News and Editorials
[This article was contributed by Ladislav Bodnar]
While Germany's Munich has been stealing the headlines with its effort to
convert the city's public administration infrastructure from Windows to
Linux, another European country has been even bolder and more successful in
adopting open source software for similar tasks. This country is Spain. Based
on its many success stories and the determined approach of several regional
governments, it won't be an exaggeration to claim that Spain -- of all
European countries -- is furthest along the road to Linux adoption and is
setting a notable precedent for other countries to follow.
Although Linux had always been popular with the geek segment of Spain's
computer users, its wide-spread adoption really got off the ground with the
announcement in April
2002 of the LinEx project. The LinEx
distribution, based on Debian GNU/Linux and with GNOME as its default desktop
environment, was created by the regional government of Extremadura in Western
Spain. Extremadura had set itself some clear goals:
create conditions for wide-spread adoption of information technology and
increase computer literacy among the citizens. Various ideas for achieving
those goals were followed by
clear plans -- until the realization that the cost of providing the hardware
in combination with inevitable software licenses would be unbearable.
Refusing to give up at the first hurdle, the Extremadura government turned to
open source software. It did not hesitate to employ engineers to create a
customized Linux distribution which would meet its exact needs. Although the
first releases of LinEx were not without problems, the subsequent ones have
seen dramatic improvements, especially in the area of hardware support. There
was no shortage of testers, as the government gave away the product CDs at
every opportunity - in government offices, magazines and even daily
newspapers. There was a determined campaign to get LinEx out to everybody.
Finally, the effort bore fruit and the Extremadura government announced last month that it had
successfully deployed 80,000 LinEx computers in schools, or one system per
two students, and it had also created 33 computer centers for use by the
general population.
Enthusiam for free software tends to be contagious, so few people
were taken by surprise when the neighboring province of Andalusia, the
largest in Spain and roughly the size of Minnesota or Austria, also began
flirting with Linux. It wasn't long before a firm policy was declared
in March of this year. It demanded, among other things, that all software
development carried out by "La Junta de Andalusia" or any official
educational entity be developed with free software. Additionally, all
hardware acquired by official educational centers was to be fully compatible
with Free Software operating systems, which was to come pre-installed on all
newly purchased computers. All official Internet access points were required
to be equipped with Free Software.
Next in the line of "infected" regions was Aragon, another large province in
the North East of the country. Earlier this month, its government introduced
intensive 40-hour Linux
courses in Zaragoza, the region's capital, while the local Linux
enthusiasts have launched the Zaralinux
portal and even their own distribution called Augustux. Augustux is a
Knoppix-based live CD with full support for the local language and its latest
version is freely available for download. It is worth noting that Richard
Stallman visited
Zaragoza earlier this month to take part in a conference on Free Software
movement and GNU/Linux.
Even if the remaining regional governments of Spain have yet to declare any
open source software initiatives, they are undoubtedly watching the progress
made by the pioneers in Extremadura and Andalusia with keen eyes. After all,
politics and finance play important roles in every society. If other regions
can save substantial amounts of money and provide their citizens with access
to technology at the same time, then opposition parties and taxpayers in
other provinces will have every reason to demand the same. This in turn will
create further opportunities for commercial companies in software
development, education and technical support.
And indications are that this is already happening. Spain has always had a
fair share of Linux distributions and while some of them are no longer
around, new ones are being established regularly. The oldest ones are HispaFuentes and ESware. Although HispaFuentes seems to have
withdrawn from developing their Red Hat-based distribution and is
concentrating instead on custom solutions, support and security, ESware
continues with active development of its Debian-based desktop and server
products called ESware365. The company also provides consultation and support
services as well as educational and certification programs. Several new Linux
companies have sprouted recently. Among them is BlueSock Linux Solutions, a company
creating a Debian-based distribution called BlueSock Linux (a first beta
release is now available for download) and Lambdaux (λux), a commercial company producing
yet another Debian and LinEx-based distribution. Both of them also offer a
range of Linux training and certification services.
Spain is a country which has embraced Linux and free software with open arms
for the benefit of both its population and its economy. Between the
government initiatives, volunteer efforts, commercial companies
and non-profit communities, the country has pioneered Linux adoption like no
other on this planet. Determination in overcoming difficulties, resistance
and FUD of those whose livelihood depends on the current status quo, together
with a clear plan of action has made Extremadura and LinEx an example to
follow. Many countries are a lot poorer than Spain, yet they still run their
public administration on expensive proprietary software and channel their
taxpayers' money out of the country. As Extremadura has shown us, it
doesn't need to be that way.
Comments (7 posted)
Distribution News
Mandrake Linux 9.2 Beta 1 has arrived to offer you the opportunity of an
entertaining summer of bug squashing. It's got lots of updated packages
and it's waiting to be
downloaded now.
Just be sure not to use it in production environments, and report those
bugs.
Full Story (comments: none)
Red Hat has announced a public beta release of Red Hat Enterprise
Linux 3. This release is available for several architectures, and
includes a heavily patched 2.4.21 kernel (Native Posix Threading, FUTEXes,
per-device block I/O locking, reverse-mapping VM, huge pages, the O(1)
scheduler, ACPI 2.0, 4G/4G memory split, asynchronous I/O, TUX, filesystem
ACLs, cryptographic API, IPSec, etc.) along with a very current set of
applications. See the announcement for details.
Full Story (comments: 2)
Xandros, Inc. has
released a 1.1 edition of
Xandros Desktop Deluxe. It's got the Mozilla communications suite 1.3.1
with spell checking and spam filtering; the OpenOffice.org office suite
1.0.3; the Evolution groupware client 1.2.4; Enhanced hardware detection;
plus printed documentation and 30 days of e-mail support.
Xandros has announced a giveaway
of Xandros Desktop Deluxe to attendees of the San Francisco LinuxWorld
convention.
Comments (2 posted)
The Debian Project had a
successful conference
in Oslo. According to Debian Project Leader, Martin Michelmayr,
Debcamp was particularly impressive. "
"This year's debconf and
especially the preceding debcamp were a great success. The idea of having
a debcamp in which people can work on various projects together was born
during last year's debconf and got realised this year. We have seen that
it is very effective when you can put people who normally work together via
the Internet into a single room. Many design and implementation issues
have been discussed and have successfully been resolved. We will try to
hold more debcamps in the future, possibly smaller ones in different
countries.""
The Debian Weekly News for July 29, 2003 is
out. This week's issue looks at the Open Group's new strategy; a review of
the CheckInstall tool; and much more.
The ZopeMembers site reports
that a Debian package for OpenFlow is available for download from the Icube
website.
Comments (none posted)
The Gentoo Weekly Newsletter for July 28, 2003 is out. This week looks at
radical changes to Perl module handling; the first Gentoo Bug Day on August
2; Gentoo Linux 1.4 for PowerPC now available for pre-order; and Indonesian
documentation team in need of translators.
Full Story (comments: none)
This week
Slackware Linux has
upgraded USB modules to 2.4.21, and packages such as gawk, dvd+rw-tools,
binutils, distcc, apache, mod_ssl, and nfs-utils. As usual the details can
be found in the
slackware-current changelog.
Comments (none posted)
New Distributions
SPB-Linux is a USB distribution
that boots from a memory stick. The current stable version is 2.0, but the
most recent version is 2.1 beta 1 which features kernel 2.4.21 with usb 2
support, X, mozilla and more. (Thanks to Fred Mobach)
Comments (none posted)
ScummLinux
creates a bootable Linux CD which includes ScummVM and your favorites Scumm
games, so you can play them anywhere. The initial version of ScummLinux is
0.1, released July 27,
2003.
Comments (none posted)
Minor distribution updates
Damn Small Linux has released
v0.4.1 with minor
feature enhancements. "
Changes: This release offers a choice of two
X servers, Xvesa and Xfbdev. Xfbdev uses the framebuffer provided by the
Linux framebuffer device, which can be a much better choice for older
laptops. Also new is the emelFM file manager." Version
0.4.2 is also out.
Comments (none posted)
Fli4l (Floppy ISDN/DSL) has released
development v2.1.3 with
major feature enhancements. "
Changes: You can now specify MX entrys
in the nameserver configuration. The packet filter config is much-improved,
and you can also switch to an alternate configuration scheme for enhanced
packet filter configuration. Portforwarding now works with whitelists and
you can forward a whole protocol (e.g., GRE). You can now do DSL with the
Fritz!DSL from AVM and use the in-kernel PPPoE to reduce your CPU load. It
is now also possible to install and boot on DiscOnChip and
USB-Memory-Sticks. Included in the ISDN package is the CAPI for ISDN cards
from AVM."
Comments (none posted)
Knoppix has released
v3.2-2003-07-26 with major
feature enhancements. "
Changes: Many software upgrades, new drivers,
and boot options."
Comments (none posted)
System-Down::Rescue has released
v1.035 with minor
feature enhancements. "
Changes: This release should be considered a
release candidate for 1.0. The uncompressed ISO image has been reduced in
size to only about 18 MByte, with a lot of free space on the CD-cards
available for upgrades. The scripts and the library directory have been
cleaned and the various file systems have been changed. Ext2 is now used
for the initrd image and cramfs is used for the images to allow them to be
mounted runtime, reducing RAM usage and improving general performance. Many
bugfixes were made to the net libraries, so ping and ftp now work."
Comments (none posted)
Page editor: Rebecca Sobol
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