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US Army Signs $471,000,000 Deal for Microsoft Software

zero_offset writes "According to this article at Yahoo, Microsoft will provide software for 494,000 Army computers during the next six years. At roughly $950 per computer this clearly involves more than just the OS, although the article unfortunately doesn't provide details, and I was unable to find any references to this on the Microsoft website." The great things about this deal: the Army is going through a reseller, when clearly they have the purchasing power to buy direct; and most of the computers they purchase are normal consumer machines which will be purchased with Windows and Office already installed, so the Army will be paying twice for each machine.

3 of 1,260 comments (clear)

  1. Sounds.. by Lugor · · Score: 5, Interesting

    like the Army is paying for Microsoft's fine...

    Justice Department: Bad Microsoft.. you must pay $500 million and promise to never do it again.

    Defense Deparment: Here Microsoft.. $471 million for you...

    Right hand doesn't know what the left hand is doing? Or does it?

  2. Re:A soldier's perspective by Dun+Malg · · Score: 5, Interesting
    If the army mandated a free operating system, they could modify the operating system to only provide the services that the army NEEDs

    Modified by whom? Certified for DoD use by whom? As for "services ...the army needs", even the army can't tell you that, so they'd say "just make it do everything". Also, who's going to port all the lame crap software the army already has that runs under windows? What if some of it can't be ported?

    The problems you described do not happen with a properly configured system.

    People don't forget passwords or forget which printer is theirs in Linux? [scoff!]

    I would guess even someone in B. CO 1/509th Abn could figure out.

    Figure out isn't the problem. You say Linux can be made unbreakable. Nobody who's ever given anything to an 11B (infantryman) ever calls anything unbreakable. You can't depend upon something being robust to protect it, you have to have people available who can fix it when it breaks.

    No offence intended.

    None taken. Hooah.

    SGT DunMalg 3/187th MI Bde 101st ABN Div (Air Assault) (1987-1993)

    --
    If a job's not worth doing, it's not worth doing right.
  3. I'm an Army Sysadmin by The+Evil+Couch · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I fully agree, most of my users have serious problems just operating windows, let alone doing work on it. If you threw Linux at them, they would just stop using the computer and go back to doing everything on paper.

    another thing is that while the liscense costs for all the software that they're getting isn't horrible price-gouging, we don't fucking need it.

    I'm in an officer school, the only function for having a database is for keeping track of student information. I already have an access database in place with an oracle database slowly replacing it. I don't need or want SQL and NONE of my users need it, either. we don't need to buy a shit load of liscenses at slightly above prices, what we need is to break that chunk of cash up and give it to the units so that their Sysadmins and IMOs can determine what the unit needs.

    I'll give you a little story as an example of how trying to add too many pieces to the puzzle WILL fuck up a supply chain:
    earlier this year, I needed 14 computers. I sat down and figured out the paperwork bullshit and forms for it (I'm actually Infantry and have zero training for admin stuff). I priced out how much it would cost for what we needed and found several retailers that we could go through. I sent that stuff up to higher and after about 2 months of that paperwork going through commitee and bueracracy, I got 14 computers that were totally different from what I requested, cost more, lacked software liscenses and hardware that my users needed for them to do their jobs.

    anyone higher than brigade levels has no fucking clue what a battalion needs, and even then they don't really know.

    this whole package for stuff we don't need irritates me.