Spanish Extremadura Moving 40,000 Desktops To Linux
jrepin writes with this quote from a post at the European Commission's JoinUp site:
"The administration of Spain's autonomous region of Extremadura is moving to a complete open source desktop, replacing the current proprietary desktop platform, confirms the region's CIO, Teodomiro Cayetano López. The IT department started a project to install the Debian distribution on all 40,000 desktop PCs. 'The project is really advanced and we hope to start the deployment the next spring, finishing it in December.' The project makes it Europe's second largest open source desktop migration, between the French Gendarmerie (90,000 desktops) and the German city of Munich (14,000 desktops)."
While it is a pity that Europe is sliding into socio-economic oblivion, it's a great chance for Linux. Never waste a crisis!
They have hosted codesprints and Debconf 2009. So this is really just a continuation of a long time of moving towards Linux. But I do not like the part where he says "Our budget for this is zero euros", that will not go well.
Nobody expects the Spanish Extremadura!
"And of course, it needs to be free. Because our budget for this plan is of zero euros."
Yep.
Can't see this blowing up in anyones face. (See: the ongoing ordeal and budget overruns of the Munich conversion)
#!/bin/csh cat $0
OK, so I understand from other posts that Extremadura has historically done a good job of supporting Linux. Whatever. I still can't shake the feeling - particularly given past experience with other big migration projects - that this is a ploy to get a better price from Microsoft.
how soon before more cities, and states move this direction? As that happens, it will gut America's massive MS exports.
Extremadura is one of the poorer regions of Spain and with the general funding squeeze trying to get the public deficit under control, I reckon they have a lot to gain from this.
Please remain calm, there is no reason to pani... wait, where are you all going?
Finally! Just in time for the end of the world, too.
I wonder if, in the future, having to buy hardware that is "designed for Linux", and is therefore in a market aside from the one of mainstream desktop PCs, could reduce the economic advantage of such operations.
Please allow me to make a few clarifications on the subject, because there are some additional facts related than can be missed if you didn't read TFA and TF(Spanish Newspaper)A linked by TFA:
I thought they did this back in 2005.
http://www.osnews.com/story/12611
such negative vibes man.. try to relax.
I don't know what the automated translation looks like, but I can tell you that
a) LinEx was not a "ridiculous incest", it made sense big time and also was more than just the distro, they put a free-software-based-PC every two under-13 school kids, they put the same PCs in every public library in the region ("Nuevos Centros del Conocimiento", New Knowledge Centers), they created elder-persons computer-literacy programs and more...
b) how can they "suck in public money" if they were the very public administration? They stopped giving away public money to (US) private companies, and created a public entrerprise to create a public-interest, publicly-available, free-as-in-beer-and-also-as-in-speech region-wide computer network with public access to the internet.
Yeah, I was trying to look up that distro under distrowatch, but couldn't find it. Thought it was a localized edition of Linux. At least w/ Debian, they have a rich ecosystem in place. At least, w/ that there won't be a painful migration around.
Makes sense to go to Debian from all those old versions of Windows. Although I wonder - does Debian Linux support a wider variety of hardware than Debian kFreeBSD? That way, one can get the advantages of FreeBSD along w/ the offerings of Debian.
I don't see "conservatives" using "Debian kFreeBSD", "Debian" is THE OS of Conservativity.
LinEX is a debian based disto, so switching over to regular Debian is fairly simple and requires less maintenance.
P.S. Hear, hear for more Debian users!
Just waiting for Steve Ballmer to show up there, in order to bribe them to not make the switch to Linux. It seems like they do for everybody else that announces they are going to dump Microsoft.
That is a lot of government desktops for 1,000,000 people. Perhaps this is the real issue with Europe 4% of it's population work on a government computer which is most likely around 10-12% of the working population.
unavailable for comment
Linex did some ridiculous things. I dont know now but in the beginning they changed the names of the applications to use ones with historical or regional significance:
Gimp was called Zurbaran, Kpresenter Alcantara, Abiword Brocense, Kword Espronceda, Mozilla Medellin, GnuCash Ovando.
That was a really stupid. Better to stick to Debian.
Why did this post get modded down? Yes, poster is AC, but it also sounds like poster is possibly from Extremadura and probably from Spain. Local input is informative.
friends don't let friends teleport drunk
The change in branding could represent a change in support structure. By making new brands on this software, they can make it clear that the upstream projects are not providing support for that software.