El día 28 de enero de 2009 5:12, Matt Needles escribió:
> Luis Vasquez wrote:
>>
>> Medellin, Enero 25 de 2009
>>
>> Hola, Comunidad
>>
>> Solo quería enviarles esta nota, que de veras reafirma el " ...
>> feeling..." o " ... palpito .." que  hemos sentido en estos días .
>>
>> En esta dirección:
>> ://www.daniweb.com/blogs/entry3857.htm
>>
>> Cordialmente,
>>  Luis e. Vásquez r.
>> OpenOffice.org Volunteer & Support
>>
>
> Por favor, dénos una idea de qué se trata. La dirección dada no es válida.
>
> Gracias,
> Matt Needles
>
Hola Comunidad.

Parece por momentos que se satura el server, así que copio el artículo
completo y que cada uno saque sus propias conclusiones.

Jan 25th, 2009, 2:21 pm
There are number of factors coming together that lead me to believe
that open source's moment is right now, today, this year. Open source
already runs so many things and just last week as Barack Obama was
elected the 44th president of the United States, he asked Scott
McNealy of Sun to prepare a report on open source technologies as a
first step toward exploring the use of open source in government.

When you combine this with the current economic crisis, the maturation
of open source products in general, and a willingness to explore FOSS
(free and open source software) as a reasonable alternative, these
factors are coming together at this one moment in time and it's time
for Open Source to step up.

The Products

Consider MySQL and Apache's host of projects, which are used in
businesses every day of the year. Alfresco is a serious player in
content management to name but a few excellent enterprise-class open
source products. On the desktop Firefox and Thunderbird are as likely
to be found as Internet Explorer and Outlook or Outlook Express these
days on a Windows machine and OpenOffice is reasonable, free
alternative to Microsoft Office.

The Economy

The economy is a mess. IT budgets are tight. Companies are looking for
ways to cut costs. Now is the time to look at open source.

As I've written here before, it's not free, but it does greatly reduce
the cost of software purchases because you are no longer burdened by
expensive licensing requirements. You still have all of the other
costs related to implementation, maintenance, training and so forth.
There are always costs associated with implementing any software, but
this gives you a flexible, lower-cost alternative and many
organizations will be taking a closer look if they haven't already.

The Government

President Obama has promised to find ways to reduce the cost of
running the federal government and open source is a way to do that.
Chances are there are lots of open source projects running in the
government today, but if you put the weight of the presidential bully
pulpit behind it, it's going to have an impact. And the government is
a huge customer, which will be looking at open source businesses, not
just the free downloads. They will want support and services and
training and the business ecosystem around open source should appeal
to Obama and his grassroots approach to governing.

Of course, it's important to remember that the large commercial
software companies are also powerful economic entities that create
lots of jobs, and they are not going to go away or take this lightly,
but it could put some pressure on these companies to put some of their
products under open source or reduce costs. But it could also put them
into fighting mode. High tech companies were good to Obama and he will
likely avoid biting the hand that fed him.

It's Coming Together

Just last week Alfresco released Alfresco Labs 3, perhaps the most
comprehensive open source content management system ever released.
Last year saw the releases of Firefox 3 and OpenOffice 3.

Open source tools are maturing. They have real use cases in real homes
and businesses. All of these factors lead me to believe the time has
come for open source. Maybe it's already arrived, but with a push from
the United States government combined with a soft economy, it could
truly be the moment for open source to flourish.

-- 
Alejandro Rene "El Corrector Empedernido" Fernandez Blanco
http://technopolios.blogspot.com/

¿Conoces algún sitio del gobierno de tu País que no respete los
Estándares Web? Reportalo con sus datos (País, Estado / Provincia,
Ciudad, Organismo y de quién depende), en
http://technopolios.blogspot.com/2008/08/sitios-web-gubernamentales-y-estndares.html

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