Open source makes its way into educational institutions
By
siliconindia news bureau
Hyderabad: For all those engineering students who have to put up with installing and uninstalling various software pertaining to their course of study, a new "free software Operating System" developed by 'e-Swecha', a variant of Linux, aims at rectifying the quandary students would be put through all over the country.
Richard Stallman, the founder of the Free Software Foundation and GNU Project, will launch the e-Swecha initiative, on Wednesday, wherein about 21,000 computers will see migration from present OS to e-Swecha across the state in the next one-month, they said.
JNTU,Hyderabad has already taken an initiative to promote the usage of free software in colleges and has stood by its word for transformation of the current OS to e-Swecha OS, they added.
Stallman said Kerala initiated the process of switching computers in its public schools to free software in association with Free Software Foundation of India.
"Nearly 700 high schools in Karnataka and about 400 in West Bengal have also switched over to free software, but nothing substantial had been done in AP, so far," Stallman said.
Richard Stallman, the founder of the Free Software Foundation and GNU Project, will launch the e-Swecha initiative, on Wednesday, wherein about 21,000 computers will see migration from present OS to e-Swecha across the state in the next one-month, they said.
JNTU,Hyderabad has already taken an initiative to promote the usage of free software in colleges and has stood by its word for transformation of the current OS to e-Swecha OS, they added.
Stallman said Kerala initiated the process of switching computers in its public schools to free software in association with Free Software Foundation of India.
"Nearly 700 high schools in Karnataka and about 400 in West Bengal have also switched over to free software, but nothing substantial had been done in AP, so far," Stallman said.
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