Schools In Portugal Moving To OSS
New submitter thyristor pt writes "In light of massive national budget cuts, the Portuguese government will force public schools to move to free/open source software (Google translation of original in Portuguese). Schools with some 50,000 outdated computers won't see their software licenses renewed, the main reason being the cost of hardware upgrade inherent to mostly Microsoft software updates. Will the Euro debt crisis be a driving force to the spread of open source software?"
We've seen this over and over again. Microsoft will just offer to give the software for free. They know that it's not in their best interest for it to become general knowledge how functional open-source alternative have become.
Open Source can only spread by being objectively better (in ways customers care about).
Have you tried Libre Office lately?
Most people I've set it up for like it a lot better than the current ribbon-infested Microsoft version.
"I've got more toys than Teruhisa Kitahara."
"The real question is, can Windows 7 run properly?" ...and on Windows servers it became next to impossible to use a browser.
Nope, it keeps asking me for admin password all the time.
Portugal has had for years a company marketing a linux distro - caixa mágica. The national "one laptop per child" project already shipped with a linux installation. The IT world is already entrenched in linux. There is absolutely no need to look at brazil for linux support.
I went to a (public) High School here in Portugal around eight years ago; at the time, all the machines we used in IT classes already dual-booted between Windows and a Portuguese GNU/Linux distro ("Caixa MÃgica") and we had to learn how to get around on the Gnome desktop.
Dilbert RSS feed
There are lots of world class open source projects out there that gets picked because they are simply better than their closed source equivalents - linux, apache, postgresql, spamassassin, varnish, ruby, python, gcc/llvm, webkit, postfix, dovecot etc.
I have used Word for years, but after having been forced to write a 50 page user manual in it, I stopped using it. I have never looked back.