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Answers On LUGs, Life, and Linux in Iraq 318

Adam Davidson is an American reporter who has been in Baghdad for many months, and in his 'spare time' helped start Iraq's first LUG. We sent him your questions last week, and he's replied in great detail, not only about the LUG itself but also with a rare 'geek's eye view' of daily life in Baghdad, and comments about how the Iraqi IT infrastructure (and laws controlling it) are being (re)built.

1) Computer density in Iraq - by MajorDick

What is the density per capita of PC type computers in Iraq ? I mean how many people even own computers ? What is the average computer available for use in Iraq ?

Adam:

It's impossible to get accurate statistics for pretty much anything in Iraq. But I've found that most middle-class families do have a computer. Middle-class in Iraq means the senior bread-winner makes anywhere from $100 to $600 per month. Many businesses have computers. And there are Internet cafes that have sprung up all over the country and are wildly popular. So, most people who want to are able to use a computer as often as they'd like. The computers available are surprisingly up-to-date. Sana'a Street, the main computer shopping area, has dozens and dozens of computer shops where you'll find almost everything you'd need: late-model P4 or AMD CPUs. Decent motherboards, even raid, good hard-drives, some decent soundcards, etc. Good printers from HP, etc. There are a lot of low-end brands as well as the well-known ones. You can get most of the gadgets you'd like: USB memory keys, digital cameras, portable harddrives, flat screens, whatever. And anything you want that's not in stock can be shipped in from Dubai in a week or so. The prices are far cheaper than in any other Arab country I've been to.

Most Iraqis have their desktop or tower computers assembled locally, from imported parts, of course. But you can buy full HP systems and a few other brands. It's also easy to buy pretty current laptops. A basic system--AMD, 256MB RAM, 40gig HD, is around $400. I just bought a fully loaded system for less than $1500.

I go to Sana'a street pretty often and it is always completely packed with people buying computer systems and parts. There is so much pent-up demand for so many things. Under the previous regime, import tariffs were so high that everything cost twice what it would elsewhere. Now, it's so cheap. And while many Iraqis are miserably poor, many others are benefiting from the current situation and are buying not only computers but their first washing machines, satellite TV systems, microwave ovens, and on and on.

2) Encryption - by onyxruby

For years strict encryption rules were an issue for Iraq. Has the US now stopped it's encryption restrictions for Iraq or do you simply get your crypto from elsewhere?

Adam:

I don't know too much about this. I'd check out Don Marti's coverage of the issue at LinuxJournal. But there is no regulation of software in Iraq now. There are tons of shops that burn you anything you want for about a buck a CD. I downloaded US-crypto here, because I'm a US citizen working for a US-based radio show and I figure I'm entitled. But I don't think Iraqis would even know what restrictions exist or have any idea how to follow them. That being said, security and crypto issues are not big concerns here. Most Iraqis just don't know much about them, since they're less than a year into using the internet freely. Under Saddam, of course, there was massive government restriction on what could be accessed and what crypto could be used.

3) What will the Iraqi government use? - by rueger

I'm presuming that any government computer infrastructure has been destroyed, and that they will be more or less starting from scratch.

Am I correct in assuming that Microsoft is in there big time locking down contracts to rebuild government computing sytems?

Adam:

In the massive looting after the war, pretty much the entire computer infrastructure of the government was stolen. I'm friends with the head of IT for the Ministry of Trade (one of the biggest users of computers in Iraq) and he told me that he had recently purchased 30,000 desktop workstations. Every single one was looted. So, yes, they're starting from scratch. My friend, the MoT IT guy, says he wants to deploy Linux. From what he knows, he thinks it's a much better fit for Iraq. It's cheap, adaptable, has good Arabic support. But he just doesn't know enough about Linux, since it was all but unknown in Iraq during Saddam's regime. I find that is typical--when I explain Linux to just about any Iraqi, they get it quickly and want it. Any company or ministry that had a server most likely used Unix and now wants to switch to Linux. And there is great interest in desktop Linux.

I know the guy who is Microsoft's sole agent in Iraq. He's actually a nice guy, lives down the block from me. He's having a very hard time. They are not as powerful here as you'd expect. First of all, since all software--including M$--costs a buck a CD, it's pretty much impossible to convince anyone that they should pay thousands of dollars for systems. Also, there is a general suspicion of large foreign corporations coming in and gobbling up Iraqi assets. So, people in the know are more excited about Linux. That being said, few Iraqis even know that there are operating systems other than M$. I've found exactly one Iraqi who has heard of Apple, and maybe a few dozen who've heard of Linux. So, just letting people know there is an alternative is a big issue.

The US occupational government, the Coalition Provisional Authority, uses M$ desktops and servers, as does the US-appointed Interim Governing Council. Most ministries are now using DOS systems. But the ministries are largely able to purchase things like hardware and software completely independently of the US. The Iraqi government has a budget this year of something around $12 billion and they choose how it's spent. The US government has made the decision not to alter the ministries too much. It's too much work in the short time before the handover of power to a sovereign government at the end of June. And the CPA is so overworked and out-of-touch with day-to-day issues at the ministries that I don't think they could force a M$ deployment even if they wanted to.

I do assume, though, that without any counter-pressure, the new Iraqi government will use M$ by default.

4) Can we help you in some way? - by herrvinny

Can we help you in some way? Old computers, networking equipment, webspace, etc?

Adam:

The Iraqi LUG has received several generous offers of support. I'd say that old computer equipment is not helpful, because so much new stuff is available so cheaply. They also don't need any more distributions. several people have sent distros, and I've become a one-man distro download center, since I have pretty fast DSL (believe it or not) and have been downloading the major distros and giving them to the iLug.

What the iLug needs most is:
1. Money.
2. Information.
3. Technical help.

The amazing iLug has some ambitious and exciting plans. They are planning to open a Linux Users Center in May. A generous ex-pat Iraqi living in London will donate space and some money to set up a place that can have a dozen or more Linux machines. It will be in a prominent location and will offer free or very cheap internet access, to lure people in. There will be trainings, tech support, meetings, to build up the base of knowledgeable Linux users. The space is centrally located and will, I'm certain, be extremely popular. Before the center is opened, the iLug is distributing one-page fact sheets in Arabic along with a CD of MandrakeMove to introduce Iraqis to Linux. They're handing these out on college campuses and on Sana'a street. I'm also hoping the iLug gets enough money so that its two directors, Ashraf Tariq and Hasanen Nawfal, can go on staff. These two guys are so impressive, so smart, ambitious, eager. But, like all Iraqis, they need to make a living. So, if there could be, say $500 a month for each of them, they could devote themselves full-time to Linux advocacy. That would be so wonderful. In their off hours--handing out distros and evangelizing--they've brought the membership of the iLug up from two to 70 in a couple months; it would be thrilling to see what they could do if they worked at it full time. The iLug also wants to create packages of information, along with copies of distributions, to hand out to IT decision makers at the ministries and private companies. So, a few bucks can go along way towards creating a well-informed, vigorous, and free computer environment in Iraq.

To donate, just go to the paypal link on the www.linux-iraq.org site.

Information is also very important. Don Marti, of LinuxJournal, has very generously arranged to have a lot of books sent over to Iraq. But many more are needed. They still don't have any kind of basic intro to Linux. They want to create a strong library for the iLug members and for the soon-to-be created Linux Center.

Technical help is also important. Having people the iLug can turn to for help would be wonderful. Since pretty much every Linux user is a newbie, it's not that easy to find someone who can troubleshoot. Also, as you can see, their website is pretty primitive. It would be great to have someone offer to design and build and host a more exciting one.

5) Domestic vs. Foreign Talent - by Evil Schmoo

Is the recent growth in your user group due to an influx of homegrown Iraqi talent, or are there more foreign users (ie, contractors) coming incountry?

Adam:

The iLug is almost exclusively home-grown talent. These are Iraqis who have never been outside of Iraq. It started with Hasanen Nawfal, this amazing computer programmer who somehow found out about Linux during Saddam's regime and got a copy of Red Hat (he now prefers Mandrake). This alone shows how curious and capable he is. It was all but impossible to surf the web freely or download much of anything on the crappy pre-war connections. He got his friend Ashraf involved after the war, and together they've been teaching others--mostly college and graduate students--about Linux. I haven't met any returning Iraqi exiles who know Linux or have gotten involved. The foreign contractors are locked away in secure bases and don't interact with the Iraqi population.

Iraq has very well-educated computer science population. Technocrats at the ministries and university professors and students. There are tons of people who know C++ and other languages. But they've been hampered by the lack of new information during sanctions and by the fact that Iraq had no software industry. There are plenty of people who designed computer control systems for power plants or databases and maintained servers. They're smart and experienced, but they have 13 years or so of catching up to do.

6) Legislative issues - by temojen

Given Iraq's clean-slate status:

How can the international community promote the freedom to use information technology for fair and lawful purposes (ie no DRM, free use of strong cryptography)?

Adam:

I think this is a major issue. It won't be answerable until there is a new Iraqi government (currently scheduled for June 30th at a former rogue state near you) and we are able to assess who is in charge, who is writing the laws, and how much influence the US will have in the process. My guess is the US will have a lot of influence and that copyright protection and it's scary cousins will have a major push. But, judging by the messy process of government-creation (see: salon.com article [Editor's note: Subscription or annoying ad required to view complete story]) it is possible the US will have to negotiate away some controls. I actually have no idea how to influence this process. The people who are currently rewriting Iraqi laws are US folks, many military lawyers who have never dealt with commercial or IP laws before, and they're so locked away in hidden offices in the CPA palace (formerly Saddam's Presidential Palace) that I don't know who they are or who is talking to them. I would say in reality that these issues are far down the list of US concerns right now. But with a new government and this huge market open for the first time, it's hard to imagine the US happily allowing the completely free system in place (there were no copyright protections for foreign companies under Saddam) to stand. I guess the usual: write your congressmen or something.

I think the best thing that can be done here is to inform the future Iraqi government about the dangers of certain kinds of laws. It would be difficult to find Iraqi decision-makers who completely (or at all) support the US presence here. The vast majority are extremely wary of the corporate colonialization of Iraq. So, I think this could be a real fight and there are no clear winners yet.

7) Infrastructure - by Golias

If one believes western media, Iraq is a nation under constant siege, in which the plumbing and electricity is absent for large swathes of the nation, and order is just barely maintained by the massive presense of unwelcome US troops. Also, many in the west believed that Iraq under Saddam was a very backwards and un-developed place (apart from military development), and one was not likely to find many computers at all, let alone connected ones.

So, as somebody who's actually there and actually knows what life is like for a techno-geek in today's Iraq, perhaps you could give us a detailed account about current network infrastructure, how easy or difficult it is to buy computer parts, how much Iraqi people (and Iraqi computer geeks in particular) use Internet technologies to connect to one another (e-mail, blogs, instant messaging, the web, etc.), what cultural attitudes in Iraq concerning the Internet, the global community, and the West, etc.

Most people in the United States (which is where most of the readers of /. come from) know very little about day-to-day life in Iraq. A detailed account would probably be very educational and broadening.

Adam:

Since I have to spend a lot of time convincing my mom that I'm actually a lot safer than she thinks, I know that the US impression of Iraq is way off. The truth is life here is quite normal. The streets are crowded (way too crowded, traffic is a nightmare), shops are filled with new consumer goods. Restaurants are thriving. Schools are open. People go to work, school, hang out with friends. You see the occasional American humvee or tank roll down the street, but other than that, it's hard to tell you're in a country under occupation and a guerilla war. Much of Baghdad seems like a normal, if poor, third world capital. Not too different from what I've seen in Latin America, say. There are wealthy areas, poor areas, kids playing, all that. A few months ago, I would hear a few explosions every night and a lot of gunfire. It became so common that we'd just ignore it. But these days, those things are so rare that we actually pay attention when they happen.

Middle class folks (who would be desperately poor by US standards), have decent homes, cars, most likely a computer. The middle-class and wealthy areas (like Jadiriya, Karada, Arasat, and Mansour) of Baghdad are extremely lively. Poorer people are pretty badly off. Unemployment is huge and underemployment is horrible. In the Thaura or Seven Palaces neighborhoods, people are lucky to make a buck a day and wouldn't be able to live without the monthly government food ration. They are unlikely to eat much meat--since that's not included in the ration. And they are certainly incapable of buying a computer or even affording the dollar-an-hour internet cafe fees.

There is a lot of fear in Iraq, but much more of bandits than of terrorists. Nighttime Iraq is pretty quiet. Only a few neighborhoods stay open after dark and the highways are all but empty. There is a lot of crime, car-jacking, murder, rape. The nights are bad and most ex-pats, like me, stay in the house. Wealthier Iraqis and ex-pats have armed guards 24-hours and never travel alone. Almost all Iraqis have a Kalachnikov rifle in the house to ward off burglars.

I can say that I've been in Iraq for most of the time since the war and I have never once felt afraid. I'm always cautious, probably a lot more tense than I am back home in New York, but I've never had any reason to fear for my life or safety.

The infrastructure stuff is a major hassle. Power is out as often as it's on. We, like many wealthy Iraqis, have a big generator, so we're able to stay on. But most middle class people can't. There is phone service in about half of Baghdad. The government ISP, Uruklink, is still operating and if you have a phone line you can get on line (assuming you have power). Uruklink does offer DSL service to a few neigborhoods. I have a 256K line that goes down a few hours a week and a few days a month. Yesterday we were down for most of the day because some guerillas cut the fiber-optic line. Most businesses and internet cafes opt for satellite internet connections. These vary in prices, but most likely cost a grand or so a month and are also not terribly reliable, unless you buy a very expensive system. Most Internet cafes have terribly slow connections and are down for hours a week for one reason or another.

But when they're up, the Internet cafes are packed. Pretty much every Iraqi I meet has an email address, even if they don't have a computer, usually through Hotmail or Yahoo. Iraqis love chat rooms and on-line dating services and porn, like everyone else. Male/female relations are so restrictive in Iraqi society. It's pretty much impossible for most single guys to spend any time alone with a woman who is not a relative. So, I think the titillation of the 'net is all too exciting. There is also a huge explosion in networked gaming. Those places are always packed with people playing games with folks from around the world. Some Iraqis even ignore the porn and actually try to figure out what the 'net is all about or learn about advances in their profession or hobby or whatever. I've found that middle-aged and older people are more likely to find the web strange and troubling and less likely to use it. Even more than in other countries, Iraq will soon have a massive generational digital-divide.

In short, Iraqis have access to everything, but it can be a huge pain. Of the iLug founders, Hasanen has a phone line and internet connection, Ashraf doesn't. Because of work and other pressures, Ashraf is able to access his email or read web-based Linux stuff only once or twice a week. Hasanen can do it every day. Not because Hasanen is richer or anything, he's just lucky enough to live in a neigborhood with a phone line. No average Iraqi has a fast-enough connection to download a distribution or even a large program. My DSL line costs a base of more than $200 a month (a fortune for most Iraqis) for a 128k connection and more than $600 a month since I boost the speed to 256k.

8) State Of Intellectual Capital - by RenegadeTempest

After living under totalitarian rule, what is the state of the country's computing talent? What disciplines have the strongest computing talent?

Adam:

Networking is probably most advanced. It's easy to find Iraqis who can build and maintain a complex network. There are plenty of people who know the basics of desktop computing. And more than a handful of decent programmers. But the coders don't have much experience, since they were limited to small custom projects. Also, the knowledge isn't too broad. Tons of people know C++, even more know visual basic, but few know any other languages.

9) IT jobs in Iraq - by Koyaanisqatsi

Out of curiosity, might as well ask someone who's in the field and there: what are the typical IT positions in Iraq? What skills are most sought after?

Adam:

Same as above. Networking is the main job here. there are lots and lots of new networks going up--all the ministries and private companies. There are a lot of computer salespeople with their own small shops. Unlike at say, CompUSA, the guy selling you your laser printer probably has a PhD in computer science. With all the money that's about to spent in Iraq (tens of billions this year), I'm sure there will be a lot more demand for network building and maintenance. It'll be a while before there's much of a home-grown programming industry, although there is and will be lots of demand for database and website creation. I can't imagine there will be anyone actually making computer parts any time soon.

10) Intellectual Property legislation - by Elektroschock

I read in other news that Iraq as under US occupation will get a copyright legislation written by a RIAA official. But nobody talks about software patents in Iraq. Will the United States pressure for a US style patent legislation in Iraq? I heard that patents are incompatible with islamic law. Some Muslims in my neighborhood were much in favour of free software because of religious reasons. Do the Iraqis LUG guys also believe that the GPL unlike proprietary software is according to Shariah law?

Adam:

There is certainly no problem between GPL and Shariah law. Ashraf, the co-founder of iLug, is from a very distinguished Shiite Muslim family. He's a sayed, a direct-descendant of the prophet Mohammed, and takes his religion very seriously. Actually, contrary to what I'd heard before the war and despite decades of secular dictatorial socialism, Iraq is an extremely religious place. Most people don't drink, no Muslim eats pork. As I wrote earlier, I think that it's way too early to tell what Iraqi property rights and patent laws will look like. I think it is best to assume the worst, but to support the iLug, which is the only group I know of in Iraq who advocates for free software. Things are so up in the air right now, all of this is so new (no Iraqi has had to think about intellectual property issues for one minute of their lives), that the decision-makers will be extremely sensitive to influence. It is an open book, but it will be closed soon, within months. Now is the time to support the iLug so they can be powerful advocates for good Iraqi laws.

Ashraf and Hasanen and I believe that good, open laws that avoid the hazards of absurd patents and DMCA style restriction would not only be good for Iraqi Linux geeks, but would be good for the country. This place is so poor, so behind recent advances in technology, but has such a base of strong, eager, excited computing talent. Only with the free and open ability to innovate and collaborate will Iraqi computer professionals and advocates be able to help make this place prosperous.

So, once again, go to www.linux-iraq.org and click on that Paypal button.

This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Answers On LUGs, Life, and Linux in Iraq

Comments Filter:
  • Censorship? (Score:5, Interesting)

    by aynrandfan ( 687181 ) on Monday February 02, 2004 @01:10PM (#8159726)
    I am wondering how controlled their access is to the web after Saddam's fall.

    What sort of censorship still goes on there, if any?

  • by bc90021 ( 43730 ) * <bc90021 AT bc90021 DOT net> on Monday February 02, 2004 @01:15PM (#8159767) Homepage
    The article mentions that the iLug needs books... however, it does not mention where we can send them (or even if we can!). I have a ton of old Linux books that I would happily send (at my expense, though probably only one or two a month), but how do we go about doing that?
  • by fnord123 ( 748158 ) on Monday February 02, 2004 @01:16PM (#8159776)
    I wonder what the country-wide network infrastructure is like? Having guerillas cut the fiber line (as mentioned in the article) in Baghdad doesn't sound promising.

    Given that many middle class families have generators but land lines are flaky (and DSL coverage sounds pretty low), maybe the iLUG should look into setting up an 802.11b community network?

    Pringles cans can be used for directional attenae, generator power to support the nodes, Linux is a good OS to build it on, seems like it would be a nice fit to me!

  • by God Takeru ( 409424 ) on Monday February 02, 2004 @01:16PM (#8159784) Homepage
    That's one way to guarantee your job security in a shaky market-- be the guy who volunteers to go to Iraq! Hell, most of the US soldiers I know aren't exactly volunteering for that position.

    Of course, make sure you don't teach the Iraqis -too- well, or they might start outsourcing jobs there, too ;)
  • by Mozz Alimoz ( 245834 ) on Monday February 02, 2004 @01:30PM (#8159907)
    These two quotes from Adam Davidson struck me:
    First of all, since all software--including M$--costs a buck a CD, it's pretty much impossible to convince anyone that they should pay thousands of dollars for systems.
    And later in question 5
    Iraq has very well-educated computer science population. Technocrats at the ministries and university professors and students. There are tons of people who know C++ and other languages. But they've been hampered by the lack of new information during sanctions and by the fact that Iraq had no software industry. There are plenty of people who designed computer control systems for power plants or databases and maintained servers. They're smart and experienced, but they have 13 years or so of catching up to do.
    It's a bit hard to establish a software industry when you don't pay the programmers. But I guess now they're hoping to sell the software to nations that do respect intellectual property? BTW, I'm not accusing individual Iraqis of doing anything that I wouldn't do in their situation. This is just an observation.
  • Wireless (Score:5, Interesting)

    by sleepingsquirrel ( 587025 ) * <{Greg.Buchholz} ... ingsquirrel.org}> on Monday February 02, 2004 @01:31PM (#8159913) Homepage Journal
    Now we need to do a follow-up question and answer session. Here's my question: Since hardware is apparently cheap and the wired infrastructure is so bad, are Iraqi's using 802.11 for their networking? Seems like VoIP over wireless might also be a popular option.
  • by LWATCDR ( 28044 ) on Monday February 02, 2004 @01:33PM (#8159928) Homepage Journal
    "sounds like the American liberation has been extrmrly sucessful..despite the lie you get from Kerry, Dean and the Liberal Democrats. "

    Okay lets get this straight this is their opinon! In case you did not know it but the news really is entertainment. People watch shows about people getting killed and explosions. Pictures of Solders building shools are boring.
    As far as Kerry and Dean. Just like Bush they get there informaiton from somewhere. I have to give them the benifit of the doubt and say that they believe what they say. I do not agree with them but isn't it good that we can hear both sides?

    "Slashdot and its clueless followers sure look stupid now don't they"

    Ummm. Slashdot is a comunity of many people with different opinons. The only thing that the people on slashdot agree on is computers are cool.
  • by American AC in Paris ( 230456 ) on Monday February 02, 2004 @01:37PM (#8159972) Homepage
    In all seriousness though, it's nice to have a little bit different viewpoint of life in Baghdad. I really thought that everyone must be staying home all day long, afraid to leave their homes, given the way the US media reports the conditions there.

    ...Iraq may not be the a smouldering pit of of doom and gloom, but it sure as heck ain't a fun place to be, either. Below is an excerpt from Baghdad Burning, an Iraqi blog:

    Sometimes, sleep just seems like a waste of time and electricity. For example, the day before yesterday, our area had no electricity almost the whole day. Friday is our 'laundry day' so it was doubly frustrating. We stood around looking at the pile of clothes that needed washing. My mother deliberated washing them by hand but I convinced her it would be a bad idea- the water was cold, the weather was miserable and the clothes wouldn't even feel clean. We waited all day for the electricity and once or twice, it flashed on for all of 20 minutes. Finally, at 12 p.m., my mother stated, "Tomorrow, if there's no electricity, we'll wash them by hand. That's that." [blogspot.com]

    ...it's dated January 26, 2004.

    This individual has both a computer -and- an internet connection, yet their daily life is still at the mercy of the highly unreliable power grid. It may not be hell on earth, but it's a far cry from anything even remotely pleasant...

  • by ackthpt ( 218170 ) * on Monday February 02, 2004 @01:45PM (#8160040) Homepage Journal
    Are their prices listed on pricewatch?

    In all seriousness though, it's nice to have a little bit different viewpoint of life in Baghdad. I really thought that everyone must be staying home all day long, afraid to leave their homes, given the way the US media reports the conditions there.

    Doubtfully they're exporting, yet, as most of this stuff is coming from Taiwan, through Dubai. If you wanted to actually order from some shop on Sana'a Street you'd probably pay a ton in postage, get nailed with import duties, and it may never arrive.

    Even needing to go so far as printing handbills advitising prices for local consumption is probably overkill. I would love to see some digital photos *hint* *hint* of this street and some shops.

    As far as the media goes, Mr. Bremmer needs to get some people on the ground from CBS, NBC, ABC, CNN, etc and show the people back home how it's going. Though it might be counter-productive as media may still be a terror magnet.

  • by cnkeller ( 181482 ) <cnkeller@nOsPAM.gmail.com> on Monday February 02, 2004 @02:00PM (#8160183) Homepage
    I have a ton of old Linux books that I would happily send

    I applaud your sentiment, but I have to think of what the poster mentioned in his repsonse about old hardware. Let's face it, linux is a moving target. If the books are old to you, they're old to someone else as well. I realize that it's not exactly true, /bin/ls will always be /bin/ls, but hopefully you get my meaning. It souned they like were fairly current on being able to grab ISO's, etc. I would think the you'd be better off just donating your money and perhaps some of your time. Then again, if you were really intersted in helping and could spare $50, I'm sure they'd appreciate some new tech books as well...

  • by zellyn ( 692627 ) on Monday February 02, 2004 @02:02PM (#8160202) Homepage

    Why not?

    Perhaps you know for sure that you wouldn't make a good leader, but perhaps you just need to think about things differently. Read some history and take note of the ages of famous generals and leaders when they first started to lead. It's surprising...

    As for chaos and no structure... the nature of non-western countries is often uncertainty and lack of clarity, especially right after a war. I lived in Sarajevo, Bosnia, for 11 months in 98-99 (quite a while after the war) - you just have to get used to it. Having grown up overseas, I actually enjoyed the slower pace. At first, knowing you might have to spend an entire morning just to pay your gas or telephone bill is frustrating, but after a while you learn to just accept it, stop and have coffee on the way back, bump into a couple of friends downtown, etc. Dealing with any sort of bureaucratic agency (visas, passports, vehicle registration, etc.) is a real pain - you get a different answer every time you ask the same question. The trick is to keep asking until you get the answers you want!

    If you're serious about going over there, perhaps you should look for agencies who might be willing to send you over there - I'm sure the ILUG guy would be able to give you some pointers. Just beware that many humanitarian organizations have a feeling of being there "on a mission", so if you don't like working all the time you might have to be very firm.

  • by drinkypoo ( 153816 ) <drink@hyperlogos.org> on Monday February 02, 2004 @02:27PM (#8160444) Homepage Journal
    It makes it sound like they're using antiquated "portable" computers (luggables) like the Kaypro 2/4, an old Compaq, the PS/2 model 70, and what was that commodore luggable called? That thing was extra neato. Personally I'd have gone for ILUG, since it's an acronym, and not just a catchy name; Not to mention, I would never decapitalize the character for the country in question.
  • Re:Crazy (Score:3, Interesting)

    by dr_canak ( 593415 ) on Monday February 02, 2004 @02:49PM (#8160804)
    Say what you will about MTV as a media outlet, but they occasionally do nice bit of programming on the documentary side. Recently, they sent one of their reporters (Gideon Yago)to Baghdad to talk about post-war Iraq with teens and young adults.

    http://www.mtv.com/onair/diary/

    Like this interview, one of the fascinating things was to see the day-to-day activities being carried out by the populace. Yes there was gunfire as they walked, but there were also huge traffic jams (as the article points out), tons of shopping, kids playing soccer, internet cafes, etc....

    There was also some nice interview footage of this reporter with Iraq young adults, young american soldiers, and military officials in charge.

    Anyway, a good program, and very much not what I expected with regard to the state of post-war baghdad. From what we hear in the news, it's armageddon on the streets, but as these interviews show, there is far more to the story.

    jeff

  • by swillden ( 191260 ) * <shawn-ds@willden.org> on Monday February 02, 2004 @02:58PM (#8160969) Journal

    My mother deliberated washing them by hand but I convinced her it would be a bad idea- the water was cold, the weather was miserable and the clothes wouldn't even feel clean.

    This is off-topic and irrelevant to the point, but still I think people might be interested in knowing that you actually don't need a washing machine to get your clothes clean. In fact, you can get your clothes far cleaner when hand-washing them than any machine can, and you can even do it with cold water.

    I washed my clothes by hand every week for two years when I lived in southern Mexico, and I quickly discovered that clothes can be gotten *very* clean that way, even in cold water (we never used hot water -- most of the ten or so apartments I lived in didn't have any way to heat water at all). Growing up in the U.S., with machine-washed clothing, I always thought that it was just inevitable that white clothes gradually become slightly gray over time, but with good hand washing technique (not hard to learn) I found I could make my white shirts stay perfectly snow-white forever. The biggest problem I found with hand-washing was that it tended to wear the clothing out more quickly, because it got cleaned more vigorously. Over time the material would get perceptibly thinner.

    For years after returning home from Mexico I'd occasionally get irritated with my dingy clothes and resort to washing them by hand to get them clean. I even bought a very expensive washing machine, hoping that it would do a better job -- it did, but not much better. Now, of course, I've fully assimilated back into the consumerist American culture, so when my clothes get dingy I donate them to Goodwill and buy new ones.

    One thing I never did like was line-dried clothes -- machine tumble drying with fabric softeners makes the fabric soft, whereas drying them on the line makes them stiff. That's a matter of personal taste, though. My wife actually installed a clothesline in our back yard last year and uses it in preference to her fancy computerized dryer because she likes the "crisp feel and summery scent" (her words) of line-dried clothes, especially bedsheets. I don't like my sheets to crackle, but sometimes you have to compromise and, well, of all the times in the day that your wife can be mildly annoyed with you, bedtime is a particularly bad one...

  • by scrotch ( 605605 ) on Monday February 02, 2004 @03:05PM (#8161076)
    Trading a flakey electrical grid for being safe from midnight abductions, rapes and torture is an easy trade to make

    If you read this interview, you'll find that the streets are empty at night because of fear of "crime, car-jacking, murder, rape". So perhaps the trade isn't complete quite yet...

    I believe it will get better. It is obviously transitional now. I believe it Will be better than it was under Saddam. But it ain't easy yet.

    We should all look carefully to get a sense of where this guy is coming from. We can do it with easy to understand numbers. He says in one spot that $200/mo. is a fortune to most Iraqis. In another he says that $500 a month would let a guy work full time for Linux advocacy. In another spot, he says he pays more than $600 a month for his DSL line - upgraded from the $200+ base price.

    So the perspective we have is that of a man who can spend two Iraqi fortunes for his internet connection...
    I'm not going to say he should be doing something else with the money. I'm not going to suggest that I spend my money in a 'better' way. I will say that we should all pay attention to this. We should all take in to account who's speaking and what their experience might be before we decide to base our estimation of an entire country on their perspective.

  • I would go. (Score:2, Interesting)

    by torpor ( 458 ) <ibisum AT gmail DOT com> on Monday February 02, 2004 @03:06PM (#8161100) Homepage Journal
    As a geek with a passion for history, I'd be very happy to add Iraq to the roster of places to have worked.

    Remember, a Free Iraq is a Rich Iraq, and to me that means "new tech market in interesting areas".
  • Re:Thank you. (Score:5, Interesting)

    by dreamchaser ( 49529 ) on Monday February 02, 2004 @03:44PM (#8161646) Homepage Journal
    My brother is with the 101st and just got home last week. He was able to get access via an Internet Cafe near the oil refinery he was stationed at, especially after he rebuilt their LAN for them (free access for him from then on!)

    Thank you, thank you all for what you have done and what you'll be asked to do in the future. As a couple of others have said, not all of slashdot is left leaning.
  • by fnord123 ( 748158 ) on Monday February 02, 2004 @03:48PM (#8161699)
    Step 1: Adam Davidston (sp), who has DSL gets a 802.11b ap. Maybe sent to him by a generous slashdotter.

    Step 2: Ashraf Tariq and Hasanen Nawfal get 802.11 NICs and external antennae components, perhaps via the same method.

    Step 3: All three buy Pringles cans and enjoy tasty chips while browsing consume.net website and other community wireless websites.

    Step 4: Using pringles+components+NICs+Linux, beginning of a community wireless network is setup.

    Step 5: Repeat the above, using bandwidth controls built into freely available software, various routing schemes such as AODV, and more pringles cans, until lots of the iLUG people are sharing the few DSL connections.

    The above is pretty obvious, perhaps you are just nitpicking because you think being a cynic makes you look more informed or something.

  • by vik ( 17857 ) on Monday February 02, 2004 @04:15PM (#8162046) Homepage Journal
    Yup. A little money goes a long way to promote Linux there.

    Vik :v)
  • by Keith McClary ( 14340 ) on Monday February 02, 2004 @04:26PM (#8162201)
    Am I the only one here who thinks the not-so-clever-anymore substitution of "S" for "$" is the kind of thing one would expect from a know-it-all teenager, and not someone with relatively strong associations with the rebuilding of a nation's IT infrastructure?


    It does avoid any possible confusion with:

    a chronic progressive nervous disorder involving loss of myelin sheath around certain nerve fibers

    a state in the Deep South on the gulf of Mexico; one of the Confederate States during the American Civil War

    a master's degree in science

    A microsecond: One millionth of a second.

    An abbreviation for milli-seconds (1/1000th of a second - usually not capitalized)

    A magntiude determined at teleseismic distances using the logarithm of the amplitude of 20-second period surface waves generate>

    Multiplex Section

    the abbreviation for Mint State, it's used with a numerical figure to grade unworn coins

    Mobile Station

    The mobile terminal (that is, the mobile phone) used by the subscriber to access the cellular network.

    Abr. Motor ship. A designation for many cruise liners.

    (Memory Stick) Sony's memory solution. This is a memory only card that is the size of a stick of gum.

    The two-character ISO 3166 country code for MONTSERRAT.

    Manuscript or typescript is the original work set down on paper using, pen, typewriter or printer.

    Main Structure

    The temperature at which transformation of austenite to martensite starts during cooling.

    Mass Spectrometry (laboratory analysis technique)

    Military Science

    Title for women who specifically request to be so identified.
  • by pavon ( 30274 ) on Monday February 02, 2004 @09:33PM (#8165402)
    It's nice to hear an honest, levelheaded opinion on slashdot. It's funny - I felt almost the exactly the same way before the war and came to the opposite conclusion. I knew (and so did all of the conservatives I talked to) that what the President was saying was mostly political spin. We weren't going to war to liberate the people of Iraq, or because the WMD were a real threat, or because there were substantial links with terrorism. But at the same time the "blood for oil" motivations that the liberals were claiming seemed just as unlikely to me. So from my point of view all I saw was both sides yelling mindless reterict(sp?) and neither side actually give any meaningfull argument for or against the war.

    In the end I decided that I really thought that this would be a good thing for both the people of Iraq and stability of the middle east, because it was truely in the best interests of the US to rebuild the country into a real democracy. And I couldn't think of any good reason not to go to war, except for the principle of the matter. So I chose not to oppose the war.

    As the war got closer my conclusion became more polarized and irrational. Probably mostly because I live near a liberal arts college and work on a military base and was constantly harrassed by idiots whose entire political ideology consists of the phrase "f**k the man", and who look down on anyone who doesn't think like them as a stupid sheep who believe everything that the Man says. It would have been really nice to find someone who was actually willing to talk about the war.

He has not acquired a fortune; the fortune has acquired him. -- Bion

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