lørdag 9. juli 2005, 23:36, skrev Sergio Talens-Oliag: > Sadly that means that a lot of offers will be based on the > commercial distributions (I've heard rumours about Novell and the > message from Quim about Ubuntu)
Not necessarily. The three regions in Spain that runs, or gonna run a Linux-distro in their schools, have done that based on a customisation of Debian. The same is the situation in Munich[1][2]. To make this possible, you have to ha business skills that not allays is common in the free software community. The reason for this is almost entirely a demographic issue, where most of the free software developers are under 30 years old, and you sometimes need more experience with business that comes as a result of experience in real life businesses. Sometimes the skills needed also "contradicts" how software is bought traditionally. The costumer believes that they have to buy the software, when free software could be "sold" with a maintainance agreement. People that buy software don't always know about open innovation, and how this could be done. [1] http://news.zdnet.co.uk/0,39020330,39195204,00.htm [2] http://europa.eu.int/idabc/en/document/3356/336 [3] http://europa.eu.int/idabc/en/document/4403/469 [4] http://harvardbusinessonline.hbsp.harvard.edu/b02/en/common/item_detail.jhtml?id=8377 Thanks Knut Yrvin

