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By Michael Conry |
Contents: |
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All articles in issues 1-102 are available for public reading at
http://www.linuxjournal.com/magazine.php.
Recent articles are available on-line for subscribers only at
http://interactive.linuxjournal.com/.
Last month we reported on an upcoming vote in the European Parliament regarding the future of software patents in Europe. According to many Free and Open Software advocates, the proposals in front of the parliament would, probably permanently, establish the practice of software patenting in Europe. This, they argued, would lead to a reduction in innovation and give an unnecessary and crushing advantage to large software companies who could use their greater resources to legally elbow smaller competitors out of the market. You can read a cogent and well-argued discussion of these views in the open letter addressed by Linux Torvalds and Alan Cox to the members of the European Parliament
There are many people out there who were not content simply to complain about the direction events were taking. Instead, they lobbied, and lobbied hard, to get the concerns of financially small (though numerically large) interest groups onto the agenda. An initial sign that these efforts might be having an effect was the announcement of a further postponement of the vote on the proposed directive. Though no reason was given for the delay, the first postponement was the result of widespread confusion regarding the issues at stake, and a feeling that the directive was being forced through with undue haste. It seems likely that similar sentiments lead to this second deferment.
The ultimate, and welcome, result of this concerted lobbying process was that amendments were proposed to the directive which removed many of the most objectionable proposals. This amended directive was approved by the parliament with a margin of 364 votes to 153 with 33 abstentions. LWN have helpfully reproduced the directive online in a readable HTML format.
It is important to learn lessons from this success and to apply them in future struggles. Many Free Software enthusiasts have learnt valuable lobbying skills in the course of their advocacy, and these skills must be developed and shared. A particularly interesting account of this lobbying process has been published by NewsForge, and it gives useful information both on how to lobby, and on what level of understanding can be expected of politicians and their staff. Additionally, it is important to follow up on politicians who have been lobbied and to check how they actually voted. As pointed out by NTKnow, the UK Liberal Democrats made very positive noises, but ultimately voted in favour of patents. Of the UK parties, only the Greens and the UK Independence Party voted against software patents. If politicians realise that Free software advocates pay attention (and draw attention) to their voting records, they will be far more likely to heed future representations. These skills will be especially important since pro-patent interests are likely to try to get their way through the alternative route of national parliaments.
For more information on this story, if you are interested in an anti-patents, pro-free-software point of view you should look at FFII.org. Their account of the final amendments and vote is worth reading.
A comparison of four Linux Office suites and how well they handle random MS Word/Excel/PowerPoint doucments.
Some links from NewsForge:
Bellevue's Linare sees Linux future, launches $19.95 operating system.
The age of corporate open source enlightenment
Some links from Linux Weekly News:
And since they generate so much media noise, lets list a few relating to SCO:
Some links from O'Reilly:
Some links via LinuxToday:
Listings courtesy Linux Journal. See LJ's Events page for the latest goings-on.
IDUG 2003 - Europe |
October 7-10, 2003 Nice, France http://www.idug.org |
Linux Clusters Institute Workshops |
October 13-18, 2003 Montpellier, France http://www.linuxclustersinstitute.org |
Coast Open Source Software Technology (COSST) Symposium |
October 18, 2003 Newport Beach, CA http://cosst.ieee-occs.org |
Enterprise Linux Forum |
October 22-23, 2003 Washington, DC http://www.enterpriselinuxforum.com/ |
Media Advisory/Open Source Software Chicago Forum |
October 23, 2003 Chicago, IL http://www.osschicago.com/ |
PhreakNic |
October 24-26, 2003 Nasheville, TN http://www.phreaknic.info/ |
LISA (17th USENIX Systems Administration Conference) |
October 26-30, 2003 San Diego, CA http://www.usenix.org/events/lisa03/ |
Linux Open Alternative Days |
October 30-31, 2003 Bucharest, Romania http://www.load.ro/ |
O'Reilly Mac OS X Conference |
October 27-30, 2003 Santa Clara, CA http://conferences.oreillynet.com/macosx2003/ |
HiverCon 2003 |
November 6-7, 2003 Dublin, Ireland http://www.hivercon.com/ |
COMDEX Fall |
November 17-21, 2003 Las Vegas, NV http://www.comdex.com/fall2003/ |
Southern California Linux Expo (SCALE) |
November 22, 2003 Los Angeles, CA http://socallinuxexpo.com/ |
Annual Computer Security Applications Conference (ACSAC) |
December 8-12, 2003 Las Vegas, NV http://www.acsac.org/ |
Linux Clusters Institute Workshops |
December 8-12, 2003 Albuquerque, NM http://www.linuxclustersinstitute.org |
Storage Expo 2003, co-located with Infosecurity 2003 |
December 9-11, 2003 New York, NY http://www.infosecurityevent.com/ |
Consumer Electronics Show |
January 8-11, 2004 Las Vegas, NV http://www.cesweb.org/ |
Linux.Conf.AU |
January 12-17, 2004 Australia http://conf.linux.org.au/ |
LinuxWorld Conference & Expo |
January 20-23, 2004 New York, NY http://linuxworldexpo.com/ |
O'Reilly Emerging Technology Conference |
February 9-12, 2004 San Diego, CA http://conferences.oreillynet.com/etcon/ |
SXSW |
March 12-21, 2004 Austin, TX http://sxsw.com/ |
SD West |
March 15-19, 2004 Santa Clara, CA http://www.sdexpo.com |
CeBit Hannover |
March 18-24, 2004 Hannover, Germany http://www.cebit.de |
COMDEX Canada |
March 24-26, 2004 Toronto, Ontario http://www.comdex.com |
2004 USENIX/ACM Symposium on Networked Systems Design and
Implementation (NSDI) |
March 29-31, 2004 San Francisco, CA http://www.usenix.org/events/nsdi04/ |
RealWorld Linux |
April 13-15, 2004 Toronto, Ontario http://www.realworldlinux.com |
CeBit America |
May 25-27, 2004 New York, NY http://www.cebit-america.com/ |
Strictly Business Solutions Expo |
June 9-10, 2004 Minneapolis, MN http://www.strictlyebusiness.net/sb/mpls/index.po |
USENIX Annual Technical Conference |
June 27 - July 2, 2004 Boston, MA http://www.usenix.com/events/usenix04/ |
O'Reilly Open Source Convention |
July 26-30, 2004 Portland, OR http://conferences.oreillynet.com/ |
LinuxWorld Conference & Expo |
August 3-5, 2004 San Francisco, CA http://www.linuxworldexpo.com/ |
USENIX Security Symposium |
August 9-13, 2004 San Diego, CA http://www.usenix.com/events/sec04/ |
USENIX Systems Administration Conference (LISA) |
November 14-19, 2004 Atlanta, GA http://www.usenix.com/events/ |
In the final roll of the dice for Mobilix, (a site providing information on mobile Linux systems), the highest German civil court has found in favour of Les Edition Albert Rene and has dismissed the appeal brought by Werner Heuser. The work that formerly took place under the Mobilix banner will still continue, thankfully, under the new name Tuxmobil
Debian Weekly News reported that The Debian project has received full access to a Dual Opteron machine for porting efforts to the new amd64 architecture.
Also from Debian Weekly News debian-installer team have put together a HOWTO which guides through the process of installing sarge.
Prakash Advani conducted an interview with Alex de Landgraaf, the founder and the lead maintainer of the Morphix project. [via DWN]
The Python Software Foundation has announced the release of version 2.3.1 of the Python programming language. This minor release introduces a number of enhancements based on two months of experience since release of version 2.3.
Franz Schmid has announced the release of Scribus 1.1.0 - Linux Desktop Publishing, which builds upon the recently released Scribus 1.0, as well as the launching of an integrated Scribus Web site at www.scribus.org.uk.
The GNOME-Office team has announced the immediate availability of GNOME-Office 1.0. GNOME-Office is a suite of Free Software productivity applications that seamlessly blend with the GNOME Desktop Environment. GNOME-Office includes the AbiWord-2.0 Word Processor, GNOME-DB-1.0 Database Interface and Gnumeric-1.2.0 Spreadsheet."
The XFce Project has announced the release of version 4.0 of their desktop environment and development platform.
Mick is LG's News Bytes Editor.
Born some time ago in Ireland, Michael is currently working on
a PhD thesis in the Department of Mechanical Engineering, University
College Dublin. The topic of this work is the use of Lamb waves in
nondestructive testing. GNU/Linux has been very useful in this work, and
Michael has a strong interest in applying free software solutions to
other problems in engineering. When his thesis is completed, Michael
plans to take a long walk.