[Facil] [Demcom] Un documentaire de la BBC fait l'apologie de l'open source

Valerie Dagrain vdagrain at free.fr
Dim 25 Juin 22:52:37 EDT 2006


(Excusez les doublons)
Ce film  documentaire a l'air des plus informés et informatifs sur le 
sujet. L'intéressant est qu'il ait été fait par la BBC qui va devenir 
l'avant garde du mouvement open source (open archive, etc.)  si elle 
continue comme ça. Le site de la conférence en Asie où a été présenté 
le doc. vaut aussi le détour. http://www.asia-commons.net/

AA


-----Original Message-----
From: bytesforall_readers at yahoogroups.com 
[mailto:bytesforall_readers at yahoogroups.com] On Behalf Of Frederick 
Noronha (FN)
Sent: 25 juin 2006 02:30
To: bytesforall_readers at yahoogroups.com
Subject: [bytesforall_readers] *** doggone dong on The Codebreakers

http://calban.org/?p=179


The Codebreakers: Conclusion defeats facts
Friday, June 23rd, 2006 in Technology, FOSS, Microsoft


I watched this morning my DVD copy of the video material entitled "The
Codebreakers", which I got during the Asia Commons Conference this June.
With the title sounding controversial as it has come right in time when
the Da Vinci Code film has generated mixed reactions from the global
public, there is no way the material has something to do with the Holy
Grail.

The 38-minute documentary is about the inroads having been made by Free
and Open Source Software (FOSS) as far as crossing the digital divide is
concerned.

The video takes off from the World Summit on Information Society (WSIS)
in Tunis last year, which was concerned about how to bridge the growing
digital gap between the rich and poor countries.

The first quote in the film is a major plus for FOSS advocacy.

         Nicholas Negroponte, founder of MIT Media Lab and chair of One
         Laptop Per Child project: "We have chosen free and open (source)
         software because it's better, and it means that children can
         actually participate in making the software better over time. We
         believe completely in community developed software and content."


And Microsoft has this to say in reaction:

         Jonathan Murray (Microsoft Europe): "It reminds Microsoft that
         customers have choice. It reminds us to go back to work and
         listen to the customers. We have to invest six billion dollars
         in ways that meet the needs of the customers."


Do you have an analogy for FOSS for it to be understood by a common
folk? Here's one:

         Kenneth Cukier (Economist): "Open source software may be likened
         to generic drugs - it costs less."


And what is the videogram without a quote from the father of free
software movement?

         Richard Stallman: "Freedom 0 means you run the program as you
         wish. Freedom 1 means you help yourself, to study the source
         code and change it as you wish. Freedom 2 means you help your
         neighbor, to make copies and distribute to others when you wish.
         And Freedom 3 means you help your commmunity, to publish or
         distribute modified versions of the program as you wish. If you
         have these four freedoms, then it's free software."


And then came Bruce Perens, one of the thinkers of Open Source, who had
this to say:

         Bruce Perens: "Open Source (Initiative) takes Free Software and
         promotes it to business people. When we say free, it does not
         mean freedom but it means cheap and that indeed would play too
         well with business people."


And thanks to the duo of the Stallman and Linus Torvalds, there are
already 29 million users of Linux worldwide. Firefox enjoys 20% of
userbase in Europe; 14% of the US. Apache as web server is used by more
than 60% of the world's web servers.

The main component of the documentary is its featuring several FOSS
initiatives, namely:

      1. SchoolNet in Namibia, concerned in teaching children how to
         assemble computers and run and modify FOSS applications.
      2. Brazil government's efforts "to use FOSS in government
         procedures and support FOSS as a tool for society." So far,
         around 150 million dollars have been saved each year, which is
         used to invest in hardware in previously technologically
         impoverished areas.
      3. Digital Doorway (Meraka Institute, Africa), which aims to
         provide 'minimally invasive education' for the poor in Africa.
      4. Computer Buses (Central India). This is a project wherein a bus
         containing 24 computers and teaching facility takes a round of
         rural communities to teach schoolchildren how to use computers
         using FOSS.
      5. Sahana, FOSS Disaster Management Software (Sri Lanka). Aside
         from FOSS's investment benefits, the software has been deemed as
         "sidestepping red tape" in government's providing relief and
         rehab assistance to disaster-affected communities, like in Sri
         Lanka in the wake of tsunami two years ago.
      6. Agri Bazaar (MIMOS, Malaysia), for online trading of
         agricultural products.
      7. Spain's initiative to connect its depressed region Extremadura,
         wherein 100,000 computers were connected to the Internet using
         FOSS. It generated savings of about 20 million euros.

Major IT companies like Intel, Hewlett Packard and IBM bow to the
growing pressure of considering open source in their business. They all
agree that customers' tastes are changing, which include preference over
FOSS. Their strategies must be reviewed accordingly. IBM, for instance,
has deployed over 100 FOSS projects and hired over 700 FOSS developers.

Microsoft agrees on the contribution made by FOSS in computer innovation
and providing access to technology. It sees partnership with FOSS in
that regard.

While watching the video, I was already wondering how it would be
concluded. I had an inkling that the BBC must have been pressured by IT
giants like the Microsoft to act in accordance with their interests.

Here's the documentary's conclusion:

         FOSS has been selected as software of choice in poor and
         developing countries because:

              1. There is no upfront cost and temptation to distribute
                 pirated softwares.
              2. Geeks and non-geeks can create virtual communities to
                 invent software.
              3. For developing countries where labor is cheap, high
                 service charges are no problem.
              4. Software can be localized.

         Does that mean FOSS could be the bridge to cross the digital
         divide? No one can say for certain. But what is certain is that
         the evangelists will not stop seeing its places.


What a way to end the story! Doesn't it sound foolish? After all the
presentation of great inroads by FOSS, here's a BBC documentary that
does not even claim that FOSS has indeed on its way to bridging the
digital gap. Instead, it puts the fate of FOSS to its bunch of
personality champions.

On the bright of it (though I still think the conclusion sucks), I think
the BBC video puts forward the twin challenges of:

      1. How to increase the tribe of FOSS advocates and practitioners to
         make governments, businesses and communities FOSS-aware;
      2. How to document success stories or best practices on FOSS as
         'proofs of concept,' so that even the BBC will courageously say
         that FOSS is indeed bridging the digital gap.

Before watching the docu, I thought it would pass as a great sequel to
Revolution OS, which tells how hackers rebelled against the proprietary
software and Microsoft and formed the GNU/Linux community.

To conclude, let me compare the two films metaphorically: "Revolution
OS" is "free software" while "The Codebreakers" is "open-source." And
here's hoping that there will be a sequel to the latter with a title
something like "The Code Broken".








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