Hi guys, Cristiaan from the local Herald has written a very informative article about the cafe and open source software in general. Click here to have a look!
Archive for September, 2005

An evening at the Innovation and Sustainability Awards
September 19, 2005We have attended the gala dinner that was organized for all the finalists of this competition. We entered in the “Economic : ICT” category – and finished as one of the finalists – which is great – this is the first time we have entered a competition since our launch in October 2004 – and it is good to know that people already recognise the cafe’s work.

“An alternative way of teaching the free software philosophy” – from silentcoder.co.za
September 19, 2005AJ says : “I believe that if you can help a neighbour in need, you are morally bound to do so. With software ‘can’ is never a question. It doesn’t cost you anything to make a copy, and send it to him – and you still have it. So you are morally bound to do so. In the post-scarcity world, charity becomes costless – so proprietory software twisted some laws completely beyond their intended purpose to create an artificial scarcity where none should exist.
They illegalized charity.
They made it criminal to be a good person.” click here to read on….

Jargon’s story about Software Freedom Day at the OpenCafe
September 14, 2005We definitely had a great time on Saturday and did have very interesting discussions – click here to jump over to the Centauri site for an in-depth look at our SFD celebrations:-)

Software Freedom Day photos are online
September 14, 2005
We had lots of fun on Saturday – it was definitely worth all the effort!
Click here to see all the photos!

Introducing Jargon and the Alpha Centauri Network
September 14, 2005
Jargon appeared in the cafe a few months ago ( from Rustenburg ) and since then he has been one of the most enthusiastic supporter of our OpenCafe:-) Jargon, thanks for all the support – I still can’t believe all the help you have been overwhelming us
Jargon has his own open source project & website called the Alpha Centauri Network. It focuses on providing support for installing and using Linux. Jargon & us are working on starting a new online forum for the OpenCafe.

The first Freeculture.org initiative in SA
September 14, 2005The recently created Free Culture initiative is hosting events in Durban during Software Freedom Day.
FreeCulture.org was founded in the USA by two Swarthmore students after they sued voting-machine manufacturer Diebold for abusing copyright law in 2003. Named after the book Free Culture by Stanford University law professor Lawrence Lessig, FreeCulture.org is part of a growing movement, with roots in the free software / open source community, media activists, creative artists and writers, and civil libertarians. Groups with which FreeCulture.org has collaborated include Creative Commons, the Electronic Frontier Foundation, Public Knowledge, and Downhill Battle.
For more info on the Durban initiative contact Kofi Mangesi – 073 107 6600.

Introducing CC Mixter SA
September 14, 2005ccMixterSA – our local music sharing portal – was launched on September 1 – as the South African version of ccMixter.org.
You can use ccMixter to upload and download loops and remix them with your own music. The loops on the site are freely available for everyone as they are published using a Creative Commons license.
Click here to see an animated movie about using Creative Commons Sampling licenses.
So don’t waste time – create your own remix today!

About Wikipedia on ITWeb.co.za
September 11, 2005
Free Culture South Africa Celebrates Software Freedom Day
September 11, 2005
Students of the University of KwaZulu-Natal (UKZN) joined the Free Culture movement in South Africa to celebrate Software Freedom Day 2005. The day was marked with an exhibition and Talk, close to hundred students turned up for the event, of which only a quarter were women. The exhibition attracted Open Office.org Southern Africa, Computer Science Department of UKZN, and the local Free Culture chapter. Many Free/Open Source Software (FOSS) materials were distributed including Ubuntu Linux CDs, Open office.org CDs, Creative Commons badges and stickers and free culture flyers. A Freedom toaster donated by the Shuttleworth Foundation was also exhibited and many students had the opportunity to `toast’ some CDs and to learn more about FOSS.
Speaking at the talk, Craig Adams South Africa representative for Open
Office.org, said, proprietary software was denying computer users their fundamental freedoms and that the right to choose is been compromised by proprietary software.
Luke Voster, the coordinator of the Open Source project in the university said, eight of the university’s computer labs were currently running on Open Source software, he added that an integral part of the university’s FOSS programme is to ensure that lecturers are trained in the use of FOSS to ensure that students assignments can be accepted in FOSS format.
Kofi Mangesi of the UKZN Chapter of Free Culture, commenting on the event said `we believe this event has sparked the beginning of serious discussions among students on the need for copyright reform in the digital age’.
















