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    Open and popular ... FLOSS in Tamil
    January 30, 2006, 8:34 pm
     

    http://www.flonnet.com/fl2302/stories/20060210003909700.htm
    Open and popular

    A CORRESPONDENT

    An open-source suite of Tamil applications for the Windows
    operating system is the first of its kind for the platform.

    PANACEA DREAMWEAVERS, a Chennai-based software company, has
    released an open source suite of Tamil applications and tools
    into the public domain. It includes an accounting package,
    two dictionaries, a management software for self-help groups
    (SHGs), a simple text editor and a feature-rich word
    processor, and about 250 free fonts. Most of the products
    ship with the source code.

    It is claimed that this is the first such initiative by a
    company or organisation in the area of public domain Tamil
    software. A similar effort was sponsored by the Central
    Government, in which a collection of tools was acquired from
    private players and released for public consumption in a
    compact-disk form by Minister for Communications Dayanidhi
    Maran. However, none of the software included in the package
    was in open source format.

    Besides, the company claims that its efforts are a first in
    the Microsoft Windows-based Tamil computing environment. Most
    open-source Tamil applications are developed for the Linux
    operating system.

    Open-source software is software whose source code is made
    available to the public, enabling anyone to copy, modify or
    redistribute the source code without paying royalties or
    fees. Open source is associated with collaborative
    development, wherein developers who have access to the
    product's code correct any problems or deficiencies in it or
    add additional features, thereby helping the software to
    evolve. Many such applications are backed by a large number
    of developers from all over the world and have evolved into
    robust systems.

    Some well-known examples of open-source initiatives are the
    Linux operating system, the Integrated Development
    Environment Eclipse, the Apache web server and the Mozilla
    suite, including the web browser Firefox, which recorded its
    100 millionth download recently.

    One of the most prominent advocates of free software is the
    Free Software Movement started by Richard Stallman in 1983.
    The movement is also active in India, but its adherents focus
    all their energies on writing software for open-source
    operating systems such as Linux and not for the commercial
    Windows platform.

    In the CD under review, the products are neatly divided into
    sections: Panacea Apps (short for applications), Panacea
    Desk, Panacea Valaiyodi, and Source.

    Panacea Apps comprises Mugavari (Tamil-English address book),
    Sangam Pro (SHG management package), Selvam (accounting
    software), Valluvan (documentation software), and
    Pulavan-Paalam (dictionaries).

    The Panacea Desk folder comprises Pathippu-250 (collection of
    250 fonts), R4U (English-Tamil word processor), Saarathy
    (keyboard driver) and Tamil Olai (simple Tamil text editor).

    The Source folder includes the source code of all the
    products except R4U and Valaiyodi.

    According to the company, Sangam Pro is meant for
    non-governmental organisations (NGOs) to assess and evaluate
    the performance of SHGs. Some of the features are the ability
    to enter and save details of loans, repayments, meeting
    schedules, deposits and membership.

    Selvam, the software for maintaining accounts in Tamil, is
    aimed at small and medium enterprises and is also suited for
    home users. R4U, a Tamil-English word processor, easily
    creates Tamil and even multilingual documents. Users can
    easily switch between English and Tamil typing.

    The other products in the suite are also useful and easy to
    navigate. The company's stated mission to develop the
    Valaiyodi browser into one that can translate English Web
    pages into Tamil is something to look forward to.

    Th applications have a few bugs, but they are minor and
    should not stand in the way of encouraging such attempts. The
    country sorely needs free software and open-source
    initiatives for the Information Technology revolution to
    reach most segments of society. And it is widely accepted
    that the best way to go about achieving this is to write
    software in the language of the people and make it available
    free of cost.

    Nevertheless, a few points need to be made. The collection of
    fonts in TAB and TAM formats is no doubt excellent but run
    the risk of obsolescence in a world that is quickly adopting
    Unicode as the standard for recognising non-English textual
    characters.

    In text processing, Unicode takes the role of providing a
    unique a number for each character. In other words, Unicode
    represents a character in an abstract way, and leaves the
    visual rendering (size, shape, font or style) to other
    software, such as a Web browser or a word processor.

    Microsoft Windows NT/2000/XP make extensive use of Unicode as
    an internal representation of text, while Unix-like operating
    systems such as Linux, BSD and Mac OS X have adopted it as
    the basis of representation of multilingual text.

    Secondly, the dictionaries - both of which are
    well-structured and simple to use - need to be updated. The
    Tamil language has kept pace with the modern world and a
    dictionary with contemporary words and phrases and their
    usage will be most handy.

    It is hoped that the budding entrepreneurs behind the venture
    will do what is needed, for the collective good of the Tamil
    computing world. Panacea Dreamweavers, which is hardly a year
    old, is the brainchild of a group of entrepreneurs whose goal
    is to develop solutions for the Tamil language computing
    space, according to the founders. Their corporate philosophy
    is that Tamil language software must not place any financial
    compulsions on the end-user.

    The software developer community in India and abroad would do
    well to emulate this endeavour and come out with more such
    products so that the divide between the digital haves and
    have-nots is bridged.


    Knowlege is power... share it equitably!


    --
    ------------------------------------------------
    Vinay Yadav vinayRas Infotech
    www.vinayras.com Nagpur, India
    ------------------------------------------------
    Linux Consultant & PHP/MySQL Developer
    ------------------------------------------------