More on Massachusetts' Push for Open Source
pbaumgar writes "With more than $32 billion in sales last year, Microsoft Corp. doesn't usually worry about losing one customer. But this one may be different. In a memo sent last month, Massachusetts Administration and Finance Secretary Eric Kriss instructed the state's chief technology officer to adopt a policy of 'open standards, open source' for all future spending on information technology." Follow-up to this story.
I'm not saying I'm an MS-apologist, but shouldn't decisions based on taxpayer money usually be based on cost analysis? A Blanket policy against MS, without allowing for a competitive bidding process or even alternative analysis doesn't seem right.
I know you all want OSS to win, but not by cheating. Shouldn't all have to compete on a level field, especially when we're the ones paying for it?
The safest way to approach lava is to have another person with you and he goes first.
After all humans are supposed to be adaptable, so why not switch to a system that can do the same for peanuts?
Remember, this is Taxachusetts. It is not a matter of if, it is a matter of when they will find a way to tax the hell out of free software and drain your wallet for using it.
Open source is clearly more expensive, according to a cost study by the state of Florida, when used for typical government tasks. The study states that the cost to switch to open source software, to train works to use the software, and to maintain it, is over 40% more expensive than the closed source counterpart costs to currently maintain and use. Florida decided without much debate to keep their state running closed source software. This will cost taxpayers money at a time when many states simply don't have any extra room in their budgets. While this sounds good in principle, it's not the best decision for the government, especially considering the current economic conditions. The real factors in this decision are the state of Massachusetts grudge against Microsoft and their ongoing antitrust lawsuit. It's too bad that an immature grudge is going to cost taxpayers money and result in needed state programs being cut.
"Microsoft's risk of losing the public sector market altogether is small, at least for now.
.. give me a break. Talk about being vague and inacurate.
The company's products are just too essential, and many open source alternatives too ineffective for many of the kinds of big database jobs governments require.
"
What MS database is so esential to the "big database jobs" government requires? Access? SQL Server?
[alk]
Most of the article is no-shit, no-brainer stuff, but a quote interested me: "The momentum is unstoppable at this point," said Scott Handy, vice president of Linux strategy and market development at IBM. I think this is what scares Redmond the most, is the momentum and speed with which Linux is spreading. Major companies are likely to follow suite (no pun intended) if the goverment starts to switch. And some foreign governments seem eager not to be dependent on an American company. Aside from starting the sentance with "and", this is another good point, with a growing mistrust of the US abroad, many foreign governments are likely to adopt open-sourced alternatives. The is that cost factor too. Namibia defineatly cannot afford $300,000 in MS software to run the already poor and corrupt goverment. The can afford two people to impliment Linux though. "Politically, there are only pros, but in terms of government employee productivity there are quite a few cons," said Schadler, the Forrester researcher. I must agree on some levels. Until my iMac and AOL grandomther can use Linux, it won't be widely implimented. Not everyone "gets" technology, or has a BS in comp sci, or even knows the difference between AOL and the internet.
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"It says that's bad for technology companies and bad for taxpayers, who may get stuck paying for inferior, more expensive products."
Isn't this our line??? Isn't this what we say when we say that everyone should consider Linux?
Buses stop at a bus station
Trains stop at a train station
On my desk there's a workstation....
Actually, according to the article, it seems that cost analysis was exactly one of the reasons this policy is being pushed. Also, this is not a blanket policy against MS; it is a blanket policy of open source. If MS wants to open the source of some of their products then they have as much opportunity as anyone else to compete for Massachussetts' money.
If a government picks a Windows solution, it is very hard to make sure that everyone can communicate with it (.doc files being a prime example).*
If government picks an open source (or at least an open standards solution - which just as effectivly denies them picking Microsoft who have at best shoddy compliance, although it would allow them to pick Apple) solution then everyone can communicate with it.
That way the pubilc that the government is there to serve can choose to run any platform they like, be it closed or open - and thats where the choice should be. Government shouldn't be making that choise for them by using a platform that doesn't interoperate well.
*This also goes for things like web services - deployments of ASP.net using ActiveX content on Windows aren't the most compatible things in the world. It also goes for in house software - any work paid for by the taxpayer should be available to the taxpayer, and if it's developed on Windows it will only run on Windows, denying the people of their right to use it on their platform of chocie.
Beep beep.
Microsoft says it knows it won't win every contract, but it opposes any type of mandate preventing proprietary software from even being considered. It says that's bad for technology companies and bad for taxpayers, who may get stuck paying for inferior, more expensive products.
:)
And who is a better expert on such products than Microsoft?
cost analysis isn't the only issue. the MA reasoning may be that they want OSS for the freedom of information quality. think about it, if the gov't is using closed source software, for instance, to tally votes, and someone files a FOIA request, they can't exactly get the propriety information (ie, source code).
it almost seems that OSS is absolutely necessary in order for a gov't to be able to comply with the FOIA.
Be very scared, Billy Boy!
It's also worth noting that Microsoft is not actually excluded from bidding. They are welcome to provide their own open source solution to win the government contract.
Now, they may be unwilling to do so, but that's their problem. If they don't want to attempt to fulfill the requirements of the request for bids, they don't get a shot at the juicy government contract.
You are a dirty boY!
Yes, we all want OSDN "stuff" to win out in as many possible applicable sectors, buisness, personal, government, etc. because we believe is is The Right Way on many levels.
:) I think the people are best served by a government that uses tools that came from the people themselves unfettered with political or monetary influence. Linux & OSDN projects have offered this alternative to humanity for the first time in force, as have all other open-source type projects.
I concur with folks expressing the opinion that legislating Open Source alternatives into government budgets is incorrect, because it is on principle - at no time should we ever, as a society, legislate any single thing as the "right way". Only GM for cars? Only Apple for music? Only MS-terminals for voting? We'd all revolt against this.
However, this isn't legislation - it's a directive from a state official, which isn't the same. Your elected official in your state of Massachusetts has made a determination and pushed forward a directive s/he feels is in the best interest of the state's citizens. Do I agree? Yes. Why? Simply on the principles that OSDN projects use open standards anyone can code to. Microsoft only opens standards when they see money-making opportunities in licensing, which is, well, buisness - they're supposed to make money, they're a company!
The "correct" place for this debate I think, is in the courts. Someone needs to file for a public injunction against a government agency buying Microsoft products to force the question of "were alternatives considered?" with an independant investigator that has the authority to disqualify Microsoft if they try to use their money or influence to force purchasing decisions through monetary ends. This is no different from anything else the government buys - cars, military hardware, paper, staples, etc.
A base problem that boggles me is that software is a commodity as I think of it - the best producer with a solution is just that. MS of course doesn't want you to believe this, but I think the reality of "software" as a whole is that we're moving to software as a commodity item that doesn't make it bland, but specialized and much more creatively rich through the adoption of common contexts and languages to express out programming needs. MS wants to "own" those contexts, and therein lies the sin most would like to accuse them of.
We could use a whole force of small companies going to the courts claiming legitimately they have been picked on by Microsoft because they dumped several gazillion into the re-election coffers of the Congress critter on the Committee for (X) and the obvious results.
Microsoft is a de facto standard, so of course, *anything* that isn't Microsoft will be perceived as good - we need to be careful netizens about that and make sure the public understands we're offering an alternative that needs to be examined, not a replacement bourne out of hate.
Nothing like the Finance Secretary dictating what kind of software an entire organization should run. Surely he is well-informed on IT and is capable of making such a far-reaching decision.
These are the same arguments they had with Peru a year or so ago. And the replies are the same. Public money must buy stuff that the public can access at the lowest additional cost. It must be able to be repaired, developed, modified and upgraded by any competent person, not just an M$ one. Being secure in some vague sense of that word might also be good
I thought an Open Source news site like Slashdot would support this victory more and flamebait a lot less. .Doc and every MS office file can be opened with Open Office and its free for those who dont know)
Open Source is a good thing.
For every Microsoft file, there is an Open Source program that opens it. (i.e.
Open Source is the prinicpal that America was founded on. Democracy where everyone gets a say on how the government is run and can change it and shape it to make it run better.
Please no fighting. I come to Slashdot for insight and information from others perspective.
Hey Steve, what's up man? Don't you have a /. account yet?
"And a voice was screaming: 'Holy Jesus! What are these goddamn animals?'" - HST
Massachusetts' tax burden isn't even in the top ten of states! Even New Hampshire (you know, the 'live free or die' people) have a larger tax burden. While it's true that they have no state income or sales taxes, ask them what they pay for property taxes. You'll find them to be almost FOUR TIMES what someone in Massachusetts pays!! Why? Over a decade ago, Massachusetts passed Proposition 2 1/2, which limits property taxes. I lived in a town where we still had a town meeting form of Govt. EVERY PENNY SPENT was examined with a magnifying glass. So, next time, get your facts straight, clueless ones!!!
Why don't they simply mandate open and free protocols and file formats. It would essentially be the same as there is no way that Microsoft would open theirs up. At the same time, Microsoft could not (with a straight face) complain that the government is being unfair if that were the case. This also has the benefit that those that need/want/find more beneficial closed source products can still do so.
MS is a software company - a huge one - nothing prevents them from using open standards and writing open source software. Same as everybody else, they are free to do that.
Oh well, what the hell...
As a user and developer of open source technologies, I feel it's much more important to push open source into governments than it is to convince businesses and large corporations to make the move.
:)
The government represents us. They spend a helluva lot of citizens' tax dollars, and it is quite logical for us to encourage them to use inexpensive technologies where they can. Also, considering what a tremendous security risk it can be to have a government running a single platform, it's good to encourage diversity in the government's information systems.
As for businesses using Linux and open source... I can't see why people care so much. I run a small business and rely on Linux to save costs and make efficient use of old hardware, and this gives me a competitive advantage. Why should we, as a community, go out of our way to tell businesses what's best for them? Let capitalism sort it out right? Dog eat dog and all that
Please, Microsoft does not provide rock solid support. Firstly, there is a development and support community who provide most of the technical support for Microsoft products. Secondly, I have found errors in published technical information about their own products, authored by them.
I use Microsoft products all the time, and I think they are very useful, but I think this zealous view of Microsoft products is flawed.
Perhaps you should read an EULA sometime. Especially the bit about where the software vendor is not liable for anything: errors, crashes, defective security or lost data. The direction Microsoft is heading is to clearly make the data stored in the files the property of Microsoft. Just look at what Palladium (or whatever the replacement is called this week) is supposed to promise: remote disablement of software and the data inside it. You want to sue us? We will disable your software and the data inside it until you bend over and drop your pants. And how will the government be able to defend itself from that sort of abuse? Simple, just don't buy it. And that is what Massachussetts is saying: we don't want to pay for that risk.
The same is true with the conjunction but. A sentence beginning with and or but will tend to draw attention to itself and its transitional function. Writers should examine such sentences with two questions in mind: (1) would the sentence and paragraph function just as well without the initial conjunction? (2) should the sentence in question be connected to the previous sentence? If the initial conjunction still seems appropriate, use it.
There is nothing physically stopping Miscrosoft from developing products that fall under this guideline. This is NOT an anti commericial descision. Its anti closed standards/source. Just because Microsoft choses as a company to use proprietary standards and tag their source as off limits is their own CHOICE.
They will have to live with that desision or change their ways if they are to keep up with the times.
Figures in /. you get a score of 1 since you think they are 'useful' :). Why is it that in /. news anything against Linux is a 'claim' and anything for it is a 'fact'. I enjoy learning new things (ie. BSD, Linux etc.) but I think this is getting a bit too far
Your family might be rich if your grandmother can afford iMac. On the other side, your family is not rich if you grandmother cannot afford any ISP but AOL.
Jokes aside, Linux runs perfectly fine on iMac. The list of distros include:
- Gentoo - the fastest one on PPC;
- YDL - the specialized on PPC only;
- Red Hat - for most of average people it IS the linux;
- Debian;
- Suse;
- Slackware;
As for AOL, yes, no AOL client for Linux yet, but... does AOL still keep 90% of American home ISP market? I guess not - there are many other ISPs (especially broadbands) which are OS neutral, perhaps together they keep upto 50% of american home ISP market. Besides, outside USA, AOL is presented only in Canada (where it may have less than 10% of home ISP market).Less is more !
Well on /. the default score for logged on users is 1 and the default score for anonymous users is 0. But yes, /. is full of Linux fanboys but its been that way since the beginning.
I approve of Open-Source in the public sector for one fundamental reason. The People (used in the broad collective sense) should be able to know what their government is doing and how their doing it, and with the source freely available, it's a lot easier to do a much more detailed analysis of their software side (not to mention more legal) than poking around with their M$ products.
I say more power to Massachusetts. One MS beats down another ^_^
Peter M. Dodge,
Chief Executive Officer,
LiquidFire Studios
Platinum Linux - www.
1. 90% of goverment database applications don't require any big DBMS. The rest might do, but they are typically are a top secret, so we don't know about it either (NSA, CIA, FBI and other Big Brothers).
2. Oracle's leadership is based on a mind inertion, not on real benefits. Among commercial DBMS vendors I can recall few cases when Sybase and DB/2 where more appropriate than Oracle. In many (90%) cases in goverment IT projects the cost/performance ratio of Oracle is way worse than of PostgreSQL.
3. PostgreSQL is never *noticably* inferior to MySql. There are some cases when MySQL can be 5-10% faster - such difference is hard to notice in real life. Most of (in)famouse benchmarks are made by switching off any integrity in MySQL, ignoring that you can switch some integrity off in PostgreSQL too. Well, enough about those myths. Just to add: PostgreSQL is well known as the most programmable DBMS on the market. MySQL cannot beat that either. Neither Oracle or MS SQL.
Conclusion. Sometimes PostgreSQL is considered to do to Oracle in upcoming two-three years exactly the same as Linux to Microsoft Windows - getting the market from it. It doesn't have enough hype for it yet (is it b/c of its BSD license?). But giving it some goverment support - it can get that hype. Let's see.
Less is more !
The government has merely stipulated the format in which it wants software to be submitted for approval. This is no different than saying please submit your resume in pdf. While there are certain products that do pdf better than others, you are not required to have one particular pdf writer, just enough knowledge to get your resume into pdf.
This is notably different from demanding that all resumes be submitted in ms word format, as you can only submit in that format if you own ms word, which constitutes a mandate for submitters to purchase a product from a particular company. It is microsoft who chooses not to conform to the file format for software submission, and they are locking themselves out. I have no sympathy, remorse, or doubt on this one. Open source is a valid request for software submission.
I see no where in any of this that it says that it is ruling out Microsoft. I see that it is stating that they have to take Open Source Software into consideration when they are shopping around. Why does everyone argue that it is bad to mandate Open Source when all they are doing is telling the people in charge of purchasing to just take it into consideration. The problem is that Microsoft does not want Open Source considered because they are very afraid of what is happening around them. If governments start adopting then more people will start using the same software to be able to better communicate. When an Open Source alternative like OpenOffice will do everything the basic person wants to do, why would they shell out several hundred dollars? People shouldn't twist leveling the playing field to look like everyone is against a giant. If we took the same stance of creating equality between the blacks and whites in America as we took with trying to stop Microsft from using their place to continue their monopoly we would have slavery in common practice still today.
I wonder if not going along with Microsoft is going to be cost effective in a long run. I have several computers at home and opted to get a Mac for my main "office" computers. Although most of my development work has been done on FreeBSD, I found that some Open Source software is not at the level where I'd like it to be for everyday careless work.
Take office applications for example. When I was in college, I wrote most of my papers with Emacs and LaTex. However, it is complicated and definitely not for everybody. I tried using KWord, but after it crashed "on-save" several times, I quite using it. Do things like that bother me? Absolutely. Oh, then there is a big HCI (human-computer interaction) factor. As far as I am concerned, most Open Source GUIs that come with Linux boxes are very far from what I'd expect from a solid system and that can do some damage to productivity. Going all the way with Open Source may be a good money saver for now, but what will happen in the long run? I think we should opt for a mix of Open Source and commerical software for some time.
Why does it take you animals until 2003 to figure this stuff out? You should have already understood this by now. Its relatively simple logic.
The next complaint I hear against open standards and open source gets a slap to the back of the head.
I myself live in mass (massholes unite!) and I've been thinking of this even before this happened. if schools and other public institutions started using more comples and, some would argue, better operating systems? well, that means some peoples jobs depend on how fast they can adapt to new standards. theres a guy who works at my school teaching digital photography, and he can barely use a windows station. slap linux on this and bam, he's out of a job. I love open source, I install linux onto anything that I can in my power. I think it would make my life better (I don't have to deal with the difference in putting linux files on a windows machine) however, it would make life harder for the other 97 percent of computer users. windows has the advantage of protecting us from ourselves. there is no init to kill. no kernel modules to delete. no kernel to compile, for that matter.
Public money must buy stuff that the public can access at the lowest additional cost. It must be able to be repaired, developed, modified and upgraded by any competent person, not just an M$ one.
I wonder if the state autos and trucks are being serviced with OEM-certified mechanics? With OEM proprietary diagnostic equipment? Or are their vehicles being serviced by "any compentent person?"
Meanwhile, the university where i work is slipping into the grasp of the borg from redmond. maybe i should start looking for jobs in MA state government...
pr0n - keeping monitor glass spotless since 1981.
It's about time that government and other publically financed entities make a cognizant decision to fully explore open-source alternatives.
Limited closed-systems like Microsofts should have no place in:
schools, government or non-profits.
Closed systems are best suited in the market that drives them - that being for-profit money-driven companies and in the homes of the drones that power such.
The United States finds itself in a pickle. While education instituitions abroad find a great adoption of open source in schools and governments, in the United States peope are chemically and financially dependent upon Redmond/Microsoft for their technical survival. Microsofts latest advance to ITify Philadelphia's schools and essentially create Microsoft High will create nothing more than more MS drones with useless certifications - and more IT folks who barely understand how things work, but rather have mastered how to navigate the finite steps of being a Microsoft IT person.
I'd much rather see schools use open source exclusively and encourage creativity and independent thinking. We don't need another generation of Mavis Beacon's secreatarial enhanced typewriting drones.
The less we encourage open source within schools the more ground the US loses to foreign countries where open-source is becoming common place.
As for the core issue of government - How can you have a homeland defense department that allows the vaarious branches to endorse and use MS products when major security issues and patches are a weekly issue that requires reboots and downtime?? Using Microsoft products in such settings is dangerous and un-American. There are alternatives - unfortunately, too many Microsoft drones would lose their jobs and have to learn new things if open source was recommended and accepted. Unfortunately, making good decisions and learning is un-American to most of the people out of the academic womb stage.
1) It takes money to develop open source software. Even if it is not money from licensing, the money does come from somewhere. Most open source developers are developing on the dime of their companies. There is a cost to doing this.
2) Open source is genuinely not as polished as a commercial product, and products that do add that polish tend to drive up the cost of open source stuff. For example, Oracle on Linux is still more expensive than SQL Server on Windows Server, by about 5k per server.
3) Open source has yet to produce developmental tools as effective as
4) The Language Wars are on again, and C# is the opening salvo. I hate to admit it, because I really do love C++, but the latest specs for the next major version of C# are absolutely wonderful. C# developers are getting really good generics to go with a surprisingly well thought out framework.
It's a tall, tall order for open source to match MS in the IDE development. When it was just an editor that was one thing, but an editor that now knows about your class hierarchy as you key it in, real two way tools ala Delphi (by the guy that invented Delphi), and MS is putting together one remarkably coherent and solid offering in
If the weight of the language wars continues to favor MS, then Linux application development will become more costly than the equivalent of MS, source code, or no source code.
This is my sig.
As another example, consider that military vehicles *always* have maintenance done by military mechanics, and usually most minor repairs as well.
"He who would learn astronomy, and other recondite arts, let him go elsewhere. " -- John Calvin, commenting on Genesis 1
You want to sue us? We will disable your software and the data inside it until you bend over and drop your pants. And how will the government be able to defend itself from that sort of abuse?
Ok, so MS can threaten them with their extra 'leet backdoors. The goverment has all the guns. If Ballmer and Gates had AR-15s jammed in their ears, I do believe they would pull their peckers out of the goverment's ass in a hurry,
A software company threatening the goverment with IT armageddon is laughable.
Yes, but Taxachusettes sounds funny, and therefore is easy to remember and must be true (as are all things if you are able to convince enough people).
You need to learn to think like a Republican if you want to understand these things.
Read, L
The items you mention were of course in there, but my take on the Peruvian answer was that the Government (and the people) must A) be able to see what is inside their software for reasons of security and also to ensure that the government has no special interest in the purchase of the product, and B) that the government should never be beholden to a business interest for maintenance, repair, or availability of the tools it uses, when those tools are used to serve the taxpayer and house private information like tax/medicare records.
It was for these reasons that in addition to being a fantastic answer from Villanueva to the MS FUD, that the shotgun was momentarily pointed at the U.S Government for having so many proprietary systems. Also let's not forget Germany as an early adopter of these principles.
Linus never gets in a car with Ted Kennedy.
Putting the debate between cost between OSS and proprietary software aside, I personally feel it is a great advantage for the source code for systems that will be holding sensitive public data to be available for code audit by the government. Using proprietary software to archive sensitive governmental data is tantamount to giving a private corporation ownership of the data.
It would seem to me that a political outsider in office committed to poring over the books, combined with a fiscal crisis, would provide some kind of opportunity to advance the cause of free (beer / speech) software.
I've actually temped at a MA state agency.
This particular agency (which was, as things go in MA, one of the better-managed ones) could really use some rationalization of its IT architecture, open-source or no.
The dominant model was by far the desktop PC running Office, with a minimal amount of work pushed server-side. This despite the fact that most divisions had large database needs.
My division had two major databases. One was in Access. Each user had a copy on her own machine, which she would have to sync up with the other copies before and after every session. Conflicts would have to be fixed by hand. And god help all of them if someone forgot to sync up a few times! It could take hours to fix.
The other was an excel spreadsheet. Mercifully, there was only one copy. But this was a heavily relational, tens-of-thousands-of-entries dataset. The office ladies (who had a lot of ingenuity if not much in the way of geek knowledge) had somehow strung together a complex system of multple worksheets and update macros to make it work for a while, but it was falling apart at the seams. In particular, duplicate entries were becoming a huge problem. I had to port the damn thing into Access; there was no other option.
Between all of this spit and glue stuff and non-locked-down, aging Windows workstations, you can see how the IT guys spent most of their time.
90% of what they did could have been handled by a thin client and database server setup (which might have freed up resources from troubleshooting to pay for a real database guy). From my observation, that figure would apply to the rest of the agency as well.
The other 10%, though, was producing official correspondence in Word. And management wanted to make damn sure that anything going out under their signature was produced under the sleekest, most bells-and-whistles environment possible.
This makes the basic assumption that there are any productive members of the Goverment. This assumption is not nessisarily true
I used to have a cool sig, back when I cared
The comparison of Oracle + Linux vs SQL Server + Windows is a valid one.
If I am going to switch database servers, I may as well compare the best operating system for that database server to run on.
For me, Oracle is a Unix database first and a Windows port second.I've not actually had good experiences with Oracle on Windows. The question for Oracle is "which Unix?" You could make a strong argument for Sun, but I threw in Linux as it seems that's where the world is headed.
Opposed to that is SQL Server, which only runs on Windows.
This is my sig.
We had no real debugger for our DEC Pro 350 assembly language, only halts and register dumps. We had no debugger for our USCD P-System, just Writeln. And, the editor was a joke. Oh, and the Apple II that I teethed on in some ways was the best because you could CTRL-C an AppleSoft BASIC program and print out the variables. But good look in 6502 assembly because you were dead!
Borland's Turbo Pascal and Turbo C++ were amazing at that time, and I went right for them.
I still think IBM IPMD for OS/2 was the best debugger I'd ever used for its time, and GNU's GDB was possibly the worst.
This is my sig.
-- The WIPO Avenger
Government's decisions should be based on all the impact the action will cause, not just the direct cost. You could argue that spending on support of open source rather than Microsoft will benefit local companies (hmm.. FSF?) and improve state's economy.
Or you could consider that government documents should be still readable after very long time (say, 300 years) and Microsoft may not be around to write a viewer for whatever people use to read at that time.
You can argue with the particular points I brought up, but no cost shouldn't be the only factor.
largely because I'm a math major, and like to typeset with OO's formula editor. I'm too lazy to learn LaTeX just yet
Really, you need to Just Do It. It doesn't take that long to figure out how to use LaTeX to the point where you can typeset your math homework... find time some afternoon or something and get started; you'll have to do so sometime. You can probably find someone to walk you through it. (Once you can do your math homework, then you can start figuring out how to use the rest of LaTeX's nice features)
Besides, your sig says "Democracy dies behind closed doors." If proprietary software isn't a closed door, I don't know what is...
At the very least, governments should get software that will allow them to comply with the spirit of FOI. Citizens should be able to demand the source so they can check that it correctly and lawfully implements the acts and regulations that it should. Open Source is one way this can be achieved (not the only one, but a fairly good one).
-- Hi! I'm the "Good Times" signature virus. Copy me into your Sig!
When I was just a little Netscape coder
My momma used to tell me some crazy things.
She used to tell me that Netscape was number one
She used to tell me billg was afraid of me.
But then I got a little bit older
And I realized, she was the crazy one.
But there was nothin I could do or say to try to change it
Cause that's just the way she was.
You don't
Wanna fuck with billg.
(Why not?)
Cause billg
Is gonna fucking kill you.
You don't
Wanna fuck with billg.
(Why?)
Cause billg
Is gonna fucking kill you.
Listen to this in Windows Media
Listen to this in RealAudio
I guess the crux of the matter is: Can she load Linux, and then administer (use) it effectively?
Absolutely not. That will be the day that Linux will see widespread adoption.
Sig (appended to the end of comments you post, 120 chars)
Can she load Linux, and then administer (use) it effectively?
Can she load Windows and then administer it/use effectively?
I saw people f*cking with OSX, from printing anf file sharing to Shockwave Flash nob-recognized by many web-sites version, to non-recognized file-types to save and so on, to locked/frozen Mac on Flash/Java plugins.
No wonder Macs are spread only among 5% of american PC users who are brain-washed zealots and who can ignore the importance of such problems (grandmother cannot, unless she's a grandma of a zealot too).
Less is more !
But, if they have a different perspective than Open Source, they are flamebait - right?
clueless?
This from someone coming from a state that still kisses camelot ass?
When you stop electing murderers, child molestors and rapists as elected leaders, you will have earned the right to wash our shoes.
Till then, keep your clueless comments to yourself.
It is a policy that all data managed by software from one company should also be accessible by software from any other company that might want to bid on a future contract. I.e. it is a mandate for open standards, a mandate that put all companies on an equal term for now and in the future.
It is a pro-competition law, which is why MS hate it. They don't like competion, there is much more money in being a de-facto monopoly.
As effectively as Windows, which falls into the I-wish-she-knew-more-but-Windows-aint-gonna-help.
The overwhelming majority of home PC work is done by a friendly guru or someone following step-by-step directions. If Linux get step-by-step directions from vendors (which it will with enough market share) there will be no problems.
The standard ABI on Windows is a big deal, though. It means that "supporting Linux" means supporting Red Hat.
May we never see th
- there was absolutely no understanding of what "open standards" actually means. He used the non-controversial HTTP standard as an example, but when audience members tried to get clarification on Java (ubiquitous but company controlled spec),
.NET (MS but ECMA), C++ (public standards process but levels of non-compliance), there was just one thing that became clear: in his mind "open standards" means free software. It's not about philosophy, it's just about money.
- there was absolutely no understanding of open architectures. One pretty famous guy in the audience pointed out that Outlook talking to a POP3 server was actually an open architecture whereas Outlook talking to Exchange was not. Again, the approach was that if it costs anything, it's not open.
- all examples that he gave had to do with savings on licensing costs. Even some very OSS-friendly people in the audience cautioned him that there are many other costs and that he should not expect any significant savings right away.
- he mentioned that the real problem was that they had told contractors to just go and implement. Which the contractors did with predictable consequences (closed architectures, no interoperability, etc.)
One thing became pretty clear to me: there is indeed no stopping the OSS train. Based on my experience in creating and selling commercial software, price beats every other argument in the long run, and there is no competing with free and open source is mostly associated with free. You have to be and continue to be 10x better than the closest free competitor and that is really hard to do in the long run. Even if there is no free competitor that really does what you do, customers will use the free software as a tool to press you on price (and you almost always have to give in because you never know whether they really are so clueless to believe that the student project they found solves their problem).I would reccommend that he hire some good architects to write decent RFPs instead of throwing out commercial software. I see the character of lock-in changing from corporate to project-based. You might for example find yourself to be locked into struts when everyone has moved on to the next new thing (JSF or whatever). Getting rid of struts 20 years from now will be expensive, no matter what else you do.
In that context I mourne the state of the world, because commercial software quality is actively discouraged in such an environment.
Between offshoring and free software, I'm giving local, commercial software another 20 years, and then the problem will have solved itself, with government agencies having the coice between foreign software and free software.
I am honored to work for large and unpopular US three-letter government agency.
Just this morning I read their report on environment and languages. Report acts as an advisory for choosing technology / tool sets for new projects.
It is very long and thorough and contains a lot of details including performance metrics and lots of comparasons - price, vendors, caveats, etc.
Aside of the results (Java beat C# by narrow margin), I was shocked to see absolutely no reference to open source software or technologies. No Linux, no Apache, no Tomcat/JBOSS, nothing.
And that how it is like in real life.
A Blanket policy against MS, without allowing for a competitive bidding process or even alternative analysis doesn't seem right.
Yes, you're correct. The decision should be based on cost analysis.
Unfortunately, most CIO's won't do a complete cost analysis.
There are costs associated with both Microsoft technology and costs associated with open source software that typically are ignored.
In the case FOSS, what's typically unaccounted are the training and migration costs for a workforce that is largely familiar with Microsoft's way of doing things.
In the case of Microsoft, what's typically unaccounted are the costs of lock-in from using interdependent Microsoft technology and being put on a forced upgrade path that requires hardware upgrades, software upgrades and relicensing on a more frequent basis than a business analysis would demand.
I love FOSS and I think it brings great value to computer users.
But most advocates for legislation take it one step too far by requiring use of FOSS for governmental business. In some particular isolated cases, such as voting machines, complete openness is justifiable.
So, what legislation should do is
- Mandate use of complete, free, publicly-documented, open, standard interfaces.
Then, good business policy for purchasing should address thorough consideration of all options and all costs, so long as these interfaces are provided. Multiple vendors, including Microsoft, could compete on providing the highest quality, highest performance, most secure, lowest-priced, best-maintained implementation of a software product.Mandating use of FOSS is needlessly restrictive; doing so would compound a long history of mistakes that have been made in flimsy sole-source contracts to companies [like Microsoft]. There, we've learned how a "solution" you've bought for your organization, while providing some benefits, simultaneously makes your data and your business processes hostage to someone else's demands for money.
Both purchasing models are not good business, and they can cost the taxpayers in more ways than are typically known at the time of the decision.
"Provided by the management for your protection."
most govt types would be happy with
GNU/Linux + openoffice + evolution
Backend, govt is always hit hard by the "MS worm of the month". A GNU/Linux infrastructure would go a long way towards curing that dilemna.
I wonder if the state autos and trucks are being serviced with OEM-certified mechanics? With OEM proprietary diagnostic equipment? Or are their vehicles being serviced by "any compentent person?"
Vehicles are interoperable. You can take the same drivers, put them in a different vehicle from any manufacturer, and they'll still know how to drive. This means you are free from proprietary standards and can spend tax payer money responsibly.
Ok the following quote is from a Microsoft executive that is trying to explain with Open Source is bad... Does anyone see the humour in this quote! :-)
Microsoft says it knows it won't win every contract, but it opposes any type of mandate preventing proprietary software from even being considered. It says that's bad for technology companies and bad for taxpayers, who may get stuck paying for inferior, more expensive products.
LOL!
I see a LOT of good points here, why don't we send all of these good point to the MT governor, technological officer....etc? Why don't we offer our opinion to rebutal many of MS's doubious claim right when the State most need it? E-mail the MT state geovernor now!
When you stop electing murderers, child molestors and rapists as elected leaders, you will have earned the right to wash our shoes.
I think you have us confused with Rhode Island.
I see this as an opportunity to correct past M$ abuses, which the DOJ and most state AG's were not able to do. Maybe, after a few years of real leveling of the playing field, they should be allowed back into the competition. Of course, by then, I don't think many customers will want them back.
The real advantage of open source is only realized after a second or third generation of use: The ability to customize systems to the minimum necessary hardware yet maintain administrative controls. Open system customization can end the waste of purchasing Windows XP Pro and a full MS Office suite when the users need access to e-mail and a word processor. After a governmental unit has experienced the freedom of open source, the proprietary software with its limited choices will pale in comparison.
Once open source has been established as a viable option, you should see an energetic bidding process among a growth industry of companies that can build on the open source structure. This revitalized bidding should lead to decreased costs and increased options.
Personally, I work in an organization where we have found the proprietary document formats fall short of the needs to the organization at times. We have to spend extra effort on a daily basis to force documents into an open standard. The open standards that allow universal access to documents is essential to a government that wants to communicate to every citizen. Any movement that calls for adherence to open standards is in the best interests of the citizenry. The cost of access by the private individual is reduced by eliminating expensive proprietary software on their personal systems.
All government units should support open standards at a minimum. The maturity and availability of open source products can create a better environment for both the government employees and the citizenry. Monies spent on open source by the government will return more and better open source products for citizens.
Ha! That's exactly what I am experiencing with Slashdot:
- when I submit the form it doesn't retuns any response, and it happens sometimes annoyingly often;
- simple queries return with annoyingly long waiting time;
- instead of the page I expect the page with slashdot logo on it tells me that there is some internal server error;
How would you explain that? Slashdot has been slashdotted? Or wrong backend database? By the way, similar problems I've described here are typical by my observations for weblogs and forums with MySQL on the backend. Those ones with PostgreSQL work much more stable and smooth.Less is more !