Slashdot Mirror


Why The Korean Government Could Go Open Source By 2020

An anonymous reader writes As the support for the Microsoft (MS) Windows XP service is terminated this year, the government will try to invigorate open source software in order to solve the problem of dependency on certain software. By 2020 when the support of the Windows 7 service is terminated, it is planning to switch to open OS and minimize damages. Industry insiders pointed out that the standard e-document format must be established and shared as an open source before open source software is invigorated. A similar suggestion that Korea might embrace more open source (but couched more cautiously, with more "should" and "may") is reported on the news page of the EU's program on Interoperability Solutions for European Public Administrations, based on a workshop presentation earlier this month by Korea's Ministry of Science, ICT, and Future Planning. (And at a smaller but still huge scale, the capitol city of Seoul appears to be going in for open source software in a big way, too.)

17 of 64 comments (clear)

  1. e-document format? ODF? by Lonewolf666 · · Score: 2

    For the most common purposes, like text documents and spreadsheets there is already ODF.
    It is even an ISO standard. Unless there are unexpected problems with things like Asian fonts, that should be a no-brainer.

    --
    C - the footgun of programming languages
  2. Not a chance by lakeland1587 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Korea is very tightly wed to Microsoft. I've seen linux on some servers and of course embedded devices, but I have never seen it on the desktop there. A huge amount of the software is Windows only, with both Mac and Linux users completely locked out. It's a pretty conservative, conformist culture - especially at a government level.

  3. "The" Korean government? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Last I checked there were at least two Korean governments.

    1. Re:"The" Korean government? by phantomfive · · Score: 4, Funny

      Last I checked there were at least two Korean governments.

      It's South Korea. The Dear Leader invented Open Source, so South Korea is behind the times in adopting.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    2. Re: "The" Korean government? by binarylarry · · Score: 2, Interesting

      NK doesn't have a govt, it's a communist utopia ruled by a god king.

      --
      Mod me down, my New Earth Global Warmingist friends!
  4. Re:Yes. by phantomfive · · Score: 3, Insightful

    No, I'm pretty sure that Apple will continue to swallow up 95% of the money and market-share generated from the ongoing stream of Open Source

    Apple will never be considered for this kind of program as long as they have a weak commitment to backwards compatibility. That's essentially why Korea is leaving Microsoft here (and Microsoft has a lot of backwards compatibility, you just have to pay for it).

    --
    "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
  5. Very difficult to do by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

    Korea (presumably South Korea) is infatuated with Microsoft tech. ActiveX is used everywhere - banks, online shopping, even gateways for various official and private services. Despite the technological marvel that South Korea is at times, Active X & Internet Explorer are the apex of their Internet communications and Linux is basically not used anywhere. For open source to work, there will have to be a complete shakeup of how everyone uses computers and the Internet over there, including non-Government business and regular users. That'll take some time.

  6. Google I/O by tuppe666 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Here comes the year of the Linux desktop.

    The Linux Desktop is already here. In and amongst the pissing contest in early markets consoles; watches, home, health between Apple and Google (What happened to Microsoft). Chrome OS got Android compatibility and Office Update and its Office improved, massive Android integration, and Google Play . As well as some great adoption statistics. 8 OEMs making 15 distinct Chrome OS devices now on sale in 28 countries, 10 highest rated notebooks available on Amazon.com and Chromebooks sold to K-12 schools has risen 6x.

    The fact that GNU Linux continues to flourish is just an aside.

    1. Re:Google I/O by jones_supa · · Score: 5, Informative

      On PC desktop the QA is still terrible. For example, Ubuntu 14.04 LTS ships with a media player which does not work properly with touchpad and which crashes when the subtitle setting is changed. Also the ACPI fan speed control is broken for a bunch of laptops. Sure, the correct solution here is simply to switch from Totem to VLC, and use a different kernel for the fan problem. Easy enough... but soon enough, some other glitch pops up. As long as Linux desktops (not only Ubuntu) are filled with these nasty surprises, the support costs will be enormous for fixing all these bugs or finding workarounds for them.

    2. Re:Google I/O by jones_supa · · Score: 2

      There is also a bug where the initial install of Windows 8 fails to show progress when installing updates (stuck at 0%), while the backend updates worker is actually installing updates just fine. Also a bug from Windows 7 is still present: the File Explorer occasionally loses the ability to display Japanese characters properly: they are shown as squares instead. The "Burn disc" button does not work from the ribbon menu, but "Burn disc" from the right-click context menu works.

      Hey, I agree with you. Windows is not an angel either.

      The problem is that Linux has 100x more of these kind of bugs.

  7. Active X? by tuppe666 · · Score: 2

    Korea (presumably South Korea) is infatuated with Microsoft tech. ActiveX is used everywhere

    2020...in Five years they can easily do replace everything...with sanctions and tax breaks even sooner.

  8. Also illegal, so far... by tlambert · · Score: 5, Informative

    Also illegal, so far... It's illegal to use something other than the ActiveX plugin authorized by the Korean government to do online banking in South Korea. The current president promised to change things, but so far, nothing has changed. Here's his promise being reported:

    http://en.wikinews.org/wiki/So...

    The problem is that Korea requires use of their own national encryption standard, which has a governmental back door (and for which exploits have already been demonstrated at BlackHat) in order to "secure" banking transactions from snooping by foreign powers (guess they called that one correctly).

    Here are some other articles about where the plugin is required to establish secure communications channels:

    http://gadgets.ndtv.com/intern...
    http://www.washingtonpost.com/...
    https://www.techdirt.com/artic...

    1. Re:Also illegal, so far... by sensei+moreh · · Score: 2

      I do believe the current president is a her

      --
      Geology - it's not rocket science; it's rock science
  9. Open Drivers by FithisUX · · Score: 2

    Open Source will thrive when documents mandate that every device must be accompanied by a document describing how this will be programmed. In other way you buy an NVIDIA card or an smart phone and you get a PDF that gives detailed specification of how software can use the device (not how it is manufactured) to get the advertised functionality. this should extended to all sub-components that interact with the software. Using undocumented functionality should be illegal since it is a means to provide illegal competitive advantage. No blobs.

  10. Re:RoK? Or PRoK? by nukenerd · · Score: 2

    No.

    I followed the first link in TFA ("Korea IT News") to find out, and even that did not tell me. Then I noticed a reference to "the capital city of Seoul" in the last line, but it was not clear that it did not relate to a different story. Even assuming Seoul was the capital concerned, I confess that I could not remember whether it was North or the South (not being American, I am not as close to the subject) so I went to Wikipedia and, incredibly, even that does not tell you.

  11. Which Korea? by bradgoodman · · Score: 2

    Kool Korea, or Krazy Korea?

  12. Chrome browser == Linux desktop by 140Mandak262Jamuna · · Score: 2
    In the heydays, immediately after the IPO, when Netscape stock price was zooming up, Marc Andreesen boasted, "The desktop is irrelevant. OS is irrelevant. The Browser is the new king of the hill" (not an exact quote). Microsoft took the threat seriously, fought hard, fought dirty, and killed Netscape as a company. But it could not kill the idea. It won the battle with Netscape but lost the war with the browser.

    Once someone with serious financial muscle, namely Google, took up the idea, it was game over for the desktop. Google docs has much smaller set of features compared to Microsoft Office. But it is enough to meet 100% of the needs of 90% of the population. It is also enough to meet 90% of the needs of the remaining 10%. Mere 10% of the user base using these bells and whistles for just 10% of the time. ChromeOS is based on a Linux kernel. Android pads and phones are based on Linux. Linux has taken over the server market. It has been the decade of Linux.

    In a meta sense, the old PC desktop market was based on selling everyone the superset of needs of all the users. Grandma wanting a machine to look at pics of grandkids was buying a machine capable of developing C++ projects or doing video editing. Once Apple broke the market into two pieces, content creators and content consumers it was a true paradigm shift. But even grandma needs to type a letter once in a while. The browser is enough to meet that need,

    Similar shift will happen in automobiles. Everyone is buying a machine that can refuel/recharge in 10 minutes to go another 250 miles. Even the second and the third car of the family is bought with the same mind set. But it can change very quickly. Solar is picking up. It is cost effective for people to ditch the grid. Utilities are looking for a way to keep them in the grid. Grabbing a piece of the transportation energy market would be very attractive to them. When Big Oil gets a real well financed competitor well versed in dirty local politics, the electric utilities, that is when electric cars will take off.

    There are many technologies maturing. Basic range of 100 miles is well within reach. Range extending options based on rentable charged batteries, battery swaps, towable range extending battery packs, range extending IC engines are all possible. The challenge is not the technology, but the investment needed for infrastructure.

    --
    sed -e 's/Chuck Norris/Rajnikant/g' joke > fact