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Re: [Fsfe-uk] OFT visit


From: Ramanan Selvaratnam
Subject: Re: [Fsfe-uk] OFT visit
Date: Fri, 06 Jun 2003 11:28:36 +0100
User-agent: Mozilla/5.0 (X11; U; Linux i686; en-US; rv:1.4b) Gecko/20030507

Hi,

I must admit first that the schools related threads are a bit beyond me.
But I want to introduce someone invovled with education plus comment on few issues we might be missing.

ian wrote:

On Fri, 2003-06-06 at 01:01, MJ Ray wrote:
Andrew Atkinson <address@hidden> wrote:
[...] All the result can be is that M$ removes
the school agreement making schools pay the corporate rate.
No, the right result could be that the licence fees are calculated
based on machines using the licensed code, rather than just on number
of machines.
This is the situation schoolchildren will face when they grow up to be adults. Correct? Surely there must be consideration to reality and fairness (in economical terms) in education policies. Is it possible to get the message of free software to these policy makers too.

Then free software sellers can get equivalent access to
the schools and schools can save money by not paying for things they
don't use.
Not quite sure how it works, but the OFT could declare MSSA unlawful and

MSSA == M$ Schools Agreement ....correct?

therefore it has to stop. But then MS could replace it with a lawful
agreement. If the OFT judged that bulk disounts in essence were a loss
leader to education to shut out competition they could regulate the
price up or down although I think that less likely.
Is there any document up on the internet explaining this in detail or is it something that is being currently campaigned for?
Sounds very reasonable though (any such moves against snake oil merchants ).

Making them charge
450 quid a station for office would certainly migrate a lot of achools
to OO.org!

...and many other very capable software that value many freedoms of the future generation. This will be exceptionally good for local SMEs providing such solutions. I can think of few good reasons w.r.t customisability and better education straight away.


If MS use this case as a reason to get rid of the Schools Agreement,
I will be wondering whether they were already planning to do that and
just found a handy scapegoat.

And then Campus agreement? Don't think so. Then there are enterprise
agreements. If that happened their would be a major rebellion by
customers and gov would have to foot the bill in the public sector. It
would migrate people to free software quicker than anything but it would
be painful for a while. Not likely to happen IMHO.

I'm a little confused by your later claim.  How has MS requiring you to
pay for machines not running their software had any effect on their
competitors' pricing?  Surely whatever the competitor does will have no
effect because the school has already bought MS?

I think he means there is an incentive to get low cost software into
schools as a loss leader to hook the kids. This isn't likely to be the
case except with the few big corporates such as MS Adobe et al. It also
block out free software and reduces the reason to develop alternatives
so I don't think the argument is that cut and dried. Could well be bad
in the long term. Drug dealers give their stuff away free so they can
charge a premium when the client is hooked. Seems to me a comparable
situation.

As a teacher I feel that it is my job to show what is out there and try to
give an unbiased view of the advantages and disadvantages (at times this is
very hard)
Bias always exists.
Bias towards solutions that respect our freedom to share and cooperate is very important....more than the need for software even.

Put more practically ....
I will want my children to learn from every aspect of school life not just learn some things that are taught in 'morals class' at 10 am and then be forced to get involved in contradictory immoral practices at 11 am in the 'IT class'.

another example ....a kid, through many possible reasons requires the same software used in school at home on the same family machine....I wonder how non-free software will be able to help out here...

We can only hope to compensate for it or reduce it
to insignificant error noise.  Anyone claiming otherwise can have a free
lecture about statistics when I get some more tuits.  ;-)

If free software thrives you will be able to demonstrate say several WPs
all legally in a library - in fact with all using XML open file
standards the pupils could choose to use the one they prefer and pass
documents to each other unhindered. This is an educational goal worth
going through some pain to achieve.
Regards,

Ramanan

PS: Simon, this is the list for <www.affs.org.uk>





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