Linked by Thom Holwerda on Wed 8th Nov 2006 19:59 UTC, submitted by Coxy
GNU, GPL, Open Source The theory behind open-source software is that it avoids many of the pitfalls - including cost - of closed alternatives. But Steven Buckley, who runs Christian Aid's common knowledge programme, prefers to buy software from the likes of Microsoft. Is this not odd for a charity? "Open-source doesn't mean free," he told BBC World Service's Digital Planet programme. "Quite often, if you install open-source software within an organisation, you have a support contract that goes with it - it's an essential part of operating that software. Over time, that can actually cost more than having Windows on an enterprise machine."
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ok
by Dekkard on Thu 9th Nov 2006 01:33 UTC
Dekkard
Member since:
2006-01-07

two words: Bone head. he obviously doesn't know of the thousands of us running 'nix/bsd for years with no service contracts.. talking about uninformed.

RE: ok
by r_a_trip on Thu 9th Nov 2006 17:48 in reply to "ok"
r_a_trip Member since:
2005-07-06

He needs a throat to choke, when something screws up. It is more convenient to point at MS, than to say that in house support is trying to fix the problem with the OSS solution.

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