Egyptian Linux Advocates' Replies 539
Alaa and his friends at Linux-Egypt put a lot of thought into answering your questions. Alaa wrote, "we felt there was much misinformation or lack of information about egypt while reading the comments so I kinda used each question to inject some extra info," which makes this Q&A worth reading for insight into Egyptian society even if you have no particular interest in Linux. Thanks, Alaa and Linux-Egypt.
1) Computers in Egypt? - by Anonymous Coward
Can you give us some idea of the state of computing in your country? For example, are computers common in general home use, are middle-class types able to afford them, and so forth. I'm also curious about how the heat and sand are handled - are they problems?
Alaa:
Computer usage is very widespread in Egypt, official government estimates are 10% of families own computers, I'd say this is probably a correct observation (you never know with official government figures). this is significant if you put in mind other statistics about 40% of Egyptian population are illiterate, a rough 10% of those who received basic education return to illiteracy. with an average income of about 1000$ dollars a year and a about 60% or more of the population under 25 years old (most probably not buying computers for themselves) this means anyone who can use computers and can barely afford them is buying them.
almost all university students and graduates (we get about half a million university graduates per year), know basic computer and internet usage. everyone in the middle class has a hotmail account (email it is assumed equals hotmail, if you ask your average Egyptian about his email account she will reply with the username only).
Egyptian parents feel it is essential to buy their kids computers and teach them how to use them, the theory being you can't get any kind of job without computer knowledge, they're common everywhere in Egypt not just cities.
it is a rare town that does not have a NetCafe.
everyone uses whiteboxes assembled locally, only laptops are bought from big brands, a computer is relatively cheap when compared to other household apparel, you can assemble a basic system for about 150$.
but thats not the interesting question importing technology is easy, there is lots of computer expertise in the country also, the market is always expanding, computer related schools are the most popular places to spend your university years (after medical school).
most jobs are networking and administration jobs, there are lots of webdesign/webprogramming jobs (Egyptians love flash pages), and a big market for Visual Basic, Foxpro, Access and MS SQL Server based solutions. only big name in enterprise development in Oracle, although most of the oracle jobs are PL/SQL not Java based.
other programming jobs are quite rare but they exist, there is some work on embedded programming, some enterprise programming with Java, everyone is trying to get into the VoIP business, some companies are trying to start data warehouses. most companies are small software houses, I doubt they make any big profits but it seems their goals are to make a living not a profit.
The sand is not a real problem, contrary to what you guys seem to think we don't live in the desert, in fact this is one of the biggest problems facing us, the 70 strong million Egyptian population is living in about 2% of the land area crowded around the Nile valley and north coast which means we build our homes, roads, factories and cities on the little land we have that is fit for agriculture, we should be living in the desert but we aren't.
In Cairo however the dust and pollution are a very big problem, I have to open my PC and blow the dust out once a month, every few months one of my cards would stop functioning because the dust got between the connectors.
Heat isn't such a big deal, it probably means you can't overclock (personally I underclock), and servers are usually placed in freezing air conditioned rooms anyway.
Heat is indirectly a big nuisance though, lately everyone started buying air conditioners and they're overloading the aging power grid, it is very common to get power outages and blackouts in very hot nights (I can't thank the inventor of journalized file systems enough).
2) What is the killer app in Egypt? - by eltoyoboyo
Or more to the point, what is the first thing users want to do after the system is installed and running?
Alaa:
that must be IM, probably MSN followed by Yahoo Messenger and ICQ
thats what most computer users spend their online time doing, net connectivity is available to anyone who owns a computer through a series of free to dial numbers (billed by the minute for rates lower than normal telephone calls), broadband is creeping in slowly in the form of ADSL which starting from this month began to be slightly affordable.
the killer app when not online is probably Windows Media player, Egyptians enjoy the movies very much but don't usually go to the cinema (our cinemas are always barely surviving, sometimes they even get government subsidies and tax breaks just to remain floating), so watching movies on your PC is the way to go for computer owners.
we're talking illegally copied movies of course, there are some cheap VCDs in the market but most people just buy the movies from the guy under the bridge or copy them from friends, almost all Egyptian movies find their way to the pirated CDs market a few days after they start showing.
after that its Internet Explorer for browsing and email and MS Word.
anyone who uses any other apps is an advanced user
as for games FIFA 2003 appears to be the most popular game, football and car racing are very big here, even bigger than FPS.
strategy and RPG games seem to require a bit of knowledge in English, they're played but are not as big as FIFA.
network gaming is beginning to be popular, after the internet became available to all households CyberCaffes (which BTW never serve anything but the internet) began to offer loads of games and even organize tournaments with prizes and all.
one of the interesting peculiarities about Egypt is that Game Arcades are banned almost everywhere in the country, in the mid nineties they where very popular, in both rich and poor areas in large cities, now for some reason there is a loud enough group of Egyptians who prefers the government and police interfere with their kids than to try and raise them themselves. so calls to ban these shops that wasted the kids time and money where voiced in all public newspapers. and governerate by governerate they decided to save all the poor children and close the arcades so the kids can go back to study. The result is CyberCaffes have a very big market even if everyone gets broadband.
this situation of course means that very few CyberCaffes are interested in using GNU/Linux
oh and BTW the act of playing computer games is commonly referred to as "tel3ab atari" "to play Atari"
3) Pre-install questions or misconceptions - by dkh2
What were the most common misunderstandings among new or potential Linux users? Did you provide a place for newbie questions and answers?
Alaa:
well first of all the word installfest is a bit misleading when it comes to our event.
we assumed very few would bother to bring their PCs with them to the fest so we decided to make it a general Linux Festival, a day to present everything about GNU/Linux, Free Software and Open Source, so we had demonstrations and presentations, we distributed informational pamphlets with FAQ like Q&A, and we had a number of volunteers do nothing but chat with the visitors and answer their questions.
the main target for all this was newbies, so in a sense the whole festival was a place for newbie questions and answers.
I don't know if there was a most common misunderstanding, the questions we got this time were surprisingly smart.
I suppose the most frequently asked questions were all about compatibility with Windows, the fact that GNU/Linux is a separate Operating System is sometimes confusing, they don't exactly know where the PC stops and the OS starts, and Microsoft are not making it easier with their thick metaphors. questions about why GNU/Linux needs its own partitions and whether their Windows applications will run on it or not are very common?
once you explain to them that GNU/Linux is a completely separate platform they start worrying about whether their documents and media files will work or not?
to avoid complicated arguments about media files and patents we prepared a specially remastered version of Mandrake 10 CE to include PLF packages capable of playing back all sorts of media files so this part was easy.
of course some had confusions about the meaning of Free Software and Open Source, Free Software is actually the easy part when it comes to Arabic since we have separate words for libre and gratis, but our media tends to copy news from the web and translate it in a very shallow manner so its more common to see GNU/Linux referred to as the gratis operating system.
Open Source is always a bit confusing because the adopted translation means absolutely nothing to anyone even programmers.
4) More particularly - by Dlugar
I'm interested in: what's the best distro with regards to Arabic support? I've been studying Arabic for a year or two now and I enjoy tinkering around with Arabic on Linux, but sometime's it's so hard to get things to work! (I recently tagged some of my Arabic-language mp3s with Arabic Unicode in the id3 tags, and so far the only player I've found that will display the Arabic tags is the Beep Media Player (gtk2 fork of xmms).
Alaa:
that would probably be Mandrake, they work closely with Arabeyes.org, they offer a basic installation guide in Arabic (not full documentation), the installer itself is not translated to Arabic but their tools are and it comes with Arabic fonts, and it's about the only distro where Arabic filenames show properly out of the box on both Gnome and KDE, and AFAIK they're the only major distro to include one of Arabeyes projects in RPM form.
however it doesn't look like Mandrake tests their Arabic support (and unfortunately it seems the Arabic users community is not doing a good job of testing and bug reporting either), in Mandrake 10 OpenOffice would not render Arabic text correctly without installing FreeType packages made by PLF with the bytecode interpreter enabled, this problem is not inherit in OpenOffice since it worked fine with older versions.
apart from Mandrake there are a couple of Arabic distros, HayderLinux which I have no experience with. And Arabbix, a Morphix based arabized liveCD which probably has the best Arabic support yet.
as a rule anything not using GTK2 or QT3 most probably does not support Arabic.
Arabic support is getting better but its true that its still hard to get things to work, for instance this Mozilla bug http://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=197375 is a show stopper and slowing the adoption of GNU/Linux here yet no one in the Mozilla developer community or the Arabic community is working on it.
if you want to help please vote this bug, if you know the Mozilla source base please look into it or contact Arabeyes.org and give them directions on where to look.
5) Politics, religion and software - by CdBee
Have the recent military actions taken by Western countries in the Islamic world affected attitudes towards software, bearing in mind the US-centric nature (Microsoft, Intel, Adobe) of commercial, closed-source software?
Alaa:
politics has, I don't think religion had any influence.
the continued support the US is giving to the state of Israel and the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq have led to a widespread boycott movement, most Egyptians don't want a single dollar of their money to get into the US, I think Linux-Egypt.org got many new members due to this trend. this trend is a purely economical one, no one is refusing software or any form of technology because they're the product of another culture.
in the case of software many Egyptians want to stop using M$ products specially when they're paying for them (beginning to be quite common among companies and government agencies)
local and Arabic media is covering GNU/Linux as a possible alternative that could allow for economical independence in the software market, and I'm sure this played a big role in the success of our event.
but there is a special resentment towards Microsoft, probably due to an incident few years ago when they put adverts all over Israel thanking the Israeli army. or maybe due to the perception that they have some influence over the Egyptian government.
note that these sentiments are shared by both Muslims and Christians in egypt, although of course the more extreme Muslims would voice them in very religious phrasing.
6) Motives for switching - by Rei
On the subject of national origin:
There is a widespread perception in the west that the Arab world is backwards in terms of technological knowhow, and in education in general. How do you, as a geek in Egypt, perceive this? Do you feel that the free software movement can help nations like Egypt achieve the sort of tech industry that nations like Israel have by increasing exposure to computers for the average person?
Alaa:
I don't know about the Arab world, but here in egypt it is basically true we are very much backwards.
Egyptian education is in a very bad state, it has been so for quite some time now and it keeps getting worse, high school graduates hardly learn a thing outside some math and basic mechanics, I'm a student in a Computer Science school and I know I almost learned nothing there, some places are better than others but the general state isn't very good at all, and most Egyptians would agree (we have this thing about not wanting to tell foreigners our bad news so you might not hear it often, but if you monitor any local media, or any local internet community you'll find the topic of how bad the education is brought again and again).
in theory and intentions our education isn't particularly backwards, the courses being taught are probably very similar to what is being taught in Europe and in the case of high school probably even more advanced than what you're used to in the states, the problem is rather in quality, of course its basically impossible to learn anything when your average classroom has 100+ students
in terms of technological knowhow surprisingly enough I don't think we're as backwards as it looks, a large enough number of people pass through the educational system intact and start learning the real stuff in post graduate studies, abroad or in their work environment, we got enough talented and well educated people to lead the way forward, and its surprisingly easy to find them, many Egyptians can even name them for you, ask them who is your top Genetics experts and they're bound to reply Dr Mostagir.
so the way I see it it's more a question of resources, infrastructure and of saving the crumbling educational system. And that is what worries me, the educational system seems to be a hopeless case, I'm sure if you pick a random sample of 1000 elementary school teachers and test them for language and math skills similar to what you test in SAT they'll fail miserably. as for resources and infrastructure almost all of it is controlled by a centralized government infested with corruption and with zero credibility among the people.
as I explained above the average person is more or less exposed to computers, this is not that part that is missing.
but yes I do believe that the free software movement can make quite a difference, by providing the source code, the documentation and a transparent development process you solve the educational part of the problem motivated individuals can teach themselves by joining this community, educational institutes too can rely on these resources and the free flow of information to achieve better education. The problem of infrastructure and resources is greatly reduced in the case of software, specially free software all you need is computers and an internet connection.
I don't know much about the tech industry in Israel; but I'm sure Free Software can help build a thriving software and computing industry, the knowhow is there (thousands of very talented experts out there), and a feasible way to improve the skill pool, the fact that we don't have to start from scratch and can benefit from all the advances of the international free software community with no cost is an essential aspect to it too.
I know many agree with me, we've done three seminars in different Egyptian Universities where these sentiments where voiced by both students and staff, that was a big part of what people talked about in the festival and its actually one of the goals of Linux-Egypt.org and my main personal motivation to help make this come true.
and for this rare opportunity to make our lives better we thank all the Free/Open Source Software community. believe me its greatly appreciated, even by the people you'd normally consider haters of your culture (we had a poster once send a thanks to RMS and wishing that god would lead him to the path of Islam so he can rest in heaven when the day comes!!!
7) Women. - by Mateito
I didn't look through all the installfest photos, but I didn't see a lot of women there. Okay, so hanging out with a lot of geeks configuring network services isn't most chicks idea of a hot date. But, nevertheless, how many females are involved with the open source crowd, and in the IT industry in general, in Egypt?
Alaa:
only word I have for you is "Ya Moftary" I don't know how to translate this, literally it means you despot, but actually it is used when someone makes a very clearly unfounded claim or accusation
Look in the photos again, 36 out of 103 photos had females in them (maybe you where not counting the veiled ones) their numbers where actually higher than what the photos would tell you, our photographer MaysaraOmar has quite individual notions of how photography should be.
first let me explain something, there is no Open Source crowd exactly, there is Linux-Egypt.org and a few companies using GNU/Linux and a couple of very small groups (a new LUG was just started in Cairo University few days ago, they where a great help in the festival) thats it.
I don't know about membership in Linux-Egypt, but we set up a mailing list for the festival visitors which had about 300 subscribers, judging by their names I'd say more than 40% where females, on the festival itself we gave up trying to do registration when the flow became very rapid but my estimate is no less than 25% were females (which I think is quite good for such events), most came on their own not tagging along with their husbands, brothers, fathers, uncles and boy friends, we even got a group of 4 female students who came together from TantaUniversity outside Cairo to pick copies of GNU/Linux and ask questions about their GNU/Linux based graduation projects. The only non Egyptian visitors we got where middle aged ladies.
we had with us 3 female volunteers (only 1 was involved in the technical stuff).
one of the visitors (who was quite good looking BTW) was starting her own software house and was scouting for talents (we had to restrain some of the volunteers
in IT in general it must be a very high percentage, most companies I deal with have more females in their staff, I'd say 50% of all IT jobs or even slightly more but probably the number drops the closer you get to the general manager (is it different anywhere else??).
there are many factors that would affect this, girls tend to do better in school (don't know why) and engineering and computing schools take the top high school graduates so they're usually heavily populated with females, IT is deemed a suitable job for a female since it does not involve much traveling, they don't have to order many men around as opposed to other engineering jobs where you got to deal with many workers and technicians (this isn't really a big factor when it comes to employment but no one tells them till its too late) and late hours could be done at home, alot of the job are still government jobs which are governed by strict rules relating to grades in school and university, age and stuff like that, there is no way to avoid employing a female who is qualified in a situation like this.
Egyptian girls tend to start looking for husbands very early, so their ideas about a hot date may surprise you
8) the competition - by TeamLive
I am wondering what the competition is for an operating system in the arab world. Is windows as big as it is here? Or do people use other operating systems (BSD, OSX, Solaris, Linux) most of the time?
Also, what is the most widely used distro in that part of the world?
Alaa:
you're kidding right??
of course windows is as big, its probably even bigger, the most widespread OS is probably windows 98, then comes WindowsXP, and then windows 2000, you get my drift??
most of it is illegal copies of course.
our government is almost 100% Microsoft, same is true for educational institutes (hell mathematicians write their papers in Microsoft Word here, there is this one guy who knows LaTeX, he makes a fortune out of Egyptian mathematicians wanting to submit papers to AMS Journals), although basic courses with GNU/Linux in them and research and graduation projects on GNU/Linux are starting to appear.
on the other hand our CS departments started teaching C# and .Net before they had any compilers ready.
Macs used to be popular in the printing and journalism field, some of our newspapers still have some aging Macs there and are having a hard time networking them with the new windows machines (hey maybe thats a good opportunity for Linux there), Mac OS X almost doesn't exist (I think it didn't have Arabic support till the current release).
big business and banks are Unix users, although most Unix vendors have closed their local branches, IBM is still supporting a bunch of ancient mainframes, frcu.eun.eg was running on a VAX/VMS machine till few months ago, but most of these aging machines are being replaced slowly by GNU/Linux or Windows boxes.
I only know of one company (an ISP) using FreeBSD, there are some embedded and industrial control work being done on QNX and NetBSD but its all small stuff.
GNU/Linux is slowly replacing all the Solaris installations around Sun basically pulled out of the Egyptian market, some of its old employees are opening GNU/Linux companies.
Apart from Microsoft, GNU/Linux is the most widely known and talked about OS, so I think at the moment its the only alternative (but its not real competition yet).
9) Popular Culture - by Anonymous Coward
How ingrained is technology/computing (including OSS) into popular culture in Egypt? In North America it is everpresent and accepted as part of the culture, as it were, but I seldom see the same side of other societies. Are geek topics common 'water-cooler' discussions?
Alaa:
I just heard someone on the metro/underground say he jumps around like a mouse on a desktop, how's that for ingrained??
we had some popular songs mentioning internet relationships (with comical video clips and stuff).
Egyptian cinema is still finding it hard to portray computers or computer users correctly (but hey Hollywood still does computers that beep and blink).
almost everyone has heard the word internet, some of the older folks think its the tool of the devil, this thing similar to satellite TV that corrupts kids and allows them to download porn, some just know the word but have no idea what it is.
most however have some almost correct notion, you must keep in mind that a huge number of Egyptians work abroad (the money they send is actually the second largest source of income), any technology that allows these people to call home is quickly adopted by the whole nation, in many cases these people are poor craftsmen from farming families with little to no education, don't be surprised to find the local whiz in the village passing from house to house establishing VoIP calls for the folks to see their granddaughter for the first time.
as for geek topics, I'm not sure what you mean by that, if its SCO, the DVD case, etc then no; Egyptians are unaware that their rights to use Encryption are being stripped away let alone being aware of what happens abroad.
if however you're talking about the release of a new Pentium by Intel, or SATA getting cheaper or the release of Microsoft's latest beta then yeah, its quite common to hear young people discussing these things (specially males), this is usually mixed with talk about cars and mobile phones (both more popular topics and more ingrained).
OSS is not ingrained yet, although many have heard the word Linux before, no month passes without a mention of Linux in at least one of the national daily newspaper and one of the monthly computer magazines (usually well intended misinformation).
oh and BTW one of the reporters who regularly cover OSS and GNU/Linux has the coolest family name ever, he is called "Al Batriq" which means The Penguin
I don't know how a topic would be considered a geek topic if it was ingrained in society and culture and to the point of becoming water-cooler discussion though?
10) Positive contribution? - by acceber
Do you feel events such as InstallFest have contributed positively to the growing awareness of computer technology in non-western countries?
Alaa:
this question is meaningless, it is based on an assumption that there is a lack of awareness of computer technology to begin with which is not true.
and please don't lump whole countries together like this, I'd say awareness of computer technology in Egypt or India is as big or bigger than in countries like Greece or Poland (I confess this is not a very well informed opinion but I'm sure the differences won't be as big as the question implies).
however naturally I feel that our festival has contributed positively to the slowly growing awareness of Free/Open Source Software in Egypt
I encourage all LUGs regardless of how western their nation is to organize similar events and please take a leaf from our book, don't make it an installfest only there is alot you can do with just a bunch of volunteers.
oh and use Wikis to organize such events you won't regret it.
-- http://www.manalaa.net ultimate_answer_t deep_thought(void) { sleep(years2secs(7500000)); return 42; }
Great interview! (Score:5, Insightful)
Now that is the kind of interview I really enjoy reading!
It's not technical but tell us about the use of the tech from the view of a 'local' with some insight into the culture. Makes the world seem a bit smaller.
- A Canadian who learned a few things about Egypt today.
culture is not high culture (Score:4, Insightful)
street culture in tokyo is very different than street culture in cairo or helsinki, and learning those differences is just as valid, insightful, and interesting as learning the difference between chinese opera and western opera
in fact, given that traditional cultural influences exert less and less pull over common folk of any culture nowadays, it could be said that what you indicate is important to learn is really LESS important than what is divulged in this interview, for populism rules in the world now
so congratulations on YOUR elitist troll
Re:culture is not high culture (Score:2, Informative)
slashdot has bad comment display parameters (Score:5, Informative)
so slashdot should fix how they display comment threads here, because it is misleading, and indicates a train of thought which does not exist, and only encourages insanity
Re:Great interview! (Score:2, Insightful)
If I don't have an interest in listening to Egyptian music and reading local Egyptian newspapers, then I shouldn't bother to read small snippets from people with insight into Egypt? I guess you're saying, either delve completely into Egyptian culture or don't bother being interested?
Wow, I suppose I must be in the minority here who haven't had much exposure to Egypt but still found the answers very interesting and inf
Re:Great interview! (Score:2)
Exactly what literature did you have in mind?
The Egyptian edition of 'Wired'?
Re:Great interview! (Score:5, Insightful)
if it would make you any happier I respect many jewish personalities and have a few jewish friends (not from egypt since they're rather rare here).
being against the state of israel or its policies does not equate to hating jews, or even hating israelis for that matter.
I'm also against the government of egypt and its policies, does this mean I hate egyptians??
Re:Great interview! (Score:2, Insightful)
I'm sure you don't hate Jews. But do you realize that the logical result of disbanding the state of Israel would be a displacement and perhaps mass-killing of so many of those Jews whom you do not hate?
Re:Great interview! (Score:4, Insightful)
Yep. And that would be SO much worst than the displacement and mass-killing of so many of those Palestinians who used to live there.
It's perfectly possible to be against those policies without hating jews, you know.
Re:Great interview! (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Great interview! (Score:5, Insightful)
First off, it was not "Israel's Land" for almost two millenia, but 78% of it was taken from the Palestinians in 1948. They have since settled over half of the remaining 22%. Your comment would have been equivalent to a person in the early 1800s saying "Why do those Cherokees keep trying to take America's land?"
Secondly, we need to look at each individual conflict, because they all have different leadups to them (apart from the obvious issue of the displacement of almost a million people, which has since grown to ~10 million). For example, if we want to look at the 1948 war, we have an ongoing guerilla war going on in Israel and Palestine; the Palestinians were in a military alliance with several surrounding states. The Israelis solidly took the other hand, and there was the mass expulsion of refugees. The end result is obvious; when you attack someone's allies, to the point of driving many hundreds of thousands of them out of their homes, you can expect the allies to attack back. Calling it "Arabs starting wars to try and sieze Israel's land" is disingenous at the least.
In 1967, Israel attacked the surrounding states, declaring that they were preempting an arab strike. In reality, this argument doesn't hold much water - their several hundred thousand troops mowed through the mere 80,000 that Egypt had near the border, they blew up nearly all of Egypt's aircraft nearby because they were not on any sort of alert (as a country planning an invasion would be), etc. Jordan and Syria hardly did a thing; Israel siezed the West Bank and Gaza, and immediately began settling it and driving its people into refugee camps. Now, it can be said that they were protecting their vital interests, given, say, Egypt's blockade and Syrian shelling from Golan. But preempting their imminent destruction is complete nonsense.
In 1971, the Arabs *did* initiate a war, with the goal of retaking what was lost in 1967. You are only justified in that case, but if you omit context, you're being disingenuous.
If you want to talk about respecting international law, I suggest you go to www.google.com and search for the keywords "israel", "united nations", and "resolutions". I suggest you also read the Geneva conventions all the way through, especially the parts about siezure of land. I then suggest that you go to http://www.amnesty.org and search for "Israel"; search at http://www.hrw.org/. This will be a good starter; get back to me when you're done so we can go into more detail.
Lastly, it annoys me to no end when people are accused of being anti-semitic when they oppose the policies of Israeli right-wingers. Almost 60% of Israelis support the complete disbandment of all but the largest settlements, and yet if a person over here says that the settlements are illegal, they're accused of being anti-semitic. Opposing, say, Likud, is not opposing Jews. Some of my best friends in college were jewish, and my bridesmaid was half jewish. And when I started talking with her about the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, guess what? She started ranting and raving against Sharon.
Lastly, arabs are Semites too, you idiot.
Re:Great interview! (Score:4, Insightful)
I hate what some jews are doing to the palestinians, and I hate what some palestinian do to the jews. It's all stupid.
Pro-Arab coverage in the US? You gotta be kidding me. I mean, really.
And, oh yeah, mass killing of palestinians is fictional [bbc.co.uk] all right. And that's only yesterday, mind you.
Re:Great interview! (Score:3, Insightful)
you read far too much into his opinion
if you would go on what he has said and what he has said only, and stop investing your fears, uncertainties and doubts into his words, then i think you will find that you like the guy
but if you constantly abuse him by projecting your distrusts upon him, then don't be surprised if he, or others reading your words, dis
Re:Great interview! (Score:5, Insightful)
A quarter of my ancestry is Jewish, and I am very much opposed to the blatant violations of international humanitarian law which occur in Israel with shocking regularity either via the IDF or militant settlers. I am also opposed to the violations of the same international laws via the suicide bombers as well. As a general rule I see no difference between a suicide bomber blowing up a bus, and an F16 dropping a *1-ton* bomb on an appartment building in an attempt to assassinate *1* person.
But let's face it. You're reaction is as much a part of the problem as anything else and actually speaks to a different and deeper issue.
I don't know if you have reviewed the various source documents from WWI and WWII regarding the various plans of moving Jews from Brittain and Germany. If you can, I highly suggest looking at them, and reading them (including the Balfour Declaration) with the understanding that pretty much all Europeans at the time hated Jews. To summarize, the Germans wanted to move the Jews to Madagascar, and the Brittish wanted to move their Jews to the Brittish Mandate of Palestine Palestine once it was "liberated" from the Ottomans.
Indeed the sense from reading the Balfour Declaration was that sending the Jews to the Brittish Mandate of Palestine was OK, provided that this did not adversely effect the Palestinians.
You have to understand that Jews as a whole have deeply internalized the centuries of hatred directed at them, not by the Arabs (The Sephardim got along much better with the Arabs than, say, the Spanish), but by the Europeans. Hence they have learned to see the world as a place where they are, and will always be, surrounded by enemies. The problem is, if you treat everybody as your enemy, pretty soon, many will resent you, just as we resent the RIAA and the MPAA.
Jews also have a historically insular society (particularly true of the ultra-Orthodox, Hasidim, etc), and this complicates things because they do not readily mix with outsiders.
One of the most difficult lessons in life is to understand that treating your neighbors with respect and friendship, even if they can hurt you, and even if they might hate you at the moment. brings great rewards later. This lesson must be even harder for Israel than it is for the US due to the history, and we all can see how neighborly we are here when it comes to foreign policy
Arab culture has its own problems too, and as I am not as intimately familiar with Arab culture and history, I will leave it to those who are to create the critiques. Nonauthoritatively I will say, however, that one of the real issues they are wrestling with is the fallout from the decline of their great civilizations in the 13th century, where theological revolts occurred against topics such as Mathematics. When you combine this decline with its inevitable result-- domination by foreign powers (Turks, Europeans, etc.) for centuries, perhaps you have the same internalized oppression you see with the Jews.
Here are my predictions, however. The current horrors of the Israel/Palestinian conflict will continue for the next 40 years or so. At that point, if current demographic trends continue, more Arab Israeli citizens will live inside the "green line" than Jewish Israeli citizens, and Israel will become a secular state. After what may be over a hundred and thirty years of bloodshed and unofficial civil war, reconciliation will be necessary or the alternative will be worse than anything we have seen this century (on both sides of the conflict).
But I actually see open source as important here as well. As it grows, we will see people from different countries, including Israel, Iran, Egypt, Saudi Arabia, etc. working together on common projects. I know it is not much, but it is a start, and one which may help to sow the seeds of peace.
Discrimenating!! (Score:2, Funny)
"so simple even a frog could implement it."
Why must article discrimenate againt the French ? We are good people. Too much now in the US is anti-French feelings, like "freedom fries". We helped US defeat Hitler, and France is a leads computer industry.
Re:Discrimenating!! (Score:5, Funny)
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Discrimenating!! (Score:4, Funny)
Our Egyptian linux guru had trouble translating this one. I however have a plausible theory that a proper translation is:
You insensitive clod!
Re:Discrimenating!! (Score:2, Informative)
Try reading a history book written by someone *not* born in the US.
You probably needed no sign around your neck. (Score:4, Interesting)
American tourists tend to behave with extreme stupidity in France as in other places.
I have travelled on business to France including visits to Paris many times. I do not speak a word of French, but I have never been treated poorly by French, and have had a lot of fun there, even when I politely ask for help in English.
If people can tell by your dress and behavior that you are American, it is a bad start, and it is because you haven't tried to appreciate the culture there. While they may seem rude to you, if you do not adapt, you certainly seem rude to them.
Look around. See how people dress. See how people behave. Notice that in Europe generally, you don't have to open your mouth much because it is designed for international accessibility.
On my last trip to Paris, I took a party of French-speaking Americans who lived in Paris to a nice local restaurant.
They were having to translate parts of the menu and order for me. At the end, the waitress thought she was paying me the ultimate compliment, saying that the way I had behaved, she hadn't even suspected that I was American, but had thought I must be British.
Re:You probably needed no sign around your neck. (Score:3, Insightful)
The fact that my clothes can identify me as American means that I haven't "tried to appreciate the culture"? That's ridiculous. Whenever I travel somewhere I need to buy a new wardrobe so that I fit in?
Delusions of an Alliance with Germany? (Score:3, Insightful)
I live on a pier which is the single closest appartment building to NYC that is still in NJ. I don't get to NYC very often, but when I do, I am usually lost if I'm travelling by foot. I have asked for directions a gazillion times and the worst thing I have gotten was a few people pretending not to hear me (they probably thought I was a bum, which is debatible).
So you think being mistakable for a bum makes you acceptable in France? You are wrong. Different societies look at different things, and it depe
Re:Discrimenating!! (Score:4, Insightful)
Blah blah blah... Okay, so the French were whoopsies during the war, and even worse, they helped Hitler. But what about Poland? Austria? Don't you think the French had 60 years to reflect on the collaboration era? same as Germany actually, they still feel like shit today, as a people.
But when I hear you, Americans are the true heroes, the ones whose honor never faltered, uh? don't you think you have shameful acts on your conscience too? like the way you treated native indians, like the way you treated the blacks *in your own country*, like the way you treated the Vietnamese... and that buddy is more recent history than WW2!
So give me a fucking break with your US-saved-France-France-should-be-forever-grateful record. The fact is, that was 60 years ago: back then, France was shameful and the US pretty much saved Europe. Today, the US is the gravest threat to world's peace, and the French can have the satisfaction of having chosen not to participate in the US' illegal invasion of another country and repeated violations of the Geneva convention. The US *today* is nothing to be proud of, and France was right to say no. Period.
So while you may be "good people" (debatible)
One day, when you have more experience and you stop believe Fox News and CNN, you'll realize that all people, most of the human race, is decent, honest and peace-loving. It's just governments that wage war upon each others, using their populations to do so.
Hint: which country's government, US or France, has the most peace-loving and honest government today?
As for French people, I have been to France 5 times.
All of 5 times? I can see that's a major asset to understand the French people.
Everytime I have gone, I have experienced some sort of anti-American behavior.
No, you have experienced anti-tourist behaviors. The French despise tourists with a passion, despite loving the money they bring.
From being kicked out of a convenience store (because I was looking at the post cards)
The French do that to each other too. Nothing particular to you really...
to being spit on for speaking English. Both of these incidents occurred in Paris on seperate trips.
Paris isn't representative of France, just like California doesn't represent the US.
People in southern France are really nice though.
As I said...
Re:Discrimenating!! (Score:4, Insightful)
The may even be obligated to oppose us and undermine our interests, when we go attacking other countries with no justification, as we have so recently done. This is what the Germans were doing when they invaded France. We felt obligated to assist them when they were invaded unjustifiably. They were attacking without provocation, on trumped-up ideological justifications. Like the ones that we are using to continue to prosecute our ignorant and imbecilic war against Iraq.
Also: France was correct to surrender to Germany. When you are faced with a fight that you cannot win, you must surrender. Sun Tzu said that 2200 years ago, and it stands today. If all that you will do by fighting is to get your people killed and get defeated anyway, it is better to surrender. As it was, it worked out well for them. By surrendering, they were able to sustain a powerful guerrilla resistance using trained military personnel. This force of terrorists and saboteurs laid the foundation for our invasion of France, and made liberation possible. France's surrender made winning the war possible. If they had not surrendered, their military would have been summarily crushed, and could not have gone on fighting from the shadows.
This, by the way, is EXACTLY how we won our own Revolutionary War.
Why did it work? Because the "liberation" was a popular movement with broad support among all people of the nation to be "liberated".
Why will we fail in Iraq? Because we are not "liberating" anyone, we are subjugating them. We are playing the role the Germans played in France, to the letter. We are facing entrenched guerrilla networks of ex-members of the Iraqi military (that our advisors helped to train, BTW).
You may be interested to note that France paid for every grain of gunpowder we fired in our revolutionary war. If not for them, we would not have won independence. Of this there is no doubt among scholars and readers of military history. And when they were done, they gave us our greatest symbol, the Statue of Liberty.
The question is, what does your foaming-at-the-mouth rightist BS have to do with computers, or an Egyptian installfest, other than the obvious loathing that you have for non-Americans?
Re:Discrimenating!! (Score:3, Interesting)
Also: France was correct to surrender to Germany. When you are faced with a fight that you cannot win, you must surrender. Sun Tzu said that 2200 years ago, and it stands today. If all that you will do by fighting is to get your people killed and get defeated anyway, it is better to surrender. As it was, it worked out well for them. By surrendering, they were able to sustain a powerful guerrilla resistance using trained military personnel. This force of terrorists and saboteurs laid the foundation for our
Good (Score:5, Insightful)
No language support (Score:2, Funny)
Not only pyramids (Score:5, Funny)
Seems that they also invented l33t speak.
Re:Not only pyramids (Score:5, Insightful)
Arabic has some letters/sounds with no equivalent in english (or any latin script), as a solution some Arabs transliterate these letters with similar looking numerals.
SMS made this method of writing very popular so its not a l33t speak thing at all.
Re:Not only pyramids (Score:3, Informative)
Glory be to Alaa... (Score:2, Funny)
Re:MOD PARENT UP! (Score:2)
I was explaining to a friend how the mind of a slashdot moderator works. I showed him that even if you make a truly funny, informative, or insightful post, if your sig is something that others don't agree with, you get marked DIZZOWN!
Experiment successful
Do the FUDsters know? (Score:3, Funny)
Thanks for the great insight... (Score:5, Interesting)
I'd love it if Slashdot could do more interviews with computer users from other countries in the world. Linux or not, I find it fascinating to read about the state of IT and technology in other countries.
In an age when differences between nations and religion cause friction, it's nice to read about a subject which unites us all.
Re:Thanks for the great insight... (Score:2)
I would dare say it is being used a GREAT deal more than in Egypt....A couple of Universities there alone probably would tilt the balance. And while MS is pretty poor....it and the South in general are not all a bunch of ignorant bumpkins. No more that avg. across the whole US....
Condescension (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Condescension (Score:4, Funny)
I think he should have responded "Do Americans find it difficult to see their computer keyboards over their obese stomachs?"
Re:Condescension (Score:5, Funny)
Russia: Do you get vodka in your PC?
Iraq: Do American soldiers torture your PC in prison?
Mexico: Does the hard disk perform very well when it gets covered in refriend beans?
Afghanistan: Does the heat from your PC disappate when you have the burkha cover on it?
USA: Do you get McDonald's fries in your PC?
Sure to offend everyone.
Re:Condescension (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Condescension (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Condescension (Score:2)
All the time!
Re:Condescension contd. (Score:2)
France: Do you get french fries in your PC?
Sweden: Do you get meatballs in your PC?
Sweden again: Does Inga's hair get stuck in the CPU-fan?
India: Do you get curry in your PC?
Germany/Austria: Isn't it uncomfortable to sit in a computer chair with lederhosen(sp?)?
Scotland: Do you get whiskey in your PC?
USA: You lost the vietnam war. How often does war-cripples fall into your PC?
Sweden Condescension contd. (Score:2)
Sweden: Do you type Ctrl-Alt-Del to rebork your computer?
Ashes to ashes (Score:2)
Reminds of the programmer I knew who had his computer case stood on end to be like a tower. The side-mounted power switch was now on top, and he used it as an ashtray. The inside of the unit was filled with cigarette ashes.
Re:Condescension (Score:5, Insightful)
This is nothing like asking if "obese stomachs" get in the way for Americans. Rather, it would be like asking a Californian if the frequent earthquakes disrupt the telecoms grid. It's a question about the operating environment - if you'd check, you'd see that the "proper" temperature range for running a PC tops out below that of a typical warm day in Cairo and, as Alaa points out, people are JUST GETTING air conditioning.
There is a disturbing trend, to label without thinking any question about other people's living conditions as offensive. This is itself prejudice of the most destructive type, as it prevents the basic communication from whence understanding follows.
Re:Condescension (Score:2, Interesting)
air conditioners have been available in the egyptian market for ages.
but only lately that they started to be affordable and thus popular.
Re:Condescension (Score:5, Insightful)
Don't be so quick to judge. Assume not hate but rather a lack of knowledge and take the time to educate. The sand and heat question has nothing to do with people but rather with wanting to know how those people deal with their environment. The person answering the question seems to understand this and takes the time to educate and explain. You OTOH get upset on his behalf.
Re:Condescension (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Condescension (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Condescension (Score:3, Insightful)
And yes we may all be the same physically in terms of our internal organs, but there is more to being a human than just what color our squishy fleshy insides look like. There *are* differences between people and cultures. Stereotypes an my
Re:Condescension (Score:2)
I know there were s
Re:Condescension (Score:5, Insightful)
Too bad it is Linux, not *BSD (Score:5, Funny)
10% in Egypt... (Score:2, Funny)
I wonder if thats more than in Canada?
Canada's kicking ass (Score:2, Informative)
No no that's not 82% of internet users ahve BB
Or 80% of homes have internet
It's 80% of single family dwellings have high speed Internet.
For example I have 5.1Mbit line (abnormaly fast most people only have 1 or 2)
I actually only know one two familes that don't have internet at all and neither family even lives in house. Neither one even has a phone because their pretty poor.
Now that's not normal but our whole province s dang high.
Now I suppose you
Re:10% in Egypt... (Score:5, Funny)
RMS (Score:2)
there is much for you to learn, my young paduan
Solar Cells (Score:3, Interesting)
Too bad they're so expensive.
Re:Solar Cells (Score:2)
Bob
In that case (Score:2)
Gigawatt after Gigawatt is available to them!
Re:In that case (Score:2, Informative)
Deserts aren't the most ideal place for renewable energy sources...yet. The vast landscape combined with the temperature extremes from radiative cooling/heating can whip up quite a wind.
Solar arrays are likely to be covered by some dust/sand and dust/sand storms can reduce the solar rays reaching the cells as much if not more than clouds.
Wind farms as well, can be very expensive to maintain and keep working properly in these conditions.
Only a matter of time hopefully until we develop and/or use techn
MS resentment (Score:5, Insightful)
Yet, the killer apps and most used services are Hotmail and MSN messaging services. Then offline, Windows Media Player is the killer app.
Re:MS resentment (Score:2)
I recently had someone tell me that they needed windows becuase they used Net Meeting: she had no idea that there were alternatives,let alone OSS ones.
On the other hand I also had someone ask me about switching to Linus becuase her university wanted her to buy a legit version of Windows and stop using a priated one, at the same time they had courses on Linux for newbies so she felt comfirtable there is some support. Her main conern was reading word docs.
Between th
Re:MS resentment (Score:3, Interesting)
not the products.
and nothing says it has to make sense, I've always felt Egypt was a singularity.
Re:And that was followed by this: (Score:3, Funny)
well, neither is "vi"
*ducks*
so egypt is mostly on dialup (Score:2)
holy crap, gmail is going to clean up there.
Best /. Original I've Ever Read (Score:2)
Cheap systems? (Score:2)
If so, why has noone setup an importing business yet? Yes, I bet there would be all kinds of protectionist duties, but even with a 100% duty it would probably still be cheaper then prices here (which are already
Re:Cheap systems? (Score:2)
Super Interview (Score:4, Informative)
Excellent numbers, responses and 'pricking' of stupid conceptions of what Egyptian tech is all about and what their society is all about.
About the schooling: his assessment is dead on. It is a shame but the social and economic structure of Egypt is really a reason why we see young men joining jihad oriented organizations, not their hatred of the USian Empire and 'Freedom.' If you can't get affirmation via the maninstream, you certainly can via groups that give your life a purpose. The whole revelation about how people slip BACK INTO illiteracy is most telling.
I suggest "The Transmission of Knowledge in Medieval Cairo: A Social History of Islamic Education" as great book to see how good it once was for all classes (under the Mamluks, I know). And these are the times that the Islamists imagine for themselves....
Local Participation for International Awareness (Score:2, Insightful)
I have to admit I was not aware, although not shocked, to here some of the answers he gave.
But that leaves me wondering; what can we do from here to help them there?
I mean, I don't have the money to spend to travel the world around and become a Lin-evanglilist. So what help can I provide from here to people like Alaa? What services can I provide to communities like Linux-Egypt?
It really breaks my heart to hear that the educational
So then, "Ya Mofary" means... (Score:5, Funny)
Another problem in Poland... (Score:4, Informative)
Slow software? Not a catchy phrase
Education in Egypt (Score:5, Interesting)
I have a relative at HU in Jerusalem who helped with a study a few years ago of the public education in Palestinian schools in Arab villages in Israel, and they found that there was a huge campaign of disinformation. Students spent time learning mostly political propaganda that was anti-Israel and anti-US instead of time learning math and languages. Text books were generally published by Arab companies that supported the propaganda campaign and typically were full of factual errors. They even learned off of maps that showed local geography as the Palestinian Authority wanted it to be rather than it actually was! (Often students were told that they were living in "Palestine" rather than Israel, and "Israel" was not mentioned on the map or in the classroom as far as the Arabic-speaking researchers could discern.)
I wanted to know if this type of situation is also widespread in Egypt. I realize that Egypt is in a much different socio-economic situation than Palestinian Arabs living in Israel are right now, has more money, a more legitimate government and are a bit further removed from the daily violence and hatred that is evident on both sides in Israel. But when he talks about corruption in the education system, does anything there approach this?
Also, at the risk of sounding like a tree-hugging hippy, do they teach hatred either at the mosque or at the public schools in Egypt?
Thanks to any Egyptian locals (or any other Arab country locals) or even Alaa if he reads this for any info you can provide.
I really enjoyed reading this, and representing a Jewish American nerd with a strong interest in Israel, I think it's interesting to talk to Arab nerds about political and technical issues. Anyone who fits that bill is welcome to contact me.
Re:Education in Egypt (Score:3, Interesting)
I suppose it's difficult to always be updated on where the Israelis decides the border is at any given time, considering how they're continuously expanding it into more of Palestine.
Re:Education in Egypt (Score:5, Informative)
we (me included) believe this is the occupied land of palestine.
we are taught that this was the land of palestine, then the details of how it was split into israel and the occupied territories are explained (at around the 8th grade).
almost all accepted the inevitable need for a two state solution BTW (many would prefer a single secular state where all are equal).
I don't know about palestine but here textbooks are published by the government, only foriegn language textbooks are published by any companies.
as for hatred I'm not sure I understand what you mean by that? and towards whome?, but here goes anyway.
no schools are not supposed to teach hatred of any kind, they're supposed to teach tolerance and understanding.
however it happens from time to time (too regular for my liking) that teachers would voice anti christian opinions and teach hate speech against christians.
these are grounds for firing the teacher BTW.
same for mosques, there is anti jewish as well as anti christian talk in some mosques.
the government tries to censor this kind of speech, but censorship is not an effective tool at all IMO.
strife between the two religions is growing in Egypt, and US intereference is not helping the situation at all, in fact its making it worse.
many are standing against it, some have been killed for it, its an ongoing fight and I'm hoping the voices of tolerance will win.
as for anti jewish speech, many egyptians (almost everyone who isn't among the fundementalists and even some of the fundementalists) stand against any anti-jewish speech, in fact we go to great efforts to point out the not all jews are zionists and that what we stand against is the ideology and the policies of zionism and not the jewish enthicity or religion.
unfortunatly, the strong always define the battle, the more the US and Israel harp about the clash of civilization the more it becomes a reality.
if you want to know more about how egyptians think about these issue, I recommend you browse the Linux-Egypt forum, politics comes up very often and a big part of the conversation is in English (search for iraq, israel, islam, etc)
Re:Education in Egypt (Score:3, Interesting)
so some Egyptians saw the 1st, the 3rd and then the 2nd
and yeah it saddens me soo much that we have censorship here, and I try to do my part in fighting all this.
actualy there is a very small number of jews still living in Egypt, and a community in Moroco
but yeah Arab governments did deport and persecute jewish citizens and yeah that was wrong on all levels.
its not the only bad thing our governments do, as I stated before we're talking about corrupt
Poland? (Score:3, Informative)
Actually, yes it is. One of the software vendors with whom my employer does business has a number of programmers who are in Poland. They work on the system during what is overnight here on the east coast, so it has its advantages. Poland is one of the most well advanced of the former "east block" nations.
Now had he said Romania or Bulgaria instead of Poland, then the delta would indeed have been less.
I think the next question is... (Score:2)
Man... He was writing novels for answers there!
Good stuff though. Interesting.
mandrake and arabic support (Score:3, Informative)
I would say that this work is community driven and not easy, to the point that translation of the mdk10 finished only recently, and the q&a worked started from then.
Here is the message from Youcef Rabah Rahal on 2004-04-27 that announce the end of the translation work on cooker-i18n mailling list:
Hello,
This is to announce that after 3 months of hard work, we (Arabeyes.org [1]) have finally completed [2] the translation of Mandrake to Arabic [3] (100% of the PO files !).
I have committed all the files to Mandrake's CVS. The status page [4] on Mandrake's site is not updated yet, but I think it will display the correct status in ~24 hours from now
I would like to thank all the translators who contributed to this achievement, from the Arabeyes team or not.
The next step is to do Quality Assurance. This is a (long) incremental task that will consist of inspecting all the files, correct and make the translations consistent (as you may know, translation may not be consistent yet due to the fact that many people contributed, and that a great part of the initial translation was done outside the Arabeyes.org scope).
Hoping to see a full arabized Mandrake in the next release
Regards,
[1] http://www.arabeyes.org/
[2] http://www.arabeyes.org/misc/mandrake_status_bar.
[3] http://www.arabeyes.org/project.php?proj=Mandrake
[4] http://www1.mandrakelinux.com/l10n/ar.php3
You can go and find the rest of the discussion as they talk on how such a process of translation work. Interresting stuff and a difficult and long job.
Excelllent Job (Score:4, Insightful)
I look forward to more interviews with Linux users around the world in the future. What's the point of having global communications and and robust protocols if we never peer out past localhost int the USA?
Re:I know I shouldn't be critical of his linguisti (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:I know I shouldn't be critical of his linguisti (Score:2)
Re:I know I shouldn't be critical of his linguisti (Score:2)
Re:Egypt is a dangerous place nowadays. (Score:2, Informative)
1. Arabic dialect.
2. Part of Middle Eastern geo-socio region
3. Primarily Islamic
4. Phsyical features of the Arabian Peninsula
What am I missing?
Re:Egypt is a dangerous place nowadays. (Score:3, Informative)
Bob
Re:Anyone... (Score:2)
I suspect some of his bluntness has to do with simple pride in his country, annoyance at simple things (to him) that he thinks should be known already, and just his personality. He could have controlled himself a bit better, but there's not anything wrong with it really - the whole thing's pretty informal anyway.
And if you're reading this, Alaa, thanks fo
Re:Anyone... (Score:2, Informative)
ya moftary is always used in jest, it is a term used between friends to gently inform that someone is totally off base.
Re:Anyone... (Score:5, Insightful)
So Alaa, if you're reading... Thanks for answering as detailed as you did, however no question is a stupid question. If we can't ask questions without fear of being made fun of, what reason do we have to keep asking questions?
Re:Anyone... (Score:2, Funny)
What do your friends do when you ask a stupid question?
Re:Anyone... (Score:3, Insightful)
Respect and understanding goes both ways, and I believe this Q/A was very well done and informative.
Re:Anyone... (Score:5, Informative)
my intention was not to make fun of anyone, and I did not mean the questions where stupid.
I appologise if I offended anyone, it was meant in jest,
the part about the question being meaningless is realy how I saw the question and the only answer I could give, the question is based on a false assumption and I explained above why this assumption is false.
what was I to do, ignore the question completly?
Re:Anyone... (Score:3, Interesting)
so if you want you can send me any questions you have about egypt and any stereotype you know of.
oh and BTW did you know that egyptians believe Dodi was killed in a conspiracy to prevent the birth of a Muslim heir to the British crown (conspiracy theories are popular here).
and yes stolen archaeological artifacts is a big problem.
Re:Anyone... (Score:3, Interesting)
Having visited you country the most important thing in any guide for the ignorant is to not mention sand, desert, archaology etc.
Re:Anyone... (Score:2)
What sounds like arrogance to us, may be normal discourse where he is from. Perhaps why we sound so arrogant to people in the Middle East.
Some issues are intractible. However, we can civily agree to disagree and move on with a relationship based on those things we find in common, rather than vowing to kill each other because of religeous extremism - on both sides.
Re:You Opensource fools (Score:3, Informative)
Too bad, suck it up, and get ready for it, or you're in for a rough time.
Re:You Opensource fools (Score:2)
There are no absolutes in this world other than death and taxes. On the one hand you hate the idea of religeon and government being melded together (as in most Islamic countries). On the other hand, you probably like the idea of loosening the rules against the seperation of church and state in our own country (I am assuming you are American - given the tone of your post, Mr. Anonymous (Bill)).
Sounds pretty hypicritical to me.
Ignorance only leads to sup
Re:ok, show of hands (Score:4, Insightful)
I do. I care about the adoption of OSS everywhere. The more countries that begin to see value in OS software, wider spread adoption will occur. If you are interested in the freedom to be able to innovate based on the free flow of ideas, at least in terms of software; widespread global adoption is crucial.
So count me in. I care.
Re:Nice Sig (Score:2)
Yep. I don't know where Americans get the arrogance to think that their technical infrastructure is more advanced than most 2nd- and 3rd-world nations. It's all made up. It's not like the US hit the 50% penetration mark for PCs in the home in 1999, or anything.
Clearly, we have been brainwashed by the American Cultural Hegemony to falsely believe that most places on the planet aren't fortunate enough to be as advanced as we are.
You can tell it's false because, as Araal says in the interview: "I don't know
Re:OMG!!!! (Score:3, Informative)
and not very uncommon either.
but I must warn you if you're caught with a married woman in her marital bed her and you where stupid enough to be caught by her husband he actualy has the right to kill you.
on the other hand females need not worry, wifes are not allowed to kill unfaithful husbands even if they caught them on the marital bed.