Some of you will remember Kwangju as the industrial city at the heart of the
bloody 1980 labor riots that killed several hundred people

http://www.cnn.com/SPECIALS/2000/korea/story/kwangju/

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http://times.hankooki.com/lpage/tech/200603/kt2006032117045611780.htm

Kwangju Becomes Linux City
    

By Kim Tae-gyu
Staff Reporter


The Korean government plans to pick Kwangju this month as the nation's first
``Linux City,'' where open-source software will become the mainstream
programs.

The Ministry of Information and Communication, which is in charge of the
project of boosting Linux, Tuesday revealed the plan about Kwangju located
in the southwestern part of the country.

``Kwangju was the sole bidder to meet the March 10 deadline to take up the
Linux City scheme. Our screening panel has examined the city's bid,'' said
Lee Do-kyo, director at the ministry.

``Our panel asked the city to complement its bidding documents in some
segments. Kwangju is likely to be selected as the Linux City this week or
next since it is the lone candidate,'' Lee added.

Originally, Taejon was the self-proclaimed hopeful to become the nation's
open-source paradise but the city failed to present the application ahead of
the deadline.

Should Kwangju be handpicked as a Linux City, it will be required to install
open-source software as a main operating system of their infrastructures, a
job which the ministry will support with funds and technologies.

In the long run, Kwangju will have to migrate most of its public desktop and
notebook computers away from the Windows program of Microsoft, the world's
foremost producer of software.

``The test city will prompt other regions to follow suit via demonstrating
that Linux can be the go-to operating system without any technological
glitches or security woes,'' Lee said.

To that end, the ministry seeks to invest 1 billion won ($1 million),
although the amount may change depending on the situation.

Together with Linux City, the government will also choose a ``Linux
University,'' another test bed for the emerging software that is an
alternative to the proprietary Microsoft Windows.

``Multiple domestic ivory towers applied for the Linux University initiative
and we will announce which university wins out later this month,'' Lee said.

Linux refers to open-source, free software that emerges as an operating
system alternative to the closed-door Windows program, which is flat-out
dominating the global market.

The underlying source codes of the new-borne software are open to the public
so that worldwide programmers are able to seamlessly upgrade them.

The attempt to build up a Linux-ruled area is not a first. Munich of Germany
is looking to embrace Linux and open-source packages on its 14,000 PCs in
place of the Microsoft operating system and office automation suites. 


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