AFUL's meeting with French Government officials
AFUL, the french Free Software
user group, held
a half day conference touting the benefits
of free software to a government panel in the French Prime-Minister's
building. The government panel (MTIC) is responsible for introducing
new technologies to different ministries. A french customs
official described
the easy introduction to their intranet of a Linux web server
which has shown itself to be very reliable. Another presentation
discussed the commercial need to force customers into an update cycle.
It compared
Windows 3.11's reliability to that of women's
stockings which are designed to break quickly.
The french city of Lille's computer department also
enjoyed
Linux' ease of use, scalability and efficiency on older
hardware. Finally, Bernard Lang's presentation did not
pull its punches. He discussed the dangers
for the French economy of relying on
foreign black-box software: proprietary software
reduces local employment, tends to
concentrate power monopolistically,
while free software
increases local employment (since most software jobs are
in the service industry),
guarantees originality, competition,
conformity to open standards,
and
a free choice of service provider. The website referred
to is the French Prime Minister's Governmental website, so
we can be hopeful things will start happening. Links courtesy of Nouvelles
Neuves Linux, and Translation services available from
Babelfish.
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