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Education Microsoft

A College Without Microsoft? 1257

An anonymous reader asks: "My grandfather is the president of a well-known undergraduate-only college of about 7,000 students. He tells me that an alumnus has agreed to donate $2.4 million initially (and up to $800,000 each succeeding year for 10 years) to the school for computer equipment and staff if the school agrees not to renew any contract and to buy no products or services (either directly or through an intermediary like Gateway) from Microsoft. I'm told that this isn't the enormous amount of money that it sounds like and that a change-over to non-Microsoft products would be costly. I think it'd be great for college students to use computers apart from Microsoft, but I'm told that the board will look at the decision in terms of cost, not for benefit to the students. Does the Slashdot community have any points that I can give my grandfather to present to the Board next month?"
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A College Without Microsoft?

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  • Cost over Students? (Score:4, Interesting)

    by altp ( 108775 ) on Wednesday March 12, 2003 @04:53PM (#5497011)
    I work in a Systems office at a univeristy, and understand full well cost savings over a students education. It is a problem that my office fights with all the time.

    Perhaps though, Your grandfather is in a position to change this trend where the dollar comes before the student.

    Perhaps, it would even be a good PR tool to boost enrollment in the future, bringing in more money and students.

    Just a though.
    • by Bluefirebird ( 649667 ) on Wednesday March 12, 2003 @05:08PM (#5497295)
      In my university they have workstations with double boot with win2000 and slackware. The servers are DEC Unix and also intel servers with Red Hat. M$ educational licenses are very cheap and I see no reason to remove M$ from campus when you have an alternative a reboot away and all the servers are *nix.
      • by nil_null ( 412200 ) on Wednesday March 12, 2003 @06:06PM (#5498186) Homepage
        A little anecdote:
        Microsoft donated a lab full of computers (with Windows NT installed) to my university for an operating systems class. They erased off NT from all those computers and replaced it with FreeBSD. Microsoft wanted the computers back, but it was too late. What, did they think they were going to teach an operating systems class using Windows NT??
    • by banzai51 ( 140396 ) on Wednesday March 12, 2003 @05:20PM (#5497519) Journal
      This will not boost enrollment. This will drive students away. Believe it or not, MS products are not reviled outside of subgroups of the IT/Geek community. I know this will be hard for Slashdotters to grasp.

      In the end, this guy's grandfather would be restricting CHOICE! Which is something that this group should be firmly against. He would also be hurting student's education by not including these products, which are widely used in the real world. He should walk away, or get the guy to agree that just THAT money won't be used for Microsoft products, which would be a reasonable request. If the grandfather takes this deal, he is doing the exact thing that Microsoft competitors complain about, i.e. pay OEMs to only use their products.

      • by GreyPoopon ( 411036 ) <gpoopon@gmaOOOil.com minus threevowels> on Wednesday March 12, 2003 @05:51PM (#5498008)
        In the end, this guy's grandfather would be restricting CHOICE!

        And how is this different than when I was in college and presented with rows and rows of PS/2s? Looking for a Macintosh? Not a single one to be found. Sorry, but in many cases the student never HAD a choice. All they are doing in this case is changing the lack of choice from one mandate to another.

        However, I agree with some of your other points. Microsoft is definitely not despised by everybody.

      • by zootread ( 569199 ) <zootread@NOsPaM.yahoo.com> on Wednesday March 12, 2003 @06:20PM (#5498355)
        This will not boost enrollment. This will drive students away. Believe it or not, MS products are not reviled outside of subgroups of the IT/Geek community. I know this will be hard for Slashdotters to grasp.

        Believe it or not, in a university setting as well as the industry many of us are employed in, MS products are looked down upon. I know this will be hard for MS apologists to grasp.

        Remember, CS/CEN/EE professors at universities and people who are looking to hire you, are the IT/Geek community. We teach your classes, we write the software you run. We provide you with jobs. We keep your servers running. We guard you while you sleep. Do not fuck with us.
        • by wrenkin ( 71468 ) <alex DOT cooke AT utoronto DOT ca> on Wednesday March 12, 2003 @07:56PM (#5499163) Homepage
          Yes, many of 'us'. We're computer geeks.

          But we're talking here about 7000 undergraduates, and from the sound of it, most of them probably enrolled in a humanities/liberal arts programs. When the poster mentioned the publics general willingness to use MS products, outside of "subgroups of the IT/Geek community", I'm pretty sure he felt that "CS/CEN/EE professors" fell into that group, regardless of their university affiliation.

          We're the ones always carping about choice. I'm willing to make the choice for linux, but forcing Linux onto 7000 students, who might just want to use hotmail in the library, or catch a quicktime CNN news clip, is extreme enough to merit contention.
      • by ottffssent ( 18387 ) on Wednesday March 12, 2003 @06:43PM (#5498606)
        You've already got the "somebody saying something pro-Microsoft that seems reasonable" karma, so I hope you don't mind me disagreeing with you.

        In a country full of schools and colleges using MS Word, you have the gall to claim that anyone not doing so is restricting choice?! Anyone bothered by their decision can GO ELSEWHERE, or use MS products themselves. Nobody is mandating non-Microsoft products; they're just trying to get the college not to pay for them. Microsoft is free to donate them, and students are free to use their own.

        The donor isn't seeking to force anyone to buy his products. He's seeking to force them *not* to buy certain products. Sort of like people protesting fur.

        Your average computer user has a hard enough time telling the difference between Word, IE, and Windows, let alone between Staroffice and Word. Your argument that learning anything other than Word and Excel is harming someone is pure bullshit. There are more differences between WordXP and earlier versions than there are between WordXP and OO, so the idea that you're training someone wrong doesn't hold water. Most people don't do more than type and underline, which is pretty much the same you'll have to admit, between any two word processors.

        You're wrong on your last point too - Microsoft doesn't pay OEMs to use their product. They license the product in such a way that if the OEM wants to sell *any* MS software, it has to sell *only* MS software.
      • by Tony-A ( 29931 ) on Wednesday March 12, 2003 @07:40PM (#5499078)
        Believe it or not, MS products are not reviled outside of subgroups of the IT/Geek community.
        You don't get around much, do you?
    • by EatHam ( 597465 ) on Wednesday March 12, 2003 @06:26PM (#5498405)
      buy no products or services (either directly or through an intermediary like Gateway) from Microsoft.

      No problem. [kazaalite.de]
    • Cost over Students? (Score:4, Interesting)

      by mam-hc ( 658673 ) on Wednesday March 12, 2003 @06:58PM (#5498743)
      Is the donor Scott McNealy?

      First off a university is a university when graduate programs are offered, colleges only offer undergraduate programs -- though there are exceptions, this is the general rule.

      I work at a college and we use Microsoft software extensively. We correspond with institutions of all sizes daily and Word and Excel are the default formats.

      Apart from this you should know that Microsoft offers many incentives to higher education. One is the Academic Alliance which has a subscription fee of $799/year per department. There is no restriction to the number of machines or users (including student machines) where you can load and use the software as long as it is specific to the courses being taught. The software included in this:

      Microsoft Visual Studio .NET Academic:
      Visual Basic .NET
      Visual C++ .NET
      Visual C# .NET .Net Enterprise Servers:
      Windows 2000 Server
      SQL Server
      Exchange Server
      Commerce Server 2000
      BizTalk Server 2000
      Host Integration Server 2000
      Application Center 2000
      Systems Management Server 2.0
      Mobile Information 2001 Server
      SharePoint Portal Server 2001
      Content Management Server 2002

      Microsoft operating systems, SDKs and DDKs:
      Windows XP Professional
      Windows 2000 Professional
      Windows 2000 Server
      Windows 2000 Advanced Server
      Windows 2000 Datacenter Server
      Windows 2000 Small Business Server
      Windows ME
      Windows NT Embedded
      Windows CE

      Visio Professional 2002
      Microsoft® Project Professional 2002
      MSDN Library
      Microsoft Windows CE Toolkits
      Visual FoxPro 6.0
      Visual InterDev 6.0
      Visual J++ 6.0

      Not a bad deal!
  • NMSU (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Krach42 ( 227798 ) on Wednesday March 12, 2003 @04:53PM (#5497015) Homepage Journal
    My university, New Mexico State University, has it's entire Computer Science department running Linux. We don't use any Microsoft programs at all for our CS dept. We use it in just about every other dept (Journalism has Macs, if I recall correctly)

    I think it's very nice. It gets us out of programming for just the Microsoft world, but a lot of students are upset because we're learning nothing about VisualStudio and stuff, which is what "we'll be using in the real world"
    • Re:NMSU (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Defender2000 ( 177459 ) <defender2000@nOSpam.mindless.com> on Wednesday March 12, 2003 @04:59PM (#5497121) Journal
      Hmm that "real world" idea is part of the problem right there. In the real world, there's both MS stuff AND *nix stuff. A school that focuses purely on MS is just as detrimental as a school that focuses purely on *nix.

      The fellow would be better off spending the $2.4 million on developing methods of teaching students how MS and *nix are related to each other, how BOTH are used in the real world, and familiarizing students with both.

      The idea of a contract to remove MS products may help promote OSS, and help fight off monopolies, but it would be very, very bad for the students' futures.
      • Re:NMSU (Score:5, Insightful)

        by Tyler Eaves ( 344284 ) on Wednesday March 12, 2003 @05:02PM (#5497201)
        From my expirience, someone who plain and simple knows how to code can learn an IDE in days. The other way around can be quite tough for those used to the "hand holding"
        • Re:NMSU (Score:5, Insightful)

          by cide1 ( 126814 ) on Wednesday March 12, 2003 @05:22PM (#5497568) Homepage
          It's not an IDE to relearn, it's an api. A good example is BSD sockets vs. Winsock. Yeah they do the same thing, and once you learn one, the other is trivial, but it eats up a lot of development time having to always learn the particulars of an api. I have the same problem, I'm a CompE that bit my teeth on old releases of redhat, which is roughly sysV UNIX, I picked up the VxWorks api no problem, cause it is pretty much the same. Windows programming for me is very hard because I spend 80% of my time buried in MSDN instead of coding.
          • by rsborg ( 111459 ) on Wednesday March 12, 2003 @05:38PM (#5497823) Homepage
            Windows programming for me is very hard because I spend 80% of my time buried in MSDN instead of coding.

            Hell, I went to a mostly M$ endowed CS program (at the time), and when I have to code against the win32api, or MFC, I spend about that amount of time in the books too.

          • by apankrat ( 314147 ) on Wednesday March 12, 2003 @07:39PM (#5499065) Homepage
            I have few years of commercial Windows coding experience and probably half as much of *nix one and I've gotta tell you that different APIs is not the biggest obstacle (and IDEs certainly are even the lesser one). It's more of the general practices issue. On Windows due to its closedness and incomplete documentation, the developer is haunted by a constant feeling of uncertainty. From simple things like an API call suddenly falling on patched version of WinNT to a methods declared as BOOL something() returing anything but 0 and 1.

            Dont get me wrong - it's perfectly fine to have bugs in any code, including the OS, but the inability to fully investigate the problem forces developer to stay as independent from the system API as possible and be constantly ready for the weirdest induced f*ckups possible. Sure, there are tons of people who write the code tightly coupled with Windows, but with this often means creating a lot of work for support and deployment departments.

            My general impression is that a good (as in "geeky professional") windows developer does not have much trouble moving to the *nix, while the move in the opposite direction is quite likely to be painful. Scroll the this very thread and see what I'm talking about - *nixoids complaining about Windows, and not the other way around :)
      • Re:NMSU (Score:4, Interesting)

        by Lodragandraoidh ( 639696 ) on Wednesday March 12, 2003 @05:47PM (#5497944) Journal
        I work in the 'real world' and here is the experience we are looking for:

        Linux/Unix - both system programming and system administration experience. Show us how you would automate various features, and integrate different systems together to get real work done quickly.
        VOIP and Telephony - convergence is not just a buzz word.
        Java/CGI/XML - web enabled application development is a must. No one I am talking to is considering .NET
        A plus is experience using Perl/Tk, TCL/Tk, C++ (gcc), emacs, vi, awk, sed, and shell scripting.

        Things that will not get you hired:

        Primary Microsoft experience; Microsoft certifications mean nothing in our space. I've lost count of how many microsofties come in looking for work, and are totally lost in the datacentre.
        MBA - you would be surprised at how many folks think 'system administrator' means 'managing people'; if you don't have a technical background, forget it.
      • Re:NMSU (Score:5, Insightful)

        by EastCoastSurfer ( 310758 ) on Wednesday March 12, 2003 @06:53PM (#5498700)
        The fellow would be better off spending the $2.4 million on developing methods of teaching students how MS and *nix are related to each other, how BOTH are used in the real world, and familiarizing students with both.

        So true. When I was in college our small CS dept ran all its servers on linux and had a even split of NT and linux workstations. In addition we also had some old alpha boxes, macs, sgis, etc... that and CS students could log into and use. This allowed the students to experience a multitude of OSs and hardware, which IMO is one of the important reasons to go to college. To learn and think about things you wouldn't normally learn and think about in the real world.

        Now, if I were to argue against using MS in a school I would avoid arguing the cost issue. MS generally gives all of its software(except games) for free(or close to it) to schools and students. Also keep in mind that supporting some lit edu major who can't seem to transfer their powerpoint presentation between their laptop and computers in the lab is also not cheap.

    • Re:NMSU (Score:3, Insightful)

      by binner1 ( 516856 )
      Your response to them: "If you want to learn what you'll be using in the real world, go to College. University is to teach concepts, not products!"

      -Ben
    • Re:NMSU (Score:5, Insightful)

      by pmz ( 462998 ) on Wednesday March 12, 2003 @05:18PM (#5497496) Homepage
      ...a lot of students are upset because we're learning nothing about VisualStudio and stuff, which is what "we'll be using in the real world"

      Learning programming under Linux/UNIX will make you a better Visual Studio programmer, but not vice versa.

      Visual Studio leaves too much temptation to not learn the fundamentals, and it isn't good enough to really allow this. In other words, VS will burn its users; it's only a matter of time, and, by then, it's probably too late.
    • Re:NMSU (Score:4, Informative)

      by betelgeuse68 ( 230611 ) on Wednesday March 12, 2003 @05:23PM (#5497582)
      Well you have a very doctored view of the "real world." One that of course only Microsoft wants you to see.

      I spent two years at Microsoft so I can lay down that disclaimer now, I'm not a MS basher, i.e. always have been, always will be.

      What you fail to realize is that a lot of software gets written without Visual Studio - it does NOT represent the end all be all of software development.

      IDEs got their start when "resource editors" became in vogue around 1990. A resource editor being a program that allowed you to draw dialogs, bitmaps, icons and the various other entities that Windows UI calls a "resource." The Macintosh, the old platform has a very similar notion. Visual Studio and the IDEs that preceded were born out of this. Eventually people stopped knowing how to create makefile much less use them and the idea of clicking a few buttons and having a boilerplate project has been well established in the developers Microsoft courts.

      But what many people do NOT know and are surprised is that Microsoft does NOT use its own tools to build its own products. At least not GUI tools. When you have a codebase that is 50 million lines of code, the Windows NT OS, believe me, you won't be building from Visual Studio.

      In the various product groups at Microsoft makefiles and building from the command line is par for the course. Which is by the way, par for the cours in *NIX-land. Sure I had Visual Studio, but I used it because that is what constitued my debugger. I never bothered with it as far as editing went. I prefered and still do the much more powerful EMACS editor. The Win32 version has been stable years. When I was at Microsoft I used to do my builds from inside of it. Yes "Meta-Shell" works fine on Windows.

      As for non MS envionments, believe me, son, they'are as much a part of the "real world" as what you think solely consists of the real world.

      Newbie CS students have a very naive view of software development... this is just a symptom of it, i.e. all software development is done inside IDEs.
      • Re:NMSU (Score:5, Interesting)

        by Hayzeus ( 596826 ) on Wednesday March 12, 2003 @06:19PM (#5498342) Homepage
        IDEs got their start when "resource editors" became in vogue around 1990. A resource editor being a program that allowed you to draw dialogs, bitmaps, icons and the various other entities that Windows UI calls a "resource." The Macintosh, the old platform has a very similar notion.

        Just a nit -- IDEs got their start significantly earlier than this. Turbo-PASCAL and Turbo-C provided DOS IDEs much earlier(the former was released in 1983, the latter in 86 or 87). I'm sure one of the true old timers-- older than me, anyway -- here can come up with earlier examples. These were some of the first affordable compilers for x86 based machines, and spurred MS to develop Quick-C and it's later VC descendants.

      • Comment removed (Score:5, Informative)

        by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Wednesday March 12, 2003 @07:09PM (#5498844)
        Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • Re:NMSU (Score:5, Funny)

      by Arandir ( 19206 ) on Wednesday March 12, 2003 @05:38PM (#5497824) Homepage Journal
      but a lot of students are upset because we're learning nothing about VisualStudio and stuff, which is what "we'll be using in the real world"

      When I was in college, students were clamoring for "real world" education in MSDOS, BASIC and WordStar.
    • by dcavanaugh ( 248349 ) on Wednesday March 12, 2003 @06:26PM (#5498411) Homepage
      "...but a lot of students are upset because we're learning nothing about VisualStudio and stuff, which is what "we'll be using in the real world"

      Back in my day, my college CS program was based on VAX/VMS, using languages like Pascal, Assembler, C, and Ada. VMS wasn't all that popular in 1982 aside from the niches of higher education and scientific research. Everybody KNEW that real businesses used COBOL, specifically IBM COBOL on 3270 terminals. The nearby insurance companies were all IBM "big iron" shops at the time.

      As students, we all wondered how we would ever get jobs in the "real world".

      Interesting things happened:
      • VAX/VMS enjoyed its heydey in the mid-to-late 1980's -- finding a job was damn easy
      • IBM "big iron" and COBOL were popular, but the market trend was downward (even back then), so those shops had no use for entry-level programmers.

      I have been continuously employed in progressively more responsible positions for the past 18 years. I never learned COBOL, but I adapted to each new technology as it came along.

      If your CS program were centered on today's technology (VisualStudio?), you would be ideally positioned to graduate just in time to be slaughtered in the job market by people who have real world experience. Plan on getting a job working with relatively NEW technology -- something that is not so popular now but will be peaking as you graduate. As a corporate IT manager, I can tell you that Linux has great potential -- if for no other reason because of the global backlash against Microsoft licensing tactics. IMHO, VisualStudio is the COBOL of the new millenium. Just because it's big now, that doesn't mean it will be useful for new grads when they hit the streets in a few years.

      I think Linux is a pretty good choice for a college CS program. And I actually hire people, so my opinion matters.
  • by Mr. Ophidian Jones ( 653797 ) on Wednesday March 12, 2003 @04:54PM (#5497031)
    The reality is, the kids are going to need to know how to use Microsoft tools once they graduate in order to be successful in the real world.

    Plus, imagine all the chaos as non-computer science majors try to struggle with Linux on the desktop in computer labs and so on. It will indeed probably cost a lot more than $2.4 million in the end.

    This post might sound pro-M$, but it's not. I'm just trying to give the reality of the situation. Oh well, there goes my karma.
    • by Marx_Mrvelous ( 532372 ) on Wednesday March 12, 2003 @04:59PM (#5497119) Homepage
      You're thinking in binary. There are more options than Linux and Microsoft. Can you imagine people having problems running on Apple computers? Even OS X is simpler than Windows. Macs for the n00bs, Linux for the engineers.
    • by wind ( 94988 ) on Wednesday March 12, 2003 @05:01PM (#5497174)
      There'd be nothing stopping them from having their own MS-computers, would there? (that's an honest question)

      Also, why not Macs? I agree that getting a bunch of liberal arts majors to happily use Linux might be a bit of a nightmare, but Macs are very friendly, and one *could* argue that they are also used in "real world" ... okay, maybe that's going too far..
    • by yamla ( 136560 ) <chris@@@hypocrite...org> on Wednesday March 12, 2003 @05:03PM (#5497219)
      Universities (i.e. locations where you get Bachelor degrees, not sure if they are called that in the U.S.) do not exist to teach you specific tools. If you want to learn MS Word or Visual Studio, you should take a local adult education class or take some courses at your tech school. These things shouldn't be taught at a university.

      Now, before everyone gets all huffy, I'm not saying a university must not have Microsoft tools. You want to teach programming using Visual Studio? Go ahead. My point is simply that universities shouldn't be concerned with teaching Microsoft tools, rather they should be concerned with teaching how to solve the problems.
    • by grid geek ( 532440 ) on Wednesday March 12, 2003 @05:06PM (#5497282) Homepage

      The reality is, the kids are going to need to know how to use Microsoft tools once they graduate in order to be successful in the real world.

      Um, just because MS is the dominant system at the moment doesn't mean it will be in 5, 10, 20 years time. If we followed that logic we'd all still be programming for IBM/360's in Cobol & Fortran

      CS should not be about programming! Programming is a tool and, with no disrespect to the hard core coders it is a minor part of a CS. If they are learning project management, design, testing, formal specifications, AI, etc these will stand them in better stead in their careers than "just" knowing all the C++/Java/Perl ... libraries. So why worry about learning all about MS when its likely to be out of date when they graduate anyway. Teach the basics and let them adapt to change.

      Plus, imagine all the chaos as non-computer science majors try to struggle with Linux on the desktop in computer labs and so on. It will indeed probably cost a lot more than $2.4 million in the end.

      Why? Most students need to learn new packages when they get to college anyway - is there really a huge difference between learning OpenOffice vs MSOffice? Is Gnome or KDE really harder to figure out than the windows desktop? And these are students. If they're not smart enough to figure out how to use a software package what are they doing there in the first place?

  • Tell your grandpa (Score:5, Insightful)

    by PD ( 9577 ) <slashdotlinux@pdrap.org> on Wednesday March 12, 2003 @04:55PM (#5497041) Homepage Journal
    To decline the money. If the donor wants to give money to the university, that's one thing. If the donor wants to buy the university, then he'd better come up with enough money to pay off all the professors, students, and other faculty. They are the ones who make the university, and presumably they signed up with that school because of what it was.
    • by renard ( 94190 ) on Wednesday March 12, 2003 @06:20PM (#5498356)
      As a University President, I'm sure your grandfather is well-acquainted with this basic dictum of negotiating. Never say never - instead, say "Yes, but..."

      In this case, the University's counteroffer should be that they will not spend even one penny of the Alumnus' gift on Microsoft software, or on any computers or hardware that are "tainted" by MS software. Any MS-centric purchases will have to go via a completely different appropriations process.

      To sweeten the pot a little, they might offer to match the Alumnus' contributions to the "Non-MS" funding pool at some rate, say 50% of his buy-in. That way, the Alumnus knows that the gift is not just "freeing up" more money, elsewhere, for MS purchases (money being fungible, after all).

      There ought to be a middle ground here where everyone is happy. Personally, I can't imagine being the President who tells all his faculty they are no longer allowed to use MS software on their University-provided personal computers. Ugh!

      -renard

  • Need more money (Score:3, Insightful)

    by alaric187 ( 633477 ) on Wednesday March 12, 2003 @04:55PM (#5497043)
    Honestly, tell him that it's not worth it. As pointed out, 2.4M and 800k/yr isn't enough to make a dent in the true costs that switching over 7000 people would accrue. Nice gesture though.
  • No Way (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Cire ( 96846 ) on Wednesday March 12, 2003 @04:55PM (#5497045)
    It's just not possible. While the Computer Science dept. might be able to get by, there are too many other departments out there that rely on windows only programs for their work. SPSS comes to mind very quickly. I'm sure there are tons of programs out there. And while there might be Linux alternatives (or MacOS alternatives, since the posting doesnt say they can't buy Apple), I'm more than positive the Profs have no interest in re-learning the applications they've been using to teach courses for years!

    Not to mention all of the administrative people in the Uni system who had a hard enough time learning excel, word, and outlook.

    Cire
    • Re:No Way (Score:3, Insightful)

      by Grey ( 14278 )
      Ahh SPSS, MS only? We used to run it on a VMS/VAX at my undergraduate instution. Most math packages come for unix. Outside of the sciences where there are good unix based tool, what do people need other than a word processor and a spread sheet?
    • Re:No Way (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Lumpy ( 12016 ) on Wednesday March 12, 2003 @05:01PM (#5497172) Homepage
      Why does it have to be an instant transition?

      Contrary to yours and popular belief, microsoft software doesnt magically explode when you dont buy the next version. Existing W2K and office and other iems can easily be used for another 3-4 years during which a gradual transition from MS to linux or Mac OSX can easily be preformed.

      your spreading tons of fud by making it sound like "you have to burn all MS software NOW and make everyone SUFFER!!!!!"

      it's not the case at all, and would in no way increase costs.
  • tell them... (Score:5, Insightful)

    by rtphokie ( 518490 ) on Wednesday March 12, 2003 @04:55PM (#5497050)
    that they should put the good of the students ahead of any politics. That being said, the gift should be politely turned down. The best education these students could receive is a broad one.

    That is, one that doesn't show any bias towards or against any one company's products. An education that includes zero microsoft products could be just as harmful as one that includes 100% microsoft products.

    Fast forward to the first interviewer saying to a kid "What do you mean you've never heard of Visual Basic?"
    • Re:tell them... (Score:4, Insightful)

      by techstar25 ( 556988 ) <techstar25 AT gmail DOT com> on Wednesday March 12, 2003 @05:16PM (#5497459) Journal
      I see where you're coming from, but let's give these students some credit. Are you telling me that if you sat down a jounalism student in front of Openoffice, they wouldn't be able to compose a paper? Or if all they knew was Openoffice, they would be lost using Word? Thanks to KDE and Gnome, just about anybody can figure out the Linux GUI.
      And let's be honest here, any CS major who knows C++ well should have no problem learning VC++, VB, C#, or even Java from one of those dummies books in no time at all.
  • by Marx_Mrvelous ( 532372 ) on Wednesday March 12, 2003 @04:56PM (#5497058) Homepage
    Think about it... A Mac can do everything a Desktop PC does (multimedia, web browsing, etc) and a Linux machine can do everything a CS/technical student needs (C/C++/Java compilers, technical programs like Autocad and ProE). I think the most useless machines here at Purdue are the overpriced Windows machines that need so much security/rollback software that they are rednered useless 10% of the time!
  • Two points.. (Score:3, Insightful)

    by cconnell ( 158015 ) on Wednesday March 12, 2003 @04:56PM (#5497061) Homepage
    1) If Microsoft did something like this, everyone would be screaming and calling the Justice Dept. It isn't right for someone else to do the same thing.

    2) Taking all MS products off the campus would be a dis-service to the students. Do some of us like non-MS products? Sure. But when those students graduate and go to work, are they going to see a lot of MS in the workplace? You bet. To hide them from MS products for 4 years would be harming their education.

    Chuck
    • Re:Two points.. (Score:3, Insightful)

      by jjohnson ( 62583 )

      1) If Microsoft did something like this, everyone would be screaming and calling the Justice Dept. It isn't right for someone else to do the same thing.

      A campus of 7,000 hardly qualifies as an abusive and predatory monopoly on American university students.

    • I didn't read 'remove MS products,' I just saw
      'don't buy new ones'

      that wouldn't preclude continuing to use those MS products in place, or buying products that run only on windows

      Nor did I read 'no $$ to be spent on supporting existing windows'

      Basically, it looks like 'I'll give you a bunch of money, but don't give Bill any'
    • Re:Two points.. (Score:5, Insightful)

      by InodoroPereyra ( 514794 ) on Wednesday March 12, 2003 @06:36PM (#5498529)
      Oh boy, where do I start:

      1) If Microsoft did something like this, everyone would be screaming and calling the Justice Dept. It isn't right for someone else to do the same thing.

      If it was MS, they would be clearly abusing of their power to extend their monopoly, fair enough to contact the US Justice Dept (well, these days it wouldn't work anyway). In the present case, however, someone is donating money to encourage the University to use FREE software, free as in libre, instead of a monopolistic product. You don't see the difference ? Really ?

      I just can't believe how some people try to put MS in the same standpoint as free software in these discussions. It is one huge monopolistic megacorporation that they are comparing with a movement fighting for people's freedom in the use of their computers.

      By the way, the donor would be better off stating his point in a slightly different way: I make the donation if the University makes a commitment to use free software only. That's good enough. MS can in principle produce free (as in the GPL) software and offer it to the University ;-)

  • How about Apple? (Score:5, Informative)

    by jwbrown77 ( 526512 ) on Wednesday March 12, 2003 @04:57PM (#5497072)
    OS X has proven to be a very stable OS and it gives you the UNIX underbelly to teach students how to program with free compilers, while at the same time maintaining an extreme ease of use for all computer skill levels.

    Apple and OpenOffice would fill the void nicely in my opinion. It won't be as cheap as x86 by any means, but it could be easier to support and teach.

    btw, this isn't a flame. I'm using Linux right now and I love it, but distributing it to total novices can be frustrating.
  • How much linux? (Score:5, Interesting)

    by unicron ( 20286 ) <unicron AT thcnet DOT net> on Wednesday March 12, 2003 @04:57PM (#5497085) Homepage
    How much "alternate-os"..ok..linux..do you plan on using? Getting rid of MS altogether, in any capacity, is stupid. I don't have specific facts but I'm willing to bet that windows shop outnumber linux shops 10 to 1. So while it's great that they have all this linux experience, I fear the jobs will go to those that have windows knowledge. Not saying it's right, just saying it's how it is. Linux shops in honest, real world productive companies still aren't that common. And I mean true linux, nothing MS on the entire site.

    I say prepare them for MS, it's the world uses, like it or not.
  • by V. Mole ( 9567 ) on Wednesday March 12, 2003 @04:57PM (#5497088) Homepage

    You're not going to get an entire university to drop MS completely from the school for measly 2.4 million. Instead, try for a more narrow target. Something like "funds for the engineer school, if no engineering classes use MS products for classwork." Substitute for "engineering school" and "classwork" until you get a balance that is acceptable to both the donor and the school.

  • Don't mandate (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Bistronaut ( 267467 ) on Wednesday March 12, 2003 @04:58PM (#5497105) Homepage Journal
    Here's what I would do: go to the students and faculty. Ask them what they think, and have some kind of vote. Make lot's of noise about it. At the very least, I'm sure you'd get a bunch of free MS crap. :-)
  • by scottm52 ( 544690 ) <winmaclinblogNO@SPAMgmail.com> on Wednesday March 12, 2003 @04:59PM (#5497115) Homepage
    Here is the list of things I would tell your Grandfather:

    1) Qualified (i.e. not test taking wonders) MCSE can physically manage about 14 MS Servers... However, a qualified Linux Admin can handle (depending upon variations in OS release) from 50-75. Much lower people cost.

    2) The Admin time saved can be either be converted to cash (fewer employee admins), used to increase support of University Departments and Staff, or a combination of the two.

    3) No BSA audits, papertrails, etc. which does not mean that inventory isn't maintained, it's just that it doesn't have to be a resource and legal liability issue (read, cheaper to operate).

    4) I promise to send my son to this institution when he's ready for College (about 17 years from now).

  • by NDPTAL85 ( 260093 ) on Wednesday March 12, 2003 @04:59PM (#5497134)
    Linux simply IS NOT READY FOR THE DESKTOP YET.

    This is an entire student body, not just the CS dept we're talking about here.

    The kids are going to need their MS Office with its Word, Powerpoint and Excell apps. No crappy Open/StarOffice need apply.

    Not to mention all the apps they won't be able to use since they won't have Windows as their OS.

    They are also going to have to use Windows in the workplace after graduation so they would acutually be BEHIND the rest of their generation once school is over. No thanks. No way. No how. Keep the GNU stuff where it belongs, on the server.

    All in all, lets keep software politics out of college purchasing decisions. Buy the best practical, not idealogical, tool for the job.
  • WTF? (Score:4, Interesting)

    by fudgefactor7 ( 581449 ) on Wednesday March 12, 2003 @05:00PM (#5497142)
    From the post: "...I'm told that the board will look at the decision in terms of cost, not for benefit to the students."

    So, this is not about what's good for the students? Ok, so this is partisan, anti-Micrsoftism, at it's best then, yes? Looking at base of cost alone might be ok but perhaps they're not aware that MS does provide huge discounts to educational institutions (educational institutions get special pricing from MS.) If a University is so hell-bent to not assist their students, to not do that which is in the best interest of the students, then clearly this is a University I'm glad I did not choose to attend.
  • Discrimination... (Score:5, Interesting)

    by vk2tds ( 175334 ) on Wednesday March 12, 2003 @05:00PM (#5497147)
    It seems to me that a college without Microsoft is just as bad, or worse than one without Linux.

    Lets just ignore for a moment that certain software is only available from microsoft - or at least that there are no comparible products from other supplilers.

    By having no microsoft you are forcing everyone into the same mindset. Microsoft is the predominant software supplier, but that does not make their products necesarily bad.

    University's are there to broaden knowledge, not to stifle it. This seems to me like a great way to stifle knowledge, and restrict achademic freedom.

    I have been in the Linux community since the MINIX days, so I am not a Microsoft lover. I just feel that diversity is needed, rather than uniformity
  • Alternatives (Score:3, Insightful)

    by BShive ( 573771 ) on Wednesday March 12, 2003 @05:00PM (#5497148) Homepage
    Well, there are plenty of alternatives to MS products, many of which are actually cheaper. The best thing to do would be finding out (or at least estimate) what they do have in terms of hardware/software and so forth.

    My college mostly used Sun equipment in the CS arena, and had labs of Macs and Win machines. The x86 hardware can always run Linux or BSD. For people who just need to type a paper up, there are lots of alternatives to MS Word on the Mac (Appleworks, Thinkfree, etc).
  • Cost? (Score:3, Insightful)

    by anethema ( 99553 ) on Wednesday March 12, 2003 @05:01PM (#5497183) Homepage
    Since linux and a lot of it's programs are free, the only cost incurred by switching would be paying the technician/sysadmin to keep the system/network running fine.

    Also, the learning potiential is definatly greater, because if any student wants to find out how a certain program works in terms of code, said student can almost always look and find out.

    I really dont see how it would be costly to stop paying for software and switch to a free operating system.

    With the donated money they could easily pay a whole team of lab techs etc to install and admin the *nix OS's.

    You could even have different labs with different operating systems to give students a wide view on how things COULD be done.

    Just my 2c.
  • Real World Training? (Score:4, Interesting)

    by cheinonen ( 318646 ) <cheinonen@ho t m ail.com> on Wednesday March 12, 2003 @05:02PM (#5497189)
    Forget the whole CS department, think about the other students who use the computer labs. So far, every place I have worked has used Microsoft software as the standard. Word, Excel, Outlook, Powerpoint, and so on are what 90% of the business world uses I imagine, on Macs or on PC's. Putting out 7,000 students who can't use the most widely used work software and are used to something like OpenOffice that, while great, isn't what they'll be using in their jobs, seems like a horrible idea.

    That said, the Microsoft products are just better to use for most people as well. They have features that everyone else is trying to catch up with, and keep innovating more than anyone else. Not teaching Visual Studio to programmers is one thing, but not using Microsoft products is a totally different one.
  • by mbjerkne ( 593708 ) on Wednesday March 12, 2003 @05:02PM (#5497202)
    doing fine. The school I went to only taught on unix/solaris/linux. We never once used Visual C++, Visual Basic, etc... I have a job and am doing fine. It doesn't matter what system you learn on, other than GUI programming, or even what language for the most part. I can pick up a new language very quickly, because it's just syntax, the actual design and architecture of your program is what matters.
  • by sm1979 ( 558600 ) <sebastian@muelle ... t minus math_god> on Wednesday March 12, 2003 @05:08PM (#5497302) Homepage
    At my university (Humboldt-University, Berlin, Germany) most of the computers in the CS department are Linux or Sparc stations. Thats what the students do most of the work on and thats also what most of the stuff uses. In anyway we have Windows machines for several good reasons I think.

    First, there is a public Windows NT computer pool for the students which is used for several things courses which depend on Windows Software. Chip design comes to my mind. We use the Altera Max circuit design software and the corresponding PGA chips to develop 4 bit processors in the 2nd year. It is free for students to use at home.
    Second, try to find a good secretary who knows how to write a text with anything else but Word. I guess you will have troubles doing so. Professors (and students likewise) depend on the secretaries :-)

    Third, of course students should have access to as many different platforms as possible. We also have a public Mac pool with a couple of PowerMacs.

    Last but not least, many other departments than the CS people will have to learn how to do stuff on Windows because in fact that is what they'll have to use later anyway. For CS people it's not a big deal if you have never seen Visual Studio in your courses. If you know what a compiler is and how to debug (and what a stack is :-) than you won't have many problems using Visual Studio. You won't master all its features, but you'll come to it when you need them.

    Economics or business students just learn how to use Excel and Powerpoint. You can laugh about it, I do so too at times, but in fact, that's what suits them best. They will simply not have a choice when they start at any company.
  • by sudotcsh ( 95997 ) on Wednesday March 12, 2003 @05:09PM (#5497320)
    Can't you see this Ask Slashdot is a total troll? The situation is as follows.

    Geek #1: I'll bet you ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS that you can't post an Ask Slashdot question that will get regular Slashdot constituents to propose a non-Linux solution.
    Geek #2: One hundred dollars, eh? JUST WATCH ME.

    And so we have today's Ask Slashdot.

    'Tis true.
  • by Eneff ( 96967 ) on Wednesday March 12, 2003 @05:14PM (#5497400)
    I went through an entire CS program without ever directly using a windows-based technology.

    Sure, we used NT workstations, but that's mighty quick to learn and most people know that anyway. Furthermore, with cygwin, it's as easy as extending your knowledge about X.

    However, we used Java, and C, and other languages that were either free (beer) or free (libre).

    The problem is a little more disconcerting for MIS students. However, how many programs do you know that teach troubleshooting skills, anyway? Usually, it's more business-oriented.

    What I would suggest is asking the alum to further describe his vision, and how hee feels it can be accomplished without sacrificing the general quality of education.
    ___

    That said, The cost depends on your current licensing structure. Assuming you don't have any renewable licenses, that all can be slowly transitioned.

    The methodology you need is
    1. The cost of new servers to avoid licensing issues.
    2. the cost of training. (Faculty, student)
    Macs or *ix/X servers?
    3. If you plan on an *ix/X based technology, the cost of customizing a distribution and making an X desktop that minimizes transition anxieties will pay for itself.

    The real answer is to engage the alum and have him help with the vision.
  • by DuckDuckBOOM! ( 535473 ) on Wednesday March 12, 2003 @05:15PM (#5497429)
    I'd like to meet this person. Anyway, as far as making the case for acceptance: Show the board MS License 6.0. Highlight the "good" parts, and append some of the better industry commentary about them. Make it clear that, if whatever academic licensing MS offers doesn't already include these provisions, it will soon. (A reasonable assumption.) Run some numbers on the projected TCO of M$ software over those ten years. Be sure to include some reasonable extrapolation of past losses due to viruses & such. Then run the same numbers for Linux. With a reasonable effort, you might well be able to demonstrate to the board a lower ten-year expenditure for a Linux environment before taking the donation into account. Might not succeed (esp. now that MS knows about the proposal - thanks /. [G]), but at worst you'll certainly get a cost-conscious board thinking about open source.
  • cost-benefit (Score:3, Insightful)

    by travdaddy ( 527149 ) <`travo' `at' `linuxmail.org'> on Wednesday March 12, 2003 @05:15PM (#5497437)
    I'm told that the board will look at the decision in terms of cost, not for benefit to the students.

    To have no Windows anywhere is going to cost the college a lot of prospective students who are told, "We have weird computers in our labs with Linux and they won't allow us to have normal computers with Windows because the college gets more money that way." And the prospective students are going to run away, confused.
  • Ridiculous (Score:3, Insightful)

    by kalidasa ( 577403 ) on Wednesday March 12, 2003 @05:16PM (#5497455) Journal
    It's one thing to offer the money saying that his money can't be used to buy MS products. It's another to use the money to blackmail the school into NEVER buying ANY MS product with ANYONE's money. Tell your grandpa that the guy is a jerk.
  • by h4x0r-3l337 ( 219532 ) on Wednesday March 12, 2003 @05:16PM (#5497458)
    Does the Slashdot community have any points that I can give my grandfather to present to the Board next month?

    Your grandfather should tell the board that students that don't know how to use Microsoft products are useless in the workplace, and that therefore it is the college's duty to make sure their students are familiar with Microsoft products. Completely ridding the place of all things Microsoft is not the way to do that.

  • by stinky wizzleteats ( 552063 ) on Wednesday March 12, 2003 @05:18PM (#5497502) Homepage Journal

    At the risk of sounding like a Linux zealot, I must ask - what is the goal here, education or training?

    I guess I always imagined, (and my Lit professors consistently agreed) that education was an experience that was supposed to transcend job skills and give you something you couldn't get from a technical guide, training bootcamp, etc.

    If you are any sort of computer professional, you are training all the time. If you can't handle changing gears in terms of the development platform you use, you are already behind the game before you've even gotten started. If, on the other hand, you've gotten some real Computer Science with emphasis on theory, you are going to have a framework of knowledge which I personally understand to be education.

    If one were to recognize the need to get into the nuts and bolts of a system, free from constraints of filtering the information to remove marketing intent, and free from anticompetitive obfuscation and outright deceit, which would be the best option to look at if one wanted an education?

  • by dasmegabyte ( 267018 ) <das@OHNOWHATSTHISdasmegabyte.org> on Wednesday March 12, 2003 @05:21PM (#5497546) Homepage Journal
    Other than strong arming them into an alternative they might not want? Because the major ramification here, especially for a small college, is that they won't be able to support students' machines that are running Microsoft operating systems.

    There's little difficulty in getting them to interoperate. But that the support resources -- help desks, IT staff, trainers -- would have to switch to linux/OSS. And that means that the necessary knowledge base isn't there to help people out. If a student is using MS Word on his laptop, and doesn't know how to do something, you'd have to tell him "we don't support Windows because it's too costly." A very patriotic phrase. But it doesn't help the student. Which means it doesn't help the school.

    I'm not saying "don't use linux in schools." I'm saying don't put all your eggs in ANY basket. The college I went to had about 600 Windows machines, 200 Macintoshes, 100 Sun stations and about an equal number of RedHat machines. A lot of savvy students used the Sun and RedHat machines, and I don't mean just engineers. My wife, who wouldn't know open source from cold sores, used to use the $9000 Ultras to check her email, because they had these huge trinitron monitors and didn't have lines around them like the Windows machines.

    The hodge podge of machines meant that we each had our own preferences and our own specialties. I think that's the best situation for a school; a technical equivalent to a "liberal arts" education.
  • by 5KVGhost ( 208137 ) on Wednesday March 12, 2003 @05:48PM (#5497950)
    If I were a board member I wouldn't want any part of such an arrangement. And if I were an IT Admin or an instructor in such an institution I'd be outraged that such a thing would even be considered.

    Decisions about what software are used in teaching and administrative tasks should be left to the people who actually use the software. Making sweeping decisions based on the whims of a wealthy patron is not in the best interests of any institution.

    I think it'd be great for college students to use computers apart from Microsoft, but I'm told that the board will look at the decision in terms of cost, not for benefit to the students.

    What benefit to students is that, exactly?There's nothing to prevent the college from using open source or non-MS products wherever they want to, if they think it would benefit the students or the instutition as a whole.
  • by edremy ( 36408 ) on Wednesday March 12, 2003 @05:51PM (#5498013) Journal
    That amount of money isn't going to cut it.

    Yeah, yeah, yeah, Linux free, M$ expensiveblah blah blah. But it's not true.

    First, what critical systems run under Windows? I work at a small liberal arts college. Our student registration and billing systems are Windows. There are no Unix versions of the software we use. Comparable Unix products cost, quite literally, millions of dollars. (Price Banner recently? Our IT director did: it's buy Banner or renovate the library.)

    Oh, did I mention that we'd lose all the extensive customizations, support documentation and the like we've made to those products? Let's redo a few man-years of effort.

    Then there's all the costs to switch the Windows software over to Unix. What various professors use *isn't* free. Rebuying SPSS alone would run a small fortune. Forget all the econometrics programs the Econ folks have, the CAD programs, the quantum chemistry codes...

    Of course, some software simply isn't available, period. I'd lose Chime, a great plug-in that I can do all sorts of neat chemistry tricks with. There is no comparable Unix program.

    Next, you've probably got close to 1000 computer using staff and faculty on that campus. How much will it cost to retrain all of them? Oh, and finding secretaries and office workers that know StarOffice is damn hard. We can hire MS Office-knowing temps cheap.

    At least double the size of the Help Desk, to handle the increased volume of calls. You're going to need a full-time person just to handle the inevitable complaints about losing formatting on all of those Word documents the profs get mailed.

    Now, how many of your current IT staff can handle the changes to Linux? We've got some good network admins, server gurus and programmers here, but they're Windows folks. Do you fire those staff or switch them to Unix, where their 10+ years of experience is suddenly null?

    It's not enough money. Not even close.

  • by An Onerous Coward ( 222037 ) on Wednesday March 12, 2003 @06:15PM (#5498286) Homepage
    Pros:

    1) The university gets millions of dollars from an unnamed donor. A lot of the rougher parts of the transition could be smoothed over by this money. The other points will focus on the transition itself.

    2) The university saves a bundle on licensing fees. This may be especially important since Microsoft is trying to move towards a subscription model.

    3) While open source solutions aren't drop-in replacements for Microsoft products, the end user apps are similar enough to minimize the need for retraining. If someone knows their way around a Windows desktop, Gnome and KDE are pretty easy to grasp. The same goes for Office vs. OpenOffice and IE vs. Mozilla. With power users, its sometimes trickier, since they may have come to rely on certain obscure features.

    4) With OSS, you don't need to rely on Microsoft for technical support. The fact is, Microsoft is the only company capable of adding features and fixing bugs in Microsoft products. So if you have a problem with those products, and MS isn't interested in fixing them, you're out of luck. Open source is more flexible in this regard.

    5) A better CS program. If we assume that dropping MS will substantially increase the use of open source software, then it's very likely that CS students will have reasons to explore the code of the products they use every day. So they're being exposed to non-trivial implementations of structures, algorithms, software design decisions, and everything else that comes along with it.

    I realize that Microsoft's "Shared Source Initiative" also allows some level of access to the code. But the barriers are much higher (NDAs), and the rewards are much lower (can't recompile, bugfix, or experiment).

    Cons:

    1) Ten years is a long time. You don't know what new products and services Microsoft will be coming out with over that time, or how useful they might be to the campus. Think about how the computing world has changed since 1993, and ask if the school really should be making such long term decisions about their IT infrastructure.

    2) You lose the option to buy Microsoft products. By itself, this fact is too obvious to mention. But what are the ramifications?

    3) You lose compatability with important Windows-only software (like certain CAD products). The university may be able to hobble along with the licenses they already own, but that's going to be more and more difficult.

    4) People don't like change. Such a transition could make for an ugly political brawl.

    [note: Five pros, four cons! Obviously, this means they should take it.]
  • by Rev.LoveJoy ( 136856 ) on Wednesday March 12, 2003 @06:47PM (#5498633) Homepage Journal
    Perhaps I misunderstand your question. How will depriving students of the ability to learn on MS systems or to code for windows or even us MS products be a good thing?

    I would be more apt to sympathize with the strings attached to this donation if it weren't so clearly going to dictate the educational doctrine of my school.

    Am I missing the obvious?

    Cheers,
    -- RLJ

  • by Dominic_Mazzoni ( 125164 ) on Wednesday March 12, 2003 @07:11PM (#5498857) Homepage
    Ever wonder why some universities have money to build new sports stadiums and swimming pools, but no money to fix a broken dining hall? Or why a liberal-arts school might have a brand-new Science building while the library is about to crumble?

    One reason is that too many donors are only willing to give money with strings attached. You want to build a Science building, so you ask the Keck or Broad foundation to give you money. No problem. You need to raise an extra 100K here, another 100K there for general maintenance and repair, and nobody wants to give.

    If you're in the position to donate a significant amount of money to a university, please consider giving it with no strings attached. I understand that sometimes it's nice to have your name on a building, but don't forget about all of the programs that get neglected because all of the school's money is already earmarked for other projects.
  • Best Practices (Score:5, Informative)

    by amuirharmony ( 654941 ) on Wednesday March 12, 2003 @07:38PM (#5499063)
    Your grandfather should look into MIT's implementation of information systems. There is virtually no reliance on MS yet complete choice for students. The IS implementation at MIT is really a beautiful thing. Too often schools fail to seek best practices before diving into new projects.
  • by KurdtX ( 207196 ) on Wednesday March 12, 2003 @11:01PM (#5500091)
    Ok, maybe my mind is on hydrogen cars because of the recent article [slashdot.org], maybe it's because I always compare computers to cars, but basically, this will look the same to many people as stating that you cannot drive a gasoline-powered car if you attend this University.

    What does restricting your car choice have to do with education? Absolutley nothing! What does restricting your vendor choice have to do with education? Absolutley nothing! While I dislike Microsoft as much as any of you (I am currently unemployed, despite knowing I could get hired by MS if I wanted that), how stupid does this make the University look? You can only decide that something sucks if you actually get to see what it is. Remember how much we laugh at those religious organizations that boycott movies without actually seeing them? Censorship is bad, mkay?

    What I would propose to the donor is that the University use their money to use for the purchase of Microsoft-free technology: Linux, Mac, Solaris, whatever. These purchases would not affect the normal purchasing of such systems, so that if they were going to spend $1 Million on linux boxes, this year they'll now be spending $3.4 million. And since Linux is largely free / low-cost, those millions can go quite a way.

    Often what is needed in a situation like this is a beach head... if the board sees that they can get 10 Linux boxes for the price of one MS-equiped box, and that people aren't seeing any other major differences, which do you think they'll buy in the future?
  • by dh003i ( 203189 ) <`dh003i' `at' `gmail.com'> on Wednesday March 12, 2003 @11:11PM (#5500145) Homepage Journal
    As has been proven by every impartial study done (those funded by MS don't count), the TCO of a GNU/Linux system is just cheaper than that of a Windows system. I won't go into all of the reasons, but will list a few:

    1. Upgrades are free ($).

    2. Initial acquirement is free ($).

    3. Support can be purchased on a competitive basis among competing companies, thus producing superior support. How many times have you called up inept technical support guys who obviously don't know what the fuck they're talking about, can't speak English, know less about the system than you do, and are obviously reading from a TO-DO cookbook, which ends in "if all else fails, tell them to wipe the hard-drive and reinstall everything"? The simple fact is, there's a reasonable solution for the vast majority of problems you run into, which doesn't involve reinstalling everything from scratch.

    Call up a windows support guy and complain that your computer won't start up due to a corrupted IO.sys file. What will he tell you? He'll take you through the usual motions, and then -- invariably -- tell you there's nothing else you can do, back up your data, and reinstall the OS (conveniently ignoring the fact that it's difficult if not impossible to back up one's data when one can only boot into DOS and has no access to the CD-writer). He will tell you this despite the fact that there is a much simpler solution, which is simply to replace the corrupt IO.sys file with a valid working one. Why can't he tell you that, or send you the file that would allow you to do that? Because the technical support contract doesn't support that. Don't like your technical support contract options? Too fucking bad, there's no alternative.

    Not so with GNU/Linux. First of all, such problems are rarely encountered, even in the rare case where a power failure occurs, due to journaling file-systems. Secondly, technical support can be purchased at a competitive price -- which means, ultimately, cheaper for you if you section out the tech-support aspect of your bill from a proprietary vendor. It also means better service.

    GNU/Linux also provides the benefit of being able to run on much older hardware than does Windows, allowing the university to upgrade their hardware less frequently. Microsoft apparently thinks that it needs to provide hardware developers with motivation to produce better hardware by continually increasing requirements that it's software need to run acceptably. Though this is true with regards to some modern bloat-ware in GNU/Linux, there are always non-bloatware alternatives which are usually just as functional, if not more so. KDE and GNOME can be replaced with the lighter Xfce. The bloated WM's that come with them can be replaced by the streamlined and elegant WindowMaker.

    Let's not forget some of the obvious benefits. Universities are big organizations, which can afford to fix their own problems if given the means. Because GNU/Linux uses FS and OSS software, universities can fix their own problems. Indeed, they need not even pay for the solution -- they can simply throw a problem at CS students to solve, making it a mandatory part of the course.

    Let's not pretend that the university would be denying students choice by not buying MS products. These students could use whatever they want on their own computers. Exposing them to Linux at the libraries and other public areas would expose them to an operating system which is more likely than not the direction of the future. MS may be the dominant force, but it has no-where to go but down, and it's insistence on making crappy products, illegally using it's monopoly power, and depriving consumers of their rights will certainly accelerate its downfall. On the contrary, GNU/Linux is gaining more and more support. It is growing extremely quickly, and is a fertile ground for new ideas and innovation.

    Finally, exposing students to Linux exposes them to the way computer's really work. Linux -- though it now has easy-to-use inte
  • Campus Agreement (Score:4, Informative)

    by Lebrun ( 655496 ) on Wednesday March 12, 2003 @11:29PM (#5500208)
    My university signed this thing with microsoft called 'Campus Agreement'. Basically it means they get MS software really cheap, almost free for the students, but tha catch is that this "Agreement" is exclusive. They're not allowed to work other similar liceses. This results classes about VB programming, where there used to be C++ and Pascal courses. This happened after I graduated, so I did enyoy learning a lot of different languages, but now, that's a thing of the past, thanks (again) to MS (or should I say M$?) As for my favorite language, C/C++, they could be using one of Borland's tools (C++ Builder, Kylix), but as a product of the agreement, they're stuck with the very inferior Visual C++.
  • Compromise ... (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Ninja Programmer ( 145252 ) on Thursday March 13, 2003 @12:42AM (#5500596) Homepage
    Given that this is not considered "a lot of money" why not instead see if you can come to a compromise. Perhaps a figure less than 2.4 million, to promise not to buy/renew any Microsoft new contracts for 7 years with a 100% refund clause on any significant violation.

    7 years is an eternity for the computer industry -- if Linux cannot be able to hold its own accross the board in 7 years, then there's little point. It gives the school two possible outs -- forfeiture or just wait out the 7 year time limit before returning to MS.
  • Not only CS (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Brat Food ( 9397 ) on Thursday March 13, 2003 @01:38AM (#5500918) Homepage
    These funds do not just go for people getting CS degrees. Computer labs, art departments, secretaries, on and on. And i will tell you this, unless someone is in to computers, and youve all seen it, they are completly programmed for MS computing. At a web cafe, i recently added a linux machine, and the first customer to use it came up to the counter and said the computer was broken. Well i got the call, and it turns out he didnt see the IE icon on the desktop and could get no further. THIS is the problem, and id wager even people with a masters in some non computer related field do the same thing.

    Why does this happen? Because people become homoginized on MS software, and dont REALLY learn how to use a computer. I made a web kiosk with only mozilla. It took a few tries, as people would fight tooth and nail to not use mozilla. The point of this, is the average user is brainwashed.

    So, money aside, i think the point of this "gift" is to force people, no matter how they will use it, to learn the computer beyond the microsoft microcosm. To learn there IS a world w/o MS, you CAN use mozilla, etc. You are only doing students a diservice by having a computing platform where they dont have to think (since they all "know" how to use it already) and wont know wht to do if presented with anythign outside the teeny scope of that.

    Another thing to keep in mind, is that old hardware is staying useable longer and longer. A 1ghz PC will IMHO do everytyhing you could do day to day 10 years from now. You could make all of these dual boot, and do a slow changeover from your current licenses.

    I say go for it, change the face of university computing, be a pioneer. This is like a free ride to try something new.

Software production is assumed to be a line function, but it is run like a staff function. -- Paul Licker

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