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Battle For Open Standards In Dutch Public Education

In his first accepted submission, pjstevns writes "The heat is on! With the rising use of online systems for school administration the battle for open and accessible solutions is here, now. Parents are forced to buy 'proper' operating systems from your favorite Redmond based supplier — just to be able to access their children's grades, or participate in classes. A petition addressed at parliament for proper implementation of the open-standards guidelines put forward by the Dutch government itself is buzzing around the Netherlands. Comply or Explain!" It seems like a major supplier of education software in the Netherlands has written essential software in Silverlight that all students must use, claiming "...Magister is truly multiplatform because Silverlight is available for Windows, Mac OS X and Linux," despite it more or less being non-functional with Moonlight.

16 of 89 comments (clear)

  1. Isn't it great that Flash is dead now? by sourcerror · · Score: 4, Insightful

    So much about .Net cross-platform.
    At least with Java you have to go out of your way to create platform dependency (like hard-coding path separator as "\", and not querying it from the System object), or use 3rd party non-portable libraries with JNI bindings.
    Hell, they would have faired better even if they just used some Adobe Air based solution.
    Or just use ASP.Net and no Silverlight. They just choose the worst possible solution for a public facing portal.

    1. Re:Isn't it great that Flash is dead now? by Murdoch5 · · Score: 2

      I'm so glad someone points the finger at .Net, .Net is cross-platform, to all version of Windows, It can cross from 7 to 98 ( i think ). If a developer uses .Net it just shows there taking an easy road instead of making a solution. .Net is for developers who don't want to develop, just use. If developers really think .Net is a selling point for them it would be like arguing that you put training wheeling back on your bike to make is safer, only you can't take the bike everywhere and it only to 4 screws to make the solution work.

  2. Not new, but news. by reiisi · · Score: 2

    Money circulates under the table, as always.

    But it never hurts to let the people over "there" (wherever there is) know that people over here (wherever here is) are aware of their dependence on things that are fundamentally not dependable.

    (Are you under the power of gold^H^H^H^H power?)

    --
    Computer memory is just fancy paper, CPUs just fancy pens with fancy erasers; the 'net is just a fancy backyard fence.
  3. On the little freedoms by OrangeSun · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I find it wonderful that people are striving for what must seem like 'little' freedoms. I've recently come around to the idea that these small cracks become the gaping, festering ulcers of our society when left unchecked. OS

  4. Shoot the Schoolmaster CIO by Ice+Tiger · · Score: 4, Insightful

    For making such a stupid decision to move away from Open Standards. If you want stuff to work on the Internet use open standards, simple as that.

    Why should users have to go to a desktop computer with a specific OS in order to utilise the system? Maybe it should be made fit for purpose for the modern age.

    --
    "Because we are not employing at entry level, offshoring will kill our industry stone dead."
    1. Re:Shoot the Schoolmaster CIO by KoolyM · · Score: 5, Insightful

      It's more subtle than that. The Dutch schoolmaster CIO only has two pieces of software to choose from, one of which is a bunch of outdated Windows desktop apps that are terrible to work with and the one TFA is about, which is a fairly decent set of web apps that unfortunately have never worked on anything but windows (first they used all sorts of ActiveX components, now it's a bunch of Silverlight crap, apparently). So there really is very little the schoolmaster CIO can do, and given the lack of options, he probably made the best possible choice.

  5. Re:Costs. Windows is cheaper than Windows + Linux by Plunky · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Its cheaper to write software for a single platform than write cross platform software.

    This software only needs to run on one platform, the server. I didn't read TFA but TFS says "just to be able to access their childrens' grades" which should be implementable with a static page. I'm reading slashdot with Firefox on NetBSD, here can you imagine how much effort they must have put in to support that incredible combo? I don't even enable javascript!

  6. Re:Costs. Windows is cheaper than Windows + Linux by Haedrian · · Score: 2

    They should invent a language which all platforms can understand.

    We could call it HTML or something like that, but that's static, so we might need to invent something that makes it dynamic and still cross-platform-readable, like say php, asp.net, jsp,js...

  7. Re:Costs. Windows is cheaper than Windows + Linux by Pi1grim · · Score: 2

    If your X.org is crashing on you then you're holding it wrong.
    And school application can and should be written as web, not desktop applications that work withing the browser. That's what other european countries do and it works out quite well for them.

  8. Silverlight truly cross-platform? Right. by mrjb · · Score: 3, Informative

    Please hit them with a clue-bat at info@schoolmaster.nl. This page on their website requires silverlight as well: http://www.schoolmaster.nl/Foldermateriaal/Magisterboek/tabid/615/language/nl-NL/Default.aspx If you try installing the plug ins, you'll be redirected to the moonlight plugin. Which won't install because it is "not compatible with firefox 6". So in other words, it won't work on Linux. I wonder why am I not in the least bit surprised?

    --
    Visit http://ringbreak.dnd.utwente.nl/~mrjb/growingbettersoftware to download your free copy of the book
  9. Yes, conform citizen, do as you are told by SmallFurryCreature · · Score: 2

    A wise post, I will now stay on the beaten path, do as I am told by my betters and take it up the arse like you have been doing all your life.

    Sheep.

    Please mark me as a foe, I can't mark you because there is no option for mindless twit.

    --

    MMO Quests are like orgasms:

    You may solo them, I prefer them in a group.

  10. Re:This is not how you change things by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Why do you focus on Linux? There's this other OS called Mac OSX, which happens to be used by many students who are also having trouble with this. Not to mention the government *itself* decided open standards should be preferred over propietary ones. And all this guy does it point out the hypocricy of that and that there is actually a substantial non-Windows userbase here that is being affected.

    I run Linux, I expect no one to care about that and I'm fine with that, but in this case they are just screwing over *every* non-Windows user while there are plenty of alternative ways to present this sort of stuff while not depending on Silverlight. Hell, even Flash would be better (since that at least works, unlike Moonlight, which has never been of any use to me - not a single Silverlight applet I've ever tried actually worked with that..)

  11. Re:This is not how you change things by inglorion_on_the_net · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Slashdot is fun. It reports news which basically doesn't exist. This is just some guy who is on an anti-Microsoft bender and wants to somehow make his ideology meaningful in a world which doesn't really give a shit (if the low Linux uptake has anything to go by).

    This is not about Linux. It's about whether or not it is okay for public education institutions (and public institutions in general) to force the public to use a specific commercial product if they wish to partake. Given that there are various alternatives to said commercial product, and given that the government has adopted a policy of using open standards where they exist, I think forcing people to use a proprietary system is not okay. The fact that this system is also more expensive than many of the alternatives makes it even more odious.

    His rant is way too emotional for something that the politicians and most parents won't even understand.

    The story here is really simple: will we force everybody to pay for the most expensive option, or will we use standards, so that people can choose what they use?

    If people refuse to understand that, that's still no reason to take the worse option.

    I mean, everyone uses Windows right?

    Even if that were the case, it would be irrelevant: if standards were used, then _any_ operating system would be able to participate, including Windows. It's not as if, by going with open standards, you would lock out the users who can now use the system. And that's the whole point: to not lock people out.

    But they also made the decision to make life more difficult for themselves by going against the grain and choosing to use something other than Windows (an OS pre-installed on virtually all computers you can buy, so having to buy it yourself is unnecessary).

    Now you're blaming the victims. It is not them who are making things more difficult, it is the people who implement systems that will only work with specific other products, rather than going with standards that can be supported anywhere.

    One could argue that some fights are worth fighting for, but if so... a small petition from a bunch of geeks with too much emotion and too little tact is likely to not do a damn thing.

    You may well be right there, especially considering that the government _officially_ has a policy to use open standards and even to prefer open source software - yet, in many cases, has gone for a proprietary solution without even looking into the alternatives.

    On the other hand, it was also a small bunch of geeks who discovered that the voting computers we used to use in the Netherlands weren't reliable, and they were tenacious enough to eventually get them all banned - even though the initial reaction was denial, marginalization, and misinformation. It is a good example of exactly what you're up against if you want to replace a vested commercial interest with the right thing, but it also shows that you _can_ win. But you have to raise awareness, first, and that is what those guys are doing.

    --
    Please correct me if I got my facts wrong.
  12. Re:FOSS School rules OK ? by MightyYar · · Score: 2

    We're got alternatives - Linux and LibreOffice.

    No we don't. They are fine alternatives in that they are almost functional equivalents, but people aren't able to use them at work or school due to MS's monopoly position.

    People prefer to spend the money to keep the status quo and not have to learn anything new than try something that MIGHT work well enough for them

    People spent money on Office 2011 despite having to basically re-learn the program from scratch. OpenOffice requires almost no retraining from Office 2003. People buy Office because they have to if they want to interact with the outside world in an efficient way.

    They do have a huge market share though

    Yeah, a 94% market share - a monopoly.

    --
    W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
  13. Re:Read the article. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

    I'm sorry, I'm a closed-source, closed-minded Mac dev, not an open-source zealot, but to me that page doesn't look too complicated for a professional HTML designer (i.e. not the boss' teenage son). All I see in that screenshot are:

    • a navigation bar across the top clearly using HTML form elements or their equivalent,
    • a navigation list, just a single array in a given order, which could easily be a UL (unordered list) in HTML,
    • a navigation outline, meaning an array with nested arrays at some nodes, which could be a UL of UL's,
    • a calendar, which can be handled easily with TABLE elements or probably with DIVs by someone smarter than I,
    • a table of students, which is just a TABLE element that can be rigged to sort with a bit of JavaScript,
    • some buttons thrown into the mix, which have plenty of AJAXy solutions to make them do useful things without refreshing the page.

    There is nothing in that UI that HTML5 couldn't replace. Neither Silverlight nor Flash is at all necessary here. This could run on practically any modern browser on any operating system, and with CSS it could easily have a separate view for mobile phones.

  14. Seems to me... by kenh · · Score: 2

    If the school system provided a terminal server for the 10% of desktop users that opt for Operating Systems which do not natively support "Silverlight" to access the school web sites this would be a non-issue. RDP clients are plentiful and work fine on nearly all platforms. Even iPads.

    --
    Ken