On 05/11/2013 06:37 PM, John Jason Jordan wrote: > On Sat, 11 May 2013 21:04:52 +0200 > Manuel Schmalstieg <webdev at ms-studio.net> dijo: > >> Regarding the point of comparing the filesize: maybe I misunderstood, >> but earlier in this tread, John Jason and Christoph were arguing if >> disk space could be a reason for "corporations, government agencies, >> universities" not to install FLOSS software. So I was just checking >> the numbers, which happen to be in favor of Scribus. :) > It's other things besides disk space. > > Where I work (at a hospital), there is a mindset to forbid any sort of "outside" software, with the idea that this is how you keep out malware. As I was noticing that the IS department has a recurring series of training sessions on Word, Excel, Publisher, I made a suggestion that they might take a look at Scribus, and volunteered to help with the training part. But you meet a wall of resistance to change, in part because the decisions about paying for whatever massive number of licenses are at some higher administrative level, and therefore not "felt" at the lower and user levels.
Change isn't impossible, but it's slow. I've come to be seen by the IS people as something of a fellow geek, since they know I use Linux and Android to connect to the patient management software. It used to be that it was impossible for me to load Scribus on ANY computer, even in my own office, but now it's the opposite, I can load it anywhere. What's more, all users have their own network space, which means I can store my templates and scripts and other files there and have access to them from any computer in the facility. This is pretty dramatic stuff for a conservative environment. Greg
