Original Message -----
From: "IT@School" <itschool(a)asianetindia.com>
To: <manjushmenon(a)hotmail.com>
Sent: Saturday, October 05, 2002 5:08 PM
Subject: Reply
> Mr.Manjush G. Menon
> We are not giving to depend totally on Ms. Products. Rather MS
> Office is taught along with open office and Windows along with Linux
> from this year. Arranging the resource persons for training an open
> software, making available the software, the maintenance of a help desk
> etc. are logistical issues which could not be immediately undertaken.
> We plan switch out to open software within three years.
> Executive Director
>
---- Original Message -----
From: Manjush G. Menon
To: itschool(a)asianetindia.com
Sent: Friday, October 04, 2002 5:46 PM
Subject: Respected sir,
From
Manjush G. Menon,
Sr.Programmer,
Sofker Solutions Pvt Ltd,
Kochi-18.
To
The Executive Director,
'IT @ SCHOOL' Project,
SCERT Buildings,
Poojapura,
Thiruvananthapuram-12.
Respected sir,
SUB: In protest against the inclusion of products from multinational companies
in the syllabus of 'IT @ SCHOOL'
It's a very dissappointing fact that when the whole world is moving towards
Free software, we at kerala are going behind a major MNC - Microsoft. I hereby register
my protest in such an act from 'IT @ SCHOOL' Project team.
Breaking of prototypes will definetly help us in finding economical and high quality
products for our future generation.
For students and programmers, the GNU Linux contains 'GNU Compiler Collections'
which includes C, C++, FORTRAN, PERL, TCL etc. Also, for DTP and other publishing purposes,
it includes GNU Office utilities like Abi-Word, gedit, and other worksheet utilities,
all these with a nominal cost of Rs 700-800/-. The software as it is, is free and
the cost is accounted towards the media (CD + Documentation) included.
By this letter, I urge you to take this matter seriously and suggest necessary modifications
in the action plan of 'IT @ SCHOOL' project.
Wishing you all the best and wishing all 'Students @ SCHOOL' a bright future,
Thanking you,
Yours faithfully
Manjush G. Menon.
______________________________________________________
Check out all the latest outrageous email attachments on the Outrageous Email Chart! - http://viral.lycos.co.uk
Thanks to George Lessard for posting this across. FN
---------- Forwarded message ----------
PERUVIAN EFFORT COULD BAN MICROSOFT ON GOV. COMPUTERS
Peruvian Congressman Edgar Villanueva is pushing legislation to obligate all
public institutions to convert exclusively to open-source software.
Open-source programs, embodied by the Linux operating system, have
underlying code available to anyone who wants to modify or customize it.
Such software, in unadorned form, can be downloaded from the Internet for
free. Villanueva hopes his measure triggers activity in Peru's software
industry by freeing programmers from the constraints of working with coding
controlled by a few large companies. Open-source could take the expense out
of software upgrades; which is important for a country like Peru that owes
about $30 million in overdue software license fees.
[SOURCE: San Jose Mercury, AUTHOR: Associated Press]
(http://www.siliconvalley.com/mld/siliconvalley/news/3531007.htm)
Would anyone have suggestions for my journalist colleague? FN
On Fri, 30 May 2003, Keya Acharya wrote:
> Hi Fred,
> I'm doing a story for Panos on the usage of opensource and proprietory software, and was wanting to know what percentage of computer-users in India use Linux right now. Safe to say 2% ? Any numbers you can give me ?
> Thanks a lot, Keya
> Ms. Keya Acharya
> Journalist
> B 122 Century Park
> 48 Richmond Road
> Bangalore 560 035
> India.
>
> Ph: +91 80 5594597
> Fax: +91 80 559 9745
> email: keyaa(a)vsnl.com
>
--
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Frederick Noronha (FN) | http://www.fredericknoronha.net
Freelance Journalist | http://www.bytesforall.orghttp://goalinks.pitas.com | http://joingoanet.shorturl.comhttp://linuxinindia.pitas.com | http://www.livejournal.com/users/goalinks
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
T: 0091.832.2409490 or 2409783 M: 0 9822 122436
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
FREE SOFTWARE CARNIVAL: Latin America takes to FLOSS in a big way...
Latin America seems like a world away. But Free/Libre and Open Source
Software (FLOSS) there is growing much like in South Asia, and arguably,
better. Recently, a study of FLOSS in that part of the word pointed to the
contribution of GNOME (started in 1997 by Mexican devloper Miguel de Icaza),
Brazil's Sorceforge-like Codigolivre.org.br portal site, the simple UTUTO
distro from Argentina, and the widely-popular PHP-Nuke content management
system from Francisco Burzi of Venezuela.
This distant continent has also challenged the role of proprietorial
software and Microsoft (as done by Peru), and come up with interesting
university-based software solutions (see www.univates.br) from Brazil.
For instance, the Brazilian UNIVATES says it has saved more than R$500,000
(about US$ 130,000) by *not* acquiring copies of proprietary software for
servers and desktops. It saves R$200,000 (US$70,000) each year on software
upgrades and maintenance. This is enough to pay the salaries of the
development group. Meaning, Univates can effectively produce technology for
its own use (and which others can also make use of) at virtually no cost!
To understand the larger canvas of the Free Software scene in Latin America,
FREDERICK NORONHA <fred at bytesforall.org> spoke to Cesar Brod (39). Brod
<cesar at brod.com.br> is vice-president of the Brazilian free software
cooperative SOLIS (Cooperativa de Solucoes Livres).
More importantly, he coordinated the Latin American leg of a recent
Finland-conducted study on the significance of Free/Libre and Open Source
Software for the developing countries.
After studying Physics at the University of Sao Paulo and the Federal
University of Rio Grande de Sul, he dropped out of college to enter the
exciting world of software at a young age. "I abandoned university because I
was travelling too much," he recalls. Getting involved with computers at the
age of 20, he started work with multinationals, and shifted from being a
hardware analyst to being a software programmer.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
To start with Cesar, could you give us an overview of what's happening on
the Free Software front in Latin America?
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
I think almost every country (in Latin America) offers a very good story on
Free Software. They have very good projects, but the only thing that is
actually missing is communication -- people talking with each other about
what exactly they have.
For instance, you have in Peru, a very good start-up project, which is an
ERP for rural agriculture and the environment. This is some kind of thing
that is exactly needed all over Latin America, and probably for every Third
World country. But the people just dont know about it.
In the meantime, this software is very localised. So, the way it is, it
won't serve other countries. But with very little effort, and probably very
little financing too, it could be adapted to fit a lot of other geographies.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Can you give us some other examples of interesting projects you came across
in the course of your recent study on FLOSS (Free/Libre and Open Source
Software) in Latin America?
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
One of the most interesting ones was the FreeMed Project from Cuba. Its a
very simple project. It just aims to establish a network connection between
doctors in several different hospitals, in order to share information and
diagnostics about people and diseases.
Another good one is the Free Education Network that was put together by the
state of Rio Grande do Sul in Brazil. It's using Free Software to teach
young people how to use computers, how to do their Math, and actually to use
Free Software as a learning aid for all their first grade disciplines.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Which countries, in your view, are the best off in this field in Latin
America?
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
In terms of Free Software production, Brazil. In terms of software projects
allying with the GNU project, it would be Mexico, with Chile getting very
close. In terms of a user community, Uruguay has a lot to teach us.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Do you see some Latin American countries lagging behind? Why?
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
The truth is I don't know if they are really lacking, or they are simply not
communicating enough.
For instance, in the first version of my report, I have nothing about Chile.
And when the people in Chile got to know what I was doing, they collaborated
with a wonderful report, and they actually have a lot of things going on
which I was not aware of.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
In terms of revving up the FLOSS engine for take off, what is it that is
actually required on the ground in any Latin American country? Is it a good
technical base, access to the Internet, the ability of keeping in touch with
the outside world, or what?
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Thats a very good question.
I think if you just give computers to the people and just some base training
-- very little basic training -- you'll be amazed by the kind of progress
that can be made.
I'm basing my reply on one experiment done in Uruguay, by MIT professor
Etienne Delacroix. He has his programming-and-art workshop, where he
introduces people to computers in a very artistic way.
For instance, he asks people how can you be sure that this motherboard will
work once we know how a hair-drier works... and he compares the small
streams of energy that goes into the mother-board with the electric plug of
the hair-drier. And he asks people to identify where the big rivers of
energy inside those small streams of the motherboard are located.
By doing that, he makes people peep into a motherboard, and get it
working... and just by doing that he gets people together with technology.
People who even lacked access to that kind of technology before.
And after a couple of weeks, those people would be programming in C
language. So, what's missing is (the means) to re-connect people with
technology. The Third World is a technology consumer; once you reconnect
people with technology youll see a lot of good things happening.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
What are the three best things that Free Software can give to Latin America
that proprietorial software cannot?
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Technology independence, regional development. (After some thought) its
knowledge-freedom actually....
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
What would you see as the main roadblocks that stop FLOSS from getting ahead
in Latin America?
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Proprietorial software lobbying, meaning actually Microsoft lobbying.
There's also fear of the perception of the unknown technology. You can't say
the technology is unknown (but that's the perception created). And, still,
the lack of support.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
What does Latin America have to give to the rest of the Free/Libre and Open
Source Software world?
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
I think we have already given a lot of good examples (laughs). Just to give
one, the Gnome platform. Then, there's the PHP Nuke project. And a lot of
KDE-standard tools that are coming out from Chile and Brazil.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
While studying the contribution of Latin America, what did you learn?
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
That we have been reinventing the wheel in so manycountries that we have
been researching. We should communicate a lot more. Actually for a community
that lives on the Internet, it's amazing that we still dont know enough
about each other's projects.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Do tell us about UNIVATES and yourself?
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
UNIVATES is a very small university centre in the south of Brazil, and I
work for them as the technical consultant. Probably because they are so
little and don't have any money, it's a community-owned university.
That means we have to be very creative in terms of technology adoption.
That's why, in 1999, I have started for them the Free Software Project that
ended up in several products to be used inside the university. That became
quite popular, initially all over Brazil and now, in the Mercosur (the
Southern Cone countries).
(See http://www.univates.br/freesoftware)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
And about yourself?
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
I got to know of Linux just by chance in 1993 -- the kernel and the GNU
tools. At that time, I needed a Unix to run in my notebook as I was
supporting a customer far from where I was living, and didn't want to travel
that much. But a SCO/UNIX license was too expensive. Since then, I have been
using Free Software and doing some consulting jobs on that.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Has it made a difference to the way you work and think?
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
It's interesting to think about that. I pretty much left the centre of the
country, Sao Paulo and Rio, where you make the big bucks, and have moved
back to the city where I was born. My life is a lot cheaper... and I have a
lot more fun. I started using Free Software because I didn't want to travel;
in the past year it took me to Finland and Sweden twice. (ENDS)
--
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Frederick Noronha (FN) | http://www.fredericknoronha.net
Freelance Journalist | http://www.bytesforall.orghttp://goalinks.pitas.com | http://joingoanet.shorturl.comhttp://linuxinindia.pitas.com | http://www.livejournal.com/users/goalinks
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
T: 0091.832.2409490 or 2409783 M: 0 9822 122436
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
<http://presidentofindia.nic.in/S/html/speeches/others/may28_2003_2.htm>
a quote
Think different
I would like to narrate an event that took place in Rashtrapati Bhavan a
few months back when I met Bill Gates, the CEO of Microsoft. While
walking in the Mughal garden, we were discussing the future challenges
in Information Technology including the issues related to software
security. I made a point that we look for open source codes so that we
can easily introduce the users built security algorithms. Our
discussions became difficult since our views were different. The most
unfortunate thing is that India still seems to believe in proprietary
solutions. Further spread of IT which is influencing the daily life of
individuals would have a devastating effect on the lives of society due
to any small shift in the business practice involving these proprietory
solutions. It is precisely for these reasons open source software need
to be built which would be cost effective for the entire society. In
India, open source code software will have to come and stay in a big way
for the benefit of our billion people. I2IT has to play a major role in
this national mission.
[Cross-posted]
Take on Gates, Kalam tells Indian techies
TIMES NEWS NETWORK[ WEDNESDAY, MAY 28, 2003 11:31:30 PM ]
PUNE: A few months after a disagreement with Microsoft CEO Bill Gates
on the issue of software security, President A P J Abdul Kalam on
Wednesday called on Indian IT professionals to specialise in open
source software rather than relying on proprietary solutions.
Full story at:
http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/cms.dll/html/uncomp/articleshow?msid=477…
(URL may wrap)
-- Raju
--
Raj Mathur raju(a)kandalaya.org http://kandalaya.org/
GPG: 78D4 FC67 367F 40E2 0DD5 0FEF C968 D0EF CC68 D17F
It is the mind that moves
Following mail is in circulation on various GLUGs/Lugs. Please do
some image building excercise.
--
H.S.Rai http://www.grex.org/~hsrai | Registered Linux User # 223684
http://counter.li.org/cgi-bin/runscript/display-person.cgi?user=223684
---------- Forwarded message ----------
Hi,
Today I received a mail from FSF India list about a new logo for FSF
India. Curious to see how this fine logo was produced using free
software i checked it up using pdfinfo, here is the result
[raj@swathi fsf]$ wget -q http://gnu.org.in/graphics/FSFIndia.pdf
[raj@swathi fsf]$ pdfinfo FSFIndia.pdf
Title: FSFIndia.pdf
Creator: Adobe Illustrator 9.0
Producer: Adobe PDF library 4.800
CreationDate: Sat Apr 26 04:18:34 2003
Tagged: no
Pages: 1
Encrypted: no
Page size: 595.275 x 841.89 pts
File size: 56828 bytes
Optimized: no
PDF version: 1.3
I was shocked and surprised at this blatant use of proprietary software
by FSF India. Now cu
rious to see if this is an aberration or a practice,
I checked other posters from the site.
[raj@swathi fsf]$ wget -q http://gnu.org.in/graphics/poster01.jpg
[raj@swathi fsf]$ ./jhead -v poster01.jpg
Exif header 5530 bytes long
<snip>
Software = "Adobe Photoshop 7.0?"
DateTime = "2003:03:18 15:14:43?"
<snip>
nuff said, but insults to Stallman and FSF do not end here, The
text in
poster5, http://gnu.org.in/graphics/poster05.jpg asks all of us to use
"Linux" that too in bold red colour. It is also a good exercise to
check other pdfs in that page.
I do not want to make any comments about the hypocrisy of FSF India, as
facts speak for themselves. But one thing is sure, people responsible
for this have no clue about the principals of Free Software or GNU
project or are least bothered about all that. If there is some one in
FSF india who care about the stuff written in the posters please bring
out a public apology for doing exactly opposite of what you all have
been preaching for long and redo all the graphics using free software.
raj
PS: The pages referred here are from http://gnu.org.in/graphics/. I know
this is a bit off topic here, but the main FSF list do not tolerate any
critisism of FSF India.
UNIVATES, a university centre committed to Free Software development
HIGHER education institutions aim at the advancement of
human knowledge and the dissemination of such knowledge.
Free software is completely aligned with this task.
UNIVATES, a university centre located in the city of Lajeado,
in the state of Rio Grande do Sul (Brazil), has adopted Free
Softwareas the basis for its intranet/Internet servers since 1997.
BY END 1999, Univates started the development of SAGU
(Portuguese acronym for Sistema Aberto de Gestao
Unificada, or Open Unified Management System). SAGU
went live in July 2000 and is now responsible for
managing the academic and financial relationships
between students and the varsity. Incidentally, SAGU is also
the name of a delicious local dessert!
EVEN BEFORE SAGU went live, Univates demonstrated its commitment
to Free Software development by publishing the full source code
of SAGU on the Internet, allowing the coders' community to
see it evolving. It also provided technology-transfer workshops.
UNIVATES has saved more than R$500,000 (about US$
130,000) by *not* acquiring copies of proprietary
software for servers and desktops. It saves
R$200,000 (US$70,000) each year on software upgrades
and maintenance. This is enough to pay the salaries of
the development group. Meaning, Univates can effectively
produce technology for its own use (and which others can
also make use of) at virtually no cost!
THE UNIVATES IT Group is now recognised as the most important
centre of excellence in Free Software development in Brazil.
SOME OF ITS projects:
o MIOLO, a set of PHP-based object-oriented database
connectors, handlers and presentation features that
allow fast system development even for the most complex
needs
It handles transaction and communication between modules
written using MIOLO, thus making life easier for a
programmer who wants to build a system with several
interdependent modules.
http://miolo.codigolivre.org.br
o EasyPHP: a no-database, hassle-free tool for
creating simple web presence with an easy-to-use
administrative tool.
o QUALITAS: document control for quality management systems
o PILA, bookstore system with front-end point-of-sales,
stock, catalog and financial sales reports.
o FRED (content management system), a full-featured system
for creating services portals for MIOLO-based applns.
o IRRATIONAL TULIP: A group of classes and tools for
MIOLO application development, such as dia2sql
(converts database diagrams into SQL database creates and
inserts), MIOLO-IDE (an IDE for developing GTK
applications using MIOLO).
o CODIGOLIVRE2: Hosting and tools for cooperatively
developed Free Software.A MIOLO version of the existing
http://codigolivre.org.br (a SourceForge Brazilian fork
maintained by UNIVATES).
o SCOTTY, support calls and customer relationship
tracking, management and statics system.
GNUTECA http://gnuteca.codigolivre.org.br
GNUTECA is a library automation and catalog-collaboration system.
It includes a circulation control system and, when used in an
educational institution, it integrates with SAGU (though it also
works as a standalone). It is intended to go a step further from
the existing (gratis, but not Free Software) UNESCO CDS/ISIS
program, and it does provide an easy migration path from it. GNUTECA
adheres to all widely-used library standards. It now handles over
80,000 library items offered to over 6,000 students and teachers.
GNUDATA http://gnudata.codigolivre.org.br
This started as the database support for their regional database
which provides demographic and economic information of 40 cities in
the Taquari River Valley. It is a database framework for
implementing nearly every kind of database in which you need to get
comparative/statistical information (demographics, etc). It has a
'query auto-pilot' which allows non-technical users to drill down
the database searching for all kinds of stored data. It does
percentages and other calculations which the user may want to
include in queries. The development version also provides graphics.
SAGU - Free Software for academic administration
http://sagu.codigolivre.org.br
It automates the relationship between students and their educational
institution, from the moment a student enrols for an entrance exam
until she graduates.
SAGU subsystems try to mimic the functions of the university. So
it has modules that handle the entrance exam (optical reading of
the student's answers, classification, classroom assignment), the
enrolment process (which courses the student may chose for a given
term, pre-requisites), the academic data (grades, academic
history), financial and accounting data (payments, credits,
scholarships, interface with the bank and other accounting/ERP
systems) and reporting tools. Today, SAGU is being rewritten using
Object Orientation techniques... (MIOLO is also the Portuguese
word for the inner part of the bread, as well as a brand of a very
fine wine produced in southern Brazil!)
AGATA REPORT http://agata.codigolivre.org.br
Agata Report is a report generator with an EIS tool (graph
generation) written in PHP-GTK that allows you to edit and
get SQL results from several databases (PostgreSQL, MySQL,
Oracle, SyBase, MS-SQL, FrontBase, Informix, and InterBase).
It connects to a database, lists its tables and fields, and allows
you to link among tables... The result is exported to a PostScript,
text file or spreadsheets. It's interface has English, Portuguese,
Italian, French, German and Swedish support....
More details from Cesar Brod <cesar at brod.com.br>
www.univates.br or sagu at univates.br
--
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Frederick Noronha (FN) | http://www.fredericknoronha.net
Freelance Journalist | http://www.bytesforall.orghttp://goalinks.pitas.com | http://joingoanet.shorturl.comhttp://linuxinindia.pitas.com | http://www.livejournal.com/users/goalinks
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
T: 0091.832.2409490 or 2409783 M: 0 9822 122436
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
[Misposted to fsf-friends, resending]
>>>>> "Raj" == s raj <Raj> writes:
Raj> Hi, Today I received a mail from FSF India list about a new
Raj> logo for FSF India. Curious to see how this fine logo was
Raj> produced using free software i checked it up using pdfinfo,
Raj> here is the result
Raj> [stuff about Adobe tools being used to produce pdf anf jpegs snipped]
Actually none of those documents has bee produced by FSF, India or
other. They are all contributed by individuals, on the invitation of
FSF-India to make appropriate posters, logos, etc. I guess you could
carry advocacy/fanaticism to the point of not accepting any document
(which includes pdfs and graphics) that has been produced using
proprietary tools, but it'd be a bit extreme IMO.
Similarly, the Kandalaya logo was produced by a professional using
Adobe Photoshop. I have no compunctions in putting it up on my web
site, even though I myself wouldn't use Photoshop (and not just
because I don't even know how to draw a circle in Gimp either!)
Regards,
-- Raju
--
Raj Mathur raju(a)kandalaya.org http://kandalaya.org/
GPG: 78D4 FC67 367F 40E2 0DD5 0FEF C968 D0EF CC68 D17F
It is the mind that moves
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