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Open source textbooks writing experiment in italian school

  • http://stop.zona-m.net; By M. Fioretti (Posted by mfioretti on Mar 27, 2010 1:30 AM EDT)
  • Groups: Community
Fermi is a high school that isn't afraid of experiments. This year, besides a project to build a mini-rocket to be launched in 2011 and setting up a photovoltaic lab, they're trying to solve with open licenses a problem that costs every italian students from 300 to 500 Euros each year, the cost of textbooks, and are inviting other schools to participate.

Cash for software clunkers? No, thanks, unless it promotes Free formats and software

  • http://stop.zona-m.net; By M. Fioretti (Posted by mfioretti on Mar 25, 2010 6:42 AM EDT)
  • Groups: Microsoft
The Italian ICT industry is in dire straits. In order to save it, Assinform (association of the bigger Italian ICT companies, whose members include Microsoft Italy and many other multinationals) just proposed a public incentives program to "finance the replacement of obsolete software with advanced applications made to order for the actual needs of the "Made in Italy" companies" No, thanks. Unless you do it in a way that does bring lots of work to Italian programmers and make their customers and all taxpayers save much more money than any other incentive program: mandating the adoption of non proprietary formats and protocols.

Microsoft, where did you get those data about ODF?

Six months ago I got a request to check what Microsoft had said in a report about Italian public administrations rejecting OpenDocument as mandatory format, so I tried to contact MS Italy to know more. Since I'm still waiting for them, and in general Microsoft asking for "file format neutrality" is a bit ridiculous, I've decided to ask again, in public

More than 100 italian political candidates support FOSS

  • Stop! Zona-m; By M. Fioretti (Posted by mfioretti on Mar 17, 2010 6:55 PM EDT)
  • Groups: Community
More than 100 candidates to Italian regional elections that will take place at the end of this month officially support Free Software and have committed to actively promote it if elected. Many of them are in smaller parties with smaller probability to get a seat, but for Italy it's a good result anyway.

Junior High School students build their own Ubuntu computers

A course set up by a Junior High public school in Monza, Northern Italy, involves students who find difficult to focus on theoretical, talk-only lessons by teaching them how to build their own computer and install Ubuntu on it. A few participants went back to Windows after the course, but the majority liked Ubuntu so much to stick to it.

Italian entrepreneur fights proprietary file formats in Public Administrations

  • Stop! Zona-m; By M. Fioretti (Posted by mfioretti on Feb 27, 2010 12:05 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story
I sent a formal complaint against my Chamber of Commerce to the regional Ombudsman! Why do they insists on forcing Businesses to buy proprietary software with their own money, even when the Open Source alternative work just fine and some of those proprietary software programs are sold by Companies who invoice abroad, in ways that redistribute almost none of those profits in our Country?

When and how can Free Software really save public money?

  • Stop! Zona-m; By M. Fioretti (Posted by mfioretti on Feb 15, 2010 12:56 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story
when a Public Administration uses it to reform the way it works, to solve the problem it actually has instead of those authors of proprietary software _think_ it has

A family's experience with Free Software, the Internet and autism

A mother explains how and why her and her autistic son really like Ubuntu, but are still forced to use Windows in certain moments

Deluded by Italian Open Legislation initiative

Italian law proposal to defend Net Neutrality and promote Free Software has a hole that would make impossible for Public Administrations and Universities to get rid of proprietary file formats and software, even if they wanted to do it

Enough with this "FreeSoftware is communist" myth! Please!

No, really. As trollish and dumb as they may seem, you still get such reactions. And the problem is that they may damage Free Software more now than ten years ago, when almost nobody knew what Free Software is anyway, so here are a few recent facts. http://stop.zona-m.net/node/87

Free Software and homeschooling: a match made in heaven?

  • http://stop.zona-m.net; By Marco Fioretti (Posted by mfioretti on Dec 28, 2009 11:12 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: Interview; Groups: Community
Free Software is widely used in education due to its lower cost and huge flexibility. Homeschooling is relatively popular in the USA and other countries. One would expect Free Software to be very popular among homeschoolers, due to their own philosophy: how could an homeschooling advocate not love software that is all about being "free as in freedom" and doing things by yourself?

Free Software, Open Data give more opportunities to young Kosovars

  • stop.zona-m.net; By Marco Fioretti (Posted by mfioretti on Dec 19, 2009 1:11 PM EDT)
  • Groups: Community
Kosova is a country with many serious problem and one of the highest percentages of young people. Some of them are using and advocating Free Software and Open geographic data as a tool to give young Kosovars more opportunities and a brighter future.

Most FOSS users don't contribute to FOSS? No problem!

  • stop.zona-m.net; By M. Fioretti (Posted by mfioretti on Dec 12, 2009 6:44 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: Editorial
Getting upset because less and less FOSS users contribute to FOSS in any way is not just a totally unrealistic reaction, it can be counterproductive. The article explains why.

A lighter OpenOffice for all children... and their parents!

OOo4Kids is a fork of OpenOffice that can run in much less RAM and has a much simpler user interface. This is an interview to one of the developers

One hour with the XO laptop in a Nepali school

  • Stop! Zona-m; By M. Fioretti (Posted by mfioretti on Nov 13, 2009 2:40 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story; Groups: OLPC
Last week I visited a Nepali primary school which is using the OLPC laptop. Here is what I found out.

Mother explains why everybody should know Linux

  • Stop! Zona-m; By M. Fioretti (Posted by mfioretti on Oct 16, 2009 11:20 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: Interview
October 24th, 2009, will be Linux Day in Italy. You may think that such events are only relevant for software geeks, but that's not the case at all.

Ex-inmates apply open source to rehabilitation

Almost 70% of released inmates end up returning to prison. A new project uses Linux and cooperative development techniques to train ex-inmates for personal and family life.

Open Letter: How the FOSS Community May Help Disabled Users

Accessibility is crucial for FOSS to succeed. Here is a practical proposal for all FOSS supporters worldwide.

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