Promoting FOSS to People Who Don't Care
MarcoF brings us his take on how to cultivate interest in open-source software to casual users who aren't interested in or necessarily aware of its existence. Many people simply have trouble leaving their comfort zone of older proprietary software; what's the best way to get them to look at an open-source alternative?
"Since most people would rather die than write or study software source code, it is actually counterproductive to promote software 'because you can modify it yourself and be part of its community'. Look for really practical advantages which can be enjoyed every day by the person you want to convince. Start from the actual deep passions, beliefs, interests and practical needs of the people in front of you and go backwards from there, delaying the apparition of terms like 'source code', 'the four software freedoms', GPL, Gnu, Linux, etc."
I tried persuading all my friends, citing the freedom argument, the security argument, the stability, community etc. Nothing worked. Then I learned how. Show them the spinning cube (With my heavy metal friends, I go for a pentagonal prism), and shout 'It's free! It's free!' Over and over.
"Be light, stinging, insolent and melancholy"
"What, did you skip the 60s or something, pops? If people like doing it, they'll totally give it away for free."
Just hire a spokesperson with really big tits. Like, really big.
I lead by example. Then, when someone comes to me with his IE problem, I (honestly) tell him that I'm sorry but I can't help him with that because I use a better browser instead and point him to Firefox.
Lead by example? That's my way of (politely) not giving free technical support to moochers.
Toronto-area transit rider? Rate your ride.
"Oh, I remember the 60s. Best years of my life. I spent some time in the jungle hunting down the Cong. Y'know, this 'open source' stuff sounds kinda like commie propaganda to me."
Maybe there are some people you shouldn't try to switch to FOSS. : p
This guy's the limit!
It was the same for my parents. They switched from MS Office to Open Office. My father, who has at least a little bit PC experience got used to it very soon, my mother was somehow irritated by the different names ("Word" vs. "Writer") ;) but using the software itself wasn't to much of a problem for her either..
I would call that a success
http://www.linuxgenuineadvantage.org/