Olympic Softworks is a not for profit organization being set up in Olympia in Washington state for the purpose of advancing the use of Free and Open Source Software(FOSS). In following our purpose we serve the public need in several ways simultaneously.

These are grand plans. It will take determination and the help people locally to make this all work. The benefits to all of us in the pacific northwest are simply too great for this to not succeed.

Olympic Softworks email address is inbox @ olympicsoftworks.org Our web address is: www.olympicsoftworks.org

Currently, the weekly GNU/Linux class is held at the Olympia Free School site in down town Olympia. Every friday from 7-9pm. The school is located at 610 Columbia St SW in Olympia, Wa. 98501. Google Map link Check the olympicsoftworks.org site for planned covered subjects and any change of times/venues.

The class is given by Dave Thompson, founder of Olympic Softworks with over 25yrs of experience in IT.


The following few paragraphs are taken directly from http://www.gnu.org. Due to the importance of these 4 concepts, I copied this verbatim. I wanted to keep the wording, and therefore the meaning exact. In true hacker fashion the numbering begins at element number 0, the first element in any array.

Free software is a matter of liberty, not price. To understand the concept, you should think of free as in free speech, not as in free beer.

Free software is a matter of the users' freedom to run, copy, distribute, study, change and improve the software. More precisely, it refers to four kinds of freedom, for the users of the software:

A program is free software if users have all of these freedoms. Thus, you should be free to redistribute copies, either with or without modifications, either gratis or charging a fee for distribution, to anyone anywhere. Being free to do these things means (among other things) that you do not have to ask or pay for permission.


These are some of the best, and best known applications from the Free and Open Source Software community.

From the good folks over at Groklaw, a very well documented guide for those that may be curious about switching to GNU/Linux: Grokdoc

The Open Office productivity suite Open Office

FOSS image authoring application, The GIMP GNU Image Manipulation Program

Arguably the best music playing client available, Amarok. Currently it is only available for GNU/Linux, but work is ongoing for cross platform availability...both on OSX and Windows.

The most stable, available, and complete browser, Firefox


Some good videos from You Tube by featuring 3d Desktops, a great Richard Stallman video on FOSS software, the IBM 'Linux Child' videos, and the 3 Red Hat ones

IBM supports GNU/Linux 100%

Red Hat commercial #1

Richard Stallman recipe analogy

The Prodigy Child

Red Hat commercial #2

Mr.Stallman on Free Software

Shake up the World

Red Hat commercial #3

Interview with Mr.Stallman(10 min)

GNU/Linux is Open and Growing

GNU/Linux is Working

Novell parody of Mac/PC commercials #1

Vista Aero vs GNU/Linux Compix-Beryl

GNU/Linux is Everywhere

Novell parody of Mac/PC commercials #2

Sun Microsystems Looking-Glass on GNU/Linux

GNU/Linux is Ready

Novell parody of Mac/PC commercials #3

Star Craft w/touch screen on GNU/Linux

Flying Cars

54min presentation by Mark Shuttleworth

Lotus Notes 8 on GNU/LInux

Independant Parody of Mac/PC commercials

BBC Special on FOSS-Part1

GNU/Linux Server Commercial

BBC Special on FOSS-Part2


And a good hour long documentary about Free Software called: The Code, Linux This is a Norwegian documentary, but the vast majority of it is in english. It opens with the classic 2 minute long Software as Recipe comparison given by Richard Stallman.

The Code, Linux

OlympicSoftworks (last edited 2008-08-06 16:27:08 by localhost)