How Microsoft Could Embrace Linux
"He goes on to cite the governments of Paris, Munich, Brazil, Peru, China, Korea, and Japan which are all embracing open source software to varying degrees. Meanwhile, when they choose Microsoft software, fast-growing emerging markets like China and India opt for pirated copies. Salkever explains that the concerns for customers like these are the 'relatively high price of Microsoft software' and the 'concerns about buying proprietary software to run critical government operations.' Finally he points to recent moves by Sun and IBM to leave the commoditized software and hardware business behind, writing 'When the world's largest and most respected IT consultancy draws a clear bead on your crown jewels, it's time to mount a bold counterattack.'"
Free Software is NOT about price!
I would hope nobody would want Office for GNU/Linux because it wouldn't be free software, and they value their freedoms.
Price isn't an issue. Some people pay for copies of OpenOffice.org, some download it, some would probably pay more for a nice printed manual.
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