It looks as though I'll be there, as there's a possibly interesting (to me)
conference in London that day. -- MJR
Reply-To: Alex Hudson <home(a)alexhudson.com>
To: FSFE-UK <fsfe-uk(a)gnu.org>
Subject: [Fsfe-uk] [Fwd: [Gllug] Talk by Richard Stallman in London, 12 Feb]
For those unaware, QMUL = Queen Mary, University of London, in the East end.
I don't know if I'll be going yet - I'm going to try - if there are any
fsfe-uk'ers going I might try harder ;) I know it's preaching to the
converted, but hey.
Alex.
- -----Forwarded Message-----
> Tuesday, 12 February at 7pm
> Skeel lecture theatre, the people's palace
> QMUL Mile End Campus
> http://www.qmul.ac.uk/travel/mileend.shtml
>
> RICHARD STALLMAN, software hacker (in the "geek" sense), founder of the
> Free Software Foundation and of the GNU Project, and principal author of
> some of the most important GNU software, will briefly be in London in
> February. We are fortunate enough to have him come to Queen Mary,
> University of London, at short notice to give a public lecture on
> "Copyright vs Community in the Age of Computer Networks".
>
> Stallman has a long-held belief that software should be free in the same
> way that mathematical knowledge has traditionally been free--this is
> manifested in the GNU General Public Licence (and friends) and "copyleft".
>
> In order that we may gauge numbers, if you wish to attend the lecture
> please contact Sue White: suew/rms(a)dcs.qmul.ac.uk or 020 7882 5217.
>
>
> Lecture Abstract:
>
> Copyright developed in the age of the printing press, and was designed
> to fit with the system of centralized copying imposed by the printing
> press. But the copyright system does not fit well with computer
> networks, and only draconian punishments can enforce it.
>
> The global corporations that profit from copyright are lobbying
> for draconian punishments, and to increase their copyright powers,
> while suppressing public access to technology. But if we
> seriously hope to serve the only legitimate purpose of
> copyright--to promote progress, for the benefit of the
> public--then what must be done is either to reduce copyright
> powers or effectively eliminate them, depending on the kind of
> work. Governments must now protect the public's right to copy.
>
>
> Background URLs about the GNU project, "GNU/Linux" and free software:
>
> http://www.uk.gnu.org/
> http://www.uk.gnu.org/philosophy/philosophy.html
> http://www.uk.gnu.org/philosophy/free-sw.html
> http://www.uk.gnu.org/philosophy/free-software-for-freedom.html
> http://www.uk.gnu.org/philosophy/free-doc.html
> http://www.uk.gnu.org/licenses/licenses.html
> http://www.uk.gnu.org/copyleft/copyleft.html
> http://www.uk.gnu.org/gnu/manifesto.html
> http://www.uk.gnu.org/gnu/thegnuproject.html
> http://www.uk.gnu.org/gnu/linux-and-gnu.html
> http://www.uk.gnu.org/gnu/why-gnu-linux.html
>
> Richard Stallman's personal web page:
>
> http://www.stallman.org/
- --
Gllug mailing list - Gllug(a)linux.co.uk
http://list.ftech.net/mailman/listinfo/gllug
------- End of Forwarded Message
--
MJR
Organization: Sheffield Linux User's Group
Subject: Linux Seminar
Date: Thu, 24 Jan 2002 10:05:45 +0000
Reply-To: Richard Ibbotson <richard(a)sheflug.co.uk>
Hi
Just a quick note to explain about our seminar in February.
If you would like to know about Samba 2.3 then you might like to come
along and ask Jeremy Allison some questions. You might also want to
talk to Georg Greve who is the president of the European Free
Software Foundation. For more info have a look at....
http://www.sheflug.co.uk/seminar.html
There will also be several other speakers who can probably give you
some interesting facts.
Although the whole thing is free and lunch will be served you will
need to use the online registration form so that we can understand
how many people will be coming along for lunch.....
http://www.clubukonline.co.uk/local-events/Linux/linux.html
we find that for some reason just the Netscape browser refuses to
look at this page but I'm fine with Opera, Konqueror and Mozilla.
Thanks
--
Richard
www.sheflug.co.uk
Begin forwarded message:
Date: Thu, 17 Jan 2002 13:43:15 -0000
From: e.noble(a)coventry.ac.uk
To: <martyn(a)drake.org.uk>
Subject: CRAFT project
The EPI Centre at Coventry University is participating in a project to
help match European companies bidding for funds under the EC's Research
and Development budget for SMEs known as CRAFT. CRAFT helps SMEs with
limited research capability to develop new products or processes by paying
the costs of a research organisation for them.
I have recently been sent a profile for a project which has been proposed
by an Italian company. They are looking for SME partners in the UK to join
the Consortium. As it involves Linux, I wondered whether the following may
be of interest to any of the companies in your association? (I can
contact companies directly if this is easier). If any company is
interested in participating or finding out more about the project, please
either let me know or contact the details below as soon as possible.
I look forward to hearing from you.
With best regards
Emma
Emma Noble
Project Assistant
EPI Centre
Coventry University TechnoCentre
Puma Way
Coventry
CV1 2TT
Tel: 02476 236593
GENERAL
An Italian university spin off is looking for companies interested in
developing a new system - VAS, a fully open source application to manage
maintenance of legacy Microsoft Windows applications on a geographically
distributed network. Catalogues are centralised on a Linux server, by
means of Wine, and provided to client workstations using VNC. Companies
interested in developing the VAS system itself, end users, interested in
centralising Windows applications on a single server are being sought.
DESCRIPTION
The proposed solution is to centralise Windows applications and to
distribute them through the Internet, using VNC and WINE. More in detail,
the applications will be installed on a Linux server using WINE. Then,
access to the applications will be provided using VNC, directly from the
workstation of the users. In case of a new release of an application, it
will be necessary only to update the installation on the server; on the
client workstation the access will be performed again by the same VNC
client.
The innovation is to use two existing open source packages (WINE and VNC)
to run Windows applications on a Linux server, and distribute them to
users through the Internet. The Italian Company is looking for:
-companies interested in marketing the server for specific Windows
applications;
-R&D partners interested in improving the existing WINE code, so to
incraese the number of working Windows calls;
- end users, interested in centralizing one of their Windows applications
on a single server.
Target Countries: Great Britain and Germany
APPLICATION DOMAINS
Industry - Transport
Information Technology - Information processing, Information Systems
CONTACT:
Name: Paolo Bizzarri
Phone: +39 050 970 207
Fax: +39 050 3136 588
Email address: p.bizzarri(a)icube.it
www.icube,it
Project Assistant
EPI Centre
Coventry University TechnoCentre
Puma Way
Coventry
CV1 2TT
Tel: 02476 236593
------- Forwarded Message
Reply-To: Werner Heuser <wehe(a)mobilix.org>
Organization: MobiliX
Subject: MobiliX.org: severe charge with trademark issues by "Asterix and Obelix"
Dear List Member,
Werner Heuser author of Linux on the Road ( A Guide for Laptops and
PDAs) has been charged with trademark issues by the owner of the
trademarks for Asterix and Obelix "Les Editions Albert Rene" (Paris).
The name of his website MobiliX.org is supposed to be
mistaken for Obelix.
The trademark Obelix was registered by the German lawyer
Guenter Freiherr v. Gravenreuth. The legal charge is up
to 250.000 USD or six months prison. The costs of the first instance
are app. 15.000 USD. Werner Heuser has decided not to withdraw
the name "MobiliX". He is supported by the German lawyers
Jaschinski, Biere und Brexl - JBB (http://www.jbb-berlin.de).
This case is another one in the recent series of trademark troubles
for Free Software projects (SAMBA, Kylix, Kilustrator,
SELFHTML, SuSE, ..). Therefore this case seems to be very important
not only because many of these projects have names ending on "iX".
The MobiliX.org (http://mobilix.org) site is dedicated to Mobile UniX
systems. Therefore its name is a combination
of the word "mobile" and the suffix "iX". It leads you to a lot of
useful hands-on information about installing and running Linux, BSD,
Solaris and other UniXes on laptops, PDAs, cell phones and other
mobile computer devices. It exists since five years and besides
the famous site "Linux on Laptops" (http://www.linux-laptop.net)
by Kenneth E. Harker it seems to be biggest resource on this topic.
Current news about the case are at
http://mobilix.org/mobilix_asterix.html
Werner Heuser
- --
|=| Werner Heuser = Keplerstr. 11A = D-10589 Berlin = Germany
|=| <wehe_AT_mobilix.org> T. 0049 - (0)30 - 349 53 86
|=| http://MobiliX.org How to Use UniX on Mobile Computers
|=| http://Xtops.DE Laptops+PDAs pre-installed with UniX
|*| This is no time for phony rhetoric -- Lou Reed
_______________________________________________
Discussion mailing list
Discussion(a)fsfeurope.org
http://mailman.fsfeurope.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/discussion
------- End of Forwarded Message
--
MJR
------- Forwarded Message
Subject: Re: MobiliX.org: severe charge with trademark issues by "Asterix
and Obelix"
Reply-To: "Georg C. F. Greve" <greve(a)fsfeurope.org>
Organisation: Free Software Foundation Europe
Date: Wed, 09 Jan 2002 22:18:57 +0100
|| On Wed, 9 Jan 2002 21:24:16 +0100
|| Jan-Hendrik Palic <palic(a)billgotchy.de> wrote:=20
jp> What about all free projects with names, which are similar to
jp> names from commercial names? I think it is more possible to get
jp> into trouble with people like Gravenreuth every day those poeple
jp> could do their work.
Yes, it is obvious that the Free Software movement has not paid enough
attention to this.
jp> Are there people, where you can go, if you have some problem with
jp> that, maybe the fsf?
The FSF Europe already tries to do what it can. In fact we got in
contact with Werner Heuser of MobiliX immediately when we heard about
this and it is not really circumstantial that Till Jaeger (the lawyer
of Werner Heuser) is also the lawyer of the FSF Europe. If you read
the Heise article, you will even find that we are being mentioned
there.
In the earlier case that created a lot of fuzz, the case of
Killustrator, we also had Till Jaeger investigate the matter. He was
ready to defend the Killustrator project - and would most likely have
won. Unfortunately the author of Killustrator and the University he
published it from preferred to settle the matter by changing the name.
Regards,
Georg
--
Georg C. F. Greve <greve(a)fsfeurope.org>
Free Software Foundation Europe (http://fsfeurope.org)
GNU Business Network (http://mailman.gnubiz.org)
Brave GNU World (http://brave-gnu-world.org)
------- End of Forwarded Message
--
MJR