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.gov.au Guide to Open Source Software

kieronb writes "The Australian Government Information Management Office has recently released "A Guide to Open Source Software for Australian Government Agencies". Surprisingly, it actually appears to have been written by someone with a clue, and provides quite a balanced overview of what F/OSS is and how it differs to proprietary software. Choice quotes: "Sourcing OSS solutions is a new and less understood area for Government Agencies. As a recult, it often seems to involve higher risk. As open source solutions become more mainstream and agencies gain expertise in evaluating and deploying them, this perception of risk should subside."; "Access to source code is, however, valuable to agencies by virtue of the economic flow-on effects that accrue when multiple vendors offer competing products based on the same technology. Access to source code also reduces the risk of vendor lock-in.""

14 of 144 comments (clear)

  1. About bloody time Australia by __aawfbm2023 · · Score: 5, Funny

    Finally we don't look like a bunch of flaming drongos.

    1. Re:About bloody time Australia by aerthling · · Score: 3, Funny
    2. Re:About bloody time Australia by BladeMelbourne · · Score: 3, Informative

      We rarely (I have only seen it once in 26 years) throw prawns/shrimp on the BBQ and we never drink Fosters either.

      Talk about inaccurate stereotypes.

  2. Government views on F/OSS by nhnfreespirit · · Score: 5, Interesting

    It is good to se that some governemts are actually begining to consider the potential benefits of using F/OSS software. I susspect that this is a trend that will increase dramatically over the next few years. As a few govnernments sets sucessful examples of F/OSS deplyment others will follow!

    Luckily not everybody buys into the FUD.

    - nhnFreespirit

  3. Government Spending by fgl · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Personally, I don't see how any government can in good conscience spend money on a solution, when there is a free, standards based alternative.

    --
    Go Away! Not for Sale
  4. Hang on a sec.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    They approved a licence that is not open source and branded it as "open source". Read the following:

    http://www.zdnet.com.au/news/software/0,2000061733 ,39190311,00.htm

  5. Someone please clue in the rest of the gov'ts by El+Cubano · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Access to source code also reduces the risk of vendor lock-in.

    MS bashing aside, this is the real issue. If you like MS software and it does the job for you, then go ahead and use it if that is what you want. The problem I have is when some government agency makes their public record information available only in Word or Publisher format. (I know OOo does word, but that is not the point). Once governments push for truly open data interchange standards, industry will follow and the sky is the limit.

    Simply look at the history of telecommunications and the early years of the automotive industry before things like ITU and SAE standards were around. It was a dismal place for consumers and businesses. That is the current state of the IT industry. It is a patchwork of incompatible and proprietary lock in devices.

  6. OSS as only acceptable choice ? by moz25 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I think that at some point, an organization as big as a country's government should consider itself in a good position not to accept vendor lock-in, where the cost savings are just part of the equation. So yes, it will probably catch on. This demand is already being recognized by vendors, considering MS' shared-source program.

  7. The U.S. government has been using & making OS by HamOpMW · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I'm sure everyone knows who developed SELinux? Surpise... NSA! The FCC as well has been using at least 4 distos of linux for quite a few years, and not just for their severs either.
    I also know that my local city govenment (Bakersfield, CA) is using Firefox. (although they still leave shortcuts for IE). To further make my point... quit assuming that US govenment agencies are not considering OSS. Even Redmond,WA (until recently) was using linux servers. I would love to know how many MS employees have Firefox on their desktops.
    What other TLA's are using OSS/Linux?

  8. Typical by gowen · · Score: 4, Funny

    Is it any surprise that a nation descended from the worst convicts and criminals England could throw away would eventually align itself with Open Source Software, well known throughout the world as a transparent price-fixing scam... :)

    --
    Athletic Scholarships to universities make as much sense as academic scholarships to sports teams.
  9. State Governments Still Lagging Behind by __aawfbm2023 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Particularly in the education sector. As a student at a Queensland State School, I have no other choice than to use Windows boxes, with Word and Internet Explorer. Not because it's easier for the admin to set up (and let's face it, most school admins are a bit dim), but because Education Queensland has a contract with Microsoft to teach me about Microsoft products. We get advertisements about special deals on Office, frequent assignments (in the junior school) centred around PowerPoint and our ANZAC day ceremony was nothing more than two "Presentations" and a trumpeteer. Why is it that the Liberal (not actual liberals) government is buying into Open Source, while Labor is siding with Microsoft?

  10. Headache by eric.t.f.bat · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Bloody hell. The day I skip work with the flu and a kitchen-shelf-related near-concussion, the agency gets slashdotted. I'm glad I'm not looking after that site -- just four or five other ones run by AGIMO. I wonder if they're still up... yep. Phew!

    I can report that I've been using PHP, Perl, the Sablotron XSLT parser and other FOSS tools in the service of AGIMO for the last couple of years. I even develop in Emacs. AGIMO and the AusGov in general are quite amenable to open source s/w. They even have no particular objection to me open-sourcing the tools I've produced at work, like the XBlurb text parser and the Xenolith site engine -- not that I have, since neither of them is particularly interesting, but the willingness is there.

    Meanwhile, AGIMO is getting in bed an awful, awful content mismanagement system, which I'm doing my best to avoid. It's not all good news. But it's a long way from a single vendor, thank the gods.

    --
    I have discovered a truly remarkable .sig block which this margin is too small to conta
  11. Of course we drink Fosters ! by anti-NAT · · Score: 4, Funny

    Yes, we love our Fosters, it is the best Aussie beer ever. I personally drink 3 pints of the stuff with breakfast, lunch and tea.

    Shh! We've got to let them think we drink camel piss ..ur... Fosters, so we can keep all the good beer to ourselves.

    --
    The Internet's nature is peer to peer - 20050301_cs_profs.pdf
  12. Hooray, but... by aybiss · · Score: 3, Insightful

    While I do agree with the sentiments of the very first post...

    As a programmer and hardware salesman/repairman I've seen and dealt with open source as well as MS solutions in both the home and office, long and short term.

    I will say that the price of Microsoft software is pretty outrageous, almost the same as the hardware if you want the whole shebang. (Then again, try buying enough MYOB functionality to run a shop, that will set you back a pretty penny :-o).

    Some free software is fantastic, in fact in many cases the free stuff is superior in various ways.
    Some users will NEVER get the hang of Open Office. "It's just all too differenty to Word".

    It's good to see a worldwide push towards this sort of software model because it will drive prices down and functionality up. ... ... but I can ring Microsoft 24/7 and talk to someone who will sort me out with basically anything on Windows, Office, the Internet... ... (ellipses are cool) ...

    The question still remains whether or not these government departments (or anyone) will benefit in the long term. One thing I can tell you is that in Australia getting some guy to fix your XP box will cost about $35/hr whereas a really hopeless Linux administrator will cost about $75. In a 'regional' area like Newcastle you'll have a hard time finding a guy who can install Debian.
    ("Debbie who?")

    I think it will depend on what these people are doing, and how often they normally have to call the 'computer guy' (me).

    this.mod(-2, "RAMBLING");

    Aaron.

    --
    It's OK Bender, there's no such thing as 2.