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software definition



tb@becket.net (Thomas Bushnell, BSG) a tapoté :

> Stephane Bortzmeyer <bortzmeyer@nic.fr> writes:
> 
> > This was very often written in that thread but it is wrong. To be
> > stored on a FTP server or burned on a CD, you just need to be
> > digital. You do not need to be software. The Bible does not become
> > software once you type it in vi or Emacs.
> > 
> > [This confusion between "software" and "digital" seems very prevalent
> > in Debian. I share Mathieu's regrets about it.]
> 
> Perhaps people who aren't native English speakers have learned the
> wrong definitions?
> 
> Software is distinguished from *hardware*, and thus refers to bits as
> opposed to atoms, and it is irrelevant what the particular bits
> represent.
> 
> Of course in the early days of computing, most the only software on
> computers consisted of programs, and so a lot of people got
> confused.

"Software" is translated into "Logiciel" in French, which means program
actually. 
The "French name" for Free Software is "Logiciel Libre".

It makes no room for confusion: when you believe in "Logiciel Libre",
it does not mean at all that you think that magically every text that
is copied on a computer change it's nature (like the Bible stopping
to be a theological text to be a "software")

If this translation, endorsed by the FSF France I think, as been
picked, it's surely not a mistake but because "Logiciel" is really
what need to be free in an operating system -- it is the operating
system. Do you think every text you type on your computer should be
worldwide shared?  

Finally, apparently english dictionnaries we can get for instance via
kdict define software in a way do not contradict the translation
"Logiciel":


WordNet (r) 1.7 [wn]

software
     n : (computer science) written programs or procedures or rules
         and associated documentation pertaining to the operation
         of a computer system and that are stored in read/write
         memory; "the market for software is expected to expand"
         [syn: software system, software package, package]
         [ant: hardware]



 The Free On-line Dictionary of Computing (09 FEB 02) [foldoc]

software

   <programming> (Or "computer program", "program") The
   instructions executed by a computer, as opposed to the
   physical device on which they run (the "hardware").
   "Code" is closely related but not exactly the same.

   Programs stored on non-volatile storage built from
   integrated circuits (e.g. ROM or PROM) are usually
   called firmware.

   Software can be split into two main types - system software
   and application software or application programs.  System
   software is any software required to support the production or
   execution of application programs but which is not specific to
   any particular application.  Examples of system software would
   include the operating system, compilers, editors and
   sorting programs.

   Examples of application programs would include an accounts
   package or a CAD program.  Other broad classes of
   application software include real-time software, business
   software, scientific and engineering software, embedded
   software, personal computer software and artificial
   intelligence software.

   Software includes both source code written by humans and
   executable machine code produced by assemblers or
   compilers.  It does not usually include the data processed
   by programs unless this is in a format such as multimedia
   which depends on the use of computers for its presentation.
   This distinction becomes unclear in cases such as spread
   sheets which can contain both instructions (formulae and
   macros) and data.  There are also various intermediate
   compiled or semi-compiled, forms of software such as
   library files and byte-code.

   Some claim that documentation (both paper and electronic) is
   also software.  Others go further and define software to be
   programs plus documentation though this does not correspond
   with common usage.

   The noun "program" describes a single, complete and
   more-or-less self-contained list of instructions, often stored
   in a single file, whereas "code" and "software" are
   uncountable nouns describing some number of instructions which
   may constitute one or more programs or part thereof.  Most
   programs, however, rely heavily on various kinds of operating
   system software for their execution.

   (1998-06-04)






-- 
Mathieu Roy
 
  Homepage:
    http://yeupou.coleumes.org
  Not a native english speaker: 
    http://stock.coleumes.org/doc.php?i=/misc-files/flawed-english



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