Dear all,

I am working on an article to map the FOSS landscape in India. I spent some 
time going through archives of the various groups / Wikipedia pages and 
websites. What I see is a fragmented group of individual enthusiasts and 
contributors, either working individually or in companies that support / use 
FOSS and of course having a lot of flame wars. The Linux Archives India have a 
tag line "All The Dirty Laundry Unfit to Wash in Public"

From what I gather, the PC magazines of the mid-90s were critical in getting 
FOSS (via Linux) in India and there were a few mailing lists that cropped up in 
the late 90s (the earliest archives I found are from 98. This list itself was 
formed in 2001). I guess there were some fights about naming (who owns ILUG v/s 
Bharat LUG etc) and the mailing lists were mostly about sharing tips regarding 
installation, drivers and networking troubleshooting.

In Chennai CDAC was established in 1998 and they started promoting FOSS in 
local universities and then branched off into NRCFOSS and launched the Bharat 
Operating System (BOSS) in 2007 (anyone using it??) that had built in 
localisation for Indian Languages. These days NRCFOSS is supposed to be working 
on a “SAAS based delivery stack for cloud computing” but can’t find any 
evidence of it. (Your tax payer money!!)

In Bangalore, the community was driven by the very inspirational Atul Chitnis 
and Kenneth Gonsalves who got some “movement” going on with the FOSS.IN events 
(from 2001 to 2004) which I have heard (second hand) that were instrumental in 
introducing FOSS to a large number of people. I also heard they had an ugly 
spat. Bangalore is also home to VTiger CRM, a popular Open Source project (or 
is it Chennai? I heard it was run by the Zoho group, can anyone confirm?)

State of Kerala (where A is for Activism) has been on the forefront of FOSS 
implementation (atleast in the PR) and the state legislature has also moved to 
get FOSS implemented in government. As per Wikipedia FSF India was established 
in Kerala in 2001 and the movement is largely led by Satish Babu who is the 
director of ICFOSS. They seem to be the most progressive in terms of FOSS 
implementation and there are a lot of News Items on how they have successfully 
used FOSS in many Gov activities (power to them!). (Interestingly the ICFOSS 
website has a “Director” menu link instead of “About Us” as if the Director and 
the organization are the same thing!). Kerala is also the home to the formerly 
open source Fedena school ERP project, which is un updated in a while and and I 
think its not open anymore.

In Mumbai we have Nagarjuna from Homi Bhabha who runs the Gnowledge Lab from 
2007 (still can’t figure how its different from a wiki!) and has also been 
active in promoting One Laptop Per Child and other FOSS projects in India. Also 
in Mumbai is the very inspirational Krishnakant Mane who runs the GNU Khata 
project in IIT Mumbai (funded by ICFOSS?). Did not find any post on the history 
of GNU Khata but the mailing list is since 2009, so I assume it has been around 
since 2006-7? Ironically Mumbai is the only city that has some “projects” (in 
Mumbai, we do, we don’t talk) including our ERPNext (sorry for the plug) which 
was started in 2006 but the repo is from around 2008.

Speaking of Projects, the NRCFOSS website has a number of projects listed, but 
like spent tax payer money it seems to be hard to find any public repository or 
mailing list for any of them.

Also sometime, I am guessing since Facebook and mobile explosion (2007), the 
focus has moved from Linux to a more broader (and some might say evil) “Open 
Source” - note the renaming of popular blogs and events (Linux Asia is now Open 
Source India, Linuxforu is now Opensourceforu) and focus has now “shifted” to 
cloud based technologies like “OpenShift” and also there has been some movement 
in the Android space (Aakash tablet, again anyone seen the repos?). Also the 
“free thinking” community has also moved to other technologies like Python 
which have a reasonable community and some traction in the universities (SciPy).

I am not covering the commercial space yet. The Open Source India (OSI Days) 
event is happening this weekend in Bangalore and I am not sure if they even 
bother to post on these lists. Wipro has pledged to staff its Open Source Unit 
to 10,000 (yay!). And not to mention the hundreds or may be thousands of Open 
Source development shops that have sprung up all over India (esp in Delhi, 
Jaipur, Ahmedabad) servicing Open Source projects on Elance and similar and 
mostly doing HTML / CSS / PHP based customization. The poor guys who don’t get 
respect for their taste but still manage serve many small businesses and keep 
the world moving.

In terms of contributors, I see some really brilliant individual contributors 
to various projects, many of whom have now moved to the west but their names 
still crop up in mailing list archives. There is a FOSS Community of India page 
on the wikia site that has a “hall of fame” section which is sadly unmaintained 
but has a list of many individual contributors (and probably some of them are 
spammed or self-promoted)

I guess this mail itself has become the article - I am sure I have missed a 
whole bunch of important stuff so please send your comments and thoughts. 
(specially the old timers!)

Thanks!

best,
Rushabh












@rushabh_mehta
https://erpnext.com

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