Pakistan "Opens Up" Open Source Training Toolkit to Everyone
The toolkit contains step-by-step manuals comprising of six modules covering various Free and Open Source Software applications.
When
it comes down to developing and sharing ICT based open
knowledge,
Pakistan
is never behind in the arena, the third largest low-cost IT
enabled
and
offshore BPO services provider nation in Asia after India and
China.
Such
is an example set forth by the Open Source Resource Center (OSRC),
a
project
of the Ministry of Information Technology, Government of
Pakistan.
OSRC
has developed and released a FOSS resource kit titled "OSS
Training
Toolkit" originally put together in order to facilitate OSRC's
training
comprising
of free-of-cost workshops that it carries out
throughout
Pakistan.
The
toolkit contains step-by-step manuals comprising of six modules
covering
various
Free and Open Source Software applications, and all the content
is
both
available in a tangible printed manual form as well as Open
Document
(.odt),
Portable Document (.pdf) and MS Word (.doc) formats so
that
anyone
and everyone can benefit just by downloading the material.
The
toolkit covers topics of great importance and relevance to
ICTs
including
but not limited to databases, application servers,
desktop
applications,
office productivity suites, Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP)
and
Customer Relationship Management (CRM) software, and open source
desktop
applications
for both Linux and the Microsoft Windows platform. Along with
the
manuals, the toolkit also carries a set of CDs that include two
Linux
distributions,
Ubuntu Linux Desktop and the Fedora Server Distributions, as
well
as the other applications.
A
key feature of the toolkit is that its curriculum has been planned
and
laid
out in such a manner that anyone from a basic to novice user can
learn
and
benefit from it. Another feature that accompanies the toolkit is
the
free
trainings and facilitators that are provided by OSRC
free-of-cost.
The
objective of conducting these trainings supported by the toolkit is
to
enable
organizations intending to migrate or adopt FOSS solutions to
improve
technical
skills of their personnel.
The
OSRC has plans on partnering with the local industry to conduct
these
free-of-cost
open source software awareness-raising seminars and
training
workshops
for universities, colleges, training institutes, NGOs,
federal,
provincial
and local government bodies throughout 29 different cities
in
Pakistan.
OSRC facilitates these trainings by providing both the
training
material
and the trainers.
The
29 cities possibly being considered for its training initiative
include
Abbotabad,
Bahawalpur, Bannu, Dera Ghazi Khan, Gilgit, Dera Ismail
Khan,
Faisalabad,
Gujranwala, Hyderabad, Islamabad, Karachi, Khairpur, Khuzdar,
Kohat,
Lahore, Lasbela, Loralai, Mardan, Multan, Peshawar, Quetta, Rahim
Yar
Khan,
Sargodha, Sialkot, Sibbi, Skardu, Swat, Swabi and Malakand.
These
trainings
are to be conducted in the following format covering all the
aspects
of the toolkit including:
.
Module 1 - (1 day) - Open Source Orientation and Linux Installation
.
Module 2 - (2 days) - Linux Server Administration
.
Module 3 - (1 day) - Introduction to MySQL database
.
Module 4 - (2 days) - PHP and Enterprise Collaboration Suites
.
Module 5 - (1 day)- Java, other open source programming languages
and
application
servers
.
Module 6 - (1 day) - Open Source ERP and CRM
The
training toolkit has been released under open source licenses
through
the
OSRC website thus individuals and organizations interested
in
deploying/migrating
from proprietary to open source networks can freely
download
(partially or completely), distribute, use and modify the
training
toolkit
and its related CDs. Not only this, the physical manuals and
bounded
versions
of the OSS Tool Kits have already been shared with FOSS Advocates
and
members from other countries including display at the
UNDP-APDIP
International
Open Source Network organized Asia Source 2 FOSS Training Camp
in
Sukabumi, Indonesia earlier this year.
In
order to promote open access and sharing of the OSRC Open Source
Toolkit,
there
is a copyright and disclaimer accompanying the publications, that,
it
has
been published by the PSEB for members of the IT industry and
the
public-at-large
without restricting its use. Secondly, the OSRC does not
accept
any liability for any direct and consequential use of the toolkit
or
its
contents the toolkit may be distributed only subject to the terms
and
conditions
set forth in the Open Publication License therefore, if users of
the
toolkit would like to further redistribute the toolkit, they will
have
to
abide by the following notice:
"Copyright
(c) 2006 by Pakistan Software Export Board (G) Limited, Ministry
of
Information Technology, Government of Pakistan. This material may
be
distributed
only subject to the terms and conditions set forth in the
Open
Publication
License, v 1.0 or later (the latest version is presently
available
at http://www.opencontent.org/openpub/)."
Online
References:
[1]
OSRC Open Source
Toolkit:
http://www.osrc.org.pk/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=29&Itemid=4
2
[2]
OSRC Open Source Tookit all chapters download
(Zip):
http://www.osrc.org.pk/toolkit/oss_toolkit.zip
[3]
Expression of Interest in Free Open Source Seminars/Training
Workshops:
http://www.osrc.org.pk/ads/OpenSource.jpg
[4]
TORs for Conducting Open Source Training
Workshops:
http://www.osrc.org.pk/ads/TORs_Conducting_OpenSource_TrainingWorkshops.pdf
[5]
UNDP-APDIP International Open Source Network IOSN Asia Source 2
FOSS
Training
Camp, Sukabumi, Indonesia.
http://wiki.asiasource2.iosn.net