On Wed, May 09, 2001 at 06:33:28PM +0100, E L Tonkin wrote:
- What about your average idiot, who thinks Windows is complicated?
And what about the generation in rising, that is beeing taught how to use non-free OS's, calling that "taught on how to use a computer"?
Obviously, free means free as in free speech in this whole mail.
I strongly feel an overwhelming majority of education, both lower and higher, (except theoretical computer science university-grade classes) is not only using only proprietary software, but is teaching only the use of proprietary software, without even letting the students know that there is software that is free.
This already lead to the ridiculous situation where some IT departments hire MSCP's for positions as ... *nix admins, because there are MSCP's on the market, but no *nix skilled admins. E.g., my school's IT department does. While GNU's Not Unix and my university's IT doesn't quite use a free OS, I'm convinced they would do the same if they were running a GNU variant.
Always taking my school's IT department as an example, these guys are basically infiltrating the whole system, gradually moving more and more of the server infrastructure to what they know how to run properly... MS Windows. I don't thing this situation is local to my school. Another university in the same city has some computers for students to use for their work. Every single computer is running MS Windows. Yes, even computer science students only have access to Windows boxes. These students are the future admins and decision makers in IT departments. The "next generation" of admins will udnerstand only Windows. Thus making the use of free software the difficult path.
There is no point in having free software if no one knows how to use it. I think we should make some efforts leading to:
- Developing free software to be used as a tool in any level of education: primaire, high school, supérieur.
- Promoting the teaching of free software use. It can't be widely used if there's no widely spread knowledge on how to use it.
- Increase the general exposure of the next generations to free software. Let them all, not just geeks, know it exists, and they have enormous benefits to reap from it.