Tag open source

Phun

If anything is certain is that this is fun. Lots of fun. An excellent piece of software and a great educational companion.

A plan that will mandate the use of open standards and open source software government-wide

Say the Dutch. And that's excellent news. Government is perhaps the foremost market segment where open source can thrive, evolve and gradually be positioned so as to make inroads in the enterprise. Holland plans to be running open software by mid 2008 at a national (central government) level and 2009 for local and state organisations. Interestingly, according to The Register, the bill was not opposed in parliament, despite Microsoft's protests; on the other hand, I'm sure that many in the Netherlands may be somewhat frustrated by this, although in the longterm I'm sure they'll appreciate the difference. The message is clear: Open Up or be excluded. Who's next?

Shuttleworth's Interview at Open Season

There is a very interesting interview with Mark Shuttleworth, the guy that started and funds Ubuntu development through his company, Canonical. The interview is interesting for several reasons: First it exposes what many linux users don't get: compiz fusion and the eyecandy is nothing but the icing on the (missing) cake. There needs to be additional effort to turn all this amazing technology into coherent, useful software. Second, it demonstrates some of the issues behind Open Source development and some ways that they can be resolved. Finally, it covers the major problems facing OpenOffice.org, tries to explain why they're there and takes a look at the rest of the industry and its relations to Ubuntu and linux. Worth listening.