Date:26/10/2008 URL: 
http://www.thehindu.com/2008/10/26/stories/2008102655171100.htm 

National 

At last, a desi PC software system 

Anand Parthasarathy 

BANGALORE: The personal computer has been around for over 25 years - but 
Indians have had to run them with 'imported' software, whether Microsoft's 
Windows,
Apple's Mac OS or one or other flavour of the Open Source Linux.

Finally, we have something we can call India's own PC Operating System: The 
Chennai unit of the Centre for Development of Advanced Computing (CDAC), led
by its Director, M.R. Rajagopalan, has put together BOSS or Bharat Operating 
System Solutions, an Open Source distribution of what is called GNU/Linux.
The desktop version no 3.0 recently released supports 18 Indian languages and 
includes a host of features to enhance its utility: a 3-D desktop; support
for Bluetooth wireless devices; a document reader for the PDF format and 
application tools in all Indian languages.

It is also compatible with Bharateeya OS, the Office tool set for Indian 
languages that CDAC brought out a couple of years ago to "Indianise" the 
OpenOffice
suite.

Four States - Tamil Nadu, Kerala, Bihar and Chhattisgarh - have been proactive 
in deciding to standardise their e-governance applications around BOSS. For
lay users, who want to give it a try, the software can be downloaded from

http://www.bosslinux.in/
 - but CDAC also promises to send it on a DVD to anyone who writes in to or 
calls at any of its CDAC- BOSS support centres in Kolkata, Bangalore, Mohali,
New Delhi, Noida, Thiruvananthapuram, Pune, Hyderabad and Mumbai. Addresses can 
be found at the website.

On DVD drive 

To help those who don't want to disturb their existing system, while giving 
BOSS a tryout, it can also be run from the DVD drive without hard disk 
installation.
Give it a try - it is not perfect; like so many Linux realisations, it might 
not work with every peripheral you have, at first shot; but it is the most
meaningful product to come out of the Indian software industry in decades - and 
let's recognise it, this is work that a government department had to do.


It may be one small step for CDAC's Chennai team; it might turn out to be a 
giant leap for desi PC users - if enough Indians embrace it.
To unsubscribe send a message to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with the subject unsubscribe.

To change your subscription to digest mode or make any other changes, please 
visit the list home page at
  http://accessindia.org.in/mailman/listinfo/accessindia_accessindia.org.in

Reply via email to