Archive for June, 2007

Venezuela to power up Linux development in Sud America

Please excuse me for the big copy & paste from this page, it’s worth it:

Mérida, June 12, 2007 (venezuelanalysis.com)— The Venezuelan government of President Hugo Chavez announced the launch of their “Bolivarian Computers” last week, consisting of four different models produced in Venezuela with Chinese technology. The new computers will run the open-source Linux operating system and will first be used inside the government “missions” and state companies and institutions but eventually are expected to be sold across Venezuela and Latin America.

Venezuela’s President Hugo Chavez presented the new machines to the public last week at an event in the state of Falcon as he donated them to a school there. The new computers are produced by the joint venture VIT (Venezuela de Industria Tecnológica), which is owned by the Chinese company Lang Chao and the Venezuelan Ministry of Light Industry and Commerce.

“The price of other similar brands is US$ 930, and the price of our computer is US$ 690, almost 40% less,” explained President Chavez. “But, in addition, it has an added value, given that it comes with open-source software and a three year guarantee, while other brands only offer one year.”

Production of the models began in the end of 2006 and the first 1,619 units were distributed to students of Integral Medicine in the government program Mission Sucre. Chavez promised last October to give a computer to every one of the 11,100 students in the second year of the new medical education program Integral Community Medicine (MIC) and began to follow through with that promise last May.

“I feel excited because the president came through with his promise, and that makes us be more responsible with the program, more dedicated, since it is a big help that motivates us to keep moving forward,” said one student.

Units have also been given to the Urban Transportation Fund, the Agrarian Bank, the national mail service Ipostel, and the Experimental University of Simon Rodriguez.

And although the first units have been donated to the public sector, the new Bolivarian computers will also be sold inside Venezuela and exported.

“We are working with cooperatives and small companies to form our own distribution network,” said the manager of sales Eduardo Hernandez. “It’s a slow process. This month we have already completed the formation (of a distribution network) in Caracas and by the end of the year we will have distribution and technical support throughout the whole country.”

The computer factory is located on the Paraguana Peninsula in the state of Falcon and has an annual capacity of 150,000 units. For this year the factory is expected to assemble 80,000 units and 6,000 laptop computers.

Until now Venezuela has always imported computers both from well-known brands and generic brands from the developed world. With this new venture the Venezuelan government hopes to diversify national production, integrate national productive chains, and work towards technological independence for the country.

According to the web page of the new state company, VIT has the objective of “production, marketing and sale of technological products, with an emphasis in manufacturing and assembling computers and accessories. Our efforts are also focused on national export, with a future projection to the international market.”

By the end of the year, the intention is to begin to locally produce some of the technology in order to substitute some of the imported components used in the assembly of the machines for components produced in Venezuela. In order to do this, the government has built installations for research and development in order to design the components inside the same factory.

The company is offering 3 different desktop models and one laptop with a price range of US$ 405 (Bs. 870,750) to US$ 1,400 (Bs. 3,010,000). The processors will range in speed from 1.5 GHz to a 3.0 GHz Intel Pentium IV and the laptop will use a 2.0 GHz Intel Core 2 Duo processor.

With respect to the operating system, Venezuela has taken a strong position in favor of open-source software in order to “promote technological development” and help “reach technological independence.” For this reason the computers will use the open-source Linux, but the components are also compatible with the Windows operating system.

By: Chris Carlson - Venezuelanalysis.com

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3D rendering requires money

Take a look on this:

It is a sample rendering from a blender demo scene.
It took about one hour to render it on my 2ghz Core2 Duo with Gentoo x86_64 and Blender 2.44 (64bit).

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Is Italy going to enter the CG movie industry?

When it happens it is really hard to believe what’s happening. But sometimes it really happens: looks like an Italian animation company, Rainbow S.p.A., got a huge success with a product for little girls and initially expanded the success from 2d animation to toys and other merchandise acquiring a market share of about 1.5 Euro billions.
This huge success made them take an even more interesting decision: they entered the computer graphics movie industry creating the RainbowCGI animation studio. This is driving them in direct competition with giants like Pixar, Walt Disney and Dreamworks, we have to wait for next Christmas to know which one will win.
Now I would like to know which operating system is powering up their render farm… ;-)

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How to make money with open source

I just read an interesting point of view from James Stauffer’s blog. It’s interesting because it isn’t the usual developer side of the problem but the users’ one.
Making it simple: free software isn’t perfect, many times it doesn’t even get close to the features list of the closed software. How can we solve this problem?

If 50% of companies that buy commerical database systems instead used an open-source database and spent 25% of the savings advancing that open-source database then it would all work out well.
The one difficulty is getting the software customers organized to do this. It really helps if someone can jump start the project so that other companies can see the value.

Would you rather spend $100 for for Windows or get Ubuntu and spend $25 supporting it?

In my opinion this is just a dream: you must keep in mind that this kind of decisions is taken by people who pretend to force the world to their own vision built at the business schools. You can’t win when your opponent’s brain is ROM-powered…
So, is free software destined to lose in some areas? No. We only have to move the precedent decision from business-schools-guys to the Parliaments. European Union (where I live) is already sponsoring many software projects, they only should take this to a completely upper level. Would you pay the rent for your house forever if you could borrow the money from a bank to buy the house?
It’s just an investment on ourself and our future, I don’t really understand why we should pay a tax on computers to software houses like Microsoft, as a European Citizen it really looks like paying a tax to the USA.

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Stallman @ La Sapienza

Io non c’ero ma la registrazione è stata pubblicata su Google Video:

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