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Ffiw,
yesterday was a frantic day. Relieved that the 'catching up' angle got
into the press rather than blind praise to Microsoft. Pushing the human stories could be used to raise awareness and general interest. I would prefer however that the press would find news on significant releases or big developments like some schools / county councils beginning to make use of free Welsh software or deciding that they're rejecting Microsoft for various reasons including Welsh language support be more newsworthy. The Welsh windows announcement has raised the stakes. There's a risk that people will take up and stick with the Welsh language versions of Windows which will not be in the best long term interest of the Welsh language, the software industry in Wales nor for the budgets of our schools and our tax money. So I am more certain now of the need for a Welsh Live CD. Not just for demo purposes but as the easiest alternative for current Windows users to use, and not just XP users, but also Windows 98 and 2000 (which the pack doesn't support). And I feel that a race is now on. For it to succeed, get the press coverage we'd like, maintain the perception Welsh open source software being ahead and ultimately better serve the language, the Welsh Live CD has to be the 'first to market' and come out before Welsh Windows. We don't know what Microsoft's timetable is but I would hope, despite all the work there is that a LiveCD could be ready in June/July.(?) Being able to take up and be able to get into using a Welsh desktop environment HAS to be easy. There's nothing simpler than sticking in a CD into the PC and hey presto you've got a bilingual environment. (fyi I� went through today through the Welsh installation of Mandrake 9.2 on a machine that used to have win98 but unfortunately despite choosing Gnome to get a Welsh desktop, I ended up with KDE in English. I've no idea of why or where I went wrong - resorce limitations(?)) The Live CD would have to do everything and anything Welsh Windows would do - (spell checkers and Cysill. (Cysill for linux is my own opinion and not (yet) Canolfan Bedwyr policy - we haven't got Cysill/Cysgair running natively in Linux. It will with some tweaks in Wine however as we've just recently discovered) so nobody looses out by opting to a free desktop. It also has to do more than a Welsh Windows - i.e. it has to be bi-lingual. When we're sure of the ability to carry it off, it would be newsworthy perhaps to announce who might sponsor financially the CD productions or who might have an interest in using the CD (e.g schools) Bwrdd Yr Iaith might have an interest. I really think that after yesterday BYI should at least from now on give equal attention and publicity to free Welsh software (Linux,Gnome+KDE, OOo and Mozilla) as it did to Microsoft. I suppose the problem with our community is that were not as big as an American corporate who can't give BYI as much of an ego boost. Anyway! sorry Kevin I didn't reply to your invitation to a meeting sooner, but I've been playing with Knoppix and PC Linux OS and Mandrake Move CDs.� But of course let's meet up. Hwyl, Dewi. Ysgrifennodd Kevin Donnelly:
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