French Police Ditching Windows for Linux 122
esocid writes "In another European blow to Microsoft the French paramilitary police force said Wednesday it is ditching Microsoft for the free Linux operating system, becoming one of the biggest administrations in the world to make the break. The gendarmerie began severing its ties with Microsoft in 2005 when it moved to open source office applications like word processing. It switched to open source Internet browsers in 2006."
Better headline (Score:4, Funny)
Yes, yes, it's more of a cliche than a joke.
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They only surrendered to the Germans for one real reason: their artwork and architecture. I really cant fault them for that, considering the pictures I've seen in the aftermath of England.
I also keep in mind that they also made our current word: sabotage... that words origin comes from Nazi occupation of France, when the peoples would jam up factories and machines to help Germany.
For what situation France got stuck in, I really cant blame them.
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Re:Better headline (Score:5, Informative)
They surrendered to the Germans because 1940s France was a bitterly divided nation with an ineffective government, and some political factions favored surrender over working with their political enemies (the Communists were strong in France at the time and operated as a fifth column, because of Stalin's alliance with Germany at the time--ironically, they would become some of the most effective of the Resistance later when Hitler invaded Russia), and also because of a strong strain of isolationism at the time--many Frenchmen in 1940 were actually convinced it was all Britain's fault, an opinion that was reinforced when the British bombed the French fleet at Mers-el-Kebir to prevent it from falling into German hands. The catastrophic military loss they suffered--the result of poor training, poor organization, poor leadership, and most of all, horrid communications (the French supreme HQ's picture of events was routinely several days behind what the front lines were seeing)--may have been the proximate cause, but the kind of disaster France suffered in 1940 takes a political and moral collapse as well as a military one. Read Shirer's "Fall of the Third Republic" sometime, fascinating read.
Um, no, it doesn't. While the Resistance in France certainly practiced sabotage, they didn't invent the word. The word comes from the French railway strike of 1910, in which the workers destroyed the wooden shoes that held the rails in place. The shoes in French were called "sabots", hence "sabotage".
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Re:Better headline (Score:4, Interesting)
The contrast with France and Italy is interesting: there were a lot of anti-Republicans in France in 1940 and they backed the armistice. They were then left utterly discredited (though obviously haven't gone away - see Le Pen), but the battle that was started on 14 July 1789 was settled forever on 20 August 1944. For Italy, though, because so many fascists got away with it (especially as some of them could say they were behind the capitualtion), the country has been described as being engaged in a low intensity civil war ever since.
Omissions, omissions... (Score:2)
What about the years of indecisive (although terribly deadly) warfare of the WWI? France never dislodged the German invaders, until Germany collapsed because of its own Communists...
And before that there was a Franco-Prussian war, which France lost spectacularly... And elsewhere — since Napoleon (the first and only) France was either just a dwarf or a giant on clay feet either losing wa
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That's also what I learned. In the early 1800s, the French tapestry manufactures started to purchase the newfangled Jacquard mechanical looms [suspenders.com] that got their patterns from punched cards. The silk worker corporations didn't like it one bit. Fearing for their employment, they started a Luddite campaign against the devious machines, discreetly throwing wooden shoes (French "sabot") into the delicate mechanism while the foreman wasn't looking. Hence the word.
Of course, as is often the case, the machines actuall
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The arrogant americans ignored the advice and went there... The rest is history
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Protecting your art and architecture at the cost of millions of Jewish lives doesn't at all seem worth it.
Humans grow and breed like rabbits. No matter what you do to them, they will always produce more humans. Some medieval plagues in Europe killed off 1/3 to 2/3 of the population, but it merely made a small dent in the population growth charts. Even the Jews, that were so brutally slaughtered in WWII, are now even more populous than before the war, and all that in just 60 years. (Estimated 9 millions before the war, down to 3 million after, and now around 13 million.)
The art and architecture will last for
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That pretty much sums up Nazi and fascist ideology: the state and its achievements are more important than the individuals.
As you demonstrate: fascist ideology is alive and well today.
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I wonder how you and your family would feel, if the next Nazi group decides to get rid of them, and our government allows it to save some art.
don't try to rewrite history (Score:2)
French military leaders surrendered to Germany because France lost to Germany in 1940. In addition, a lot of French supported the Nazis, eugenics, and anti-semitism. And the French were responsible for numerous crimes against humanity during the Vichy government.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vichy_France [wikipedia.org]
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I can blame them; there was a significant portion that actively supported the Nazis.
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The french are just being pro-active; in the rest of the world, BSOD ditches YOU!
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French police surrender to Linux
More like they farted in Microsoft's general direction.
C'est évident: (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Mais je pense (Score:1)
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Was ist den policien fabrichten heir?
D'oh (Score:2)
How about some donations? (Score:5, Insightful)
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I've never read such a request around here... and this is not the first big entity to do this.
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Re:How about some donations? (Score:5, Interesting)
Or better yet, contribute code. With 10% of what you were paying for licenses, you can hire or pay developers to improve open source projects, you may even choose the features that you need. You contribute them so that others with the same needs may use them as well.
Open source economics is based on the fact that code is worth more than money. Code you may share as much as you want. Money you may only split.
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The FS implies that's their intent:
(emphasis mine)
I smell users that
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They already are giving back, indirectly. In exchange for the huge licensing savings, the French citizens are getting either:
- Better police service because (licensing budget is now spent on other things needed by the police department)
or:
- Reduced taxes because the police department stays the same, but now they need less money
My opinion is that sinc
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Personally, given what our governments are up to, I think LESS police is a better solution than more. More police = more corruption.
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The problem with buying a closed source American Operating System is that you can never be truly sure that it is not full of backdoors built in by the NSA. Now some of you might consider this to be very paranoid but being paranoid can be quite important when it comes to national security, especially given the current US administrations attitudes to eavesdropping its own citizens and keenness for disrespecting other nati
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France is a hotbed of open source activity. Loads of top companies are well LAMPed and this provides a good market for developers and university grads. On top of this, there are plenty of university courses with open source projects associated, like the very excellent VLC multimedia player (and server).
There are system integrator companies like Linagora who provide full
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The French and EU government support some open source projects through research grants. Of course, more would be better.
Also, maybe they are buying support contracts, or buying machines from companies that support open source software.
I think it's good for institutions to donate, but open source wouldn't succeed if it had to depend on it
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Linux does make sense. (Score:2)
Re:Linux does make sense. (Score:4, Informative)
Yup, in France, the roads are patrolled by soldiers. And no one fucks with them, as well as by being soldiers, they don't fuck with anyone either, quite unlike the pityful police farces too often seen in the US.
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Even in the nice areas there are stations that have people armed with assault rifles outside keeping watch.
For the record, it didn't make me feel safe.
Re:Linux does make sense. (Score:4, Informative)
see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/FAMAS_(rifle) [wikipedia.org] for more information
the thing is very reliable and doesn't jam
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1) presumably more powerful than a handgun (increasing livelihood of strong bounce and hit if behind someone (though they probably have ammunition that doesn't penetrate))
2) It feels like more bullets in the air in general (though it probably is single shot mode)
3) It felt like when I visited Guatamala in the early 90's (definitely was not a particularly safe time)
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That's probably the most typical American tourist behaviour
ps: (you cannot have a friendly chat with the British queen either...Especially while in Paris)
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Just like with Slashdotters, unfortunately
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SECAM for computers ;) (Score:1)
SECAM = Something Essentially Contrary to the American Method.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SECAM#Why_SECAM_in_France.3F [wikipedia.org]
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Thank you, thank you, I'll be here all week...
Crap (Score:5, Funny)
great name. (Score:1)
Sounds better than FREAX [slashdot.org], but will Linus agree?
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The bridge gap has been closing ever tighter (Score:2)
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As far as I am concerned, the most majorly missing thing are medium and large business applications. Especially the foundation ones, such as payroll, GL, AR, AP, HR, etc. For every one application you can find for Linux, there are several thousand for MS-Windows only (and those include *ix backends with MS-Windows-only frontends or IE-only frontends). When you start looking at industry-specific applications, it is extremely worse.
This is no fa
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More standards and support systems would really help though, especially a universal method to install any Linux app on any Linux distro that supports the standard/system/filetype, I think just that would go a long way in helping things. Everyone should b
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Free as in "Freedom Fries?" (Score:1)
In all seriousness, this move seems like a wise one, especially when they enumerate the cost savings in licenses, etc. I will in fact print this out and bring it in to my MS-fanboi boss tomorrow, hoping to continue to build my case for migrating. Why is it that the Europeans embrace Linux so readily, while here in git'er'dun land it's so often viewed like the plague?
(ob. gentoo joke) Plus, they'll be more effective in their jobs if they're not sitting around, waiting for their packages to compi
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Anyway, maybe they're switching because it just makes sense financially?
A more interesting question is, what is keeping the US government from switching? Are they more deeply locked-in or are they more willing to throw some money toward
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But Mr N isn't a friend with any MS guy that I know. (And Balmer didn't give him a Xbox for Christmas, so it's maybe why french government is switching so fast...)
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If there were any French OS's, Linux wouldn't have made it.
The pic that came with the story on Yahoo (Score:1)
I'm guessing that many Microsofties (Mee-crow-soft in French) would love to be searched by one of them.
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oblig. monty python reference (Score:1)
Never thought I would say this but ... (Score:1)
meh! (Score:1)