Hi,
We are organzing a bus to go to Vlore for the freesb conference
(http://flossal.org/freesb-2010-conference/)
Register now for the Hackerbus from Berlin, Germany to Vlore for the
FREESB10 free software conference on the beach!
We are also working on a bus from Paris, France as well.
you can register now online :
http://tinyurl.com/HackerBusVlore
or just send a mail to register(a)flossk.org
Sept 11-12, Vlora, Albania.
Estimated leaving time 9th of Sept. Estimate return time 15th.
ca 170 € per person round trip total costs (if you camp), around 190€ for hotel.
The bus has 48 seats and costs in total around 7500€.
Plan is to camp at the former Naval Academy in vlore , the uni vlore
has showers, toilettes and wlan there. You will need a tent.
Hotels are also available, they cost around 20€ per night for a nice one.
First come first serve, we will have to collect money in advance to
pay for the bus.
Also people are welcome to get on at any part of the trip, but we need
to cover the total costs, so we could look for people to travel the
first part of the trip to reduce costs.
See you in september on the beach!
mike
--
James Michael DuPont
Member of Free Libre Open Source Software Kosova and Albania
flossk.orgflossal.org
From the Free Knowledge Institute about the Free Technology Academy
Permanent link: http://ftacademy.org/announce/8
FTA Announcement #8: scholarships, FTA community, new books and tools
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1. New FTA materials
2. FTA Scholarships for September
3. Annotation-tools and feedback
4. FTA Community Portal
5. Obtaining an official Master's degree
6. Print on Demand service for FTA course books
7. FTA Certificates
== 1. New FTA materials ==
The FTA is proud to announce the availability of two new coursebooks,
both under a free Copyleft license: "Open Networks" and "Legal aspects
of the Information Society".
"Open Networks" is part of the module "Network Technologies" and was
written by Enric Peig Olivé. This coursebook explores the different
aspects of open technologies that are at the foundations of modern
computer networks. The Internet is built on top of open protocols and
open standards.
In this context, "open" means the opposite of "private". Private
networks are those which belong to companies or institutions who impose
restrictions on users who join them. Open networks do not belong to
anybody because the devices they use are made available by the members
of the community.
You can get a copy of the coursebook here:
http://ftacademy.org/materials/fsm/3#1
"Legal Aspects of the Information Society" is the title of the second
coursebook we have recently published. Its authors are Malcolm Bain,
Manuel Gallego, Manuel Martínez Ribas and Judit Rius. The book
contains fundamental information for those who want to understand Free
Software and how to contribute and benefit from it in a safe and legal
way. Concepts like existing legal systems of software protection -
copyright, patents, trademark and key concepts like Copyleft and free
licenses - will provide a general background upon which practical
skills for different contexts can be built.
You can get a copy of the coursebook here:
http://ftacademy.org/materials/fsm/6#1
== 2. FTA Scholarships for September ==
The first phase of the FTA is financially supported by the Life Long
Learning programme (LLP) of the European Commission. While the FTA has
already exceeded the target for the European Commission in terms of
courses and learners, we have extra space available for learners who
wish to enhance their knowledge but are not in a position to raise the
required tuition fee. For this reason we have set up a scholarship
programme for the third and last course round during this phase, that
will run from September 6 2010 to December 6 2010.
Of course the FTA continues in 2011. For the tentative programme,
please see http://ftacademy.org/programme/2011. No scholarships for
2011 are being scheduled at this time.
To find out if you are eligible to apply for a scholarship for a module
starting in September 2010, please take a look at
http://ftacademy.org/scholarships.
== 3. Annotation-tools and feedback ==
Many of you who have downloaded FTA materials have offered us valuable
comments and feedback, although until now we didn't have the
appropriate tools to collect and revise all that input. In the coming
weeks we'll be testing a PDF annotation tool that allows any user to
submit comments on a PDF document using a web interface. It will soon
be integrated with the FTA Campus, but for now you can try it here:
http://beta.ftacademy.org/annotation-tool
The PDF annotation software was developed by Jakko van der Pol and
INFI. Jakko has kindly agreed to release it under the Affero GPL v3
license, and is collaborating with the FTA development team in the
integration of this tool with Moodle and the FTA Campus.
== 4. FTA Community Portal ==
The FTA Community Portal is a space meant for sharing knowledge and
participating in concrete activities related to FTA courses or Free
Technologies in general. Any help will be welcome to continue building
the FTA based on free (as in freedom) knowledge and Open Standards. The
FTA partnership wants to open up its infrastructure and resources so
all interested participants can benefit from them. In that sense the
FTA Community Portal can be seen as a way to both facilitate learning
as well as to make participation in FTA projects and activities
accessible to more people.
The FTA Community Portal is based on Mahara, "a fully featured
electronic portfolio, weblog, resume builder and social networking
system, connecting users and creating online communities". For more
information about Mahara, see http://mahara.org/. The FTA Campus team
has integrated Mahara with the Moodle and University Campus framework.
At the FTA Community Portal you can generate your own profile, explain
in what projects you are involved, discuss different aspects of the FTA
or other related topics. You name it, as long as it is about Free
Technology and Free Culture, use the space as you like! Set up your
profile at
http://campus.ftacademy.org/community/ - register first freely at
http://campus.ftacademy.org/ and get to the FTA Community Portal from
there!
== 5. Obtaining an official Master's degree ==
The studies started at the FTA can be continued at the FTA Consortium
Partner universities to obtain an official Master's degree. These
partner universities offer full master programmes related to free
software:
* Universitat Oberta de Catalunya (Spain) offers a Master's degree in
free software that is given in Catalan, Spanish and English. More
information can be found at this website [1]. A UOC advisor can be
contacted directly to request more information or start the enrolment
process by following this link [2].
* At the Open University Netherlands, FTA certificates are accepted in
their Master of Computer Science, which is provided by the School of
Computer Science [3]. Details about recognition of FTA certificates can
be found here (in Dutch) [4].
* The University of Agder recognises (at least) the following courses
as electives in their graduate programme of Information Systems:
**The concepts of Free Software and Open Standards
**Economic aspects of Free Software
**Legal aspects of the Information Society
(For students in the UiA bachelor programme in IT and Information
Systems, at most six FTA modules will be recognized within the IS/ICT
part of the elective area)
* The FTA partners are designing an International Master Programme that
will extend the current FTA programme and builds on previous
experiences from the Universitat Oberta de Catalunya, Open Universiteit
Netherlands, Universitat Rey Juan Carlos and University of Agder. A
taskforce has been set up with representatives from these universities
and the Free Knowledge Institute. The implementation of this programme
does take some time and therefore we recommend FTA learners interested
in obtaining a Masters degree to check with the above mentioned
partners to consider completing their studies there.
Any comments about the curriculum, recognition of FTA courses and
possibilities for obtaining a Masters degree can be discussed in the
FTA Community Portal [5].
[1]
http://www.uoc.edu/studies/mof/free_software/oficiales/master_oficial_so
ftware_libre/master_oficial_software_libre_plan.htm
[2] http://www.uoc.edu/masters/eng/master/web/_enviarDatos/index.html
[3] http://www.ou.nl/eCache/DEF/12/274.html
[4] http://www.ou.nl/eCache/DEF/2/16/502.html
[5] http://campus.ftacademy.org/community/group/view.php?id=1
== 6. Print on Demand service for FTA course books ==
A Print on Demand service is launched by the partners of the FTA. For
many people a printed book is still desired to facilitate the learning
process. The service is based on cost prices for the printing, handling
and distribution and is first made available for people who register
for courses in the FTA.
The first priority is to ship the books to learners who register for
courses in the coming trimester (starting at September 6th). All
registrations completed by August 15th can ask for this service when
registering. If you registered before this service was available, and
would like to make use of it, please contact us so we can process your
request manually. The FTA partnership hopes this service strengthens
the FTA educational experience! For those of you self-learners, who
don't subscribe to the FTA courses but are still interested in printed
copies of coursebooks: you can either print the books yourself or wait
until we have our processes in place to handle individual book orders.
You could of course also try to use commercial PoD services.
For more information, see:
http://ftacademy.org/materials/print-on-demand
== 7. FTA Certificates ==
Learners at the FTA can obtain a certificate for each of the modules
they pass successfully. The FTA certificate is issued - on behalf of
the FTA partners - by Prof. Dr. Lex Bijlsma, Dean of the Computer
Science Department of the Open University Netherlands, who chairs the
Quality and Recognition team in the FTA.
The certificates are recognised by the participating universities and
enable learners to extend their study options in the area of Free
Technologies as a complement to the existing curricula of the
universities. The certificates are issued in digital form (PDF) and a
validator tool will be made available in the near future. Here you can
see one of the first FTA learners, Marius Popma, who published his
profile and FTA certificate:
http://campus.ftacademy.org/community/user/view.php?id=36 His PDF
certificate:
http://campus.ftacademy.org/community/artefact/file/download.php?file=36
2&view=71
== About the Free Technology Academy ==
A Consortium formed by the Open University of Catalonia (Spain), the
Open University of the Netherlands and the University of Agder (Norway)
and led by the Free Knowledge Institute (FKI), the FTA has received the
support from the EC's Lifelong Learning Programme to set up an
international educational programme on Free Software. The courses are
taught completely online in a virtual campus based on the Campus
Project interoperability framework.
Following the Open Educational Resources movement, all learning
materials are freely available through the Internet. The use of Free
Software (also referred to as Open Source software or Libre Software)
is rapidly expanding in governmental and private organisations.
However, still only a limited number of ICT professionals, teachers and
decision makers have sufficient knowledge and expertise in these new
fields. The Free Technology Academy aims to address this gap by
providing high level courses that fit into larger Master Programmes at
the participating universities.
* More information: http://www.ftacademy.org
* Contact information: contact(a)ftacademy.org
* Digital version: http://ftacademy.eu/announce/8
Free Technology Academy Newsletter
http://www.ftacademy.org/
_______________________________________________
For more info about the Free Knowledge Institute: http://freeknowledge.eu/
_______________________________________________
A new U.S. Senate bill would grant the president far-reaching
emergency powers to seize control of or even shut down portions of the
Internet.
The legislation announced Thursday says that companies such as
broadband providers, search engines, or software firms that the
government selects "shall immediately comply with any emergency
measure or action developed" by the Department of Homeland Security.
Anyone failing to comply would be fined.
Source:
[1] - http://news.cnet.com/8301-13578_3-20007418-38.html?part=rss&subj=news&tag=2…
Hi there,
have you seen the ideas from her Majesty’s Treasury
http://www.hm-treasury.gov.uk/spend_challenge_ideas_2.htm:
8. In terms of spending less - what about migrating the whole of
government (the NHS, Education etc) from Microsoft products to Linux
and open source software like Openoffice.
and http://www.hm-treasury.gov.uk/spend_challenge_ideas_5.htm:
28. Annul the government’s agreement with Microsoft to provide
software and operating systems (OS) to government departments and
switch to open source software and Linux based operating systems. This
would reduce costs by: Reducing the need to update hardware in line
with new Microsoft OS releases. Linux OS and open source software has
a lower whole life cost and is less susceptible to viruses. Support a
more diverse spectrum of the IT industry, instead of one corporation;
generating additional UK tax revenue.
(Also added that to http://blogs.fsfe.org/mk/?p=614.)
Regards,
Matthias
--
Matthias Kirschner - Fellowship Coordinator, German Coordinator
Free Software Foundation Europe (fsfe.org)
Free Software is important to you? Join today! (fsfe.org/join)
As it seems, Microsoft is making a "love attack" on Greek Public Sector,
preaching "Interoperability" as the direct agreement with the previous
government (2006) ceased since 2008 due to inability of payment (from Greek
Government side) and the current is failing to staff agencies with Free
Software people and to implement GNU/Linux and Free Software solutions.
More in:
http://blogs.fsfe.org/boukouvalas/?p=55
and/or
http://linux-noosphere.blogspot.com/2010/07/blog-post_10.html
Another curious case is the extensive use of the term "Open Software" even
by people with deep knowledge on Free Software / Open Source Software and
their differences.
Greetings,
Matthias Kirschner wrote an interesting article[1] -- passing criticism
of "Intellectual Property", about correct usage of confusing terms.
Also, there is Free Software Daily's article[2] linking to original
one. Be free to vote it up!
[1] http://blogs.fsfe.org/mk/?p=612
[2] http://www.fsdaily.com/Philosophy/GOLEMs_are_better_than_Intellectual_Prope…
--
Happy hacking, Sergey Matveev
FSFE Fellow #1390 | FSF Associate member #5968
Greetings,
Matthias Kirschner wrote an interesting article[1] -- passing criticism
of "Intellectual Property", about correct usage of confusing terms.
Also, there is Free Software Daily's article[2] linking to original
one. Be free to vote it up!
[1] http://blogs.fsfe.org/mk/?p=612
[2] http://www.fsdaily.com/Philosophy/GOLEMs_are_better_than_Intellectual_Prope…
--
Happy hacking, Sergey Matveev
FSFE Fellow #1390 | FSF Associate member #5968
ORGcon [1] will be held in London on 24 July at the City University.
The conference will cover digital rights in Britain, and might be of
interest to FSFE activists and supporters.
For most of us this is a bit of a short notice, but I'm forwarding it
anyways.
1. <http://orgcon.eventbrite.com/>
----- Forwarded message from Thomas Gramstad <thomas(a)efn.no> -----
Date: Thu, 8 Jul 2010 00:46:18 +0200 (CEST)
From: Thomas Gramstad <thomas(a)efn.no>
To: efn-listen(a)uib.no
Subject: ORGcon 2010 i London (fwd)
User-Agent: Alpine 2.00 (LRH 1167 2008-08-23)
I London 24. juli arrangeres ORGcon http://bit.ly/ORGCon ,
enkonferansen om digitale rettigheter i England. Dette er vel for
kort varsel for de aller fleste som kunne vært interessert, men
videresender likevel.
----- End forwarded message -----
Hello Everyone,
Deputy UK Prime Minister Nick Clegg has opened a website where people from the UK can suggest "ideas" for laws that should be repealed/changed.
http://yourfreedom.hmg.gov.uk/
There are already some ideas there about pulling out of ACTA, Repealing the Digital Economy Act, DRM, Encryption etc..
I encourage everyone to rate the relevant ideas highly, as well as submit your own. It is not often where we get a chance like this!
I look forward to everyone's reply
Thanks
Jonathan