Next Saturday (September 20th) is Software Freedom Day:
Software Freedom Day (SFD) is a worldwide celebration of Free and Open Source Software (FOSS). Our goal in this celebration is to educate the worldwide public about of the benefits of using high quality FOSS in education, in government, at home, and in business — in short, everywhere!
There are various get togethers happening around the world to celebrate – here are all the UK ones. If you’d like to know more about free software, this video from Stephen Fry is a pretty nice start:
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Other things you might like to do include tracking down your local Linux User Group – who can help and advise you on any issues you are having – and actually installing some open source software on your computer. Here’s some quick suggestions:
- GIMP (image editing)
- Audacity (audio editing)
- PDFCreator (creates, er, PDFs)
- FIlezilla (FTP
- Firefox (browser)
- Thunderbird (email client)
- GNUCash (accounting)
- Scribus (DTP)
- Nvu – (WYSIWYG web page editing)
- RSSOwl (News reader)
- Pidgin (multi-protocol IM client)
- 7-Zip (archiving)
How else could you support or celebrate software freedom day?
For the first time in maybe more than ten years, I don’t have a machine running Windows in my possession. Last week, my Vista-running Acer laptop stopped working. Windows just wouldn’t load. It gave me a load of options to restore things to a previous state of affairs, only, because it couldn’t find the driver for my C: drive, there was no previous state of affairs. And there wasn’t any option to restore the machine back to factory settings, no restore CD, no Vista install CD, nothing.