|
 Brazilian authorities
have in several occasions praised the
open-source operating system known as Linux. Linux is
the best-known alternative to Microsoft's Windows and Brazil
is its poster child. Brazilian top technology officials talk about
creating, in South America, a "continent of open source."
by: Émerson
Luís
Data from Brazil's Education Ministry and IBGE (Instituto Brasileiro de Geografia
e EstatísticaBrazilian Institute of Geography and Statistics)
reveal that 10 years after the Internet became popular in the First World,
92 percent of all 180,000 public schools in Brazil have no access to the Internet.
Worse yet, half of these don't have even a telephone line.
In an effort to make up
for lost time, the Brazilian government now wants to put in place a program
that would democratize Internet and bring it to the masses in the schools.
Strangely enough, a program created to spread the Internet throughout Brazil,
the Fust (Fundo de Universalização dos Serviços de ComunicaçãoFund
for the Universalization of Communication Services) has money that hasn't
been used due to bureaucratic snags.
The main problem seems
to be the price of the software, read Microsoft software. Pedro Jaime Ziller,
the president of Anatel (Agência Nacional de TelecomunicaçõesTelecommunications
National Agency) once again has stressed Lula's administration's position
in favor of open source software.
Last year, the Brazilian
federal government had already announced a three-year program in which 80
percent of all computers in state businesses and institutions would be required
to use the open source operation system Linux in place of the present Windows.
At that time, the president
of Brazil's National Institute of Information Technology, Sérgio Amadeu
da Silveira, talked about the government's purpose: "The goal of the
migration is to save money by finding alternatives to expensive proprietary
licenses. We are not just going to do a hasty migration. Our main concern
is the security and the trust of our citizens." He also gave an inkling
of possible hurdles ahead: "The biggest resistance to any change comes
from the existing cultural inertia."
Speaking at the opening
of Telexpo, on March 2nd, in São Paulo, Ziller complained
about the money Brazil has been spending with software: "Concerning user
license alone, our country is bleeding at a rate of US$ 1 billion dollars
a year. To keep insisting on training users in these systems will only contribute
to make deeper the hole in which our foreign exchange has sunk."
Brazilian authorities
have in several occasions praised the open-source operating system known as
Linux, a software whose code is available for free. Any programmer can customize
the software to fit its own purposes. Linux is the best-known alternative
to Microsoft's Windows, an operating system that runs in the overwhelming
majority of computers all over the world. Brazilian top technology officials
have already talked about creating in South America, a "continent of
open source."
Fust, the federal fund
created to spread communication technology throughout Brazil, has close to
US$ 1 billion that never was used. The resources have been available since
the previous administration, but the money cannot be used due to legal problems.
Some people questioned Fust's plan to setup most of the computers with Windows
systems and took their case to Justice.
The Brazilian government
plan is to bring in the next few years broadband Internet to 185,000 public
schools, 63,000 health facilities and 5,000 public libraries across the country.
Small town city halls would also benefit from the national program.
A recent article by BBC
World Service estimated that open source systems will soon be working in up
to one third of all computers in Latin America. Brazil is leading this trend
towards Linuxation. And Linux has become a hit not only among government officials
trying to survive with ever shrinking budgets, but also private schools and
businesses.
Even favela children
learning the rudiments of computing are being instructed in Linux powered
boxes. An increasing xenophobic mentality mainly against the US is also contributing
to the drive from Microsoft, seen as an American monopolistic juggernaut,
to Linux and other open-source software.
 |