An article from the Digital Divide Network reads:

Free and Open Source Software is important because it can help NPO’s and CBO’s stop spending valuable resources, which could and should be directed elsewhere, on software. Proprietary software, software produced and marketed with restrictions on its use, is never really owned by the organizations that use it. For example, an NPO generally cannot legally give its workers copies of proprietary software to use at home. Schools cannot send their students home with the software they use at school, and students aren’t allowed to copy proprietary software to share with friends. Free and Open Source software renders these kind of concerns a complete non-issue. It’s really a very simple and elegant solution to an artificially created problem.

This particular idea has come up in my research several times. For instance, why should a programming language such as Visual Basic be taught in schools when students have to purchase a copy for home? Why not Python when it’s a great language, it’s open source and of course, free. The same could be said about using MS Office vs. Open Office.

So there was reason #1 that Open Source is important for schools. Now what can YOU add to the list? Feel free to draw outside the lines.

 

I’ll probably be too tied up to go this summer, but this conference looks quite interesting. The First International Conference on Open Source Systems is to be held July 11-15, 2005, in Genoa, Italy.

OSS2005 will provide a forum to discuss theories, practices, experiences, and tools relating to development and applications of OSS systems, with a specific focus on two aspects:
- the development of open source systems and the underlying technical, social, and economic issues;
- the adoption of OSS solutions and the implications of such adoption both in the public and in the private sector.

For more information, check out http://oss2005.case.unibz.it.

Also, it’s been mentioned on this blog before, but if you would like to subscribe to an RSS enabled conference calendar, check out our home-grown Educational Conferences Calendar. Instructions to subscribe to the calendar using various methods (this works great with iCal) are found here, and you can also add an event to the calendar here (click on ‘New Event’).

  •  June 29, 2005
  •  Posted by Alec at 11:31 pm
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