The end of Microsoft?

Peter Hiscocks phiscock-g851W1bGYuGnS0EtXVNi6w at public.gmane.org
Tue Mar 29 14:55:57 UTC 2005




	


    Brazil: Free Software's Biggest and Best Friend

Isis Cordeiro, pointing, and Jennifer Patrochinio, right, attending a 
class on computers in Rio de Janeiro. The Brazilian government has plans 
to help millions of low-income people buy their first computers.
John Maier for The New York Times
Isis Cordeiro, pointing, and Jennifer Patrochinio, right, attending a 
class on computers in Rio de Janeiro. The Brazilian government has plans 
to help millions of low-income people buy their first computers.


*By TODD BENSON 
<http://query.nytimes.com/search/query?ppds=bylL&v1=TODD%20BENSON&fdq=19960101&td=sysdate&sort=newest&ac=TODD%20BENSON&inline=nyt-per> 
*

Published: March 29, 2005

	



John Maier for The New York Times
A city-run center in a poor section of São Paulo is one of several 
efforts in Brazil to give people wider access to computers.



SÃO PAULO, Brazil, March 28 - Since taking office two years ago, 
President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva has turned Brazil into a tropical 
outpost of the free software movement.

Looking to save millions of dollars in royalties and licensing fees, Mr. 
da Silva has instructed government ministries and state-run companies to 
gradually switch from costly operating systems made by Microsoft 
<http://www.nytimes.com/redirect/marketwatch/redirect.ctx?MW=http://custom.marketwatch.com/custom/nyt-com/html-companyprofile.asp&symb=MSFT> 
and others to free operating systems, like Linux. On Mr. da Silva's 
watch, Brazil has also become the first country to require any company 
or research institute that receives government financing to develop 
software to license it as open-source, meaning the underlying software 
code must be free to all.

Now Brazil's government looks poised to take its free software campaign 
to the masses. And once again Microsoft may end up on the sidelines.

By the end of April, the government plans to roll out a much ballyhooed 
program called PC Conectado, or Connected PC, aimed at helping millions 
of low-income Brazilians buy their first computers.

And if the president's top technology adviser gets his way, the program 
may end up offering computers with only free software, including the 
operating system, handpicked by the government instead of giving 
consumers the option of paying more for, say, a basic edition of 
Microsoft Windows.

"For this program to be viable, it has to be with free software," said 
Sérgio Amadeu, president of Brazil's National Institute of Information 
Technology, the agency that oversees the government's technology 
initiatives. "We're not going to spend taxpayers' money on a program so 
that Microsoft can further consolidate its monopoly. It's the 
government's responsibility to ensure that there is competition, and 
that means giving alternative software platforms a chance to prosper."

Microsoft has offered to provide a simplified, discounted version of 
Windows for the program. Though a final decision on which software to 
install has been delayed several times, as has the program's rollout, 
Mr. Amadeu and some other government officials have publicly criticized 
Microsoft's proposal, calling the version's abilities too limited.

Still, Microsoft has not given up just yet. The company, which declined 
to make an executive available for an interview, said in a statement 
that it was still "working with the PC Conectado project to see if 
there's a way Microsoft can help."

Under the program, which is expected to offer tax incentives for 
computer makers to cut prices and a generous payment plan for consumers, 
the government hopes to offer desktops for around 1,400 reais ($509) or 
less. The machines will be comparable to those costing almost twice that 
outside the program.

Buyers will be able to pay in 24 installments of 50 to 60 reais, or 
about $18 to $21.80 a month, an amount affordable for many working poor. 
The country's top three fixed-line telephone companies - Telefónica of 
Spain; Tele Norte Leste Participações, or Telemar; and Brasil Telecom - 
have agreed to provide a dial-up Internet connection to participants for 
7.50 reais, or less than $3, a month, allowing 15 hours of Web surfing.

The program aims at households and small-business owners earning three 
to seven times the minimum monthly wage, or about $284 to $662. The 
government says seven million qualify, and it hopes to reach a million 
of them by year-end.

That may seem ambitious in a developing country of 183 million people 
where only 10 percent of all households have Internet access and just 
900,000 computers are sold legally each year. (Including black-market 
sales, the number is closer to four million, still a small fraction of 
the number sold in the United States last year, according to the 
International Data Corporation, a technology research firm.)

"We're well aware that we're talking about doubling the domestic market 
for personal computers," said Cezar Alvarez, the presidential aide in 
charge of the PC Conectado program. "But it's absolutely feasible."

Some analysts have questioned the effectiveness of such programs, noting 
that some similar projects in Asia have become bogged down in red tape 
and, in some cases, have ended up favoring the elite. In Malaysia, for 
instance, the government is introducing a second affordable-computer 
program after its first attempt failed because of poor planning and 
fraud - something Brazilian officials say they are working hard to prevent.

Others say the government should focus its technology initiatives 
elsewhere, especially in schools. Only 19 percent of Brazil's public 
schools have computers.

The government says it plans to complement the PC Conectado program with 
stepped-up efforts to put more computers into schools. It is also 
investing $74 million to open 1,000 community centers in poor 
neighborhoods by year-end with computers that run free software programs 
and offer free Internet access - supplementing similar programs by local 
governments and nongovernmental organizations.

The drive to bridge the digital divide has drawn widespread praise 
throughout the technology industry. But the preference for open-source 
software has been controversial, with critics inside and outside the 
government saying Mr. da Silva's administration is letting leftist 
ideology trump the laws of supply and demand.

"The government shouldn't be the one who decides what hardware and 
software will go into these computers," said Júlio Semeghini, a member 
of Congress from the opposition Social Democratic Party. "That's 
undemocratic."

The open-source route, however, has support beyond the da Silva 
administration. Walter Bender, the executive director of the Media Lab 
at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, whose opinion was 
solicited by the Brazilian government, replied in a recent letter that 
"high-quality free software" has proved more effective in stimulating 
computer use among the poor than scaled-down versions of proprietary 
software.

Though he said he did not oppose giving consumers a choice, he concluded 
that "free software provides a basis for more widespread access, more 
powerful uses and a much stronger platform for long-term growth and 
development."

Whatever the government decides, most industry analysts agree that the 
program will probably help combat software piracy, which is widespread 
in Brazil.

And by wooing new consumers, "even if the program doesn't reach its 
goals, it's going to end up stimulating the computer and software 
markets," said Jorge Sukarie, president of the Brazilian Association of 
Software Companies. "It's not perfect, but it's certainly better than 
nothing."


----- End forwarded message -----

-- 
Peter D. Hiscocks                         	   
Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering    
Ryerson University,                    
350 Victoria Street,
Toronto, Ontario, M5B 2K3, Canada

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