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User: nxsryan

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  1. Re:Brazil free software dream is anything but fadi on Windows in Brazil Costs 20% of Per Capita Business Income · · Score: 1

    If you volunteered or offered a civilly discounted rate for helping to implement that sort of a system you'd be surprised at how quickly you can become influential in your community and serve as an example to nearby schools... Having spent many years attempting to influence government policy on all kinds of levels, I think the real surprise is how transparently corrupt most of the U.S. government is and how little influence average people have over government policy decisions in the U.S. There are literally thousands of examples to back that up which I'll leave to you to research. :)
  2. Re:Brazil free software dream is anything but fadi on Windows in Brazil Costs 20% of Per Capita Business Income · · Score: 1

    The only way a software license has any meaning at all is through the government and courts system.

  3. Re:So many myths! on Windows in Brazil Costs 20% of Per Capita Business Income · · Score: 1

    Sorry, you don't know what you're talking about. It is not false that open source software is popular in Brazil, Venezuela, Cuba, Ecuador, etc. Compare what -your- representative government is doing with free software against what -Brazil's- representative government is doing with free software, and then we'll talk: http://news.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=542358&cid=23286332

  4. Brazil free software dream is anything but fading. on Windows in Brazil Costs 20% of Per Capita Business Income · · Score: 3, Informative

    Sorry, but this repetition about the "Brazil FOSS utopia fading" that I hear everyone talking about is largely, I believe, due to the Linux.com article that is linked to above which highlights a bunch of negative comments by a few individuals and talks about some of the licensing controversies that have come up as Brazilian society as a whole widely adopts free software (I -wish- the government in the US cared enough about the GPL to have a licensing controversy).

    In fact, the Brazil free software movement is an incredible phenomenon.

    Consider:
    1) Brazil's recent announcement at FISL of 52,000 computers labs (each with 15 terminals) serving over 50 million students -- with 29k of them coming online within the year -- all running Linux Educacional and KDE. Meanwhile, in -my- Ohio hometown, the public school system is fiscally doomed while still paying out enormous sums to Microsoft, IBM, Apple.

    2) My wife, who is Brazilian, worked in the Brazilian equivalent of the US's White House, the Palacio do Planalto, migrating even the President's -Secretary- to an open source desktop running OpenOffice, not to mention the rest of the federal agencies in Brasilia. How is the open source migration of federal agencies going in Washington DC? Oh, right...

    3) Brazil should be a model for much richer countries in this hemisphere, like the US and Canada, with their enormous and expansive Digital Inclusion program, which is entirely based on open source & free software. This program provides free training and computer lab access to bridge the digital divide in Brazil, with labs in urban favelas (ghettos that encircle the major metropolitan cities) and even remote indigenous communities living in the Amazon -- some of the Digital Inclusion projects are only accessible by BOAT. And in those areas, open source computer labs are, in many cases, the only computer access, the VOIP they provide are the only telephone, and so on.

    4) A recent study confirmed that over 70% of Brazilian companies with more than 1,000 employees are using open source software.

    5) Brazil has migrated the largest state-owned IT firm in Latin America (SERPRO) to open source software (including many more companies that are migrating).

    6) FISL, hosted in Porto Alegre, has got to be one of the largest free software conferences in the world, if not the Americas. This year, Lula made news by saying that he would do everything he could to attend FISL. When was the last time George Bush or Bill Clinton said anything about free software, let alone went out of their way to support it in person?

    It's really amazing to me how many open source advocates in the United States are indifferent to the open source phenomenon happening not only in Brazil, but throughout all of Latin America. One Linux.com article dismisses it as "hype" and that's enough for the most popular English-language open source news site? Meanwhile, an enormous free software movement goes literally un-noticed (when, in fact, there is plenty of room for voluntarism by wealthy North American developers in the region).

    Personally, I make my living as owner of a business which works with open source/free software in Latin America and the United States. My wife was employed for several years by the Brazilian government working exclusively on the widespread deployment of open source technology in Brazil. And, I operate a news website which provides English-language updates about the free software movement in Latin America - http://news.northxsouth.com/

    I urge everybody to take a look at our site and re-evaluate if Brazil or any Latin American country is a fading open source dream, or if, in fact, they are doing the hard work of converting their government to free software and, moreover, converting their society to open source software. We should take a look at what they're doing and ask ourselves: "why are -we- failing so miserably to influence -our- government?" instead of trying to find any gap in their impressive demonstration of the power of open source to transform massive social institutions.