January 16th, 2009 Benjamin Horst
Open source saves Malaysia… money!
Colin Charles discusses the issue in his post “Open Source Saves Malaysian Government RM40 Million.”
(That’s $12 million US, a pretty impressive amount coming from software license fees.)
Charles’ source is the Open Malaysia Blog, whose original article I cannot access at the moment.
Fortunately, Charles provides the following informative quotes:
Savings on licensing fee alone by adopting OpenOffice.org have already exceeded RM12 million, which is based on the total installed seats of 12,760 at public sector agencies.
And:
The top three applications being considered by most Public Sector Agencies are:
1. OpenOffice.org – Office Suite
2. Firefox – Web Browser
3. MySQL – Database using Open Source Technology
Posted in Free Culture, Open Source, OpenOffice.org | Comments Off on Open Source Saves Malaysia…
January 15th, 2009 Benjamin Horst
Two recent reports on web browser usage share show that Firefox and its open source friends keep increasing at the expense of Internet Explorer.
In IE Continues Losing Market Share to Open Source Browsers, Ars Technica looks at Net Applications’ Market Share statistics worldwide, which show Firefox reaching 21%, Safari at almost 8%, Chrome at 1% and IE at just over 68%, its lowest point in many years.
Ars also noted a decline in the use of the Windows OS, writing: “web surfers’ usage of Windows decreased to about 89% in November.”
For an even rosier picture of open source success, turn to Europe, where XiTi Monitor published its browser barometer for November (2008).
From XiTi Monitor’s European data set, IE has sunk to 59.5%, Firefox climbed to 31.1%, Opera reached 5.1%, with Safari at 2.5% and Chrome at 1.1% share.
The relentless rise of Firefox and other open source browsers continues around the world.
Posted in Free Culture, Open Source | Comments Off on Open Source Browsers Keep Growing
January 12th, 2009 Benjamin Horst
The OOoAuthors project has recently released the OpenOffice.org 3 Writer Guide at Lulu.com. At $20 for a 552-page manual, it’s a bargain on a thorough, well-researched and carefully-edited book produced by volunteer writers from the global community of OpenOffice users.
The manual covers, in part, “setting up Writer to suit the way you work;using styles and templates; working with text, graphics, tables, and forms; formatting pages (page styles, columns, frames, sections, and tables); printing and mail merge; creating tables of contents, indexes, and bibliographies; using master documents, fields, and the equation editor (Math); creating PDFs; and more.”
Free PDFs of the same content are available for download at the OOo Documentation Project site. To download ODFs of the documentation that you can edit, or to participate in writing more documentation, start at the OOoAuthors project site.
Posted in Free Culture, ODF, OpenOffice.org | 2 Comments »
December 30th, 2008 Benjamin Horst
PCWorld reports on the good year ODF had in 2008. Competing against Microsoft’s MSOOXML format, ODF (OpenDocument Format) seems to be extending its lead:
ODF has now been approved as a technology standard for document exchange in 16 countries, including Brazil, the Netherlands, Norway, South Africa, Russia, and Germany, according to the report. In the Netherlands, government agencies must select ODF-supported products in technology purchases of €50,000 (US$69,920) or more, and in Brazil ODF also has been mandated for use in government agencies.
ODF Alliance Managing Director Marino Marcich also points out the wide range of applications that now support the ODF file type.
ODF also gained more support among word-processing applications from major technology vendors, Marcich said. Google Docs, Adobe Buzzword and OpenOffice.org’s desktop and portable applications all now support ODF as a file format.
With ODF a requirement for some governments concerned about transparency in their digital work processes, and a large and growing catalog of applications that can produce and consume ODF files, it’s becoming ever clearer the benefits of using open standards in the digital world: choice, price and flexibility are all getting better for software users.
Posted in Free Culture, ODF | Comments Off on “ODF Will Prevail”
December 29th, 2008 Benjamin Horst
Foswiki, the heir of TWiki, has released some first betas for the version 1.0 landmark release after its forking from TWiki.
Kenneth Lavrsen emailed the list to inform us of the first beta, writing:
It is with great joy and pride that I can announce the release of Foswiki 1.0.0 Beta 1
It is a beta!! It should not be used for production sites. But it is very stable now and absolutely worth trying.
For normal users please download and install it and confirm that your
existing webs work just fine.
Development has been happening quickly on Foswiki, which I find very exciting after having watched TWiki seem to stagnate for a long time without knowing what was happening to it.
(See Foswiki’s User Guide to learn more about wikis in general and Foswiki itself.)
Posted in Free Culture, Open Source, Wiki | Comments Off on Foswiki 1.0 Beta Series
December 22nd, 2008 Benjamin Horst
Change.org (not the same as Change.gov) provides a feature where site members can suggest ideas they’d like to see adopted by the United States Government.
One suggestion currently getting attention on the site is to Support the Free Software Movement.
While this idea itself is highly open to interpretation, a site member offers more concrete suggestions for what it could mean in policy terms. Some of commenter John Zoidberg’s ideas include:
– No more software patents
– Financing and encouragement of Free Software development
– Make source code developed by public research organizations available under an OSI License/public domain/GPL
– Make all public services, government administrations use open document formats
– Make all public services, government administrations use Free Software (servers+desktop)
-Make software source code become GPL or public domain after X years
Government expenses could be trimmed by using more open source, while private sector innovation would also be increased due to competition around the best implementations of open standards. It’s a great way for the government to advance its technology innovation platform.
Posted in Free Culture, ODF, Open Source | 3 Comments »
December 18th, 2008 Benjamin Horst
Kerala, in southwestern India, has been emerging as an open source and free software stronghold over the past half-decade.
Indian free software community member Srikar recently traveled to Kerala and toured its schools to see how they use open source software. Over 2,500 schools, colleges and other organizations in the state have already adopted open source and have been using it successfully for several years now.
Srikar met with Anvar Sadith, a director of the IT@School project, who described Kerala’s migration process:
It all started back in the year 2002 when IT@school mission was actually planned. In 2003 teachers were given computer training to empower them in IT. By the year 2006 many schools were completely transformed to GNU/Linux. Free software was taught to teachers by SPACE (Society For Promotion of Alternative Computing and Employment). By 2007 all the schools were stabilized with GNU/Linux and IT subject was made compulsory. New text books were created that taught school children free software tools.
Srikar toured several schools to observe students actively using open source software tools. Teachers were being trained, and students were learning HTML, OpenOffice, and GIMP. When questioned about the user-friendliness of Linux and their software, students found it very comfortable.
Posted in Free Culture, Open Source, OpenOffice.org | 2 Comments »
December 15th, 2008 Benjamin Horst
It feels like InformationWeek is writing more and more about open source lately, perhaps because the open source tide is rising ever higher. Last week, IW’s Serdar Yegulalp published Open-Source Office Suites Compared, which reviews OpenOffice.org, StarOffice, IBM Lotus Symphony, KOffice and AbiWord:
“In this review I’ve taken a look at OpenOffice.org’s most recent release, along with the commercially-supported StarOffice from Sun, IBM’s reworking of OO.o as Lotus Symphony, the KOffice suite for Linux, and the minimal but still useful AbiWord. Talking about how these would entirely replace Microsoft Office would be misleading, since not everyone might be doing that — so I’ve looked at each product as far on its own merits as possible.”
Each suite has its unique strengths, and Yegulalp does a thorough job comparing their primary advantages and the factors that differentiate them.
Overall, the presence of these five major office suites as competitors, and cooperators that all support the open ODF file format, helps to encourage robust experimentation and innovation which the market has sorely lacked for well over a decade.
“Compatible competition” will bring better value and technology to all of us using these types of software tools.
Posted in Free Culture, ODF, Open Source, OpenOffice.org | 1 Comment »
December 12th, 2008 Benjamin Horst
The ODF Alliance catalogs some big achievements for the OpenDocument Format in its latest newsletter. (They provide the newsletter as a PDF, so to just read the text you can check out Boycott Novell’s mirror, “ODF Alliance Newsletter – 10 December 2008.”)
What’s big about it? Germany: “Germany has decided to implement use of ODF. According to the announcement made by the federal government’s IT Council, German federal agencies will be able to receive, read, send and edit ODF documents beginning no later than 2010.”
This brings significant additional mass to the movement: “To date, 16 national and 8 provincial governments have now formally recommended or required the use of ODF by government agencies and with the public.”
Among those other adopters are the Dutch, where the government has recently “published instructions in the country’s National Gazette regarding making open standards-based procurement the default – a policy which has been in force since 1 April 2008 – now that the European Commission has given its seal of approval. According to the announcement made on November 24, 2008 by the Ministry of Economic Affairs, this means in principle that for public purchases of IT worth more than 50,000 euro, the use of open standards such as ODF is now mandatory for government bodies in the public and semi-public sectors (“comply or explain” why not).”
Further, the newsletter points out the new ODF Toolkit, jointly developed by Sun and IBM, to build and share libraries that can read and write ODF files for use in developing new software applications.
Posted in Free Culture, ODF | Comments Off on Germany to Support ODF
December 3rd, 2008 Benjamin Horst
Songbird is the audio player sibling to Firefox and Miro, providing innovative new features that connect music with other media and web community content. It’s a highly user-friendly open source program that lets its users discover, share and listen to music in new and unique ways.
Yesterday, Songbird 1.0 was released to the world.
What is Songbird exactly? In the project’s own words, “Songbird is an open-source customizable music player that’s under active development. We’re working on creating a non-proprietary, cross platform, extensible tool that will help enable new ways to playback, manage, and discover music.”
Many new features have been implemented in this latest release, and there are many more planned for the next phases of development. Now is a great time to check it out, provide feedback, and even get involved to participate in its ongoing growth.
Posted in Free Culture, Open Source | Comments Off on Songbird 1.0 Released