[osdcmy-public] Report on the International Status of Open Source Software 2010

2011-01-17 Terurut Topik Harisfazillah Jamel
Report on the International Status of Open Source Software 2010

http://bit.ly/dUkonx

http://observatorio.cenatic.es/index.php?option=com_contentview=articleid=666:report-on-the-international-status-of-open-source-software-2010catid=13:empresasItemid=23




The CENATIC Foundation, in keeping with its objective of raising
awareness about open source technologies, regularly releases research
reports that study the different aspects of open source software.

The ultimate aim of these reports is to boost the competitiveness of
the Spanish business sector by providing information about the
business opportunities offered by these technologies and identifying
international projects that can be implemented and applied to Spanish
society.The report we present here analyses the International Status
of Open Source Software, enabling us to put the current situation in
Spain in context based on the knowledge of technology trends around
the world, the promotion and use of open technologies in the Spanish
Private and Public sectors, and the contribution of Spanish
Communities of Developers and Universities to important initiatives on
an international scale.


It is, in conclusion, a thorough overview of the international context
of open source software, creating a starting point for the
identification of new business opportunities for Spanish companies,
and new fields of study for CENATIC to continue promoting the use and
development of open source software in Spain.

For further information, please contact with: pop.ramsamy @cenatic.es

http://observatorio.cenatic.es/

---

Some extraction thats related to Malaysia

Page 21

Quadrant C includes countries with weaker or developing economies,
mainly African countries and most Latin American countries, as well as
the latest additions to the EU (Latvia, Bulgaria and Cyprus) and Asian
countries such as Cambodia and Vietnam. Except for a few notable
exceptions, such as South Africa, Vietnam, Malaysia and Venezuela,
most of the governments of the countries in quadrant C make no
significant efforts to promote the IS, or to develop OSS.

Diagram in Page 24

Page 86

The incipient incorporation of the developing countries into the IS has not
only stimulated growth in the region, it has also made it one of the main
sources of ICT goods and services for the rest of the world's markets.
The hardware and telecommunications equipment markets reach their
highest figures in the Asian-Pacific region. Examples are China, as the
main source of hardware, and India, as one of the leading sources of
software production. The revenue of other countries, such as Malaysia
and Vietnam, for ICT product exports is also increasing. This trend is
expected to continue and to accelerate over the next decade.

Page 86 AOSSC (Asian OSS Centre) alliance

Another noteworthy example
is the recently-created AOSSC (Asian OSS Centre) alliance, signed by
10 Asian countries/regions: China, Hong Kong, India, Indonesia, Japan,
Macau, Malaysia, the Philippines, Singapore and Thailand. The aim of
this alliance is to promote OSS adoption and development in Asia.

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Re: [osdcmy-public] Report on the International Status of Open Source Software 2010

2011-01-17 Terurut Topik Sharuzzaman Ahmat Raslan
Shameless plug :D

Page 113 - Panel of Experts in Asia

Khairil Yusof Inigo Consulting Malaysia
Nurhizam Safie Mohd Satar Asia e University Malaysia
Sharuzzaman Ahmat Raslan Open Source Community Malaysia
Tan King Ing MAMPU Malaysia



On Tue, Jan 18, 2011 at 10:22 AM, Harisfazillah Jamel 
linuxmalay...@gmail.com wrote:

 Report on the International Status of Open Source Software 2010

 http://bit.ly/dUkonx


 http://observatorio.cenatic.es/index.php?option=com_contentview=articleid=666:report-on-the-international-status-of-open-source-software-2010catid=13:empresasItemid=23


 

 The CENATIC Foundation, in keeping with its objective of raising
 awareness about open source technologies, regularly releases research
 reports that study the different aspects of open source software.

 The ultimate aim of these reports is to boost the competitiveness of
 the Spanish business sector by providing information about the
 business opportunities offered by these technologies and identifying
 international projects that can be implemented and applied to Spanish
 society.The report we present here analyses the International Status
 of Open Source Software, enabling us to put the current situation in
 Spain in context based on the knowledge of technology trends around
 the world, the promotion and use of open technologies in the Spanish
 Private and Public sectors, and the contribution of Spanish
 Communities of Developers and Universities to important initiatives on
 an international scale.


 It is, in conclusion, a thorough overview of the international context
 of open source software, creating a starting point for the
 identification of new business opportunities for Spanish companies,
 and new fields of study for CENATIC to continue promoting the use and
 development of open source software in Spain.

 For further information, please contact with: pop.ramsamy @cenatic.es

 http://observatorio.cenatic.es/

 ---

 Some extraction thats related to Malaysia

 Page 21

 Quadrant C includes countries with weaker or developing economies,
 mainly African countries and most Latin American countries, as well as
 the latest additions to the EU (Latvia, Bulgaria and Cyprus) and Asian
 countries such as Cambodia and Vietnam. Except for a few notable
 exceptions, such as South Africa, Vietnam, Malaysia and Venezuela,
 most of the governments of the countries in quadrant C make no
 significant efforts to promote the IS, or to develop OSS.

 Diagram in Page 24

 Page 86

 The incipient incorporation of the developing countries into the IS has not
 only stimulated growth in the region, it has also made it one of the main
 sources of ICT goods and services for the rest of the world's markets.
 The hardware and telecommunications equipment markets reach their
 highest figures in the Asian-Pacific region. Examples are China, as the
 main source of hardware, and India, as one of the leading sources of
 software production. The revenue of other countries, such as Malaysia
 and Vietnam, for ICT product exports is also increasing. This trend is
 expected to continue and to accelerate over the next decade.

 Page 86 AOSSC (Asian OSS Centre) alliance

 Another noteworthy example
 is the recently-created AOSSC (Asian OSS Centre) alliance, signed by
 10 Asian countries/regions: China, Hong Kong, India, Indonesia, Japan,
 Macau, Malaysia, the Philippines, Singapore and Thailand. The aim of
 this alliance is to promote OSS adoption and development in Asia.

 --
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 Please avoid sending me Word or PowerPoint attachments.
 See http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/no-word-attachments.html




-- 
Sharuzzaman Ahmat Raslan

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Re: [osdcmy-public] Report on the International Status of Open Source Software 2010

2011-01-17 Terurut Topik Mohd Fazli Azran


 Page 21

 Quadrant C includes countries with weaker or developing economies,
 mainly African countries and most Latin American countries, as well as
 the latest additions to the EU (Latvia, Bulgaria and Cyprus) and Asian
 countries such as Cambodia and Vietnam. Except for a few notable
 exceptions, such as South Africa, Vietnam, *Malaysia* and Venezuela,
 * most of the governments of the countries in quadrant C make no
 significant efforts to promote the IS, or to develop OSS*.


What this report mean is Malaysia is not enough to promote OSS or over
promote OSS?. Owh ya maybe or not foreigner see Malaysia  are not yet ready
to produce Developer/Programmer. Malaysia also still use stone age
language/program and either not yet  want to upgrade the
subject/module/course-ware. At this level Malaysia will stay behind after
2020 if nothing happen. We know that many lecturer/Dean already want to
update all this course but our KPM/KPTM not yet ready to transforms neither
our government not yet ready in my opinion. How we want
those transformation to be done.

Our strategy now like Mafia and if any blocking we like yakuza just kill who
want like obstacle. People from outside OSS community see us  like rebellion
because we just dare to voice out and not dare give the fact and what the
planning to change it. We  know that our government need like
proposal/paperwork/strategy from community how it can be done. Politic it
another obstacle need to be throw out 1st. We need to do like professional
and let it government decide what their plan after this. We are Rakyat
already show the prove that we do what suppose to do. For now time let do
something worth and show to the public what capability OSS community in
Malaysia can do not only voice. It time is work out and implementation

Regards,
Mohd Fazli Azran

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Re: [osdcmy-public] Report on the International Status of Open Source Software 2010

2011-01-17 Terurut Topik Sharuzzaman Ahmat Raslan
The summary of that line is: We are OSS consumer, not OSS producer.



On Tue, Jan 18, 2011 at 1:44 PM, Mohd Fazli Azran mfazliaz...@gmail.comwrote:


 Page 21

 Quadrant C includes countries with weaker or developing economies,
 mainly African countries and most Latin American countries, as well as
 the latest additions to the EU (Latvia, Bulgaria and Cyprus) and Asian
 countries such as Cambodia and Vietnam. Except for a few notable
 exceptions, such as South Africa, Vietnam, *Malaysia* and Venezuela,
 * most of the governments of the countries in quadrant C make no
 significant efforts to promote the IS, or to develop OSS*.


 What this report mean is Malaysia is not enough to promote OSS or over
 promote OSS?. Owh ya maybe or not foreigner see Malaysia  are not yet ready
 to produce Developer/Programmer. Malaysia also still use stone age
 language/program and either not yet  want to upgrade the
 subject/module/course-ware. At this level Malaysia will stay behind after
 2020 if nothing happen. We know that many lecturer/Dean already want to
 update all this course but our KPM/KPTM not yet ready to transforms neither
 our government not yet ready in my opinion. How we want
 those transformation to be done.

 Our strategy now like Mafia and if any blocking we like yakuza just kill
 who want like obstacle. People from outside OSS community see us  like
 rebellion because we just dare to voice out and not dare give the fact and
 what the planning to change it. We  know that our government need like
 proposal/paperwork/strategy from community how it can be done. Politic it
 another obstacle need to be throw out 1st. We need to do like professional
 and let it government decide what their plan after this. We are Rakyat
 already show the prove that we do what suppose to do. For now time let do
 something worth and show to the public what capability OSS community in
 Malaysia can do not only voice. It time is work out and implementation

 Regards,
 Mohd Fazli Azran

 --
 To unsubscribe from and detail about this group
 http://portal.mosc.my/osdc-my-mailing-list-information

 Please avoid sending me Word or PowerPoint attachments.
 See http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/no-word-attachments.html




-- 
Sharuzzaman Ahmat Raslan

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Re: [osdcmy-public] Report on the International Status of Open Source Software 2010

2011-01-17 Terurut Topik rafe azsnal
Which has been voice out so many way and so many times... don't talk about
brain drain see what we have internally here in Malaysia and what you guys
doing about it. Don't bitch but walk the walk. Sad to see when we said this
some of you said that we don't understand the concept but when the report is
publicly announce er... but non the less it is not a complete lost as
you and all of still do have time to prove them and the test of the world
wrong

rafe

On Jan 18, 2011 2:01 PM, Sharuzzaman Ahmat Raslan sharuzza...@gmail.com
wrote:

The summary of that line is: We are OSS consumer, not OSS producer.





On Tue, Jan 18, 2011 at 1:44 PM, Mohd Fazli Azran mfazliaz...@gmail.com
wrote:


 Page 2...
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Sharuzzaman Ahmat Raslan



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