Since I have been asked to give the "Welcome Address"
during the Linux 10th Anniversary Celebration on Saturday,
I have decided to welcome all attendees to the celebration
and to tell them what Linux is all about, since everyone
seems to be busy making some technical presentation that
we forgot that not everyone who will attend will be
Linux-savvy.  So here is my attenpt at a "Welcome Address and
Intro to Linux".  Please email you remarks, changes, etc.
privately to me.  Thanks -- [EMAIL PROTECTED]

=====

Linux Tenth Anniversary Celebration
Philippine Linux Users' Group
August 25, 2001
Venue: Asia Pacific College


WELCOME ADDRESS

Welcome to the tenth anniversary celebration of the birth
of the Linux operating system.  Linux's birth was announced
August 25 ten years ago in Finland by its author Linus Torvalds,
who at that time was a computer science graduate student at the
University of Helsinki.  The Philippine Linux Users' Group
is very happy to be celebrating Linux's tenth anniversary
with you today.

What is Linux?  It is an "operating system" -- the software program
that manages the hardware resources of the computer, and allows
human users cooperative access to those resources.  Like
the popular Windows operating system, Linux is multi-tasking --
several processes can be running at the same time -- the CPU
gives each process a time-slice in which to run.  Unlike Windows,
Linux is multi-user -- several users can be logged into the
computer at the same time and each user may be running several
processes.

Linux is robust -- it does not hang.  If properly maintained,
it runs reliably and faithfully, working everyday 24 hours a day,
seven days a week, year in year out without fail. It is not affected
by popular viruses like "I Love You" and "Code Red" which have
brought down thousands of Windows machines on the Internet.  On the
contrary, it has been used to control the spread of such
Windowphilic viruses.

Linux is free -- you do not buy a license to use it.  You download
it for free from the Internet, or copy it from a friend's CD,
and all these are legal.  You are licensed to use it for free,
to study the source code and improve on it, as long as your
improvements, like the original on which it is based, are made
available in source code for free.  This "freedom to study and modify
software" is a model of software development that has proved
workable over the past ten years.  It guarrantees that Linux and
similar software will continue to improve and will be available
for free.

If it is so good and it is free, how come people do not use it on
their office PCs and their notebooks?  I think the problem here
is inertia.  People have been using Word, Excel and Powerpoint on
Windows PCs, which by the way are excellent software, that it takes
time to switch to new software like Linux.  It is like having a
comfortable and working marriage to an expensive ugly weak partner,
when there is a beautiful and robust partner waiting to be taken
for free.

So today, we of the Philippine Linux Users' Group and you our friends
celebrate the tenth anniversary of Linux.  We take this occasion
to thank the people who have made Linux what it is:  Linus Torvalds,
Allan Cox, and all 200 programmers(*) who currently maintain it,
Richard Stallman for gcc and emacs and GPL, and UC Berkeley,
Eric Allman, the Apache Group, Larry Wall, and all open source authors,
for believing that software should be free.

On the occasion of Linux's tenth anniversary, we welcome you
to this celebration of "freedom".

Enjoy!

/*
** Pablo Manalastas <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
** President 1994?-1998?, Philippine Linux Users' Group
*/

(*) NOFMAINTAINERS=$( cat /usr/src/linux/MAINTAINERS \
| grep "P:" | sort | uniq | grep -v "Person" | wc -l )

_
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