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The Military GNU is Not Unix

Open Source Software In the Military 91

Posted by kdawson
from the keep-it-stupid-stupid dept.
JohnMoD writes With the advent of forge.mil, etc. the military seems to be getting on board with free and open source software. A working group meeting is going to be held at Georgia Tech in Atlanta, August 12-13, 2009. There's a pretty good lineup of speakers including a Marine from the Iraq-Marine Expeditionary Forces, who was on the ground and saw the agility open source gave to him and his soldiers. A number of OSS projects are going to be meeting there: Delta 3D, OpenCPI, FalconView, OSSIM, Red Hat, etc. Looks like there will be some good discussions."
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Open Source Software In the Military

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  • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday July 19, 2009 @08:09AM (#28747019)

    See; with the military now realizing the destructive potential of OSS people hopefully now realize the true danger posed by this dangerous concept!

  • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday July 19, 2009 @08:57AM (#28747179)

    No you are wrong.

    When Microsoft's products crash (guidance tracking on cruise missiles) THEY SAVE LIVES.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday July 19, 2009 @09:13AM (#28747231)

    Anyone who doesn't regret the loss of lives of all soldiers no matter what country, should be dead.

    Anyone that doesn't respect all lives should be killed.

  • by OrigamiMarie (1501451) on Sunday July 19, 2009 @12:56PM (#28748393)
    Al: Uh-oh, quick! Should we use gnuke, knuke, or just bare-bones nuke?
    Bob: Ah, definitely not knuke, it screws up at least half of the commands it sends to nuke. Maybe gnuke, it's at least a competent front-end, but it's missing a bunch of the functionality of nuke -- the dev got bored and was pulled onto another project. But the command-line for nuke is so obtuse that it will take two or three tries just to get the command right, and those first two bad commands might be worse than not using it at all. Of course, nobody has what you would call real-world experience with any of them . . .
    Al: Ah sh*t, too late anyway.

    Sorry, it was the first thing I thought of when I saw the gnuke tag on the story.

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