[OSGeo-Discuss] RE: Comparison between Proprietary and OS
Gavin Fleming
GavinF at mintek.co.za
Mon May 5 06:13:20 PDT 2008
So, who's going to condense this and related threads into a presentation at FOSS4G2008?
It's the sort of input a lot of people are interested in.
Gavin
-----Original Message-----
From: discuss-bounces at lists.osgeo.org [mailto:discuss-bounces at lists.osgeo.org] On Behalf Of Micha Silver
Sent: 26 April 2008 04:32 PM
To: OSGeo Discussions
Subject: Re: [OSGeo-Discuss] RE: Comparison between Proprietary and OS
Andre Grobler wrote:
> ...
>
> So the hurdles for me to OS were "acceptance" specifically for the following
> reasons:
> Free and easy access and training of ESRI at varsity. Autocad did the same
> and look where that got them.
> Linux, just mentioning command lines has me a little nervous. (I know this
> is changing, but the field calculator is enough programming for me, thanks)
>
> ...
>
> So in short I am doing what somebody already suggested, get ESRI for day to
> day soft landing and learn OS GRASS and OSSIM meanwhile for real work;-)
> Hopefully in a while I'll wonder what the fuss was about... and possibly
> contribute, if only to the dummies FAQ section.
>
> André Grobler
>
>
Andre:
I had the privilege recently to give a short beginners course in GIS to
a small group of undergrads in environmental science. Before the
semester started I had decided to give the course based on FOSS tools. I
first sat down with the network technician, who told me that they have
ArcGIS 9, network licence, but he don't know where the disks were, and
was concerned about space on the server, network traffic, bogging down
their Terminal Server etc, etc. So I (rubbing my hands together) told
him, no problem, we're going with Open Source Software. Turned out some
of the students had MACs and one was using Ubuntu, so the choice to go
with OSS tools was a no brainer.
To my surprise, by the forth lesson we had gotten to watershed analysis,
and students were running the GRASS modules (within QGIS). Admittedly we
leapfrogged over some stuff, but still I doubt I could have reached that
level with Arc* tools in such a short time span.
The "comfort zone" problem is well know and likely the most difficult
hurdle to overcome when trying to migrate to OSS tools. But to some
extent it's nothing more than a matter of perception. Proprietary
software vendors have surrounded us with distorting mirrors. Once you
step away, things look quite different.
Regards,
Micha
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