa456 · · Score: 1

    I always thought that open source was anti-US and this proves it. Do you think the French would be going to Open Office if Microsoft was a French company. Not on your Nelly. They'd be espousing the benefits of the proprietary way in fine Gallic prose. But Microsoft is American so the slime balls - oops sorry, French - are all for it. It never fails to amaze me how politically naive American software developers are. The apolitical geek, oblivious to the fact that the whole world is 'borrowing' US IP, hacks on bad mouthing Microsoft and aiding and abetting the loss of their own jobs. Maybe now with US geeks being made unemployed by Chong and Gupta (and Ivan) you guys will wake up and see how you've undermined your own careers by giving away the secrets of the software kingdom(and I write this from Canada, not the US.) I wonder how US geeks will fare as burger flippers?

  153. Re:Fun: Microsoft software running under Linux by Alexis+de+Torquemada · · Score: 1
    Microsoft would be in a position where it could compete for the position of supplying office software, but only if it ported their office software to the Open Source platform.

    Or they could have teamed up with Code Weavers.

  154. Re:History of surrender for loud mouthed americans by FortKnox · · Score: 1

    Unlike Europe, you're surrounded by oceans.

    Mexico and Canada. Anyone could come in by that way.

    FYI if there is ever another "Great War" and it is fought on American soil, your guns won't save you from nuclear and chemical attack.

    Nukes are just a bad idea... we have a ton of them and would just fire them back.
    You know the cure to exposure to, say, anthrax is? Fresh air. Chemical attacks hurt in enclosed areas, not out in the open.

    --
    Good quote, too many chars. Seriously, the slashdot 120 char limit sucks!
  155. Re:History of surrender for loud mouthed americans by FortKnox · · Score: 1

    Does the American police often use napalm bombardment from helicopters, then ? And do they often use army uniforms ?

    Yes, and they recruit and draft for it, and have full carpet bombs and everything. The definition of war, by US standards, is when Congress declares it.

    No matter, whether it was a police operation or a war, you lost anyway.

    We lost a 'police action' trying to keep democracy in a nation. We didn't lose our homeland to an invading force.

    The joke would be funnier if it wasn't told every time someone mentions France.

    Sorta like when linux and bugs and viruses are mentioned when a Microsoft story is mentioned? You don't seem to mind that...

    --
    Good quote, too many chars. Seriously, the slashdot 120 char limit sucks!
  156. Re:McDonalds vs Gyro by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    you have to eat 4 or 5 of them [McDonald's cheeseburgers] to be satiated


    What? Are you pushing 140 Kilograms? That is about 1,500 calories in one meal. And a Döner Kabob? (gyro) is not much better for you. No wonder you can't stay on topic. Always thinking with your stomache...

  157. Re:History of surrender for loud mouthed americans by ultranova · · Score: 1

    Yes, and they recruit and draft for it, and have full carpet bombs and everything. The definition of war, by US standards, is when Congress declares it.

    Newspeak, eh ?-)

    You do realize that yours is an utterly ridicilous argument, don't you ? The definition of war in common language is a conflict between large armed forces, which certainly fit Vietnam.

    I'd imagine, that had the USSR launched a nuclear attack during the cold war, you'd have called that a war, even before your congress got around to formally deciding that.

    We lost a 'police action' trying to keep democracy in a nation. We didn't lose our homeland to an invading force.

    You got involved in a foreign war, performed various atrocities and war crimes, lost to an inferior force, abandoned your allies and escaped. Are you really arguing that this was less shamefull than fighting against a superior invasion army to save one's homeland and losing ?

    The joke would be funnier if it wasn't told every time someone mentions France.

    Sorta like when linux and bugs and viruses are mentioned when a Microsoft story is mentioned? You don't seem to mind that...

    What does spreading information about current computer security threats have to do with retelling the same tired joke for 60 years ?

    The thing is, most Microsoft jokes are actually quite accurate - Microsoft products are, generally speaking, buggy and very vulnerable to viruses, whereas Linux is neither. Microsofts business ethics also seem to be somewhat lacking, as evidenced by the conviction of abuse of monopoly by your own justice system.

    On the other hand, twisting 60 year old history time and again just because you can't think of any new jokes is annoying. Especially since it gets invariably modded to +5 Funny.

    Or is this some kind of misguided patriotic anger at France, because it was smart enough to stay out of Iraq ?

    --

    Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

  158. So you admit it's not as good by tjstork · · Score: 1

    Ultimately, your whole argument is, "well, the tool really doesn't actually work, but its free".

    You don't say: "geez, the power drill I just bought doesn't work, I guess I'll build it myself." You go and get one that does work.

    It's appalling that you cannot just install a product for Linux. I go to install KDevelop on my Red Hat 9 box, and the next thing you know, it's sending me all over creation trying to find a bunch of web sites that may or may not have a package that I need. Then I find out, well, it works ok on Mandrake. So I go and download that, and it still has issues as I unwittingly installed it as root and not myself and it messed up even more.

    Oh, and I won't even discuss the documention. Is the unix api part of kdevelop? Sorta. Does F1 work correctly? Sorta. Sometimes. Nope. What about the C++ guides. Sorta.

    Oh, and finally, what's up with me having to spend 2k to get a commercial version of the widget library. If I gotta fork over some dough, then, I may as well do it for M$ and get help that works.

    It's all about "File|Run|Setup".

    I wish IBM still made OS/2.

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    This is my sig.
    1. Re:So you admit it's not as good by killjoe · · Score: 1

      " Ultimately, your whole argument is, "well, the tool really doesn't actually work, but its free"."

      Huh? You must be confused. My argument was "I would be ashamed if I could not install kdevelop".

      "It's appalling that you cannot just install a product for Linux."

      No. It's appaling that YOU can't install it. I can install it just fine, so can tens of thousands of other people.

      "Oh, and finally, what's up with me having to spend 2k to get a commercial version of the widget library. "

      Huh? Why? Where does this come from?

      "It's all about "File|Run|Setup"."

      Huh? Ask your grandmother to do that once in a while and see what happens?

      Look Linux is not for people like you. You are much better off using a Mac. Why you choose to run windows is a mystery, you must be a glutton for punishment.

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      evil is as evil does
  159. Liberty fries anybody? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The French got it about free software a long time ago. BTW, give a look to Objectweb, a French team that grew up and became a major foundation for free software... Like Apache but without the diet coke.

  160. Re: by MissTuxie · · Score: 1

    agree completely. Companies (and government) should think of open source solutions the same way they think about off-the-shelf: as a possibility. Not just use it because it is open source. Risks, advantages and everything else should be considered in both cases. :)

  161. Link: Rummy and Saddam. by qtp · · Score: 1

    Here's a link to that photo plus some historical context, government documentation, and a breif history of the US history of support of Saddam Hussein through the 1980s.

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    Read, L