Thanks for the reply :D
Like I said in the last reply, my university (like many others in Europe, and
all around the world), are only around the idea of getting a job, and they
don't teach us any more how to program (or anything else), but how to use the
tool that we will mostly use when arriving to the market, and this is why we
have young people that are not interested in what they are doing but can have
better grades than others...
In my opinion if the Free Software Movement wants to be more strong it needs
more alternative software. I know that this is some stupid conclusion that
everyone knows, but I think that this must be better organized, like for
example, RMS on his response to my email told me about a Portuguese Free
Software Movement, and, to be honest, I've already searched in the web I
didn't found anything like that :S...
There is no entity that I could send an email talking about my problem that
could take an action directly in the "field". And even if there was any,
would they have enough resources ?... Could they help me (or anyone else here
in Portugal with the same problem) or would they need more help before
anything ?
That is the real question... We have alternatives ! But they are not known by
the people. And the better example I can give you is that, when I was younger
and got my first computer with Internet and my first Gnu/Linus Distribution
(Ubuntu), using it daily was very painful even when using Proprietary
Software :S.. But now I can just take an USB-Pen with Trisquel or even
Parabola, install it, and be sure that I can do all that I've already done
before :D And this is awesome :D But it is only a beginning ^_^