No Russian Operating System, At Least For Now
Elektroschock writes "The project by 27 Russian parties to develop a National Operating System for Russia has not taken off, yet (Russian). Ilya Ponomarev, the responsible technology committee chair in the Duma, received a negative response from the government. The government argues that the project and Open Standards would not impact the society and economy. Parliament members regret the setback for Russia's digital independence. Ponomarev wants to find other interested partners in the Government now." The Google translation makes it tough to tell whether this project is actually dead, or just shelved for the moment. Any Russian speakers out there who can parse it with greater clarity?
I would, but then I would have to kill you, comrade. Our national secrets are safe from your translations of the Google.
The system operates you!
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Smivs on the intertubes!
that the government refused to support the "national software platform" but it still plans to stimulate development and use of FLOSS software. This is a point of view I personally agree with. Why reinvent the wheel once again when you can just pick a linux distro and tweak it according to your needs? :)
From what I can tell from the article, the proposal was forwarded to the Communications Ministry, which replied with a rejection letter, citing the expense involved and lack of clear success metrics. There were also concerns over ghettoizing Russian IT industry away from the international mainstream.
Ponomoarev is not giving up, though, and is seeking direct dialogue between his parliamentary committee and representatives of the Ministry, and also considering discussing his proposal with other government agencies.
Original Russian text says that Government supported the idea of using open source software, but declined to support National OS.
So the project is dead.
There will be no "Russian Windows"
Deputy Ilya Ponomarev's letter to President Medvedev about the creation of a "national software platform" was redirected to the Ministry of Communications. According to CNews sources, the Ministry's reply letter to the deputy supports the orientation towards domestic and open-source software, but criticizes the deputy's main point - Ponomarev's "national software platform" proposal.
The authors of the reply (CNews has obtained a copy) agree that "supporting domestic developers is of strategic importance" and "stimulating the creation and use of open-source software is one of the government's priorities in the area of IT policy". However, they argue against the creation of a national software platform, believing that such a measure will not be a solution for the domestic IT sector's problems. The ministry writes that "the creation of such a combination of operating systems, software tools, software applications and open standards will not give a return to the economy and society".
The text directly mentions the high cost and risk of the project from the corruptibility point of view, due to the uncertainty of the criteria for project success. The authors also see a danger in the separation between the domestic and world IT industries that would result from the choice of such a development policy.
The Ministry of Communications proposes an orientation towards the possibilities that are enabled by the open-source model of software development. It proposed to direct the nation's limited resources towards the development and modification of "world leading solutions in cooperation with the world's best specialists".
They basically suggested ditching the ambitious from-scratch "national software platform", or the infamous vapourware "Russian OS", and instead focusing on contributions to existing Free Software projects.
The key sentence from TFA:
"The communications ministry has instead suggested to use the possibilities offered by the Free Software development model. The limited national resources should be put to further the development of "the best internationally-created solutions, in cooperation with the leading specialists from around the globe".
Yay, there are sane people in our government.
I live in Russia, and my understanding of the government's Linux usage is this:
A few projects are being written using FOSS software, and depending on the outcome Linux will be either considered for other uses or will be abandoned completely. Corruption is a big problem because some companies (mostly Microsoft) bribe the people deciding which software will be installed.
Police raids searching for illegal software only accept a receipt or a license with a hologram. These are mostly directed at companies and, recently, individuals who install or troubleshoot software for a living. Even if you use Ubuntu you'll probably be considered a pirate 'cause you won't be able to show valid proof that the software is legally purchased. Some companies sell an Ubuntu DVD plus a license certificate for a nominal fee.
Another problem is the so-called "otkat" bribery: when a manager buys Windows for his company for $200, he may ask the store to sell it for $300 (and print a receipt for $300), and split the $100 difference between himself and the store's manager. Linux costs less or is even free, so less money may be extracted from its purchase.
OTOH, I was recently applying for a new passport and the whole system was running on Linux. It automatically OCRed the forms and extracted stuff like signatures, placing them in a database. The system was very simple to use, the computer booted and the app started automatically, it was written in QT3; the OS was some kind of custom Linux distribution based on AltLinux (which itself was forked from an old Mandrake release).
And, Microsoft started suing organisations using pirated software, the solution is either switching to Linux and spending money on training employees, or spending about the same amount on Windows+Office. If enough companies choose the first option, it may actually become the year of Linux on the desktop. Especially since the recent crisis lowered salaries and increased prices of foreign goods by nearly 30-40%.
They should use some Russian Linux distribution. And use Russian Tux as their mascot.
Ezekiel 23:20
I think it is hilarious because you are in more danger from the poor guy trying to keep all that cruft from falling down than you ever were by the NSA. I was one of those that downloaded the source code for my beloved Win2K back in the day when it hit the net. While it was surprisingly well written and clean code every so often you would come along this -#HACK-We aren't really sure WHAT this does, but when you remove all versions of Office from 3.0-97 scream and have a nasty habit of screwing up data-Don"t Touch#
And just from the source code that hit the net there were quite a few spots just like that. Some piece of cruft that nobody had a clue what did anymore, but which seriously screwed things up when removed. Which sadly makes sense if you think about it. WinNT was released in 1993. Think about that for a second. Think about how different the specs were on machines back then and then realize how many coders have been through the revolving door of OS development at MSFT. Each one adding their own code and trying to figure out just what in the hell the guy that came before them was thinking. The fact that the WMF bug affected everything from Win3.1-XP(Vista wasn't released at the time IIRC) means that there was code still sitting in the bowels of the OS that damned old.
So worrying about the NSA having a backdoor is like worrying about a pinhole leak when you got a gash the size of an iceberg in your hull. The simple fact is the NSA don't NEED a backdoor, because they can go to a Exploits R' Us and simply buy one for whichever version of Windows they wanted to target. Because with that much code that has been going for THAT long there simply isn't anybody in the company that can tell you with certainty exactly WHAT all those millions of lines of code are doing and where they have come from. I mean it must be a nightmare to get bug fixing duty on that code. Considering the WinNT codebase began as NT OS/2 in 1988 you are talking 21 years of cruft buildup. With that much cruft the NSA simply wouldn't have to bother.
ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
The Kremlin is wrong to think that the government can pick a winning operating system (OS) and then guide its develop.
The best thing that the Kremlin can do is the following.
In short, create a liberal Western society and a truly free market. Within this environment, Russian engineers will, for reasons of greed or personal achievement, create the best OS that meets the needs of Russian society. If the Japanese can achieve such technological success, I am certain that the Russians can do the same.
I was so looking forward to trying the 'Stalinux' distro, comrade.
Down With Slashdot BETA!!! I've been around the corner and seen the oliphant; you can only abuse me from your perspecti
I was so looking forward to trying the 'Stalinux' distro, comrade.
I heard they went with 'Lenix'.