David Nielsen wrote:
tir, 21 03 2006 kl. 00:00 -0500, skrev Mike A. Harris:
I told him perhaps he should just purchase Fedora Core on CD instead,
and indicated there were many places online which you could order CDs.
He said it would be about $10, which again is like 5% of his monthly
income. And that's a twice a year cost. He said that buying Fedora
CDs locally was more expensive for "free software" than buying bootleg
copies of Windows XP down the street for $2-5 a pop.
Please note that in the spirit of the community and all that, a lot of
us "wealthy" westerners do spend a considerable amount of money shipping
totally free copies of Fedora around the world. If he or anyone wants a
copy but cannot download it, #fedora on irc.freenode.net is a good place
to find friendly people to help and every Linux forum I've ever been to
has had a sticky thread offering free copies of Linux mailed anywhere in
the world.
Getting Linux is not a problem if you utilise the community. It's one of
the reasons Linux is such a great thing to be part of.
That's a wonderful idea! I never even thought of that. The cost of one
of us Westerners shipping a CD/DVD anywhere in the world is probably
about the same cost or close to it of someone buying it online give or
take a few bucks, but the bigger difference is that to me or you it is
the price of a few cups of coffee, whereas it's like making a car or
house payment to people in some parts of the world.
<brainstorming>
Perhaps a http://www.fedora-for-free.org or
http://www.fedora-philanthropy.org could be set up, in which people in
various parts of the world who can't afford to buy CD/DVDs or to easily
download them to go to get them sent to them for free, and other people
such as ourselves could contribute a few bucks each release to fund the
distribution.
</brainstorming>
Just an idea.
--
Mike A. Harris * Open Source Advocate * http://mharris.ca
Proud Canadian.
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