Linux To Be Installed In Every Russian School
J_Omega writes "According to an article from last week at the Russian IT site CNews, Linux is slated to be installed in every Russian school by 2009. The article makes it appear that it will be going by the (unimaginative) name 'Russian OS.' As stated in the article: 'The main aim of the given work is to reduce dependence on foreign commercial software and provide education institutions with the possibility to choose whether to pay for commercial items or to use the software, provided by the government.' Initial testing installations are supposed to begin next year in select districts. Is 2008/09 the year of Linux on the (Russian) desktop?"
This is potentially good for Linux and potentially bad for Internet banking.
Let's teach all the russian kids how to hack. This is what we should be doing in the USA.
They're using their grammar skills there.
I fully encourage any and all large organizations ( like a government ) to move to an OS that suits their needs, or can be tailored as such.
With the hopeful side effect, of course, of a more robust OS for all others involved. Given russia's rather lax attitude towards IP ( which I can't fault them in ), it's questionable whether we will see changes committed back to the tree. But here's hoping!
Mod me down with all of your hatred and your journey towards the dark side will be complete!
Ok, every other week now for the past couple of years we read on slashdot "Government XYZ in country ABC is converting to Linux","Country XYZ schools in XYZ country mandate Linux be in classrooms", "Company DFG has migrated to Linux desktops", etc
It'd be interesting to see some world maps showing which countries have massive deployments and when you mouse-over, it shows you the # population that is using Linux.
Then we can turn to our bosses and say... "See!"
Anybody up for the challenge?
Adeptus
No trees were killed in the making of this post; however, many trillions of electrons were horribly inconvenienced.
Russia is a big country. Once again the growth of Linux, a product made mostly in America, is happening most freely outside of American borders. Back home, it has to contend with "software patents", and the unrestrained monopolism of Microsoft, both of which are much less of a problem overseas where governments refuse to allow big foreign corporations to shit all over their economies (whereas the US govt. is all too happy to let big American corporations do whatever the hell they like as long as they have the "lobbyists" to pay for it).
No "In Soviet Russia" jokes as FP?
Quo usque tandem abutere, Nimbus, patientia nostra?
Wait, how does Linux teach you how to hack? Is there a hacking man page that I've been missing? Maybe it is in /usr/share/hack or /usr/share/doc/hack? Never checked those directories my self. Or maybe with the latest wireless drivers the wireless car shoots needles into your brain, upload hacking knowledge directly.
Your theories are fascinating indeed.
The software will be called ALTLinux. It is the typical lack of the use of articles in Russian which seems to be confusing the submitter. If written by an English author, the article would have started "A Russian OS...".
Call me old fashioned, but I like a dump to be as memorable as it is devastating - Bender
this will just play into the hands of our detractors who can now claim that 'Open Source Really Is Like Communism' (never mind that it was invented by an American...
at least i'm trying to be funny...
j
--
open source -- in the long tradition of libraries, liberty, and threefolding...
Vendekapetz blisitsa!
(The end of Windows is getting closer!)
Comment removed based on user account deletion
Price of a given software good too high for teachers to use it? Russian teachers have already tried pirating it, because the cost of an XP OS license is ridiculous in comparison to budgets for schools there, especially outside of moscow. Microsoft comes down like a ton of bricks on the teacher, so it becomes clear that this isn't a useful route for other teachers. The switch is made to an Os without license fees and distribution limitations.
Microsoft could have solved this by lowering the price of XP for educators in russia enough so that it could have been meaningfully distributed around the country. But they didn't. Oh well.
The vast majority of Russian schools has pirated software installed. They can't afford to buy licenses for MS products, and frankly the government doesn't view it as a high priority either, Russia still doesn't respect copyrights too much. At the same time, they've been actually cracking down on pirates lately (due to international pressure, in part). So I expect that going Linux in schools is by far the easiest way of going legal in Russia - licenses are just really not an option.
will it include Stalin?
I've been trying to get the techies at my school to consider linux and open source for a while now. They are not interested, distrust things that are free and find it easier just to follow the commercial software peddled to them or recommended by the UK government's BECTA organisation. Maybe it takes a governmental decision to bring about change for the ill-informed schools. Well done Russia. In the mean time I'm trying to change their mind by giving the students copies of the OpenEducationCD and getting them to tell their teachers how they are finding it. www.theopencd.org/education
"all through my house i set up traps, it seems like the rats have a map, so now i feed the rats crack" - Donald D
Since when is GNU/Linux not commercial software?
I think the importance of the penetration of Linux is overestimated. What is more important than the penetration of Linux, is the penetration of Open Source programs. We now have a few very succesfull Open Source programs that are useful for a lot of people: Firefox, Thunderbird, Gimp, OpenOffice, and, to a lesser extent, Inkscape. They run on the three main operating systems: OSX, Linux, And Windows. The use of programs like the OpenOffice et al. ensures the use of open standards for documents, pictures, etc, which in the long run is much more important than which operating system is prevalent.
-- Cheers!
A chicken in every pot!
It should make Microsoft very happy as Russia is a hotbed of pirated copies of Microsoft products. It is nice to see Russia taking a proactive step to combat international piracy.
(*($%^%#%^-crash%%&(
What is that sound from Redmond?
The truth shall set you free!
Or as Ensign Chekov would no doubt have said, "Linux? Of course, Keptin. It was a Russian inwention."
The higher the technology, the sharper that two-edged sword.
Don't penguins live at the south pole?
;-)
Not all of them.
http://www.oregonzoo.org/Exhibits/penguin.htm Here is just one example of above the equator penguins. There are lots more.
Even those living in Antarctica live close to the water, not near the pole.
The truth shall set you free!
I've submitted news to /. about Russian schools consider switching to ALTLinux a long before, i think it was after Microsoft sued the high-school teacher for pirated copy of windows xp.
IMO the biggest driver of Linux on the Desktop is Microsoft and this article is but one example.
Their combination of their recalcitrant anti-competitive behavior and anti-piracy lobbying prompts governments to seek alternatives, which drives wider Linux awareness as Linux is adopted by educational institutions. Their anti-piracy technologies essentially prevent many multi-computer households from upgrading making Linux as an alternative (for tech savy users) that much appealing. Their zeal to dominate every market forces other industry players towards supporting alternatives as a defensive measure, which means more applications and codecs.
Linux is otherwise technically competitive with Microsoft but certainly it is facing a significant market disadvantage due to Microsoft's entrenched position, and so Microsoft's actions are likely to have the most impact in combating that position.
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As you'll surely assume from this rant I do not have children, but I do have a nephew. I also use Linux, F/OSS as well as Windows and commercial software. Let me say, that I realize that Linux and OSS doesn't necessarily mean free or cheap but usually it does cost less. I'm all for using Linux and OSS in education. I do not feel it is necessary to spend (waste) taxpayer money just because some people will rant that the children deserve the best in name-brand, expensive software for kids. If so, buy them whatever you wish for their home use, but every student does not need to be issued a laptop with Windows/Office installed on it with my money. Then they send out kids with coupon books, candy, etc. to raise more money. Linux/OSS/Freeware can teach kids to use a computer and allow them to get their homework done without spending as much taxpayer money. I'm all for it.
Stallman got to russia through CUBA !! Viva la rev !! We love Castro !! Both of them !!
The name is no more unimaginative than Microsoft or Office or FrontPage or may the boring list go on....
Now you told Microsoft things will change rapidly. Soon to be announced, discounted copies of XP to every school in Russia.
Finland declared it's independence from (Soviet) Russia in 1917. I know some people might be a little bit behind the times, but you're pushing the envelope.
For the perfect anti-Unix, write an OS that thinks it knows what you're doing better than you do and let it be wrong.
What's going to happen, most likely, is that they let the pilot programme run, and then buy sufficient amount of FUD-spreading from those involved to declare it unsuccessful, with a nice side-effect of discrediting the only competitor (Apple is not competitive in Russia - hardware pricing is way too high, and, perhaps, more importantly for education sector, their software is not localized for Russia).
linux desktop and communism are a good mach though - citizens are miserable, but pretend to be proud - and it is doomed to fail miserably
I've been upgraded to "bad"!
I own linux too.
If you mod this up, your slashdot background will turn into a beautiful sunset!
A link to screenshots of LXP2007: http://s38.photobucket.com/albums/e132/penguin7009/
Most likely "Oh crap, now they wount even think about buying any of our products."
Upper classes in Finland used to be Swedish while the losers and nobodies vere Finns. Linus belongs to the Swedish speaking upper classes. Linus is a Swede from Finland, not a Finn. Saying that Linus is a Finn is the same sayng that a Hungarian person from Romania is a Romanian or a Ukrainian person from Poland is a Pole.
Beware of anonymous cowards?
Linus's father was a Finnish communist journalist and a leading figure in the Communist Party of Finland who spent a lot of time living in Russia. I gather from Linus's book that these long absences in part contributed to the break up of his parents marriage.
It's a federal republican democracy with a capitalist economy... Has been for years.
Doesn't make it a good democracy, but then, the US can't exactly throw stones in that regard either.
Deleted
was that the old Linux or the Gnu Linux?
Apocalypse Cancelled, Sorry, No Ticket Refunds
They can't admit it but it is far better for MS if people use pirate MS software than if they use linux.
Linux reaching a large enough market share for software vendors to take it seriously would be incrediablly damaging to MS.
note: i'm known as plugwash most places but i screwd up registering that here somehow in the past and now can't register
Once you become proficient in using Linux you are having a better understanding of OS and network internals than your Windows-using peers.
You're making it sound like most windows users are proficient in using Windows. Just because something is there doesn't mean that it's going to be used. In this case, just because the code is there for everyone doesn't mean that many of these students are going to dig around and play with the code. They're going to treat it just like they do when they use Windows.
Linux seems to really be making inroads in the third world and less developed countries.
I would love to see Linux take over China, Russia, Brazil, Eastern Europe, India, Mexico, and Southeast Asia. As we progress towards the browser-centric software area (read: "Network is the computer" type ideology), I think Linux deployment will boom.
Customization, internationalization, and price are the key features that I think will push Linux ahead. At the same time, I hope the Open Source movement will continued to stress cross-platform,
which will make migration to Linux much easier for people.
Frankly, I do not believe Russian educational system is going Linux!
Even though Open Source software is well-covering school needs (especially after Star Office became open source),
the inertia is enormous: Russia now is very windows-oriented. Linux, FreeBSD is geekish. Macs are so rare
that maybe many do not know they exist (outside of publishing, some universities and some regions, like Karelia, where
they were 12 years ago introduced to education.) All education softwares are for Windows. All games are for Windows.
Pupil's home computers are Windows ones because of games. In the "real life" its almost always Windows at the offices.
Of course, Russian Linux may solve some of the problems (like having live cd for home) and probably schools will benefit
from not having a danger of installing games on school computers, but educational software should be an effort.
Arguably, old educational software works even _better_ under dosbox and Wine than in the Windows XP (!) - at least that is what I do when
some old disk can't be run in Win XP because its made for Win95 or Win3.1. But still...
Another reason which hinders adoption of Linux in Russia is lack of broadband Internet connections... Otherwise Linux (e.g. Ubintu)
is much more cool: just select whatever you want and it is here. Russian OS can have its own system of repositories and use, for example,
satellite connections to download software (say, you switch on satellite receivers on 30th of August and computers are loaded
for the new school year in a day or two).
Probably, this is some kind of political move. Politicians rarely care about the good for he society in Russia: they speak a lot, but
doings should have real motive beyond saving trillions of roubles on software (as NOT saving them can mean more dinners at
MS and partners, etc, etc). I do not believe "russian soul" is decisive in this kind of decisions.
But lets see.
Would have to be one of those USB sticks. Can't imagine a CD fitting anywhere.
Triple penetration would be Vista, Linux, BSD.
For great justice.
Faster! Faster! Faster would be better!
Can't admit it ?
"It's easier for our software to compete with Linux when there's piracy than when there's not,"
-- Bill Gates
And he and other Microsoft execs have made many similar claims.
As you well know, the page you link to says "Buy Linux-XP now!". Why should anyone buy linux? Support maybe, but not the OS. There are numerous free distros around, I cannot imagine that many will decide that they would rather pay for it. The only attraction that is offered is that you can "load Windows programs", particularly IE. Isn't that rather a case of bringing all that is bad in Windows to Linux? I'm not saying that there are no attractions, but I remain unconvinced that this is a major player of the future. However, I am ready to be persuaded otherwise. The ball, as they say, is in your court....
Have a look at soylentnews.org for a different view
OS runs you!
Let me put it straight, I don't think all Russians are money-greedy hackers, in fact getting kids out there learn Linux will give them an advantage in lots of fields, so less need for criminal activities. But still I will keep stressing how stupid this German decision was :(
molmod.com - computing tips from a molecular modeling
You might want to check out advocacy/blog sites as well.
Here's an example:
http://cdneducation.blogspot.com/
It's about independence from a closed source operating system whose producer is strongly tied to the US government, something which should raise big red alerts in any non US controlled/enslaved country. Windows is packed by spyware to control what the users do and people still think US agencies aren't using those features to fulfill their interests?
The Russians are doing nothing more than preparing the new generation to remove a spyware software disguised as an operating system from ther country and I would expect many (again non US controlled/enslaved) countries to do the same.
Your points are valid. I guess I'm not a true linux geek. Though I understand the philosophy of the true linux geek, I also understand that there are some software titles that are worth paying for. Some that come to mind are, Crossover office and Parallels, both which I own licenses for. Paying for the operating system also just seems to be the next step?
I guess I fall into the gap somewhere between the all out linux for free (where its my responsibility to make it all work) and the (purchase for having someone else do a lot of the work) person?
I also purchased Win4lin, nero linux, vuescan and several other software titles which Do Not stop me from installing on my computer as many times as I want whenever I decide to format and have a "do over". All these software titles are reasonable priced and are free of DRM for the most part.
If windows didn't cost so much and try to imprison me and try to run my digital life and wasn't so bug and virus prone, I probably would still be using it. The main reason that I usually get from true Linux Geeks because of my attitude of "for pay" software on Linux is usually that by buying software for linux you are endangering linux and will make every one have to pay!
I don't believe that. I believe Linux will always have free software and distros and that "for pay" linux software will co-exist along side of it for those like me who are not as savvy or to lazy to do it myself?
penguin7009
I've worked as the techie in a school myself before. Most of my experience is a few years old but I understand very little has changed.
The upshot is that Linux is going to be an uphill struggle in any school without a push from above. It may be found in embedded or turnkey systems where the OS is of little consequence, such as NAS devices, but that's as far as it's likely to go.
Open source programs like Firefox that run on windows don't encourage software companies to release Linux versions of their products. As long as the software I want to run requires windows and I'm not smrt enough to use wine I'm stuck with windows.
In Soviet Russia Linux teaches you!
cheers for the info
ive just started trying at my school
techie MS fanboys REALLY piss me off
if you live within a 50 mile radius of liverpool get back to me cos i have an interesting link...
www.tdobson.net #### Dare to Dream #### blog.tdobson.net
Congratulations, Slashdot trolls -- the "In Soviet Russia" jokes now write themselves.
N4st0r, trixx0r h0bb1tz0rz! Th3y st0l3 0ur pr3c10uzz!
MOD UP Parent
I'm flattered to be considered a linux geek, but I don't think that I deserve the accolade.
If people want to run Windows software then there are perfectly good operating systems for that task made by a company in Redmond. However, they come with a downside, or several 'downsides' if you like, such as cost, vulnerability, vendor lock-in etc. But don't knock them too much. They seem to have done very well out of their product. (Please don't anyone respond with the various reasons why this is so, we know them and they are not relevant here.)
However, the web page for Linux-XP proudly points out that by changing to it such things as viruses, spam etc become a thing of the past. OK, how does Linux-XP solve the spam problem? Yep, it doesn't. The virus issue is a good point but much of today's problems lie not with viruses but with people who install software that they shouldn't. If Linux-XP is able to load and run any Windows software - another claim from the page that you pointed to - then it can also load the software that you don't want it to do. Now I cannot say what effect this might have. Perhaps the file structure is entirely different which will defeat the malware but, if it is, how do Windows programs just run? Perhaps it uses WINE, which would be great improvement security wise but, despite it being very good, it is far from perfect. I remain unconvinced.
Among the benefits of not using Windows are that you avoid the costs, vulnerabilities and vendor lock-in. So buying a different piece of software that allows you to keep on buying and using Microsoft Office, might have some if not all of the vulnerabilities, and certainly is perpetuating vendor lock-in doesn't seem that much of an advantage to me.
Many people see the issue as black or white. It isn't. But whereas many already 'understand' Windows (often not so well as they believe that they do, but that is a different discussion) there is something new to learn when switching to another OS, be it Linux, a variant of BSD, or whatever. This does frighten them. Not because they couldn't master it but often because they think that they will 'lose' their current expertise in Windows. In other words, I think that they believe that their current knowledge will become worthless and they might lose the credibility that they currently have amongst their peers. Fine, that is their choice, but they are wrong. Most people rode bicycles when they were young but when they grew older they changed to cars or motor bikes. I wonder why they fear changing their OS? As you try each different OS you learn different lessons, some of which will hold you in great stead no matter which OS you eventually choose to be your everyday system.
The beauty of all of this is that it is available for very little cost. Most distros can be downloaded for free. I subscribe to a magazine which gives me at least 1, and sometimes as many as 4, new distros to try each month (Linuxformat). So Linux-XP doesn't seem like much of a bargain to me nor can I see the benefits using it to enable me to keep Windows software. There are thousands of alternatives and some of them leave Microsoft's offerings in the dust. I'm not trying to start a war here, this is simply my view. Others may disagree.
Have a look at soylentnews.org for a different view
What part of the GPL forces users to give changes back to the 'community'?
In fact, if they don't distribute and only use internally to their education system, one would argue that they don't even have to distribute the source.
Would get my vote! How about a poll on this, Slashdot!
Ever mistakenly called an Irishman British - or worse, English? Remember the reaction you got?
Right. Now, you know Finland? You know what they think about Russia? Yep.
Oh, by the way, the Finns make about the best hunting rifles in the world. Pretty much everybody has one. And silencers are perfectly legal and uncontroversial.
Now, go away and sit in the corner and think about what you did, and don't come back until you're ready to say sorry.
Real Daleks don't climb stairs - they level the building.
Thanks for the response. Get your point. I'm not really trying to convince you of anything in particular. I have so much ms software that I still use from years of purchasing ms stuff that it was a shame not to use it. Using linux with Codeweavers software really allowed me to instantiously move from Windows to Linux and not have to make a 90* learning curve. The ease of use of LXP made the transition even easier. I paid, I think, $19.95 for LXP license and $39.95 for Crossover Office on which I run about 10 windows titles of which I already purchased and which are still up to date enough to continue using. In three years of using this arrangement I have never had a virus or malware on either my linux or windows software. Not saying that this is what anyone else should do, but what has worked for me. I have also learned a great deal about linux because as you already know linux is not perfect either. I have had to learn how to use linux also. I support "for pay" linux software titles to advance linux. I know that this is controversial within the linux community but as I see it, until all codecs, movie formats and other forms of digital media are all free, how will linux be usuable right now on the desktop? In any event one thing I have learned to love about linux and the linux community is the freedom of choice. This has been mine! penguin
After events like this case of Alexander Ponosov the choice is clear. If there is no money for licensing or your licensing vendor can't be trusted, there is no third choice. It's penguins or prisons.
It is time that Russian schools recognized that prohibition doesn't work. All this what-about-the-children zero tolerance for freedom War On Penguins does is encourage crime and populate the prisons. When will US schools see the light?
Help stamp out iliturcy.
The openeducationcd is a good place to start. I've put it into my school and the kids are using it. Due to that we have a few open source programs on the school system, but it took me two years just to get them. They would much rather pay for photoshop than use GIMP / Paint.net. For me the issue isn't really the fact it is open source, more the fact that I'm at a poor school and the kids can't afford to buy commercial products, even the stupidly named educational licenses. Rather than tell them to pirate everything I show them some free stuff. They can't understand how it can be free.
"all through my house i set up traps, it seems like the rats have a map, so now i feed the rats crack" - Donald D
it's the all new and improved KGB Desktop Environment!
If this is true, there will be lots of smart teenagers with free time on their hands and everyday access to Linux OS. I see lots of new Linux viruses and exploits coming out shortly.
That article, no matter what it claims, is totally misleading as, according to most other sources (namely gazeta.ru) this line of argumentation ("oh, we are going to build our own OS!") is solely used as a way to make a better deal with MS after the serie of busts in the russian schools using pirated copies of Windows. No matter what it does, the Russian Ministry of Education is not stupid.. they just want a better deal.
http://www.automatiq.se
He must be a Swede. Besides, I read somewhere (Online) that he is one of the 300,000 Swedes from Finland.
I wondered why no one had asked this...
Rubuntu? Rentoo? Rudora?!
... and I suppose you never heard jokes about how Soviet Russians used to make claims to inventing all sorts of things for propaganda purposes?....
I hate having to explain the joke to people who like to look for ways to be offended. Glad to see someone 'got it' (the first comment to my post). Now, go away and sit in the corner and think about what you did, and don't come back until you're ready to say sorry. :)
Finland is a nice country and Nokias are my favourite cell phone. :)
-- I ignore anonymous replies to my comments and postings.
Danny.
I have written over 900 book reviews
They are going to distribute it. And they are going to call it their own. Realistically, what do you expect can be done about it?
That is why you have not been seeing the U.S. Government doing it.
Seriously... if you were a government, and you wanted an OS to use for internal business, and even (in some cases) security and military, which would you choose? A proprietary OS, the source code of which is kept secret (even from you), or an OS with open-source code, the security of which does NOT depend on "security through obscurity"?
A lot of national governments have banned the use of Windows for internal use. And I do not blame them a bit. Sane governments do not rely on others to keep their secrets for them.
Therefore, the United States Government is (choose one):
(A) Insane
(B) Uninformed
(C) Completely Clueless
(D) Unable To Function In A Realistic Manner
(E) Unaware Of Who Its Real Friends Are
(E) All Of The Above
sad how you have to hit most slashdotters over the head in order for them to get a joke isn't it. oh yeah... I am a troll [/sarcasm] I guess subtle humour is beyond most here... present company excepted. :)
-- I ignore anonymous replies to my comments and postings.
{sigh} You're right about that. To continue the Star Trek analogy, some people are like Commander Data ... literal-minded to a fault.
Note they are often given mod points.
The higher the technology, the sharper that two-edged sword.
At the risk of sounding trollish, but people have been getting Windows at no additional cost for a long time
Correction, people have been getting Windows at the risk of a BSA audit.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/business/6499843.stm
It wasn't the purchase price that disrupted the Windows market. It was the disruption by the BSA.
The truth shall set you free!
ALT Linux seems to be a Redhat recompile in the style of CentOS with some extra Russian documentation etc.
ALT Linux is based on a community-driven repository called Sisyphus. It was a Mandrake clone long ago, but has evolved into a separate distribution. For instance, it uses an apt/rpm hybrid package management system instead of Mandrake's urpmi.
While it has some drawbacks and is sometimes dependent on the upstream, it's still a valid choice if you need a Russian-speaking community. Not Debian yet, but not an RH clone as well.
The ALTLinux company, on the other hand, is known for holding various linux-related events and generally pushing linux in Russia.
WYSIWIG, but what you see might not be what you need
Russian government often promises more than it delivers. On the other hand Russian government is in the procces of passing a law that requires a license for programming, which will render Russian shareware illegal. That, I'm sure, is something they will deliver.
No, Finland declared it's independence from Bolshevist Russia in 1917, Soviet Union wasn't established until 1922.
"Bolshevist Russia or Bolshevik Russia is a common term for the Bolshevik side in the Russian Civil War, or more specifically the Russian government between the October Revolution (November 7, 1917) and the establishment of the Soviet Union (December 30, 1922)."
Might the US government look askance at closed-source Russian software that was rumored to contain government-compliant (Russian government, that is) backdoors? It'a a bit obvious that we wouldn't want to trust that, especially with a new cold war brewing. For all Putin knows (not that he's famed for paranoia or anything) the NSA has an instant backdoor to every Windows installation connected to the net, or a kill switch, or whatever. I'd be moving to Linux too.
Linux alliance is a group of independed russian FOSS companies. It based on the third largest in the world by source code packages count community-supported deposiatary of GNU GPL Linux software. Linux alliance in favour of GNU GPL and support it.
Depositary name is Sisyphus. http://sisyphus.ru/ . Distributive name is ALT Linux ( http://www.linux.com/feature/119106 ). ALT Linux is a member of Linux alliance.
Most likely to win the tender Linux alliance. The main competitor, which is likely to lose is IBM, promotes distribution Ubuntu.
Sorry for my bad english, i am Russian.
Do we have already an idea about the choice of the distribution ? A commercial distribution or more common ? It's maybe the beginning of a worldwide change at the education level...
Steve Ballmer was right. Linux IS communism!
But seriously, when western commercial (capitalist) software companies have been sued into oblivion over "patent infringements", we can rest assure that we can look to the east for free and cheap software.
Long live the revolution, comrades!
Actually I was referring to the broader state of affairs rather than specifically to a particular case, it's easy for people to see that a computer with
Windows installed sold for $599.00,
Linux installed sold for $625.95,
No OS installed sold for $665.00;
and conclude that windows is not only free, but valueless the same attitude they have with Linux. Linux has the tougher row to hoe when prices are seem as equal because it requires more user involvement than windows does. The BSA goons by bullying the Russian schools into getting a non-pirated OS are simply positioning Linux as the incumbent system, so now in Russia this and future generations of kids will see Linux as the system of choice and nothing that Redmond can do is likely to change the Russians position on this.
What happens when Teachers in the US say to Microsoft, "Redhat bidded out the software package for $39.95 a seat installed and configured on site for 150 seats in 5 locations and they'll have 5 RHCEs hang around for a week giving on-site support and training"?
Apocalypse Cancelled, Sorry, No Ticket Refunds
Those darn communists and their Red Hats...
*ducks*
Linux is international. And irrespective of country, linux is saving money for governments, schools, and that translates to saving taxes. If you were to assess the major use of XP in the home or school, there would be less than 6 topics, ranging from writing, spread-sheet, internet, emails and other lower priority activities that are used by 99% of the population. As for hacking, the same people intent on hacking are world-wide residents without borders. In closing, Bravo Russia. Leslie in Montreal, Canada Remember, Russia was first with Man in Space. No country has exclusivity on intelligence.
Leslie Satenstein Montreal Quebec Canada
> Well done Russia.
I live in Russia. I don't beleive it'll ever come true due to our government, bureaucracy and people stupidity.
BTW Russia voted YES on OOXML. Some enthusiasts were recently trying to get protocols or analysis reports on which this decision was based but they had no luck because it seems that decision was based on msft money not analysis.
I choose friends for sigs
its a shame that i disagree with its 'open source' philosphy - i'm a 'free softwaare' person... having said that it still looks like a good thing and i dont want to cause myself to many problems.
my current school which i have just moved to has no F/LOSS which is really rubbish. as a 24/7 gnu+linux user its hard moving to win xp & ie 7....
having to do web design in dreamweaver and frontpage2003... YUK.
but in many ways it is the right thing to do - if you introduce these kids, for what ever reason you want to using F/LOSS maybe a few years down the line,
after they have finished complaining about it they will see its benefits and perhaps switch to ubuntu or linux mint or something.... from there, debian & gentoo await. (then comes gNewSense and Utotu)
But i know what you mean. it is hard for people to understand why high quality stuff can be free. but if you look at bill gate's open letter ( the really famous one) its quite easy to explain....
- no computer hobbiest can spend 4 years of his life bug checking etc....
but 50 computer hobbiest can spend 2 hours a week doig that....
www.tdobson.net #### Dare to Dream #### blog.tdobson.net
i didnt realise it was canical sponsored...
perhaps i am wrong about it being 'open source' on purpose... and not free software...
anyway... enough said.. it is probably safe to disregard my comments regarding ideology conflicts
www.tdobson.net #### Dare to Dream #### blog.tdobson.net
This one is a no-brainer. First, you declare Linux your eductional OS, then you admit that you've been slack on piracy and bring off a serious long term crackdown. Microsoft products simply cease to exist within your national boundaries... and they invite you to join the WTO as an exemplar new member.
The second verse is also obvious. An unltra-nationalist government decides to promote "national" music and films. They place a sky high import tax on applicable items, subsidize "national culture" and crackdown on piracy. The RIAA couldn't possible complain.
http://www.desktoplinux.com/news/NS7546509093.html I tried to post this article on slashdot but it was rejected :-(
After opening the free internet clubs in every city in Macedonia for older and poor people which work on Ubuntu, this government continue to pleasantly surprise me :-)