Let's discuss this.
The WORLD MARCH FOR PEACE & NON-VIOLENCE (www.theworldmarch.org) did
go to the wagah border and people from Pakistan were there on the
other side, but the officials had their own reasons for not allowing
us to meet.
What you are proposing is interesting and we intend taking this forward.
Let's work together on it.
Sudhir Gandotra
On 9/14/09, alpafoundation <alpafoundation@...> wrote:
> Accept Greetings of Peace from Pakistan.
>
> ALPA Foundation is a registered non-governmental, non-sectarian,
> non-political entity. We are committed to pursue sustainable development
> following the mandates of the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) for
> sustainable human development for the deprived segments of society.
> The Foundation came into being on 31st January 2002 and is registered under
> the Societies Act 1860 on 7th July, 2003. It was January 29, 2004 that the
> Commissioner of Income Tax of the Central Board of Revenue, Rawalpindi Zone
> have granted ALPA Foundation its non-profit status (Tax Exemption Approval
> -06/03-04/4074/ I).
>
> We promote productive lifestyles for all, building on goal-oriented self
> development, efficient resource mobilization of available resources, hard
> work, good ethics and good governance.
>
> Starting this year, we are planning a project on People to People Contact
> for Peace among India and Pakistan. This project will focus the youth and
> use the Information Communication Technologies and Community Radio/Web
> Podcast/Web Radio for developing peace among the youth of the two nations;
> this will strengthen the relationship between two Countries. We are seeking
> partners from India to Implement this Project From Nov-2009 the interested
> community organizations and groups practicing ICT4D are invited to send
> their Expression of Interest to take part in this project by email to Tanvir
> Akhtar tanvir@alpa. org.pk Grace Tinapao Shaikh grace@.... pk This
> project's participants will visit the each of the countries during this
> project and opportunity to see the success full initiatives in the Region as
> well.
>
> Thanks in advance…
>
> Tanvir Akhtar
> Founding Director
> Coordinator ICT4D Project
>
>
>
--
Sudhir Gandotra
www.sudhirgandotra.in
Best Indian Linux for 2008 - www.OpenLX.com
Humanising Technology - Transforming Lives
Let's discuss this.
The WORLD MARCH FOR PEACE & NON-VIOLENCE (www.theworldmarch.org) did
go to the wagah border and people from Pakistan were there on the
other side, but the officials had their own reasons for not allowing
us to meet.
What you are proposing is interesting and we intend taking this forward.
Let's work together on it.
Sudhir Gandotra
On 9/14/09, alpafoundation <alpafoundation@...> wrote:
> Accept Greetings of Peace from Pakistan.
>
> ALPA Foundation is a registered non-governmental, non-sectarian,
> non-political entity. We are committed to pursue sustainable development
> following the mandates of the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) for
> sustainable human development for the deprived segments of society.
> The Foundation came into being on 31st January 2002 and is registered under
> the Societies Act 1860 on 7th July, 2003. It was January 29, 2004 that the
> Commissioner of Income Tax of the Central Board of Revenue, Rawalpindi Zone
> have granted ALPA Foundation its non-profit status (Tax Exemption Approval
> -06/03-04/4074/ I).
>
> We promote productive lifestyles for all, building on goal-oriented self
> development, efficient resource mobilization of available resources, hard
> work, good ethics and good governance.
>
> Starting this year, we are planning a project on People to People Contact
> for Peace among India and Pakistan. This project will focus the youth and
> use the Information Communication Technologies and Community Radio/Web
> Podcast/Web Radio for developing peace among the youth of the two nations;
> this will strengthen the relationship between two Countries. We are seeking
> partners from India to Implement this Project From Nov-2009 the interested
> community organizations and groups practicing ICT4D are invited to send
> their Expression of Interest to take part in this project by email to Tanvir
> Akhtar tanvir@alpa. org.pk Grace Tinapao Shaikh grace@.... pk This
> project's participants will visit the each of the countries during this
> project and opportunity to see the success full initiatives in the Region as
> well.
>
> Thanks in advance…
>
> Tanvir Akhtar
> Founding Director
> Coordinator ICT4D Project
>
>
>
--
Sudhir Gandotra
www.sudhirgandotra.in
Best Indian Linux for 2008 - www.OpenLX.com
Humanising Technology - Transforming Lives
The IDRC India Social Science Research Award (IDRC SSRA) 2009 is about celebrating best research practices in social sciences in India on the occasion of 25 years of IDRC’s regional office presence in India. The Award seeks to recognize young talent and celebrate research that has demonstrated impact on policy and practice, or has enhanced public understanding of behavioral & social science principles.
Up to ten Research Awards will be given in five key thematic areas.
Award Categories
The IDRC SSRA will be given out for best research practices in the following five thematic areas (2 in each category):
·Enhancing Food Security
·Climate Change and Adaptation
·Rural Innovation Systems
·Equity in Health Systems
·Social Inclusion
A maximum of INR 40,000 per award is available.
Submission guidelines
·Research papers: to be submitted neatly typed in soft copy – 8 to 10 pages maximum with 1.5 spacing in times new roman 12 sized font
·Poster submission: to be shared shortly
Selection Notification
Selection information will be shared on the award site. No personal communication will be entertained.
Award Ceremony
The selected awardees will be felicitated and awarded at an award ceremony cum round table on December 18, 2009 in New Delhi (Venue: NCUI Complex, August Kranti Marg, New Delhi)
Organisers
Organiser: IDRC, Regional Office for South Asia and China www.idrc.ca
Please feel free to get in touch with us for any specific queries.
For IDRC SSRA 2009 Team
Shweta Birla
-- Osama Manzar Founder & Director: Digital Empowerment Foundation Chairman: The Manthan Award - Best e-Content for Development Publisher & Editor: d-Content [enabling development through digital content]
Grand Jury & Board: World Summit Award, Austria Process & Anchor: Dataquest e-Gov Champion Award; Bahrain eContent Award; Sri Lanka eContent Award
Website and application procedure:
http://www.cs.cmu.edu/~cprose/winterschool/index.html (preferred deadline:
October 25, 2009)
This internship program in technology-supported education will draw on broad
areas such as mobile learning, educational games, technology-assisted language
learning, computer-assisted collaborative learning, intelligent tutors, machine
learning, educational data mining, human-computer interaction, as well as speech
and language technologies. The goal is to create an international bridge between
institutions of higher learning in India and Carnegie Mellon University, which
is at the forefront of research both in technology and in the learning sciences
in the U.S., and even worldwide.
This internship program will provide valuable research training opportunities
for Indian undergraduates through a partnership between one of India's premier
technical universities and one of the top ranking schools of computer science in
the world, with the goal of expanding the pool of talented young researchers in
India. A secondary goal is to provide a mechanism through which ongoing research
partnerships can form and flourish between researchers at institutes for higher
learning in India and researchers at Carnegie Mellon University, such as taking
the form of co-advised B-Tech projects. And finally, the internship program
directly benefits the infrastructure for education in India as a biproduct of
the research projects the students will engage in. As part of the internship
program, participants will focus on topics relevant to education in India, and
in the developing world more generally.
The internship program will be composed of two stages. In the first stage,
students will apply to participate in a two-week winter school from December
10-22, 2009 in Hyderabad. During these two weeks, students will attend lectures
that will cover research and research methodologies, tools and techniques,
insights about theory and practice, and a broad overview of the field of
technology-supported education. Students will participate in team projects,
which will be presented in demo sessions at the end of the winter school.
Students who successfully complete the winter school will be invited to apply
for research internships at Carnegie Mellon University. Successful applicants
for stage two will be matched with internship advisors for a summer internship
at Carnegie Mellon University's main campus in Pittsburgh, USA, for summer 2010.
Some financial support for the summer internship may be available.
Please help to spread the word. Thanks!
-Matt
Matthew Kam
Assistant Professor
Carnegie Mellon University
School of Computer Science
Human-Computer Interaction Institute
Email: mattkam@...
URL: http://www.cs.cmu.edu/~mattkam
Accept Greetings of Peace from Pakistan.
ALPA Foundation is a registered non-governmental, non-sectarian, non-political
entity. We are committed to pursue sustainable development following the
mandates of the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) for sustainable human
development for the deprived segments of society.
The Foundation came into being on 31st January 2002 and is registered under the
Societies Act 1860 on 7th July, 2003. It was January 29, 2004 that the
Commissioner of Income Tax of the Central Board of Revenue, Rawalpindi Zone have
granted ALPA Foundation its non-profit status (Tax Exemption Approval
-06/03-04/4074/ I).
We promote productive lifestyles for all, building on goal-oriented self
development, efficient resource mobilization of available resources, hard work,
good ethics and good governance.
Starting this year, we are planning a project on People to People Contact for
Peace among India and Pakistan. This project will focus the youth and use the
Information Communication Technologies and Community Radio/Web Podcast/Web Radio
for developing peace among the youth of the two nations; this will strengthen
the relationship between two Countries. We are seeking partners from India to
Implement this Project From Nov-2009 the interested community organizations and
groups practicing ICT4D are invited to send their Expression of Interest to take
part in this project by email to Tanvir Akhtar tanvir@alpa. org.pk Grace Tinapao
Shaikh grace@.... pk This project's participants will visit the each of the
countries during this project and opportunity to see the success full
initiatives in the Region as well.
Thanks in advance…
Tanvir Akhtar
Founding Director
Coordinator ICT4D Project
Dear Colleagues,
If you received this email in error, please forward it to the appropriate
department at your institution. Please do not reply to this message. In case of
any queries please email us at ncoss@...
2nd Call for Participation
NCOSS-09: National Conference on Open Source Software
May 25 - 26, 2009, Navi Mumbai, India.
Organized by
Centre for Development of Advanced Computing, Mumbai
Supported by
IEEE Computer Society, Mumbai and Chennai chapters &
CSI, Div II on Software & SIG-OSS
Media Partner
Linux For You
The National Conference on Open Source Software is intended to act as a forum
for promoting adoption of open source softwares and solutions in different
areas, by sharing experiences in solution selection, customization/adaptation,
etc. Over 110 papers were submitted to the conference from all over India. After
a rigorous international refereeing process, 25 papers have been selected, which
will be presented during the conference.
Conference Programme :
*
Pre-Conference Tutorials (on May 24, 2009) which include
+
Adopting Service Oriented Architecture (SOA) using Open Source
Software
+
How to build your extensions for Open Office
+
MySQL cluster & high availability
+
Customize your Moodle [Learning Management System]
More information on these tutorials can be found at
http://ncoss.cdacmumbai.in/index.php/oss/OSS09/pages/view/aboutTutorials
*
Paper Presentation in areas including
+
e-Learning
+
Collaboration Technology
+
e-Commerce
+
Enterprise Applications
+
Indian Language Computing and Localization
+
Knowledge Management
+
Other domains
Visit this link for more information on selected papers of the conference
http://ncoss.cdacmumbai.in/index.php/oss/OSS09/pages/view/SelectedPapers
*
Invited Talks
+
Keynote address by Prof. C. R. Muthukrishnan, Advisor TCS and
Ex-Director IIT Madras
+
Invited Talk by Prof. Prabhu Ramachandran (Developer of
Mayavi), IIT Bombay
+
Invited Talk by Dr. B.K.Gairola, Director General, NIC (to be
confirmed)
*
Panel Discussion
+
A panel discussion on - 'Circumventing barriers to FOSS
adoption'
More information on invited talks and panel discussion will be
updated at
http://ncoss.cdacmumbai.in/index.php/oss/OSS09/pages/view/TalksDiscussion
*
Some live demos of FOSS applications like
+
Vanilla - Open Source Business Intelligence software
+
Project OSCAR
+
Indic script rendering in PDF using jasper reports
+
Webservice testing tool and more . . .
Programme Committee :
Ramakrishnan S., C-DAC, Pune (Chair)
Chakravarti A. K, DIT, Delhi
Zia Saquib, C-DAC, Mumbai
Sasikumar M, C-DAC, Mumbai
Sivakumar G, IIT, Mumbai
Venkatesh Hariharan, RedHat, Mumbai
Mohan H R, The Hindu, Chennai
Rishab Aiyer Gosh,UNU-MERIT, Netherlands
Krishnan C N, AU-KBC, Chennai
Gora Mohanty, Sarai, Delhi
Rajagopal M R, C-DAC, Chennai
Dravida Seetharam, IBM, Bangalore
Nagarjuna G, HBCSE, Mumbai
Demo Hall :
NCOSS-09, announces DEMO HALL for show-casing open source applications. The aim
is to provide a platform for people to demonstrate their open source
works/tools. Irrespective of whether you have a paper at the conference, you can
use this opportunity to showcase your work.
All those participating in the demo hall must register for the conference. You
would just have to fillup the following
http://ncoss.cdacmumbai.in/files/conferences/2/ApplicationforDemoSession.rtf and
mail it to ncoss@... asap. Now limited slots are available on a
first-come-first-serve basis. So apply early...
For more details visit
http://ncoss.cdacmumbai.in/index.php/oss/OSS09/pages/view/aboutDemoHall
Registration Fees:
Conference
Tutorial
Not for profit/ educational institutions
Rs. 2200/-
Rs. 700/-
Industry
Rs. 3500/-
Rs. 1000/-
Student
Rs. 1100/-
Rs. 500/-
( Registration form and more details on website )
Limited seats available, register early !
Contact :
(For more details and registration)
NCOSS-09 Secretariat,
C-DAC Mumbai, Raintree Marg, Near Bharati Vidyapeeth,
Opp. Kharghar Railway Station, Sector 7, CBD Belapur,
Navi Mumbai - 400 614, INDIA.
E-mail : ncoss@...
Phone : +91-22-27565303
Fax : +91-22-27560004
Website : http://ncoss.cdacmumbai.in
Warm regards,
NCOSS Team.
Free
Sender: "Omi Azad" <omi@...>
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
Date: Tue, 28 Apr 2009 14:30:52 +0600
Message-ID: <20090428083052461.7D9D0D38598A2800@Omi-PC>
X-Priority: 3 (Normal)
Importance: Normal
Hello All,
On 23 April 2009 Ubuntu released it's new version of Desktop and Server
operating system Jaunty Jackalope (version 9.4). As you may know that every time
they release a new version of their OS, I distribute it's DVD for free with some
easy conditions. I wrote a post on that in my blog which can be found at
http://omi.net.bd/402
If you are interested to have one copy, you are encouraged to visit the above
given link and follow the steps.
Happy Linuxing
Omi Azad
--
This message has been scanned for viruses and
dangerous content by MailScanner, and is
believed to be clean.
Dear Colleagues,
If you received this email in error, please forward it to the appropriate
department at your institution. Please do not reply to this message. In case of
any queries please email us at ncoss@...
Call for Participation
NCOSS-09: National Conference on Open Source Software
May 25 - 26, 2009, Navi Mumbai, India.
Organized by
Centre for Development of Advanced Computing, Mumbai
Supported by
IEEE Computer Society, Mumbai and Chennai chapters &
CSI, Div II on Software & SIG-OSS
The National Conference on Open Source Software is intended to act as a forum
for promoting adoption of open source softwares and solutions in different
areas, by sharing experiences in solution selection, customization/adaptation,
etc. Over 110 papers were submitted to the conference from all over India. After
a rigorous international refereeing process, about 30 papers have been selected,
which will be presented during the conference.
Conference Programme :
*
Paper Presentation in areas including
o
e-Learning
o
Collaboration Technology
o
Language Computing and Localization
o
Knowledge Management
o
e-Health
o
Machine Learning and Data Mining
o
Testing and Application Frameworks
*
Invited Talks
*
Panel Discussions
*
Live demos of FOSS applications
*
Pre-Conference Tutorials (on May 24, 2009)
Programme Committee :
Ramakrishnan S., C-DAC, Pune (chair)
Chakravarti A. K, DIT, Delhi
Zia Saquib, C-DAC, Mumbai
Sasikumar M, C-DAC, Mumbai
Sivakumar G, IIT, Mumbai
Venkatesh Hariharan, RedHat, Mumbai
Mohan H R, The Hindu, Chennai
Rishab Aiyer Gosh,UNU-MERIT, Netherlands
Krishnan C N, AU-KBC, Chennai
Gora Mohanty, Sarai, Delhi
Rajagopal M R, C-DAC, Chennai
Dravida Seetharam, IBM, Bangalore
Nagarjuna G, HBCSE, Mumbai
Demo Hall :
NCOSS-09, announces DEMO HALL for show-casing open source applications. The aim
is to provide a platform for people to demonstrate their open source
works/tools. Irrespective of whether you have a paper at the conference, you can
use this opportunity to showcase your work.
All those participating in the demo hall must register for the conference. Mail
your applications to ncoss@... giving a brief description of the demo
sessions by May 05,2009.
For more details visit http://ncoss.cdacmumbai.in
Registration Fees:
Conference
Tutorial
Not for profit/ educational institutions
Rs. 2200/-
Rs. 700/-
Industry
Rs. 3500/-
Rs. 1000/-
Student
Rs. 1100/-
Rs. 500/-
( Registration form and more details on website )
Contact :
(For more details and registration)
NCOSS-09 Secretariat,
C-DAC Mumbai, Raintree Marg, Near Bharati Vidyapeeth,
Opp. Kharghar Railway Station, Sector 7, CBD Belapur,
Navi Mumbai - 400 614, INDIA.
E-mail : ncoss@...
Phone : +91-22-27560013
Fax : +91-22-27560004
URL : http://ncoss.cdacmumbai.in
Warm regards,
NCOSS Team.
Dear Colleagues,
If you received this email in error, please forward it to the appropriate
department at your institution.
Please do not reply to this message. In case of any queries please email us at
ncoss@...
NCOSS-09 announces
Demo Hall for Open Source Applications
on 25th - 26th May 2009, Mumbai, India.
ABOUT DEMO HALL
The National Conference on Open Source Software, NCOSS-09, announces DEMO
HALL for showcasing open source applications. The aim is to provide a platform
for people to demonstrate their open source works/tools to the world.
Irrespective of whether you have a paper at the conference, you can use this
opportunity to showcase your work.
The application, to be demonstrated, should be an open source application -
i.e., an application which is open source, not just built using/on open source
technologies. The application may be new systems or significant enhancements to
existing open source applications. Adapting and adopting a collection of open
source systems to solve a problem will also be considered. With lower priority,
we will also consider existing applications with which you have extensive
experience that you can share with the audience. So, if you find, say Moodle, an
excellent learning management system and you have used it extensively, you could
offer to demonstrate it, to spread awareness of such applications.
All those participating in the demo-hall must register for the conference.
The demo hall will have demonstrations slotted for half an hour each. The
demo-hall will run in parallel with the conference paper presentation, excluding
the plenary sessions. The slot allocations will be done by the conference
organisers, considering the topic of the demo and other parallel events likely
at that time.
If you are interested in participating, mail your applications to
ncoss@... giving a brief description of the demo sessions. Last date
for submitting your 'Demo Hall' entries: May 05, 2009. According to its
relevance to the conference and other constraints, we will short-list entries
from received applications. The list of demo-hall entries will be announced
periodically, adding new entries subject to availability of slots. So apply
early...
Contact Information
Address
:
NCOSS Conference Secretariat
CDAC-Mumbai (formerly NCST), Rain Tree Marg, Sector-7,
Near Bharti Vidyapeeth, Opp. Kharghar Railway station,
CBD Belapur,
Navi Mumbai - 400614
Maharashtra, India
E-mail
:
ncoss@...
Web
:
http://ncoss.cdacmumbai.in
Ph.
:
+91 - 22 - 27565303
Fax
:
+91 - 22 - 27560004 (on request)
With warm regards,
NCOSS team
Dear Colleagues,
[Apologies if you received multiple copies of this email. You may
forward this email to anyone else, as relevant.]
The paper submission deadline for NCOSS - 2009 has been extended to 28
February 2009.
The CFP for NCOSS can be viewed at :
*
NCOSS site- http://ncoss.cdacmumbai.in or
*
CSI Communications - January 2009, Isuue no. 10, Volume no. 32
Based on requests received from many people, we have now added a
guidelines document for writing a paper, which can be referred here.
With warm regards,
NCOSS Team
Dear Colleagues,
If you received this email in error, please forward it to the
appropriate department at your institution.
You are still in time to submit papers to NCOSS-2009 in order to share
your work in the tracks mentioned in the CFP below. PAPER SUBMISSION
DEADLINE: 15 February 2009
Please do not reply to this message. In case of any queries please
email us at ncoss@...
NCOSS-09: National Conference on Open Source Software
May 25th - 26th, 2009, Mumbai, India
Organized by
C-DAC, Mumbai
Supported by
IEEE Computer Society, Mumbai and Chennai chapters
Computer Society of India, Div II on Software & SIG-OSS
* * * CALL FOR PAPERS * * *
NCOSS - 2009 is being conceived of as a forum to bring together the
various groups working on developing Open Source Applications catering
to specific domains in the ICT world, including education, health,
accessibility, localisation, e-commerce, disaster management, expert
systems, machine learning, etc. A number of high quality software
solutions are available in many of these areas, for example, SugarCRM,
Koha, Drupal, Moodle, Sahana, CollabCAD, etc. Work on these systems
require a combination of domain knowledge and development expertise.
Much of the public awareness in open source is focussed on desktop,
operating system and general productivity tools. With this background,
NCOSS-09 has chosen to focus on the layer above this, bringing
together groups working on various application domains.
The conference will present experiences in deploying FOSS
applications, comparative studies among competing software solutions,
efforts in adapting and localising FOSS applications, development of
new applications, etc. The conference will consist of the following:
* Invited talks by experts from India and abroad
* Presentation of contributed papers selected based on refereeing
by a panel of referees
* Exhibition by industry and academia
* Pre conference Tutorials (on May 24th )
* Panel discussion
Papers are invited on the topics listed below. All papers will be
subject to external refereeing and acceptance will be subject to
referee evaluation. Accepted papers will be published in the
conference proceedings. We also invite proposals for tutorials.
*** TOPICS ***
Other application areas may also be considered.
Accessibility
Machine Learning and Data Mining
Indian Language Computing
e-Health
Localisation
Knowledge Management
e-Learning
Collaboration Technologies
Information Extraction and Retrieval
Content Management
Disaster Management
e-Commerce
e-Governance
*** INSTRUCTIONS ***
* Papers must report original work carried out by the authors. The
work can include enhancing existing Open Source applications for
specific requirements, development of new solutions and comparative
analysis of competing solutions. Direct survey or overview papers are
not acceptable.
* Length should not exceed 10 pages of A4 size in length (approx.
5000 words) including figures, etc.
* Papers should be in English.
* An abstract of about 100-200 words and the area(s) under which
the paper can be categorized, must be included with the paper.
Papers exceeding the specified length are subject to rejection without
review. Since reviewing will be blind, the author names and
affiliations along with the main area of the paper should be given
only on a separate cover sheet. Papers should be in one of the
following formats: PDF, RTF or ODT.
Papers may be submitted via the web at the URL
http://ncoss.cdacmumbai.in. A template paper is also made available at
the URL for formatting reference. Those who are unable to make
electronic submissions may send four copies of the paper to the
address listed below.
*** PROGRAMME COMMITTEE ***
Ramakrishnan S., C-DAC, Pune (chair)
Chakravarti A. K, DIT, Delhi
Zia Saquib, C-DAC, Mumbai
Sivakumar G, IIT, Mumbai
Sasikumar M, C-DAC, Mumbai
Venkatesh Hariharan, RedHat, Mumbai
Mohan H R, The Hindu, Chennai
Rishab Aiyer Ghosh,UNU-MERIT, Netherlands
Krishnan C N, AU-KBC, Chennai
Gora Mohanty, Sarai, Delhi
Rajagopal M R, C-DAC, Chennai
Dravida Seetharam, IBM, Bangalore
G Nagarjuna, HBCSE, Mumbai, India
* * * IMPORTANT DATES * * *
Submission of papers
February 15, 2009
Acceptance intimation
March 15, 2009
Camera ready due
April 15, 2009
Tutorial Proposals due
March 15, 2009
Tutorial Acceptance intimation
April 15, 2009
* * * CONTACT DETAILS * * *
Address :
NCOSS Conference Secretariat
CDAC-Mumbai (formerly NCST), Rain Tree Marg, Sector-7,
Near Bharti Vidyapeeth, Opp. Kharghar Railway Station,
CBD Belapur,
Navi Mumbai - 400614
Maharashtra, India
E-mail: ncoss@...
Web: http://ncoss.cdacmumbai.in
Ph.: +91 - 22 - 27565303
Fax: +91 - 22 - 27560004 (on request)
With warm regards,
NCOSS team
Dear Colleagues,
If you received this email in error, please forward it to the
appropriate department at your institution.
Please do not reply to this message. In case of any queries please
email us at ncoss@...
NCOSS-09: National Conference on Open Source Software
May 25th - 26th, 2009, Mumbai, India
Organized by
C-DAC, Mumbai
Supported by
IEEE Computer Society, Mumbai and Chennai chapters
Computer Society of India, Div II on Software & SIG-OSS
* * * CALL FOR PAPERS * * *
NCOSS - 2009 is being conceived of as a forum to bring together the
various groups working on developing Open Source Applications catering
to specific domains in the ICT world, including education, health,
accessibility, localisation, e-commerce, disaster management, expert
systems, machine learning, etc. A number of high quality software
solutions are available in many of these areas, for example, SugarCRM,
Koha, Drupal, Moodle, Sahana, CollabCAD, etc. Work on these systems
require a combination of domain knowledge and development expertise.
Much of the public awareness in open source is focussed on desktop,
operating system and general productivity tools. With this background,
NCOSS-09 has chosen to focus on the layer above this, bringing
together groups working on various application domains.
The conference will present experiences in deploying FOSS
applications, comparative studies among competing software solutions,
efforts in adapting and localising FOSS applications, development of
new applications, etc. The conference will consist of the following:
Invited talks by experts from India and abroad
Presentation of contributed papers selected based on refereeing by a
panel of referees
Exhibition by industry and academia
Pre conference Tutorials (on May 24th )
Panel discussion
Papers are invited on the topics listed below. All papers will be
subject to external refereeing and acceptance will be subject to
referee evaluation. Accepted papers will be published in the
conference proceedings. We also invite proposals for tutorials.
*** TOPICS ***
Other application areas may also be considered.
Accessibility
Machine Learning and Data Mining
Indian Language Computing
e-Health
Localisation
Knowledge Management
e-Learning
Collaboration Technologies
Information Extraction and Retrieval
Content Management
Disaster Management
e-Commerce
e-Governance
*** INSTRUCTIONS ***
Papers must report original work carried out by the authors. The work
can include enhancing existing Open Source applications for specific
requirements, development of new solutions and comparative analysis of
competing solutions. Direct survey or overview papers are not acceptable.
Length should not exceed 10 pages of A4 size in length (approx. 5000
words) including figures, etc.
Papers should be in English.
An abstract of about 100-200 words and the area(s) under which the
paper can be categorized, must be included with the paper.
Papers exceeding the specified length are subject to rejection without
review. Since reviewing will be blind, the author names and
affiliations along with the main area of the paper should be given
only on a separate cover sheet. Papers should be in one of the
following formats: PDF, RTF or ODT.
Papers may be submitted via the web at the URL
http://ncoss.cdacmumbai.in.A template paper is also made available at
the URL for formatting reference. Those who are unable to make
electronic submissions may send four copies of the paper to the
address listed below.
*** PROGRAMME COMMITTEE ***
- Hide quoted text -
Ramakrishnan S., C-DAC, Pune (chair)
Chakravarti A. K, DIT, Delhi
Zia Saquib, C-DAC, Mumbai
Sivakumar G, IIT, Mumbai
Sasikumar M, C-DAC, Mumbai
Venkatesh Hariharan, RedHat, Mumbai
Mohan H R, The Hindu, Chennai
Rishab Aiyer Ghosh,UNU-MERIT, Netherlands
Krishnan C N, AU-KBC, Chennai
Gora Mohanty, Sarai, Delhi
Rajagopal M R, C-DAC, Chennai
Dravida Seetharam, IBM, Bangalore
(This list is partial)
* * * IMPORTANT DATES * * *
Submission of papers
February 15, 2009
Acceptance intimation
March 15, 2009
Camera ready due
April 15, 2009
Tutorial Proposals due
March 15, 2009
Tutorial Acceptance intimation
April 15, 2009
* * * CONTACT DETAILS * * *
Address :
NCOSS Conference Secretariat
CDAC-Mumbai (formerly NCST), Rain Tree Marg, Sector-7,
Near Bharti Vidyapeeth, Opp. Kharghar Railway Station,
CBD Belapur,
Navi Mumbai - 400614
Maharashtra, India
E-mail: ncoss@...
Web: http://ncoss.cdacmumbai.in
Ph.: +91 - 22 - 27565303
Fax: +91 - 22 - 27560004 (on request)
With warm regards,
NCOSS team
Nepal's first FOSS Training and Research Center is opened at Brihaspati Vidyasadan School (BVS)
at Naxal, Kathmandu, Nepal. This Center has been made possible by the
financial help from Help Nepal Network and BVS Alumni and technical
help from FOSS Nepal, the community involved in spreading free and open
source technologies in Nepal.
All the machines in the FOSS Training and research Center are
running Ubuntu Linux 8.04 Desktop edition. This mainly training
facility is opened with the objective of training as many as possible
about free and open source technologies specially linux. Over the next
year this facility hopes to attract and train, mainly younger
generation specially students, on the use of FOSS technologies in
Nepal.
FOSS Nepal has been involved with the establishment of
e-libraries and small computer labs for schools across the country.
FOSS Nepal has been training people in these places to run these
centers. Besides this FOSS Nepal had been conducting trainings and
awareness campaigns across Nepal to introduce free and open source
software to the masses, but all of these had been done with help from
computer labs in colleges, universities and communities. FOSS Nepal and
the training community felt a dire need for a permanent center to
conduct its trainings as well as other activities.
To mark the achievement of the establishment of the lab, a 1
day workshop was held on Saturday 6th December, 2008 to train 25
students in the "Training the Trainer" program. This training is an
important way of spreading the word around about the FOSS, specially to
younger generation. Further 1 – 5 days training and introductory
lessons on FOSS are planned right through this year to the first half
of 2009.
Another important activity that FOSS Nepal hopes to achieve
with the students of Brihaspati Vidyasadan is to run a program called
"to students from students". This program will be a part of the
Training and Research Center. The basic concept is to take in old
computers, install them with FOSS technologies and distribute them to
needy schools around the country.
The Center also hopes to run open source software development projects
of its own. Currently one project that is being hosted at the Center is
"E-Barnamala", a software for early learners of the Nepali language available through http://www.bvs.edu.np/eBarnamala.
This software uses the concepts of integrated learning to help students
learn the basics of the Nepali language, including letters, numbers,
basic words, basic arithmetic and others.
In an effort to create awareness about FOSS, the Center is
currently planning to conduct a one day festival to showcase FOSS
technologies to student and business communities of Nepal. This
festival, to be conducted before the end of 2008, will bring together
people interested in technology for a day and will have such events as
presentations, demonstrations, short workshops, lectures and BOF
seminars.
FOSS Training and Research Center hopes to achieve a lot in the way of
not only introducing, but rapidly expanding the use of free and open
source technologies throughout Nepal. To achieve this the center looks
for help for one and all in any way possible.
---------- Forwarded message ---------- From: Subir Pradhanang<subirbp@...>
Date: Wed, Nov 26, 2008 at 10:09 AM Subject: FOSS Nepal declared one of SFD 2008 competition winners To: bytesforall_readers@yahoogroups.com
Dear all,
FOSS Nepal Community has been declared one of the winners of the SFD 2008 Best Event Competition for the second consecutive year. For more information,
Regards,
Subir Pradhanang President
FOSS Nepal Community www.fossnepal.org
---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Robert Schumann <robert@...>
Date: Wed, Nov 26, 2008 at 5:57 AM
Subject: [SFD-discuss] SFD 2008 - competition winners!
To: SFD announcements <sfd-announce@...>, Open discussions
about SFD <sfd-discuss@...>
Dear SFD'ers,
Following a highly successful SFD 2008 - with 50% more teams registered than in 2007 - we are pleased to announce the winners of the competition for the best event:
FOSS Nepal Community (team leader Subir Pradhanang) - team report PDF 7.4MB
SFD Nicaragua (team leader Leandro Gomez) - team report 1.6MB
DabaweGNU (team leader Holden Hao) - team report
Congratulations to these teams, and many thanks to Subir, Leandro and Holden for leading their events and telling the world about their how it went!
Each winning team will be receiving a prize of a pair of OLPC laptops.
The winning entries were selected for the scope of their SFD activities, the number of people reached (particularly from the wider, non-technical community) and the quality of the reporting. However we received many high quality entries - a total of almost fifty
submissions - and special mention also goes to:
Guyana (team leader Vidyaratha Kissoon) - team report
Trinidad and Tobago Computer Society (Dev Anand Teelucksingh) - team report
freeIT (team leader Mylene Sereno) - team report
Thank you to all teams (over 500 teams in almost 90 countries) for their efforts in making SFD 2008 such a great success, and don't forget to put Saturday 19 Septermber 2009 in your calendars! To make sure you don't miss out on registration, make sure that you are
subscribed to the SFD-announce mailing list.
Robert Schumann
Vice President, Software Freedom International
Dear Friends,
On 21st November 2008 (Friday) we're going to organize Ubuntu Intrepid
Ibex Live, a program to demonstrate what the latest version of Ubuntu
Linux as to offer.
This program will be held at Presidency University from 4:00 PM
onwards. The address is:
Presidency University
11-A, Road 92, Gulshan 2
Dhaka
The entry to this program is free of charge just like our software, and
you're welcome to bring in your friends, colleagues, relatives,
neighbors, whoever is interested to know about Ubuntu Linux. 1st 100
registered participant will get 1 Ubuntu DVD for free.
Ubuntu Intrepid Ibex Live is being organized by Bangladesh Linux Users
Alliance and Ubuntu Bangladesh in association with Presidency
University [1]. Online media partners of the event are Amader Projukti
[2] and Mukto [3].
Hello All
As you may know that I have a great feelings on Ubuntu Linux Desktop
operating system. With my friend Hasin
Hayder's encouragement I decided to distribute Ubuntu to those
people who don't have faster Internet access and cannot download the
operating and have a taste of it.
I started it with last time's Ubuntu 8.04 release and something like
400 DVDs. I'm going to do this again this time with Ubuntu 8.10 (The
Intrepid Ibex). My first condition is the Pass it on policy, which
means once you have a copy from me, copy/distribute it to other
interested people.
If you are interested, please take a look at my blog post:
http://omi.net.bd/308
to know how to have it.
Hope you will enjoy this.
-- Untitled Document
-- Omi Azad|
+8803894550305 | Contributor of Ekushey
Dear All,
It gives me a great pleasure to inform you that Madan Puraskar
Pustakalaya, the Nepal Country Component of the PAN Localization Project
has made two important software releases on May 25, 2008. Please find
below the information about the release.
_NepaLinux 3.0 released_
Madan Puraskar Pustakalaya (MPP), Lalitpur, PatanDhoka, Nepal has released yet
another version of NepaLinux, (NepaLinux 3.0) on May 25, 2008.
NepaLinux is a localized Debian and Morphix based GNU/Linux Distribution in
Nepali. It is a Free Open Source Software released under the GNU General
Public License(GPL). MPP has been conducting development works of NepaLinux
since the year 2004. It is being developed under the PAN Localization
Project, which is a software localization initiative in some ten countries of
South and South East Asia. The project is supported by the International
Development and Research Center (IDRC), Canada and administered through the
Center for Research in Urdu Language Processing (CRULP),
National University of Computer and Emerging Sciences (NUCES), Pakistan. So far
three different versions of NepaLinux 1.0, 1.1 and 2.0 have
been released respectively in December 2005, October 2006 and June 2007.
NepaLinux 3.0 like the previous NepaLinux 2.0 version, features two separate CDs
with respectively GNOME and KDE Desktop environments and
a combined DVD containing both of these. Some of the chief attractions of this
version are the two new applications, respectively,
the Nepali Text-to-Speech Application and Nepali Sabdakos. Among other useful
packages included in this version are offline English dictionary and
several other useful educational tools like Gcompris, TuxType, Nepali Spell
Checker and KTouch typing tutor. For detailed information on technical
specifications, please visit the link _http://nepalinux.org
<http://nepalinux.org/>_
_Nepali Office CD Released_
Madan Puraskar Pustakalaya (MPP) released the Nepali Office CD. This consists of
the localized OpenOffice.org suite in Nepali along with
a few other useful Free and Open Source Software like Gimp, Gcompris, TuxType,
FireFox, Thunderbird etc. The Nepali Spell Checker is also
integrated in the OpenOffice.org suite. This Spell Checker has the capabilities
of spell checking and providing suggestions to around 6 million Nepali
words. The Nepali Office CD is believed to be an important tool for helping to
migrate to Free and Open Source Software solutions.
Regards,
Bal Krishna Bal
Project Manager
PAN Localization Project
Nepal Country Component
Lalitpur, PatanDhoka
Nepal
Hello All,
On April 21st 2008 Canonical Ltd. released the most popular Linux
distribution Ubuntu's 8.04 LTS, code named "Hardy Heron". Ubuntu is
very popular and the fastest growing desktop operating system, which
is being embraced by more and more Windows users everyday.
To celebrate the release of Ubuntu 8.04, Ubuntu Bangladesh arranged a
launching party.
When: On May 17th, 2008 (Saturday)
Where:
The Hunger Project
Hall Room
The Hunger Project Building -
4th Floor
3/7 Asad Avenue, Mohammadpur,
Dhaka
View/Download the location
concept guideline image from here.
4.00 - Welcome note,
introduction to Ubuntu Bangladesh community team
4.15 - A presentation on
Linux usages and the new features of Ubuntu 8.04
4.45 - A peek into Ubuntu
flavours: Kubuntu, Edubuntu, and Xubuntu
5.15 - Open discussion about
Ubuntu Bangladesh community, a peek into the web tools such as: mailing
list, Launchpad, forum, IRC, etc.
6.45 - Question/Answer
session
6.30 - Call for help:
volunteers/developers/donations/etc.
 Tea/Beverages will be available on self service condition.
Participants can collect Ubuntu CDs and DVDs, as well as Kubuntu,
Edubuntu, and Xubuntu CDs. CDs will cost 25 taka and DVDs will cost 40
taka.
Participants can contribute money to the Ubuntu Bangladesh fund and the
Royal Bengal Linux development team. There will be a fund collection
box at the event location where you can drop the contributions.
http://www.theinquirer.net/gb/inquirer/news/2008/05/09/gates-offers-free-softwar\
e-asia
Gates offers free software in Asia
Pulls Intel trump card for digital have-nots
By Mark Ballard: Friday, 09 May 2008, 5:31 PM
BILL GATES HAS OFFERED free software for a million PCs the Indonesian
government is trying to acquire for students, according to the Jakarta
Post today.
Gates met Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, president of Indonesia, the
world's fourth most populous country, yesterday to talk about how the
country was also the fourth amongst 'piracy offenders' in Asia. He was
also there to renew Microsoft's 2006 deal to supply software to the
government and to add another University to its growing international
network of proprietary training centres.
The newspaper reported that Gates promised free software, "if
Indonesia could make a deal with Intel chairman Craig Barrett, who
will meet Yudhoyono in Jakarta next week".
The government was trying to buy a million PCs for under $200 each to
get more computers in education. Indonesia had one PC for every 1,000
students. It aimed to have one for every 20. So the deal might not
quite bridge the digital divide, but at least it throws a rope near
the far bank.
Microsoft's push into Indonesia and other Less Smug Countries (LSCs)
pitches US industrial might against European guerrilla software
innovation.
USAID, the US federal overseas development fund, supports a tech
innovation competition run by Microsoft in Indonesia that attracted
100 proposals last year.
The software giant has also since 2006 established a network of 110
Microsoft Innovation Centres in 60 countries, the last of which it
launched in Jakarta yesterday, which provide training and encourage
firms and students to use Microsoft software. It now has five such
centres in Indonesia.
The Europeans on the other hand have given €0.7m to the Flossinclude
programme to encourage homegrown opensource development in Asia, India
and South America.
Rishab Ghosh, an opensource guru at Maastricht University who helps
run Flossinclude, said that Microsoft was being forced to take the
"drug-pusher strategy" to Asian markets because of competition from
government-supported open source initiatives.
"They give free software to governments, but they are not going to
keep it free forever. They'll start charging, and then they make it
difficult for you to migrate because of their proprietary standards.
That's the classic lock-in strategy of the monopoly," said Ghosh, "In
the long-run, you have to pay the company that you are dependent on."
After his meeting with Gates, Indonesia's President Susilo Bambang
Yudhoyono, gave a heart-swelling speech about how IT could "fight
poverty", "raise the dignity of man", and ensure no less than the
"survival of the human race".
"We must promote technology that will reinforce, not lose, our common
humanity," he said.
This was once the philosophy that led One Laptop Per Child (OLPC), a
scheme to get cheap laptops the into the hands of African school
children, to choose the open source Linux operating system for its
machines. Open source software was supposed to spawn a network of
do-it-yourself software engineers and local repair shops across LSCs,
instead of spods trained to fill the corporate coffers of a US
multinational. But OLPC has since said it might drop Linux for
Microsoft's Windows. Sales of Linux laptops weren't going too well,
the Wintel giants were charming LSC governments with a competing model
of cheap laptop, and people were pirating Microsoft software anyway.
Gates, renowned for his tycoon philanthropism, used his trip Indonesia
to promote his vision of Microsoft as the means by which impoverished
peoples will raise themselves up on the crutches of knowledge and
modernity.
Microsoft's pitch is also identical to OLPC's once egalitarian call to
action. Microsoft's proprietary training centres would be a
"sparkplug...empowering citizens with IT skills and nurturing strong,
local software economies".
Giving free software to LSCs would also help Microsoft solve the
piracy problem in Indonesia. It merely repackages Microsoft's old
policy to piracy in LSCs, which was to let it ride because it got
people locked into its software. Gates may as well gift sand to the
Arabs. µ
--
Frederick FN Noronha * Independent Journalist
http://fn.goa-india.org * Phone +91-832-2409490
Cell +91-9970157402 (sometimes out of range)
http://www.youtube.com/user/fredericknoronha
From:
"Frederick Noronha [फ़रेदरिक नोरोनया]" <fred@...> Date:
Thu May 1, 2008 8:54 am Subject:Can we rescue OLPC from Windows?: RMS
---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Hempal Shrestha <hempalshrestha@...>
Date: 2008/5/1
Subject: [FOSSNepal] Fwd: {OLPC Nepal} Can we rescue OLPC from Windows?: RMS
To: foss-nepal@googlegroups.com
Dear All,
Here is what RMS is asking, How are the OLPC things going to take
shape in Nepal?
Source:
http://www.fsf.org/blogs/rms/can-we-rescue-olpc-from-windows/blogentry_view
Regards,
Hempal Shrestha
================================================================================\
====
Can we rescue OLPC from Windows?
by Richard Stallman
I read Negroponte's statement presenting the OLPC XO as a platform for
Windows in the most ironic circumstances possible: during a week of
preparing, under a deadline, to migrate personally to an XO.
I made this decision for one specific reason: freedom. The IBM T23s
that I have used for many years are adequate in practice, and the
system and applications running on them are entirely free software,
but the BIOS is not. I want to use a laptop with a free software BIOS,
and the XO is the only one.
The XO's usual software load is not 100% free; it has a non-free
firmware program to run the wireless chip. That means I cannot fully
promote the XO as it stands, but it was easy for me solve that problem
for my own machine: I just deleted that file. That made the internal
wireless chip inoperative, but I can do without it.
As always happens, problems arose, which delayed the migration until
last week. On Friday, when I discussed some technical problems with
the OLPC staff, we also discussed how to save the future of the
project.
Some enthusiasts of the GNU/Linux system are extremely disappointed by
the prospect that the XO, if it is a success, will not be a platform
for the system they love. Those who have supported the OLPC project
with their effort or their money may well feel betrayed. However,
those concerns are dwarfed by what is at stake here: whether the XO is
an influence for freedom or an influence for subjection.
Since the OLPC was first announced we have envisioned it as a way to
lead millions of children around the world to a life in which they do
computing in freedom. The project announced its intention to give
children a path to learn about computers by allowing them to study and
tinker with the software. It may yet do that, but there is a danger
that it will not. If most of the XOs that are actually used run
Windows, the overall effect will be the opposite.
Proprietary software keeps users divided and helpless. Its functioning
is secret, so it is incompatible with the spirit of learning. Teaching
children to use a proprietary (non-free) system such as Windows does
not make the world a better place, because it puts them under the
power of the system's developer -- perhaps permanently. You might as
well introduce the children to an addictive drug. If the XO turns out
to be a platform for spreading the use of proprietary software, its
overall effect on the world will be negative.
It is also superfluous. The OLPC has already inspired other cheap
computers; if the goal is only to make cheap computers available, the
OLPC project has succeeded whether or not more XOs are built. So why
build more XOs? Delivering freedom would be a good reason.
The project's decision is not final; the free software community must
do everything possible to convince OLPC to continue being (aside from
one firmware package) a force for freedom.
Part of what we can do is offer to help with the project's own free
software. OLPC hoped for contribution from the community to its
interface, Sugar, but this has not happened much. Partly that's
because OLPC has not structured its development so as to reach out to
the community for help -- which means, when viewed in constructive
terms, that OLPC can obtain more contribution by starting to do this.
Sugar is free software, and contributing to it is a good thing to do.
But don't forget the goal: helpful contributions are those that make
Sugar better on free operating systems. Porting to Windows is
permitted by the license, but it isn't a good thing to do.
I am typing these words on the XO. As I travel and speak in the coming
weeks, I will point to it in my speeches to raise this issue.
________________________________
Copyright 2008 Richard Stallman
Verbatim copying and distribution of this entire article are
permitted worldwide without royalty in any medium provided this notice
is preserved.
================================================================================\
====
--
Frederick FN Noronha * Independent Journalist
http://fn.goa-india.org * Phone +91-832-2409490
Cell +91-9970157402 (sometimes out of range)
Please see http://nursing.goa-india.org
I decided to give away latest Ubuntu 8.04 Hardy Heron Linux DVD/CDs
for free under some easy conditions. The offer is applicable for
Bangladeshi residence. If you want to grab a copy, please take a look
at http://omi.net.bd/?p=219
Regards
Omi
May I share two links from India that might be of interest?
FLOSS for third standard students:
http://divshare.com/download/4053521-61e
Paper on FLOSS in schools in South Asia:
http://divshare.com/download/3321637-94c
Rgds, FN
--
----------------------------------------------------------
Frederick 'FN' Noronha | Ym/Gmailtalk: fredericknoronha
http://fn.goa-india.org | fred@...
Independent Journalist | +91(832)2409490 Cell 9970157402
----------------------------------------------------------
Hi all,
Hey, let me make it clear, there is already an ISO Open Document Format as
an open standard and approved and in place and being used, Microsoft just
wants to battle it with its "Vendor Backed" OOXML format so that it can have
its "Always There" & "Monopolistic Advantage" to lock-in everyone who uses
it to Microsoft. Boy, don't we all love Microsoft for that? Since we are so
naïve, we never thought of looking at: ISO/IEC 26300:2006
http://www.iso.org/iso/iso_catalogue/catalogue_tc/catalogue_detail.htm?csnum
ber=43485
I would like to appreciate Shahzad's optimism as always, but still, I would
remain very skeptical on Pakistan's decision to vote in favor or against MS
OOXML Specification, we already know their answer, despite our efforts and
the reasons being very factual, and that have continuously been witnessed on
the Pakistan ICT Policy list since we first brought up the issues and
started the campaign against OOXML. We have had an experienced background to
do so, not claiming that we have full knowledge against it, just for the
sake of it, and we continue to advocate against it.
First, international vendors and corporations like Red Hat India and Google
were the first ones to notify Pakistan of the MS OOXML campaign, even IBM
Pakistan didn’t respond, which definitely shows lack of responsibility on
their part whereas they have been beating the Open Source drums for quite
some years now probably since 2001. Novell India that heavily pushes Suse
Linux and OpenSuse (all carrying ODF support) that services Pakistan has
been also acting like a chicken, probably their eggs will hatch soon.
Secondly as far as the Government of Pakistan with reference to the Ministry
of IT & T and Pakistan Software Export Board is concerned, now that the PSEB
MD has left his seat, I can guarantee you, the acting MD may have no
knowledge of the issue and it would definitely be a hectic task to have him
or his new team go through the 6000 document specification and understand
all the technical and not so technical jargon and identify where Pakistan
should have its position in the process. I don't blame them, their eggs may
be ready to hatch too, its summer already.
Reality bites but Ministry of IT has no control or intervention power over
the Pakistan Quality Standards body as it falls under the Ministry of
Science and Technology that is totally alien to Open Source Software, Open
Standards, for them, the Internet may be believed to be a product of
Microsoft too. A bit of letters may have revoked some activity in favor of
the OOXML discussion but that was due to continuous pushing from our end to
the PSEB to take up its stance on such an IT/ICT issue as it affects their
members. Only a handful of vendors of open source solutions from Pakistan
intelligently pursued the matter despite PSEB claiming it was playing a role
but if you browse through our email exchange with the ex-MD PSEB on the
subject, he had raised his hands as well declaring PSEB has intervened for
all it could in its limited capacity. Big round to the IT Industry, as they
claim, they are well aware of "all" the technology advancements around the
globe, we can say "DUH" to that.
Second set of issues involve, the local industry is hardly aware of the
existing ISO open standard called Open Document Format or XML-ODF or how
these affect its future of document exchange. With the new Electronic Crime
Bills and various other electronic ordinances, we will be witnessing a lot
of foul play, I am not going to explain it here though but we may remain
optimistic that it's going to eventually happen. Well just for "Pete's Sake"
and since all of already knew about it, and to feed my sheer optimism in
favor of Shahzad, here is information about the standard:
ISO/IEC 26300:2006 - Information technology -- Open Document ...
http://www.iso.org/iso/iso_catalogue/catalogue_tc/catalogue_detail.htm?csnum
ber=43485
OpenDocument - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OpenDocument
OASIS Open Document Format for Office Applications (OpenDocument) |
http://www.oasis-open.org/committees/office/
In order to vote against OOXML, it must be initially recognized that our
Government lacks knowledge on the Open Document Format ODF, the existing
open standard and specification already approved by ISO. It never accepted
it in the first place and isn’t against it either since its awareness on the
subject is limited and we would like to assure you that with the way things
have been, there may be less luck in the future.
The purpose of XML-based ODF is for document contents to become independent
from specified application or vendor's file format and vendor lock-in, an
important issue that governments must take into consideration, especially
the Government of Pakistan that has many ICT/IT programs in progress
throughout the public infrastructure. Hence open and transparent
standardization process through opinions from worldwide user community is
being developed and its position has strengthened since its official
approval from ISO, international organization for standards, as file format
standard.
For example, the Korea Agency for Technology and Standards announced in
November 2007 that it had accepted ODF as a national standard (KS) and
OpenOffice.org applications such as word processor, spreadsheet,
presentation etc, have been accepted as document formats for the first time
thus following the KS establishment, ODF now stands as the national standard
for Korea, have we heard anything of this nature from Pakistan?
It must also be noted that even though Korea approved ODF as KS, it is not
compulsory for users but it could be influential in public institutions as a
choice of document standard. At the time, 23 countries were voting rights
including Korea all voted in favor, thus it was approved as ODF without any
objection. According to an official at Korea Agency for Technology and
Standards, ODF was approved as ISO standard for it realizes open mind with
participation of various vendors and it is not subordinated to a specific
vendor. These reason also worked for the approval as KS in its case.
I would like to point you all to realize that what you all think or
anticipate is happening here is not actually action but discussion. Like the
PKNIC issue, clearly diverted to a point of no-discussion. Same goes on the
OOXML case, just be optimistic because pessimism is only for the action
takers. A change in attitudes and coalitions for change is required. Things
are getting messed up and we just want to play wearing blindfolds to the
problems arising instead of gearing up towards taking action to resolve
them.
Anyways, as always, going on with sharing Shahzad's optimism, the world is
beautiful, we are all intelligent, we are not going to vote in favor of
OOXML and we are really all aware of ODF, PKNIC is no more an issue, we
govern the internet really well, oh there really is no problem, if there is,
lets hope it will just disintegrate with our optimism. Keep up the good work
all and beat the drums on Pakistan ICT Policy but lets understand one thing
for sure, it ain't all peanut butter and jelly for us.
Btw, Shahzad, I would love to know what you feeded the government officials
and what we campaigned for, I hope it’s the same thing, oh, by the way,
don’t get me wrong, but, did you feed the ODF pill first or the OOXML first
because what's happening is making perfect logical sense.
Best optimist ever
Fouad Bajwa
FOSS Advocate with a twist
Free and Open Source Software FOSS Makes Strides in Egypt
By Fouad Bajwa,
Open Letter from a Global Trotter FOSS Advocate
It has nearly been a month since I arrived in Cairo, Egypt but it has
felt like the FOSS atmosphere in the country had been waiting for a
trigger to ignite and uncover the widespread interest in the region.
Yes, FOSS has already been here for quite some time now through LUGs
and small initiatives as well as Egyptians have been using FOSS
technology platforms in one way or the other but mostly for personal
needs.
My anticipation has been to help establish the Linux Professional
Institute Egypt and Ubuntu Linux activities while advocating the
benefits of adopting FOSS to the government organizations,
universities, civil society and private sectors. My first contact was
a group of trainers getting ready to launch professional LPI training
programs as well as technical support for FOSS in the country. Second
was bumping into Samer Azmy, an ex-UNDP Project Manager and FOSS
Advocate whom I had met during the Asia Source 2 Camp by UNDP-IOSN
last year in January in Indonesia.
The community is strong, there are many people and organizations
gearing up for adopting FOSS and pushing the agenda of open innovation
to the next level breaking the barriers towards accessing knowledge.
Only last week on the night of Saturday, Orbit TV Egypt aired a 20
minute documentary and talk show on the benefits of FOSS, Linux with a
focus on Ubuntu Linux, its Arabic language capabilities and the
opportunities it holds for Egypt and the Arab world.
After the TV show, somehow, lots of people sourced my local cell
number and a downpour of telephone calls started causing me trouble
explaining FOSS benefits in English language whereas the callers were
mostly speaking Arabic. But, all hope was not lost because they
somehow knew what I was trying to explain and viceversa.
The most prevailing questions included parents asking how they can
prevent their children from using or stealing pirated software and
businessmen concerned about the protection of their information and
removing pirated software. Somehow, many callers also knew about
specialized FOSS ERP and Communications applications. The most
interesting call was from a group that was interested in developing
electronic games for egypt on FOSS based gaming engines.
The most tangible result evolved from a caller from a Christian Youth
initiative that has agreed to train all its members on Ubuntu Linux as
well as sit the first LPI paper based tests in the region. There
stance was, how can we steal other people's efforts through pirated
software when we have the opportunity to learn and use FOSS both for
social as well as economic benefits of their community members. It is
true, FOSS creates its own path for adoption.
The next two weeks are packed with lectures to be delivered by myself
and a number of other FOSS advocates at various government educational
and research institutions on the topic of FOSS in Education and
Government Policy. A cultural center will be hosting a full house
event on the topic of FOSS and Cultural Production that will air open
productions and explore the various tools for use by cultural
organizations and arts enthusiasts.
Before I leave Cairo mid of next month, two seminars with nearly 25
business partners of a global technology giant will be held in the
offices of various companies where a technical review of FOSS will be
carried out in light of the problems that these companies have faced
with closed source software. A key topic of discussion will be the
economic and business models of FOSS driving the path for adopting
such technologies in mainstream commercial service delivery.
A number of organizations are signing MOU's as well as short term
contracts for further technical support on the subject and this
creates a positive environment for development of a FOSS Ecosystem in
which the government will adopt small but effective FOSS initiatives
while universities and vocational centers are looking at becoming LPI
partners. On the other hand civil society is interested in finding
opportunities in FOSS whereby they can improve their outreach as well
as extend ICT capacity to the sector and their stakeholders.
Having shared this, some good news in the form of press releases will
be following by the adopting institutions bringing Egypt clearly on
the global FOSS adoption map but at the same time, I will be stepping
into other countries this year, this time on the corners of Europe,
spreading the message of FOSS and catalysing such efforts that just
need a bit of a push in terms of financial and knowledge resources
though it is a long journey but the motivation lives strong.
Share Article: This article is released by Fouad Bajwa under a
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BYTESFORALL: A LOOK AT SOME URDU DEVELOPMENTS...
Some useful and interesting links from the UrduComputing mailing list
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/urdu_computing
URDU NVU RELEASE
Huda Sarfraz huda.sarfraz@...: The current release of
the Nvu localization includes the Urdu Nvu installer for
Windows, which has it's GUI in Urdu. Work to be done for
future releases includes changing the layout direction of
Urdu Nvu to right-to-left. For download and installation
details, please go to Urdu Nvu Windows Installer.
http://www.crulp.org/software/localization/OSS/NVu.html
Nvu (pronounced "N-view") is a WYSIWYG HTML editor, based on
the Composer component of Mozilla Application Suite and Gecko
1.7. It is a common WYSIWYG editor for Linux and is intended
to be an open source equivalent to proprietary software like
Microsoft FrontPage and Macromedia Dreamweaver (although to
date it is missing many features they possess). As a WYSIWYG
editor, it is designed to be easy for novice users and does
not require any knowledge of HTML or CSS to use. The project
was started by and sponsored by Linspire. Linspire hired
Daniel Glazman, former Netscape Communications Corporation
employee and CEO/Founder of Disruptive Innovations, to be
lead developer. Nvu is available for Linux, Mac OS X and
Microsoft Windows, and it can be built successfully on any
platform with the Netscape Portable Runtime. (Source: Wikipedia)
* * *
ONLINE DICTIONARY:
Aijaz Akhtar aijazakhtar@...: A very good
Dictionary is now available on line. Its huge database,
Unicode nature, and Nafees Web Naskh font give it an edge
over other on line dictionary sites. Visit here:
http://www.urduenglishdictionary.org/
[Works fine in FireFox 2.0.0.9, on Windows XP-SP2 with Urdu
fonts and phonetic keyboard installed for MS Office. When
doing Urdu to English search, you will need to switch your
keyboard to Urdu from the language bar.]
* * *
GNU/LINUX WINDOW MANAGER xfce IN URDU:
Aijaz Akhtar aijazakhtar@...: Very good news. A
low end yet powerful window maker for Linux is now translated
into Urdu by Makki. XFCE may not be as beautiful an interface
as KDE or Gnome for Linux, yet it is powerful and consumes
less processor power and is light on RAM requirements, making
it suitable even on a pentium-1 or 2 machine with 400-500 MHZ
processor (Correct me if I am wrong). So now one can download
this, and configure your Linux (with XFCE preloaded, since it
is not bundled with in some Linux disros) to use Urdu
interface of Linux. Download presently from here:
http://www.4shared.com/file/28497917/a3c84cdc/xfce_441_Urdu_Translation_by_Makki\
.html
Soon to be uploaded in the download section of
http://urduweb.org. Mohammed Ali Makki had already translated
and made available Urdu Slax earlier that is available here:
http://www.urduweb.org/mehfil/local_links.php?catid=19
* * *
HINDI TO URDU TRANSLITERATOR:
Abdur Radhid: arnandan@... A beta version of Hindi to
Urdu Transliterator is available on line. Please give your
feedback. Visit here: http://hindi2urdu.tripod.com
COMPILED IN PUBLIC INTEREST BY:
* * *
TYPING IN URDU, UBUNTU ETC:
Ali Hussnain Shah: hussnain_shah@... as a starting point
you can use crulp's Urdu Layout for Linux at
http://www.crulp.org/software/localization/keyboards/linuxphonetickb.html
There should be one text file containing the key mappings.
You can us it to learn and change it as you like and use that
on linux.
After you have developed a standard keyboard and if this
should be included in all Linux distributions, submitting it
to xorg (opensource implementation X Window System, on which
KDE,Gnome are based) would be better.. their mailing list is
at http://lists.freedesktop.org/mailman/listinfo/xorg
After submission to xorg it will be included in all linux
distributtions (debian, suse, ubuntu ...) as soon the
distribution uses a new version of the X system. I think
Sergey Udaltsov is responsible for handling of the X input
system there in the list.
* * *
PAKTYPE NASKH BASIC FONT:
Lateef Sagar Shaikh lateef_sagar@...: I have created
PakType Naskh Basic 1.0 font, which is available at:
https://sourceforge.net/projects/paktypehttp://groups.yahoo.com/group/paktype/files/NaskhBasic/1.0/
This font supports following languages: Amazigh, Arabic,
Balochi, Balti, Berber, Brahui, Burushaski, Farsi, Fulani,
Gojri, Hausa, Hindko, Kalami, Kanuri, Kashmiri, Khowar,
Kurdish, Ladakhi, Maba, Malay, Mandinka, Ormuri, Pashto,
Pathwari, Punjabi, Saraiki, Shina, Sindhi, Somali, Swahili,
Torwali, Turkish, Urdu and Uyghur and others.
This font is free for distribution and modification under
GPL. Glyphs taken from ArabEyes.org font KacstQurn, having
following copyright notice; KACST holds the copyright of the
included Arabic font which is donated under GPL by KACST. URW
Design and Development holds the copyright of the included
Latin font which is donated under GPL by URW.
* * *
LIGATURE-BASD NASTALEEQ WRITING SYSTEM:
Sarmad Hussain sarmad.hussain@...: In 1980 Mr. Ahmad
Mirza Jamil developed a ligature based Nastaleeq writing
system. He has written about 18,000 valid ligatures of Urdu
and developed a Noori Nastaliq font.
Center for Research in Urdu Language Processing (CRULP) is
releasing a soft copy of these ligatures in Unicode format.
CRULP has extensively used these ligatures for testing the
fonts developed at the center and realised that it will be a
valuable resource for other font developers. These ligatures
are grouped in 2 to 8 characters and are sorted in the end
character order. The ligatures can be downloaded from
www.crulp.org.
Reference: "Noori Nastaliq computerised Urdu calligraphy
(list of ligatures)," calligraphically designed and compiled
by Ahmad Mirza Jamil, Elite Press, Karachi.
* * *
URDU AND PHOTOSHOP CS2:
Imran Ahmed imran1@...: Why Urdu isn't supported in
Photoshop CS2:
http://en.allexperts.com/q/Adobe-Photoshop-1028/Urdu-Images-Photoshop.htm
* * *
SEVERAL KEYBOARD LAYOUTS:
Imran Ahmad imran1@...: For the past couple of
years I have been trying to find easy way to type in Urdu on
computer. For these reasons I tried several Urdu keyboard
layout such as pakUrdu, Bhurgri, NLA, Phonetic, phonetic-2,
Ishaque, Olympia, Urdu Mahir, and MS_UR_KB. The fact that
there are so many Urdu keyboard layouts while not having any
standard set, made it more complex to achieve my goal.
Finally I end up sticking with Microsoft Urdu keyboard, but
the options for clear fonts type still lacks.
--
Frederick Noronha http://fn.goa-india.org Ph +91-832-2409490
Links from Goa: http://goalinks.livejournal.com/
Hi all,
* Sorry for cross-posting *
Glad to share the news that FOSS Nepal Community has been declared one
of 3 winners of the Software Freedom Day 2007 Best Event Competition!
http://softwarefreedomday.org/Competition2007/Winners
Cheers,
Subir B. Pradhanang
FOSS Nepal Community
www.fossnepal.org
---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Pia Waugh <pia@...>
Date: Nov 30, 2007 1:56 AM
Subject: [SFD-discuss] SFD 2007 Competition Winners!
To: "Software Freedom Day discus..." <sfd-discuss@...>
Hi all,
We are very pleased to announce the results of the SFD Competition 2007!
Many thanks to all the entrants, we saw some excellent examples of how to
take software freedom to local communities, and we were inspired, as you
all will be to see some of the outcomes and reports.
http://softwarefreedomday.org/Competition2007/Winners
We have three winners, who will each receive an OLPC (One Laptop Per Child)
computer. All winners, highly commended and entries of note will also
receive a certificate for their excellent submissions.
I want to extend a warm congratulations in particular to the three winners
(in no particular order):
- FOSS Nepal Community
- SFD Nicaragua 2007 Team
- Beijing Software Freedom Day (China)
And the two highly commended entries:
- Trinidad and Tobago Computer Society
- SFD Tunisia
Read more about the entries along with their reports at the website above.
Cheers,
Pia
--
Software Freedom Day 2007 http://softwarefreedomday.org/
_______________________________________________
SFD-discuss mailing list
SFD-discuss@...http://mail.sf-day.org/lists/listinfo/sfd-discuss
Dear Faraz,
The list is to be made active by all of us as I have set up the list on
http://lists.alternatedevelopment.org/mailman/listinfo/noooxml and it is to
act as a collaboration point as well as record what we do on this.
Once again, instead of posting to all the various people through the current
method may not be welcome by many therefore, I would like to request
everyone on this list who would like to participate in the NoOOXML campaign,
kindly subscribe to the list:
http://lists.alternatedevelopment.org/mailman/listinfo/noooxml
I will be traffic moderated, no spamming, and moderated membership to avoid
trouble for the moment!
Best
Fouad Bajwa
-----Original Message-----
From: Faraz Khan [mailto:faraz.khan@...]
Sent: Wednesday, November 28, 2007 12:49 PM
To: fouadbajwa@...
Cc: All
Subject: Re: Mailing List Announce for the Pakistan OOXML issue and
MeetingPSQCA
Fouad I do not think this list is active.
At any rate,
Mr. Tariq from LinuxPakistan, Mr. Asfar from IBM and Mr.Khurram from
OSRC were able to delay the meeting to a later date which they will
disclose shortly.
Quoting Fouad Riaz Bajwa <fouadbajwa@...>:
> Dear All and Jaijit,
>
> First an update and then my message continues below the following:
>
> OOXML scrapes through, final vote Feb 2008
> On 2 September 2007, ISO national bodies voted on Ecma 376, "OOXML".
> The ISO secretariat has decided to move forward with a Ballot
> Resolution Meeting in February 2008 to make the final decision.
> Microsoft got to pass with 19 "difficulties" round one (fasttrack
> OOXML) and lost round two (vote on OOXML), and now the fight moves
> to round three, the definitive one. From February 25 to 29, 2008,
> national boards will meet in Geneva to discuss and vote finally on
> OOXML. If our country is not present, it won't have a say in the
> final result. It needs to submit a delegation list by December 11.
> The http://www.noooxml.org website explains how to help your
> national ISO board do its job and reject OOXML.
>
> My Message
> First of all a round of thanks to everyone for participating in the
> No OOXML Campaign for Pakistan by the FFII Pakistan Chapter, FFII is
> the official campaigner for the NO-OOXML Global Campaign
> http://www.noooxml.org and that?s where we have all joined in from
> therefore I would recommend not fracturing the campaign that is
> already at large and continue the petition and debate in preparation
> of the final voting on 8th of February next year.
>
> In practice of my provisions, I initiated the campaign through
> hosting the email list for Pakistan at the space for FFII Pakistan
> at Alternate Development, the regional bearer for all FFII campaigns
> and activities. You all may now subscribe to the specific email list
> set on the NoOOXML Campaign for Pakistan at:
> http://lists.alternatedevelopment.org/mailman/listinfo/noooxml where
> as after subscription, you may direct your emails to
> nooxml@... on the subject.
>
> As for PSEB?s and OSRC?s chant about getting PSQCA to invite
> participation from Academia, Civil Society and the Companies
> (Private Sector) has definitely turned into a piece of crap, I
> wonder what Khurram Islam from OSRC has to say on this? Sorry to
> say, I have been very skeptical about the claims that PSEB has been
> making in various areas of intervention and deliberations on various
> subjects such as Open Source, IPR and finally the OOXML issues. I
> would also mention this to be a failure on part of PSEB?s Corporate
> Social Responsibility. PSEB is letting both its member companies and
> stakeholders down on this issue, totally!
>
> Keeping this in view and being both an IT Professional and then a
> full time FOSS Advocate, my confidence has been shattered a bit but
> at the same time, its time to stop moving individually and form a
> consortium under Alternate Development supported by FFII as a Civil
> and Economic-Majority by the companies on both FOSS and Alternate
> forms of IPR as a means to bring public value into society and
> economy. Let?s all move ahead to joining the mailing list at and
> this will help us identify the actual stakeholders and participants
> on the issue.
>
> You are all invited to join the mailing list; the list has been set
> to moderation in order to restrict spam attacks and other menacing
> by groups trying to prevent the No-OOXML campaign!
>
> The alternate development website is under development and will be
> coming live shortly.
>
> Best
> Fouad Bajwa
>
> ________________________________________
> From: Jaijit.Bhattacharya@... [mailto:Jaijit.Bhattacharya@...]
> Sent: Saturday, November 24, 2007 11:43 PM
> To: Claude Almansi
> Cc: pakistanictpolicy@yahoogroups.com; fouadbajwa@...; Faraz
> Khan; sami@...; asad.alim@...;
> wasim@...; mohtashim@...; Pieter Hintjens;
> Badar Khushnood; Zaheda Bhorat; vfranz@...; Shahzada
> Irfan; Waqas Toor; rabia garib; editor@...;
> bytesforall_floss@yahoogroups.com; Zahid Jamil; jehan@...;
> Jehan; kislam@...; Sufyan Kakakhel; Ashish Gautam; Venkatesh
> Hariharan; Charlotte Thornby Nielsen; Dravida Seetharam; Lin Lee
> Subject: Re: [pakistanictpolicy] Re: the OOXML issue and Meeting PSQCA
>
> Dear All,
>
> I am copying this mail to Venky who is in touch with another set of
> policy influencer's in Pakistan on the OOXML issue.
>
> Venky: Can you possibly setup a mailing group of all those who are
> interested in open standards in IT in Pakistan so that it it easier
> to share and disseminate information.
>
> Regards
> Jaijit
>
> Claude Almansi wrote:
> Dear All
>
> Several dubious, apparently Microsoft-induced, things happened during
> the Swiss September vote on OOXML. So Norbert Bollow, who was in the
> Swiss committee and spearheaded their exposure, started OpenIso.org.
> It doesn't deal only with OOXML, but there are several threads about
> it in the international mailing list
> http://openiso.org/mailman/listinfo/discuss . The archive is public
> and discussions are in English.
>
> Best
>
> Claude
>
> On Nov 23, 2007 12:20 PM, Shahzad Ahmad <shahzad@...> wrote:
>
> Dear Colleagues,
>
> Met with Jaijit a few days ago. He was very keen about this process in
> Pakistan. I did tell him that there is a committee now and they will be
> meeting soon. Ready to help, he informed that they have conducted a lot of
> research, which our folks in Pakistan may like to use for their work.
>
> Will request the lead committee members to please contact Jaijit as soon
as
> possible and am sure their work will be of immense help for our committee.
>
> best wishes and regards.
>
> Shahzad
>
> (...)
>
>
> --
>
>
> Jaijit Bhattacharya, PhD
> Country Director, Government Strategy
> Sun Microsystems India Pvt. Ltd.
> The Capital Court, Olof Palme Marg,
> 5th Floor, R Wing, Munirka
> New Delhi - 110 067
> Direct: (91) 11 4219 1089
> Board: (91) 11 4219 1100
> Fax: (91) 11 2616 0928
>
>
>
>
--
Faraz R Khan
Chief Architect
Emergen Consulting Pvt Ltd
www.emergen.biz
If you pass on your comments, I'll post it to the list where this came up --FN
TAMAL SAHA <saha_tamal2002@...> wrote:
Hi,
Thanks for the article. But I think most of us know these things.
On a few points I have to say a few things:
1. I am not a big fan of Linux. I do agree that Linux is more
stable than Windows. I have to reinstall Windows every 2/3 months, as
it gets 'slow' with time. But still I prefer Windows. Why? As a
student of BUET, I had to use Linux for my OS course. I used Fedora
Core 6. Everybody was saying Linux is an OS for programmers(!). But
my understanding is that an OS should be for users. In Fedora Core 6,
I could not access the NTFS drives. I had to install special drivers.
Fed_6 did not have any working multimedia software to play
songs/videos. All of them needed codecs. Open Office was there. But it
looked slow. And its LooknFeel was not as impressive as MS Office.
And installing all those extra softwares were not easy. Anybody who
has done that will agree with me. Those open source projects think
that they have shown the poor people enough mercy by letting them use
free software. Those open source projects normally have so much
confusing download pages that u can do a PhD on 'How to download a
open source software and install that on Linux'. If u do not believe
me then try installing a Eclipse IDE with Visual Editor. I have
stopped trying any more after trying for 3 days.
2. Moreover, Gnome is the default Desktop on Linux. Every time u
double click on a icon a new window opens. I tried to stop that. I
knew there must be an option for that. But it was very difficult to
find that. And u know this kind of things are hard to find by
googling. And honestly speaking, I do not understand why those people
reinvent the wheel(KDE, GNome, X-windows).
So, my point is that if Linux has to really make an impact in OS
market, they have to stop saying that they are a programmers OS and
they have to be more user friendly. And they have to make simple
things easy. I have a feeling that, the open source business model is
the obstacle here. It feels that they intentionally make these things
difficult. Recently I went to MySQL site. Now, they are also selling a
enterprise version and slowed down the bug fixing of the community
edition. They have to decide what they mean by 'proving service'.
AND
Those advocates of Linux in Bangladesh who pretend to be very much
fond of Linux need to be clean to their mind. How many of them really
use Linux for their personal use? I doubt that it wont be even 10% of
them. And they should choose the right version of Linux. Why the
'worst' version of Linux: Red Hat distribution. which is not 'Free'.
Why not tell people to use SUSE/Dbian/Ubuntu/Kubuntu(Ubuntu with KDE).
Why not show them a version that can play music by default? Why not
show them a version of Linux that can access NTFS drives
automatically. Why tell a 'lie' of free software when the general
users have to com to service centers to have their Linux software
installed? Is Red Hat doing a very good marketing ? We also missed the
cheap AMD processors because all we knew that Intel was the best.
Intel was best because they told us that They are the best. BUt being
an AMD user for last 3 years, I know that that is a damn lie. In fact
AMD performs better than Intel. I can say that from my personal
experience.
SO
We do not want to be called the 4th notorious software pirates
because in England 27% softwares are pirated. Those wealthy people
should stop piracy first to stop piracy here.
Thanks the author for his article. This was my personal view.
Best Regards,
Tamal Saha.
--
Frederick Noronha http://fn.goa-india.org Ph 0091-832-2409490
12000+ downloadable, sharable hi-res photos http://www.flickr.com/photos/fn-goa/