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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)."

137 comments

  1. Europe is broke , Linux to the recue by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    While it is a pity that Europe is sliding into socio-economic oblivion, it's a great chance for Linux. Never waste a crisis!

    1. Re:Europe is broke , Linux to the recue by Mannfred · · Score: 5, Insightful

      As a taxpayer I'd prefer my tax money to go towards supporting lean security-hardened Linux distros (with some genuine potential for overall cost savings) rather than licenses for the latest Microsoft desktop OS, Exchange servers etc. This ought to be good news for taxpayers long-term regardless of how the economy is doing now.

    2. Re:Europe is broke , Linux to the recue by lucidlyTwisted · · Score: 5, Informative

      They're not moving to Linux though, they are simply moving from a customer Linux distro (called "Linex") to Debian, purely because they were finding maintaining their own distro too much of an overhead.

    3. Re:Europe is broke , Linux to the recue by lucidlyTwisted · · Score: 1

      "custom Linux distro" not "customer Linux distro".

    4. Re:Europe is broke , Linux to the recue by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      Bring the Occupy movement into the real world. Say no to Proprietary Corporate Software. Bring the business back to the people. All hail to Linux!

      Show the world how we can really change it for the better. Down with the corporate Zealots.

      We have the power. We only have to take it. Don't wait for your co-worker. Take a stand.

      Occupy the desktop!

    5. Re:Europe is broke , Linux to the recue by hcs_$reboot · · Score: 1

      Europe is broke

      This is a mistake to make an association between an economic failure (Spain) and the Linux choice.

      --
      Slashdot, fix the reply notifications... You won't get away with it...
    6. Re:Europe is broke , Linux to the recue by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      It's only the service nations which are going broke. Those with quasi-socialist governments which own or heavily sponsor manufacturing are doing very well - from Germany to China. Those which have steered to the right, consistently eschewing investment in manufacturing and scaling back the welfare state (which, from an economic PoV, keeps people in sufficient health and education that they can remain productive as long as possible) to create a non-productive underclass, such as Spain and Italy, are pretty much fucked. England and the US had a hope thanks to heavy research, heavy+specialised manufacturing and investment portfolios, but Cameron/Brown and Obama/Bush have been making sure to destroy our remaining self-worth and finish the job Reagan and Thatcher started.

      Linux should be supported from a socioeconomic PoV not because its initial licence cost is cheap but because it removes the strangehold of those who would create imaginary property and other artificial scarcities - the worst of which are the trade arranagements which make it artificially cheaper to manufacture in countries half way across the world with barely any human rights and/or protections.

    7. Re:Europe is broke , Linux to the recue by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

      My Linux distro is the customest

    8. Re:Europe is broke , Linux to the recue by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why ?

    9. Re:Europe is broke , Linux to the recue by dintech · · Score: 4, Funny

      No one expected the Spanish Extremadura... to switch to linux desktop.

    10. Re:Europe is broke , Linux to the recue by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

      Actually, only the computers in schools, high-schools and public health services work with Linux (at classrooms we used Linex some years ago, Debian-Edu last years and Debian squeeze this year). But we have many computers at offices working with Windows XP, 9x and W2000. These are the computers that are going to migrate.

      The changing name from Linex to Debian is provoked by a political change (progressives lost, conservative won) not for maintaining troubles. The brandname Linex was associated to the progressive party, so the new party doesn't want it around. Linex was Debian with Artwork packages and some selected programs. You can do the same without the Artwork packages.

    11. Re:Europe is broke , Linux to the recue by a_hanso · · Score: 2

      Better late than never. The invasion of England would have gone very differently had the Spanish Armada not been running Windows.

    12. Re:Europe is broke , Linux to the recue by keeboo · · Score: 1

      Ah, that makes sense now, because I've read about the migration to Linux in Extremadura since few years ago and related news even earlier.
      News on that migration were quite widespread. I'm not spanish nor living there, and still it rings a bell.

    13. Re:Europe is broke , Linux to the recue by icebraining · · Score: 2

      I actually thought they already had. They've had their own distro for years now.

    14. Re:Europe is broke , Linux to the recue by RotateLeftByte · · Score: 2

      Have you any idea where Extramadura is?

      It is a wild and truly beautiful part of Spain. The variety of Birds that you can see there is... fantastic especially the raptors.
      Pretty sparsely populated as well.

      In the grand scheme of things and in particular, the Spanish Financial woes, it is about as significant to the Spanish Economy as North Dakota is to the US Economy.

      --
      I'd rather be riding my '63 Triumph T120.
    15. Re:Europe is broke , Linux to the recue by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As a Spaniard I can confirm that the raptors in Extremadura are pulchritudinous.

    16. Re:Europe is broke , Linux to the recue by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I can confirm that, with all those ties and suits and always speaking on TV about how good they are at managing taxpayer's money and how laughable their political adversaries are/have been/would be if it wasn't for them.

    17. Re:Europe is broke , Linux to the recue by CrackedButter · · Score: 1

      Do chickens have large talons?

    18. Re:Europe is broke , Linux to the recue by tao · · Score: 1

      How then can you explain Sweden, whose finances have become far more robust (and is doing a fair bit better than the rest of the EU countries) after the liberal/right-wing government took over after years and years of socialist rule?

    19. Re:Europe is broke , Linux to the recue by theguyfromsaturn · · Score: 1

      It has taken a long time coming. That autonomous region had their own distro (LinEx [http://www.linex.org/joomlaex/]) since 2002 (shut down december 29 2011... moved on to a national initiative, CENATIC [http://www.cenatic.es/]). Apparently they still had lots of computers to migrate.

      --
      I like my dinosaurs feathery, and my pterosaurs hairy (or is it pycnofibery?)
    20. Re:Europe is broke , Linux to the recue by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      All the following is IMHO, unleated to anyone else...

      > While it is a pity that Europe is sliding into socio-economic oblivion, it's a great chance for Linux. Never waste a crisis!

      Au contraire, mon ami! (Very a propos, heh?)

      I was thinking recently about exactly that: in professional/business/enterprise environments there's a need for increased security and, in extreme cases, one cannot really choose the applications based on familiarity -- but there's instead a set of company-wide standardized applications.

      So, it really does not matter if one chooses Windows or Linux in that particular case...

      While it might argued someone would rather use Windows at home (if not else, out of lack of information about IT), in a company using Linux (or FreeBSD, or Macs) it's a must. One cannot say Windows is easier because:

      a) it's not really easier in reality and
      b) if you hire techies who do Linux, they work without any problems and have no need for Windows in any case.

      So, it's not a lack of money issue.

    21. Re:Europe is broke , Linux to the recue by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The English Armada https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/English_Armada/ of 1589 seemed to be running Windows as well.

    22. Re:Europe is broke , Linux to the recue by jellomizer · · Score: 0

      But is is really that much cheaper?
      Ok for licence costs say 250euro per windows license. we save 10 Million euro, sound good.
      Now these 40,000 people will need at least 8 hours of training say they average 15 eruo an hour. There is a 4.8 Million dollar expense (5.2 million euro left, well we are still saving money a lot of money).
      10% of these peoples PC will need to be upgraded, Yes yes Linux can run better on older hardware however if they are going to upgrade their OS they might as well upgrade their oldest PC's (and if they didn't upgrade they may have gotten an other year or two out of them), just so they can keep the configuration constant across systems and use some of the newer features. 800 euro for a new PC seems fare. That will be a 3.2 Million Euro expense (2 Million Euro saved)
      Now lets say every department has 500 employees and every department has one custom legacy app making 80 legacy systems that needs to be upgraded lets say 25,000 euros is the cost of rebuilding the applications 2 Million Euros expense (0 Euro saved)

      When you are in a depressed economic times is is sometimes it is better to stick with what you got and don't upgrade and maximize the use of your purchase. Now in the long run Linux may be cheaper (I like Linux I really do) However right now it will be a large project with a lot of risks that could back fire and be much more expensive then planned for only a chance for a small savings.

      --
      If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
    23. Re:Europe is broke , Linux to the recue by rev0lt · · Score: 1

      Sweden is a very small country (population-wise), and an oil exporter. This is a simplistic correlation, but perhaps the increasing price of oil in the last decade has increased the financial health of the country.

    24. Re:Europe is broke , Linux to the recue by mcgrew · · Score: 1

      Microsoft: Trouble at mill.
      Apple: Oh no - what kind of trouble?
      Microsoft: One on't cross beams gone owt askew on treadle.
      Apple: Pardon?
      Microsoft: One on't cross beams gone owt askew on treadle.
      Apple: I don't understand what you're saying.
      Microsoft: [slightly irritatedly and with exaggeratedly clear accent] One of the cross beams has gone out askew on the treadle.
      Apple: Well what on earth does that mean?
      Microsoft: *I* don't know - Mr Wentworth just told me to come in here and say that there was trouble at the mill, that's all - I didn't expect a kind of Spanish Extremadura.

      [JARRING CHORD]

      [The door flies open and Cardinal Perenz of Spain enters, flanked by two junior cardinals.

      Perenz: NOBODY expects Linux! Our chief weapon is surprise...surprise and fear...fear and surprise.... Our two weapons are fear and surprise...and freedom.... Our *three* weapons are fear, surprise, and freedom...and an almost fanatical devotion to Stallaman.... Our *four*...no... *Amongst* our weapons.... Amongst our weaponry...are such elements as fear, surprise.... I'll come in again.

    25. Re:Europe is broke , Linux to the recue by Sique · · Score: 1

      You messed up Sweden with Norway. They aren't an union anymore since 1905.

      --
      .sig: Sique *sigh*
    26. Re:Europe is broke , Linux to the recue by gmack · · Score: 1

      If the old OS was XP they would be near a forced upgrade anyways to avoid being caught insecure after XP EOLs in 2014. XP to Windows 7 would require a complete hardware refresh. Windows 7 or Linux, no smart admin will want to wait until the last minute (next year) to deal with whatever transition they are planning.

      Also: 5 minutes of browsing on dell.es netted me a mid range machine (core i3, 4g ram, 500g hd) with a 23 inch monitor for 610 Euro and of course that price goes down when start talking bulk purchase (and down even more without the win7 license).

    27. Re:Europe is broke , Linux to the recue by cwgmpls · · Score: 1

      North Dakota has the fourth largest oil production of all of the Unites States. It is very large contributer to the U.S. economy.

    28. Re:Europe is broke , Linux to the recue by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This ought to be good news for taxpayers long-term regardless of how the economy is doing now.

      Until Microsoft decides to force people to pay them licensing fees for Free and Open Source Software.

      Remember this is the year of SOPA and PIPA. "Intellectual Property" is dead. Long live "Intellectual Property".

      References:
      http://www.yro.slashdot.org/story/11/04/28/039255/bn-responds-to-microsofts-android-suit
      http://techrights.org/2011/11/12/

    29. Re:Europe is broke , Linux to the recue by rev0lt · · Score: 1
    30. Re:Europe is broke , Linux to the recue by RotateLeftByte · · Score: 1

      Ok. That shows how much I know from the RH side of the Atlantic.
      What I was trying to say, other parts of Spain, for example Galicia, Catalonia, Andalucia etc are all far greater contributors to the Spanish Economy than Extramadura.

      --
      I'd rather be riding my '63 Triumph T120.
    31. Re:Europe is broke , Linux to the recue by Hatta · · Score: 1

      Sure we did. Hell, Extremadura Linux is the only one Stallman will use, IIRC.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    32. Re:Europe is broke , Linux to the recue by Stormwatch · · Score: 1

      Although cost is a concern, the true reason why ALL governments, no exception, must move to open systems is because it is simply unacceptable that a public service be ever subject to vendor lock-in.

    33. Re:Europe is broke , Linux to the recue by mcgrew · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Now these 40,000 people will need at least 8 hours of training

      FUD FUD FUD!!!

      I see it's been over a decade since you tried Linux. KDE is so similar to Windows that anybody who has ever used Windows would have no trouble using KDE. I have folks bring me "broken" PCs all the time that are hopelessly infected with garbage and who have no reinstall disks for Windows. None ever needed any training to use Linux, and most came later and told me how much better they liked it than Windows.

      How much retraining did it take to migrate them to Windows 7 from XP? Moving to Linux is less of a change. All of the "hard" parts, the administration, is going to be done by IT staff who presumably are well versed in Unix. Any admin that doesn't know UNIX is, IMO, not competent to be a network admin to begin with.

      10% of these peoples [sic] PC will need to be upgraded, Yes yes Linux can run better on older hardware however if they are going to upgrade their OS they might as well upgrade their oldest PC's [sic]

      That's just stupid, and I'm not talking about your misuse of apostrophes. That old machine is going to run a hell of a lot faster under Linux, since it has no ever-growing registry nor antivirus to slow it down. If it's powerful enough to run the software it needs, replacing it is a waste of money. They're not going to be playing FPSes or calculating PI to the tem millionth decimal point.

      800 euro for a new PC seems fare.

      I hope English isn't your first language. And 800 Euro??? WTF??? A good office computer doesn't even cost 800 dollars.

      When you are in a depressed economic times is is sometimes it is better to stick with what you got [sic] and don't upgrade and maximize the use of your purchase.

      Odd how you didn't take that into account when you stupidly suggested that since they're replacing an expensive OS with a free one they might as well spend more than a new copy of Windows costs on hardware "just because".

      (I like Linux I really do)

      Considering the earlier part of your comment, that's VERY unlikely. If you'd run Linux in the last five years you'd know migration woudn't take any training whatever. Sorry, but I'm calling you a liar. An illiterate one, too.

    34. Re:Europe is broke , Linux to the recue by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      (i) you sell off state property and put that on the balance sheet and suddenly it looks like you're operating at a surplus, even though you're doing no such thing - this is exactly what all the later-to-the-party European states are now doing, but they have much less remaining to break up having already done this during the first round of destruction in the '80s (Britain) or '90s (much of mainland Europe);

      (ii) check out Sweden's main exports - not yet having destroyed their socialist heritage, much of their industry consists of building consumer goods for export;

      (iii) the luck of oil: Britain became self-sufficient for oil in the early '80s thanks to prior social-democratic government investment following a decade of recovery from the foreign-dominated Oil Crisis, while the tiny Sweden has recently enjoyed a goodly increase in the price of oil while not relying on it.

      Sweden remains one of the most highly taxed, highly welfare statist countries in the world. It will surely destroy itself too, but the good workers of Sweden have some life left in them yet.

    35. Re:Europe is broke , Linux to the recue by tao · · Score: 1

      And if you would've bothered to check the real source (CIA factbook), you would've noticed that Sweden imports twice as much oil as it exports... https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/geos/sw.html

    36. Re:Europe is broke , Linux to the recue by tolan-b · · Score: 1

      The UK Armada /is/ running Windows, depressingly... http://www.theregister.co.uk/2009/01/05/windows_for_warships_hits_type_23s/

    37. Re:Europe is broke , Linux to the recue by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      rev0lt is right, but slips on the detail. Sweden has tried hard not to rely on oil and aims to move away from oil dependency by 2020. While most countries suffer as the price of oil goes up, those which focus on alternative fuels have a serious edge. France is another good example, although it retains full faith in nuclear while Sweden does not wish to build more nuclear power stations.

    38. Re:Europe is broke , Linux to the recue by Damnshock · · Score: 1

      They're not moving to Linux though, they are simply moving from a customer Linux distro (called "Linex") to Debian, purely because they were finding maintaining their own distro too much of an overhead.

      Pitty that a comment that is wrong is scored "5, Informative"

      They're moving computers with privative software on them, not the thousans of machines that already run Linex (or Debian or whatever you want to call it)

      Regards

    39. Re:Europe is broke , Linux to the recue by mcgrew · · Score: 1

      the worst of which are the trade arranagements which make it artificially cheaper to manufacture in countries half way across the world with barely any human rights and/or protections.

      What makes it cheaper IS the lack of rights and protections. It's perfectly OK for a Chinese company to make the air so dirty that you can't breathe, and the water so dirty that rivers catch fire like it used to be in the US. Plus, it's way cheaper to live. I, as a worker, cannot compete with someone who can ride a bus 300 miles for a nickle and only has $30 a month to pay in rent. Worse, I certainly can't compete with slave labor.

      Some rich folks want us to be as poor as the Chinese so they can make fortunes manufacturing here without paying folks enough to live. Why do you think they created a recession and tried to make a depression? The poorer you are, the richer they are.

    40. Re:Europe is broke , Linux to the recue by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As an Extremadura-born citizen, I am pretty sure that they are all wasting time on YouTube and Facebook with Firefox. The only training they need is Firefox -> Iceweasel.

    41. Re:Europe is broke , Linux to the recue by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      While it is a pity that Europe is sliding into socio-economic oblivion, it's a great chance for Linux. Never waste a crisis!

      Huh? Do you mean the whole continent, or just a few countries?
      What do you mean by socio oblivion, exactly? Other than there's been a few riots in Greece 'cos they're a bit pissed off at the moment.
      It's not like Libya was, or Syria is now you know.

      And by economic oblivion, do you mean a few of the countries are having a hard time servicing their government debt at the moment,
      because some other people quite sensibly aren't in the mood to devalue the whole currency just because of a few profligate countries?
      Europe will weather the current conditions quite well in the long term I'm sure. It's other countries with massive public debt that feel it's quite
      acceptable to 'ease' themselves out of debt that I would be more worried about in the long term tbh.

      seriously, what planet are you from and do they teach geography there?

    42. Re:Europe is broke , Linux to the recue by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Thery are not going to migrate Linex to Debian because Linex "is" Debian. But I guess new machines for healthcare and education will be "pure" Debian, without installing the Linex customizations.

    43. Re:Europe is broke , Linux to the recue by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Spanish economy is almost 60% government-related. If that is not quasi-socialist I don't know what it is.

    44. Re:Europe is broke , Linux to the recue by jellomizer · · Score: 1

      Clarification for all the uptight idiots.
      Where I used a numeric estimates to prove a point that their are other factors involved beyond just the cost of the license.

      8 Hours of training Yes...
      <i>"I see it's been over a decade since you tried Linux. KDE is so similar to Windows that anybody who has ever used Windows would have no trouble using KDE. I have folks bring me "broken" PCs all the time that are hopelessly infected with garbage and who have no reinstall disks for Windows. None ever needed any training to use Linux, and most came later and told me how much better they liked it than Windows.

      How much retraining did it take to migrate them to Windows 7 from XP? Moving to Linux is less of a change. All of the "hard" parts, the administration, is going to be done by IT staff who presumably are well versed in Unix. Any admin that doesn't know UNIX is, IMO, not competent to be a network admin to begin with."</i>
      You sound like you do not work a an organization of any particular size... There is a big difference Updating your Work PC with your Home PC... Your home PC the person will play with it, for work they need to get to work right away. People are afraid to mess up their work PC they will follow policy and procedure, a New OS means there is a new policy and procedure. Less then 1 day of training with a little bit of practice for the rest of the day seems fare.
      Moving from XP to 7 will require training too... However it is less because those Apps that you know and love will still be there.

      <i>"That's just stupid, and I'm not talking about your misuse of apostrophes. That old machine is going to run a hell of a lot faster under Linux, since it has no ever-growing registry nor antivirus to slow it down. If it's powerful enough to run the software it needs, replacing it is a waste of money. They're not going to be playing FPSes or calculating PI to the tem millionth decimal point."</i>
      I am sorry fanatical zealotry towards an Operating system will not make it run light speeds faster. Linux can run faster on low end systems when you strip features away, that is its strength you can customize it in great detail. However, if you are going to have a platform where you have people with faster computers you are going to want to have a common configuration, to make maintenance easier... This isn't a home PC this is a work PC, the IT Staff will need to maintain 40k worth of PC and numerous configurations will be a nightmare. I am surprised for someone with such a low user ID to have no Idea what it takes to manage an enterprise environment.

      <i>"I hope English isn't your first language. And 800 Euro??? WTF??? A good office computer doesn't even cost 800 dollars."</i>
      I hope you don't do anything that requires logic or rational thinking... Does that include laptops mixed in too oh yes you got cheap desktops but you need Laptops too just because you need people who work out of the office... Also there is a degree of PC's you need to have on hot standby... Oh and the time it takes to install each system... 800 Euro per PC is a low estimate of the true costs.

      <i>Odd how you didn't take that into account when you stupidly suggested that since they're replacing an expensive OS with a free one they might as well spend more than a new copy of Windows costs on hardware "just because".</i>
      My suggestion isn't to upgrade anything at all, to keep things the way they are. Most people will not push for a hardware upgrade if their software is the way it is.
      It is cheaper to stay on your current working platform then to migrate... Migration is expensive and it will take a long time to recover the costs. In a poor economic situation. Cost centers such as IT needs to be stretched a little further. What advantage are you really getting going to Linux over Windows for the next 5 years... Not much...

      <i>Considering the earlier part of your comment, that's VERY unlikely. If you'd run Linux in the last five years you'd know

      --
      If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
    45. Re:Europe is broke , Linux to the recue by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And before you start blasting people on their spelling and grammar, you know some people have diagnosed problems with writing and spelling, and their spelling and grammar doesn't reflect the quality of their thought processes.

      I couldn't be paid to hold that opinion. Moreover, judging by almost every single job listing I've ever seen, the ability to speak and write well is prized far beyond any other skill.

    46. Re:Europe is broke , Linux to the recue by rev0lt · · Score: 1

      If you look at USA, they import almost 5x more oil than what they export. Still, they are the 10th largest oil exporter in the world. If you bother to actually check the CIA factbook oil export list, you'd find lots of countries that actually don't produce oil listed as oil exporters (such as Portugal, as an example), so the math you are making probably isn't that simple.

    47. Re:Europe is broke , Linux to the recue by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      At least now the region can say their systems are as durable as their regional name suggests. Extremely durable. Like those condoms.

    48. Re:Europe is broke , Linux to the recue by mcgrew · · Score: 1

      Your home PC the person will play with it, for work they need to get to work right away.

      If the thing's set up properly, they can get to work right away. Most shops have the same computers on every desk, it's just a matter of the wage of the person doing the installing. But you're going to have the same cost when you upgrade your hardware, and with open source you're not going to be forced to upgrade your hardware. Everyone using XP will HAVE to upgrade in two years, and the upgrade will likely need new hardware because the software will be bloated as it always has with Windows "upgrades" (I put that in quotes because Win 7 is less useable than XP).

      Moving from XP to 7 will require training too... However it is less because those Apps that you know and love will still be there.

      A word processor is a word processor. They've gone from WordStar to DOS Word Perfect to Windows Word Perfect to Microsoft word, and the only complaints I hear users make is that Word won't read their Word Perfect files. That's Microsoft's fault and no one else's. You won't have that problem migrating to Oo.

      I am sorry fanatical zealotry towards an Operating system will not make it run light speeds faster.

      Your cart is in front of your horse. The zealotry is from installing Linux on Windows computers and seeing how much faster they run, and they run faster because of the reasons I put forward. If Windows runs without missing features, Linux will run better with no stripping necessary. Period.

      Does that include laptops mixed in too

      Ok, you have a point there, not too many laptops where I work. 800 euros might be about right.

      My suggestion isn't to upgrade anything at all, to keep things the way they are.

      You said "might as well replace hardware".

      And I didn't bring up the fact that Linux still has a huge amount to stupidity in its UI

      Some of it, yes. Particularly Gnome (but that's just my preference; I just don't like that desktop).

      And before you start blasting people on their spelling and grammar

      The only spelling problems I have is when people confuse homophones, when they insist on spelling words like they sound. It slows down my reading comprehension, and besides -- dyslexia IS a brain problem. And why in the hell does anybody use an apostrophe when it's not warranted, dyslexic or not? Sorry, but I'm going to have to hold on to that bit of predjudice. You should know better.

    49. Re:Europe is broke , Linux to the recue by Haileri$ · · Score: 1

      I haven't really much exposure to Linux on the desktop but as an architect responsible for delivering a Windows 7 desktop to 150,000+ desktops, training is most certainly an issue, from end users, on site support teams all the way through to the backend admins. I assume there would be a step change in support tools and processes. There certainly is a big change going from Windows XP or even Vista to Win 7. In my opinion it would be naive to think that a more to a completely different OS doesn't mean a complete re-training exercise from top to bottom. It also doesn't mean that it isnt unachievable, especially if Linux / Unix already has some penetration, perhaps in the workstation space, and therefore desktop support and the tools required / processes are already somewhat defined etc. Your experience of people bringing in broken PC's to fix is a world away from an enterprise environment. I suspect have no conception of the process involved in designing and executing a simple request that in practice spans several resolver groups, some of which will certainly change as a result of an OS change. You've also completely ignored the application compatibility angle. The OS is but a window to get at your apps and therefore to that wonderful data. App compat is the most important part of any desktop refresh at the moment. Come the wonderful day when every app is HTML 9 standard or whatever the desktop may be irrelevant but right now it isn't. Please don't tell me you are going to get 15,000 apps working on WINE and maintain support agreements with the app vendors or move everything to open source and migrate the data across to the correct format at the same time. In most enterprise cases, the vendor hardware sourcing agreement is separate from the OS refresh cycle. If you can sync or extend that refresh period (assuming Linux can run on older hardware better and hence the refresh cycles can be extended) then all is well but you probably need the support of the hardware manufacturers. I don't automatically see that becasue Linux *may* work on older h/w better than Windows you necessarily *can* make this happen but I don't necessarily discount this either. I'd also note that in most cases, reliability is probably more important than speed within the Enterprise. Depends on the worker model. Both is of course very nice :) A PC may cost 800 dollars since the price could includes warranty & break-fix support to a certain SLA response time over the lifetime of the device. A laptop will be much much more. Btw, my org is on a 4 year h/w replacement cycle. Windows seems to cope fine enough. Hope this helps

    50. Re:Europe is broke , Linux to the recue by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A not so good office computer that will do the job:

      New Monitor € 125
      New Computer € 150
      Keyboard, mouse € 25
      Operating system FREE
      1 year off site warranty on hardware.
      Operating system - Just Woks

      40000 at € 300 = € 12 million

      Buying from Dell is too expensive. They are better off buying a few spare computers.

      Investigating refurbished hardware is possible.

      But they still don't have the money unless they start firing people.
      Spain has more than 20% unemployment already.

      Using Linux makes economic sense and it is a better system.

    51. Re:Europe is broke , Linux to the recue by mcgrew · · Score: 1

      I haven't really much exposure to Linux on the desktop but... There certainly is a big change going from Windows XP or even Vista to Win 7. In my opinion it would be naive to think that a more to a completely different OS doesn't mean a complete re-training exercise from top to bottom.

      I'm not sure about the enterprise grade admin tools, but as far as users are concerned, believe it or not a move from XP (can't say about Vista, I never used it) to KDE is less of a change than from XP to Win 7; I'm using all three OSes, XP at work, Win 7 on my notebook (haven't gotten around to installing Linux on it yet) and kubuntu on the main home computer.

      It's easy to see why you would doubt that, if I hadn't been exposed to Linux in a while I'd be pretty doubtful, too. DL a copy of kubuntu, you can run it from a CD and try it out without actually installing. The kubuntu CD is also good for getting data from a drive that Windows won't boot because you've changed too much on the computer.

      Your experience of people bringing in broken PC's to fix is a world away from an enterprise environment.

      That's very true.

      You've also completely ignored the application compatibility angle.

      Yes, if you're running custom apps that will only run on Windows, you're stuck with Windows. But MS isn't as backward compatible as they would like you to think. When I went from 98 to XP, half my software no longer worked. The shop I work in recently upgraded from the worst browser ever made (IE6), and the reason it took them so long was because of an application that used Java and IE6 and wouldn't run on any other browser. I assume they rewrote the app.

      But compatibility is a reason to change, not a reason not to. Microsoft isn't compatible with anything, not even itself. If you have an older version of Word, you're not going to be able to read documants made in a newer version; we have these problems all the time. It seems MS is the about only one that does this, although I've seen it with Adobe products, too, especially PDFs, they're even worse than MS.

      Please don't tell me you are going to get 15,000 apps working on WINE and maintain support agreements with the app vendors or move everything to open source and migrate the data across to the correct format at the same time.

      The Ernie Ball corporation, perhaps the world's biggest manufacturer of guitar strings, managed to after the BSA raided them (google "ernie ball linux").

      I woudn't mess with WINE, if there's something like Photoshop you need, moving to Linux really wouldn't be an option. It certainly isn't for everyone, but nothing ever is.

      I don't automatically see that becasue Linux *may* work on older h/w better than Windows you necessarily *can* make this happen but I don't necessarily discount this either.

      If you have something as ancient as a 486 running Windows 98, modern Linux distro won't work; I've tried it. But the computer is capable of running XP it will run Linux faster. The reasons are Windows' ever-growing registry and the need for antivirus. As to the hardware, often newer hardware either won't work or won't have as much functionality because the FOSS guys haven't written drivers and so forth yet.

      I'd also note that in most cases, reliability is probably more important than speed within the Enterprise.

      Reliability is probably Linux' strongest point. It simply doesn't crash. Apps sometimes do, but they never bring the OS down with it. Linux is far more fault-tolerant as well. A few years ago I was running a PC dual-boot, and thought I had a registry problem or something because Linux was working well while Windows was flaky, but it turned out that the power supply was on its way out. I had an Acer that had a bad hardware bug (they've since fixed it) where if you had it set to hibernate on battery with the lid closed but do nothing if plugged in, then closed the lid and plugged it in before the lights stopped flashing it would go crazy on either OS -- but after a few times, Windows woudn't even boot in safe mode, Linux always recovered.

      Btw, my org is on a 4 year h/w replacement cycle.

      Since the PCs always come with Windows already installed, that's a good reason to stick with Windows.

    52. Re:Europe is broke , Linux to the recue by Trogre · · Score: 1

      It's truly sad that a post like this gets modded down at all, much less "offtopic".

      --
      "Nine times out of ten, starting a fire is not the best way to solve the problem." - my wife
    53. Re:Europe is broke , Linux to the recue by KermitJunior · · Score: 1

      Thank you, troll. Those numbers are COMPLETELY bogus and pulled out of thin air. 1) You don't know 8hrs... I've seen much less (like a 30 minute briefing and a sheet of "use this program for this task" chart. 2) You just randomly threw in upgrades to pad your numbers. 3) You assume rebuilding applications (and the number of applications) to, again, simply pad your numbers. Please get at least a few facts before trolling.

      --
      There is a Universal Life Value Check it
  2. Extremadura has done a lot for linux by emj · · Score: 4, Informative

    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.

    1. Re:Extremadura has done a lot for linux by crimperman · · Score: 2

      I wondered about that too but I guess as the statement was made by the CIO that he's talking about software licence budget rather than overall budget (including staff, equipment etc.)

    2. Re:Extremadura has done a lot for linux by bgat · · Score: 1

      Yes, I find that perspective troubling too. Seems like at least PART of the savings coming from reduced licensing costs for non-FOSS software could be used to fund the transition away from same.

      The comment suggests to me a lack of clarity in the motivation for the transition. Money shouldn't be the only incentive, of course (I find the other upsides to a FOSS environment to be much more compelling), but anyone who understands the current state of affairs for software licensing would be reasonably expected to acknowledge that in a discussion about moving away from it.

      --
      b.g.
    3. Re:Extremadura has done a lot for linux by serviscope_minor · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Money shouldn't be the only incentive, of course (I find the other upsides to a FOSS environment to be much more compelling), but anyone who understands the current state of affairs for software licensing would be reasonably expected to acknowledge that in a discussion about moving away from it.

      True to an extent. I find FOSS particularly convenient and in the long term, fully open almost alwys winds up as the pragmatic choice as well. For me as an individual, that is easy to evaluate.

      For a large business or organisation, probably the easiest way to get an overall number is by the cost.

      It is, of course difficult to do. How do you factor in the short-term cost of lost productivity as users retrain? How much does it cost to have the exchange server down (again--is it that bad or just impossible to find good admins???)? How much will it cost in lost productivity as one has to mess around with DOCX versus ODT in the short term? What about in the long term (if you have 40,000 desktops, you are large enough for people to play by your rules). What about the long term advantage of hiving found that bugs that you find (and perhaps fix) get merged in upstream?

      Hard to put an excact figure on.

      Of course since it is a government organisation, there are yet more benefits. Even if it costs the same, the money spent on licenses which would otherwise disappear will be more likely spent locally on people to make the syatem work benefiting the local economy.

      --
      SJW n. One who posts facts.
    4. Re:Extremadura has done a lot for linux by JAlexoi · · Score: 1

      But I do not like the part where he says "Our budget for this is zero euros", that will not go well.

      Maybe what he meant was that they got no explicit budget that says migration to Linux. There might be several options for "funding" though - College/Uni students making code "contributions" for credits(or even part of mandatory coursework), budget for upgrading Windows machines and cuts in other services. That might be just plain accountingspeak that means that on balance the budget for Linux migration is actually 0. Without an inquiry, there is no way of verifying.

    5. Re:Extremadura has done a lot for linux by Bengie · · Score: 1

      "Because our budget for this plan is of zero euros"

      Not arguing against you, but he said "plan". I guess his plan doesn't include "staff, equipment etc". My guess is he said what he said to sound sensational. Unless he truly has volunteers doing all the work.

    6. Re:Extremadura has done a lot for linux by JAlexoi · · Score: 1

      Not long ago I finished a project in a EU member state govt agency. That DOCX is already a major PITA for the IT support. And the way they work, mostly they don't need any Windows exclusive features.

    7. Re:Extremadura has done a lot for linux by rev0lt · · Score: 1

      If you have a non-redundant mail infrastructure (exchange or unix-based), then mail is not that important for you. And while there are networks where the migration to OSS desktops (not necessarily linux-based) can be done without much hassle, in many organizations it is next to impossible without redefining the entire IT structure. The Microsoft stack has its problems (as every other solution), but one of the big advantages is centralized management. Need to give access to a given terminal to a guy, but only 9-5 this week, and the guy can only run X apps and cannot save to the computer or an external device? No problem. Someone from accounting is working with the auditor team, and needs to be able to log in to their wokstations, but keeping the same privileges as in accounting? No problem. Don't want people in customer support changing the desktop background or browser settings? No problem. The company was sold and the new owner needs to grant access to their employees to the aquired company, but not the other way around? Yeah, "no problem".

      Touting OSS as the magic bullet for everything is not a good idea. With OSS servers will still need maintenance, and sometimes maybe they will hang too. Desktops will need maintenance, and it's not at all that simple. And users will still complain.

    8. Re:Extremadura has done a lot for linux by mcgrew · · Score: 1

      Probably not volunteers, but he probably already has an IT staff that is well versed in UNIX. You need no extra staff or equipment to convert to Linux. Hell, Ernie Ball had very little trouble converting to Linux after Microsoft pissed its CEO and founder's son off.

    9. Re:Extremadura has done a lot for linux by mcgrew · · Score: 1

      The Microsoft stack has its problems (as every other solution), but one of the big advantages is centralized management. Need to give access to a given terminal to a guy, but only 9-5 this week, and the guy can only run X apps and cannot save to the computer or an external device? No problem. Someone from accounting is working with the auditor team, and needs to be able to log in to their wokstations, but keeping the same privileges as in accounting? No problem. Don't want people in customer support changing the desktop background or browser settings? No problem. The company was sold and the new owner needs to grant access to their employees to the aquired company, but not the other way around? Yeah, "no problem".

      Novell has done all that for at least the fifteen years since they put a network in where I work. I'd be very surprised if there weren't superior open source software with the same functionality.

      They recently went to MS, and it's been one clusterfuck after another.

    10. Re:Extremadura has done a lot for linux by rev0lt · · Score: 1

      Novell's eDirectory is probably the best directory service in the market today. But it's not opensource, and it can be run on Windows, as well as other proprietary unixes, such as Solaris and AIX. I may be wrong (I haven't used Novell for a long time), but I seriously doubt that a Novell solution is cheaper than a Windows one. Regarding opensource solutions, I haven't seen a product that comes vaguely close. If someone actually knows of such product, I'd love to hear about it.

    11. Re:Extremadura has done a lot for linux by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      GOsa and its fork Fusion Directory are as close as it gets I believe. I think it's used for the Munich project amongst others. The management of KDE and/or LTSP has front ends in the interface, but I don't think it's anywhere near the MS stuff as yet, and getting it running is pretty hard. Still, what it can manage is interesting - autoinstall of Linux and Microsoft clients (via FAI and OPSI), software deployment, repo management, printing, DHCP, DNS, NTP, user ACLs, multiple groupware solutions or just plain email, Netatalk, Samba, rsyslog, Squid, Asterisk, and tons more I forget... and a plugin architecture thats reasonably easy to extend.

      I really do think they need more exposure and help though. It's a huge job, and that kind of project needs a lot of oxygen.

    12. Re:Extremadura has done a lot for linux by WuphonsReach · · Score: 1

      It's the directory stack where MS wins currently. While Novell's eDirectory is fine, in a mixed environment, I may as well just pay for Microsoft's Active Directory and get things that pretty much "just work".

      I keep hoping that Red Hat will wake up, smell the coffee, and realize that an easy to administer open-source directory service needs to happen.

      (Admittedly, I have not had time to look at RHEL6.)

      --
      Wolde you bothe eate your cake, and have your cake?
  3. Nobody expects... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    Nobody expects the Spanish Extremadura!

    1. Re:Nobody expects... by pezezin · · Score: 1

      Well, I certainly do, if only because I have been living here my whole live :P

    2. Re:Nobody expects... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ^^Very funny!

    3. Re:Nobody expects... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Almost as funny as the OP...

  4. Undercosting much? by Gwala · · Score: 1

    "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
    1. Re:Undercosting much? by PeterBrett · · Score: 4, Informative

      "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)

      Um, last time I checked (which was a couple of weeks ago) the Munich project was going extremely well.

    2. Re:Undercosting much? by Aloriel · · Score: 3, Informative

      Don't be an idiot, Extremadura developed and deployed Linex, massively deployed in every single public (high)school in Extremadura; they know how to do it and what it costs.

    3. Re:Undercosting much? by Gwala · · Score: 1

      Yeah now - but look at the original time and budget estimates.

      --
      #!/bin/csh cat $0
    4. Re:Undercosting much? by kamapuaa · · Score: 3, Informative

      It's been nine years and more money than budgeted and they've converted 65% of the computers. The idea of converting to Linux is still so strange and uncommon that an autonomous region of Spain considering the same move nine years later is Slashdot-worthy news. It sounds to me like a huge failure.

      --
      Slashdot: providing anti-social weirdos a soapbox, since 1997.
    5. Re:Undercosting much? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      oh don't be such a party pooper.

    6. Re:Undercosting much? by BlackCreek · · Score: 3, Insightful

      oh don't be such a party pooper.

      The GP has a point. The Linux desktop went nowhere. 40K desktops in Spain, 14K in Munich and 90K by the French police are by themselves respectable numbers. But when you take the perspective that:

      • -- these are the 3 biggest deployments of (desktop) Linux within the whole European Union public services,
      • -- AFAIK the only 3 very large ones,
      • -- in 2012

        one needs to reckon that, yes, we may all use Linux at home and some even at work (I do) but the Linux desktop never made it anywhere close mass market presence.

      If I want to buy a high-quality laptop withOUT paying for an OS license that I am not going to use, the situation is as dire today as it was 10 years ago.

    7. Re:Undercosting much? by VortexCortex · · Score: 0
      "huge failure" - You keep using that word, but I do not think it means what you think it means.

      Every single installed copy of windows could break tomorrow, and never ever be repaired...

      ... and I could still get my Email, search Google, push Git changes to my website, get paid online, make fun of people using Facebook, browse damn near all of the Internet, including my bank's site, so I can pay my bills online.

      Yeah, so all the important shit runs Linux... o_O "huge failure" Think about how much your world would change if all the Linux installs in the world stopped working tomorrow and never came back. My phone stops working, along with nearly the entire Internet, not to mention crap-loads of the embedded devices.

      I'm not saying that things don't depend on Windows or OSX or BSD, but seriously, "huge failure"? I hope you never learn the meaning (and I fear the real issue is that it may be too late for you to learn anything at all).

    8. Re:Undercosting much? by sourcerror · · Score: 1

      There are news that Hungarian public administration is moving away from Windows desktops as well. (Also because of licensing costs; there's a general asterity going on.)

    9. Re:Undercosting much? by gerddie · · Score: 3, Informative

      Not in Europe, but The Worlds Largest Linux Desktop Deployment: 500,000 Seats and Counting in Brazil should count for something.

    10. Re:Undercosting much? by Lumpy · · Score: 1

      Really?

      http://www.system76.com/

      http://www.ohava.com/

      https://www.thinkpenguin.com/

      http://www.blackstonesystems.net/

      Yup it's dire... Nobody at all is selling desktops or laptops with linux preinstalled.

      Did you even look?

      --
      Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
    11. Re:Undercosting much? by chrb · · Score: 2

      It's been nine years and more money than budgeted and they've converted 65% of the computers.

      On the bright side: they have migrated 100% of systems to Firefox, Thunderbird, OpenOffice, and ODF.

      more money than budgeted

      Yes, but this would almost certainly have also been the case if they were migrating all their systems to a more recent release of Windows. They were running enterprise wide NT4. The comparison point should not be against the pre-existing TCO, but against the alternative cost of migrating to a more recent Windows. "We do not have a goal to compare total cost of ownership. Microsoft stopped supporting NT 4.0, so we must migrate." limux project leader. How much do you think a government migration of 15,000 NT4 desktops, plus Office and other software to a recent release of Windows would cost? Due to increased hardware requirements of new Windows, such a migration would also certainly require new PCs, which would further increase costs. Maybe the cost of migration would be the same, less, or more, but in the long term freeing themselves of costly vendor lock-in and the Microsoft upgrade treadmill should result in substantial cost savings

    12. Re:Undercosting much? by BlackCreek · · Score: 1

      Really.

      System76 is US based. Ditto for Ohava.com. Ditto for ThinkPenguin. I could not look at BlackStoneSystems. I am on a RHEL machine, and their website requires a newer flash than the one I have. Regarding living in Europe and ordering a laptop from the US:

      1. I don't know about you, but I would prefer buying my laptops from a shop I could return something if necessary.
      2. I also would rather NOT pay import taxes on my laptop...

      (Ok, I didn't flat out state that I live in Europe, but then, why do you just assume I am US based :-P)

      I have no doubt that someone with more time could find a seller in Germany or France serving continental Europe. But my point is this: if you just walk into a large 'general' computer shop all laptops you'll find will be running Windows7 or OSX. Ditto for any 'regular' computer seller on the web. Hence I call buying a laptop with Linux pre-installed a 'dire proposition'.

      That I have to go to a small specialist shop to skip paying for the OS license I'll ditch, was exactly my point. FWIW Often the economy of scale, and faster turn-over of larger brands will mean that I can buy a better spec'ed laptop WITH Windows and still pay less than what I would by buying from a smaller 'linux' focused shop. (Which of the shops you linked to has anything like an ultra-book in the pipeline?) Which -again- is my whole point, Linux laptops is a tiny niche and getting one is particularly cumbersome (relative to the 'trouble' I would have buying something with Windows7 or from Apple).

      Did you even look?

      I did look at the local Lenovo.com shop and some other places some months ago, and there was nothing I could buy without Windows.

    13. Re:Undercosting much? by chrb · · Score: 2

      The Linux desktop went nowhere. 40K desktops in Spain, 14K in Munich and 90K by the French police are by themselves respectable numbers.

      By that logic, the Apple desktop also "went nowhere", since there were no mass migrations of government departments to Apple computers. Or maybe there is another explanation? Maybe governments are very conservative in their IT procurement, and by default choose Microsoft, often without even bothering to consider other options? For obvious reasons, it is difficult to estimate the exact number of Linux desktop users, but according to Microsoft, Linux has a greater desktop share than the Mac. Here's are some interesting comments from a report from 2010: Debunking the 1% Myth

      If we do the math we find that due to netbooks alone Linux captured nearly 6% of the desktop market in 2009. In order to reach a total number we need to add larger laptops and desktops both from companies like Dell, HP (their business line) as well as smaller boutique vendors.

      Additional confirmation of the growth in Linux desktop market share last year came from an unlikely source: Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer. Using a slide to visualize OS market share Ballmer had Linux desktop market share as a slightly larger slice of the pie than MacOS. Nobody considers Apple insignificant on the desktop and neither is Linux. Here is, in part, what Mr. Ballmer had to say about Linux on the desktop and the competition for Windows:

      Linux, you could see on the slide, and Apple has certainly increased its share somewhat.

      [...]

      I think depending on how you look at it, Apple has probably increased its market share over the last year or so by a point or more. And a point of market share on a number that's about 300 million is interesting. It's an interesting amount of market share, while not necessarily being as dramatic as people would think, but we're very focused in on both Apple as a competitor, and Linux as a competitor."

      Does anyone believe that Microsoft would see Linux as a serious competitor is Linux had captured just 1% of the market? That doesn't seem very likely, does it? All the figures I have quoted so far represent sales of systems preloaded with a given operating system: Windows, MacOS or Linux. They do not represent actual usage. If you go down to the local brick and mortar computer shop or big box retailer, buy a system with Windows, wipe the hard drive and install Linux that still counts as a Windows system, not a Linux system.

    14. Re:Undercosting much? by oakgrove · · Score: 1

      The Linux desktop went nowhere.

      Good thing I don't make my choice of OS based on a worldwide popularity contest then.

      --
      The soylentnews experiment has been a dismal failure.
    15. Re:Undercosting much? by c0p0n · · Score: 1

      Also, the region (I was born there) has plenty of experience on rolling out Linux on institutions through LinEx first (schools), then Debian itself (on the health system's IT infrastructure) later on. They were far from smooth at the time as mistakes were made, particularly when it came to re-educate and retrain staff. The region's government staff desktops is the last, and biggest, migration to make.

      --

      Your head a splode
    16. Re:Undercosting much? by BlackCreek · · Score: 1

      The Linux desktop went nowhere. 40K desktops in Spain, 14K in Munich and 90K by the French police are by themselves respectable numbers.

      By that logic, the Apple desktop also "went nowhere", since there were no mass migrations of government departments to Apple computers. Or maybe there is another explanation? Maybe governments are very conservative in their IT procurement, and by default choose Microsoft, often without even bothering to consider other options? For obvious reasons, it is difficult to estimate the exact number of Linux desktop users, but according to Microsoft, Linux has a greater desktop share than the Mac. Here's are some interesting comments from a report from 2010: Debunking the 1% Myth

      Apple tries to occupy a very different market. Linux has been pushed as the 'ideal' public service desktop for years and years and years.

      FWIW I very, very much doubt Apple has less of a desktop/laptop presence than Linux. This is probably MS trying to downplay the importance of Apple in their (MS) home market.

      Judging from all my acquaintances, I can tell you that: (about 10 years ago) when I started my PhD many of my colleagues used Linux at home. With the years, each and every one of them migrated to Apple. Many of the colleagues I had after my PhD, (people that work all day on Linux desktops) migrated from Linux to Apple 'at home' in recent years. The amount of people I know personally that runs Linux at home has only been shrinking.

      The text you quoted talked about 'netbooks' running Linux. Suuure. How many *new* netbooks running Linux have you seen for sale in the last 2 years?

    17. Re:Undercosting much? by jellomizer · · Score: 1

      But it is Linux. So it has to be a success.
      Because the Operating System is by far the cause or solution to all of lifes problems.

      --
      If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
    18. Re:Undercosting much? by chrb · · Score: 1

      Apple tries to occupy a very different market.

      Apple would love to occupy the corporate and public sector desktop market. It would mean vast amounts of guaranteed income every year.

      Linux has been pushed as the 'ideal' public service desktop for years and years and years.

      Really? I see the opposite - most Linux vendors have pretty much ignored the desktop and focused on niche areas like embedded systems, servers, HPC, etc. IBM said chasing Windows on the desktop was a deadend, and Red Hat famously pulled away from focusing on the desktop years ago. Ubuntu seems to have been the only one that has maintained a desktop focus, and they have an estimated 13 million or so users.

      Judging from all my acquaintances

      Anecdotal evidence and a biased sample - your colleagues are probably in the top 1% of global income, and the kind of people who don't mind spending large amounts of cash on their personal computers.

      How many *new* netbooks running Linux have you seen for sale in the last 2 years?

      The netbook market fell for various reasons. The market changed - people adopted tablets, and full-featured laptops became smaller, faster, and cheaper than they were. MS began selling XP again and put pressure on netbook manufacturers to adopt it. Netbooks also, oddly, became more expensive as they became more like laptops in response to the increased hardware requirements. The choice of Linux distros was often odd as well - instead of partnering with, say, Ubuntu, many of the netbook makers chose to pre-install random Chinese distributions. The rise of smart phones also played a huge part - why carry a larger netbook around with you, when you can do email, facebook, web browsing etc. sufficiently well from your phone, that fits in your pocket and weighs a hundred grams?

    19. Re:Undercosting much? by chrb · · Score: 1

      List of Linux adopters. It has some interesting ones which I hadn't heard of, e.g. 180,000 Ubuntu desktops deployed in Macedonian schools.

    20. Re:Undercosting much? by BlackCreek · · Score: 1

      Apple would love to occupy the corporate and public sector desktop market.

      There is a difference between would like to occupy/own a market, and be actively working to grab that market. Apple is not fighting for the corporate market. Not saying that they are not go for it at some point, they are not into it now.

      Anecdotal evidence and a biased sample - your colleagues are probably in the top 1% of global income, and the kind of people who don't mind spending large amounts of cash on their personal computers.

      On the non-biased side: it remains impossible to buy a computer running a normal Linux desktop in a 'normal/mainstream' computer shop. Most gadgets I own, only have software support for using it with Windows or Macs, say, the image processing software that came with my photo and video cameras.

      FWIW, someone answered to a post of mine (in this thread) saying "happy I don't care about OS popularity". That misses the point. I can't safely upgrade the firmware in my cameras using Linux. I can't use the (very nice) image processing software provided with my cameras within Linux (crashes under wine). So at the end of the day, at least for me, OS popularity has actual negative consequences. (it is not the end of world, but it makes a difference).

      The netbook market fell for various reasons.

      Regardless of the reasons. It fell. Linux does not exist (in any significant way) in netbooks anymore. My point is that the netbook gain in market share was an ephemeral thing.

    21. Re:Undercosting much? by tlhIngan · · Score: 1

      Apple would love to occupy the corporate and public sector desktop market. It would mean vast amounts of guaranteed income every year.

      But at what cost? Corporate purchases, and by extension government ones, tend to be ones that generate lots of revenue, but have tiny margins as people drive to lower the bottom line cost. Even the server market, considered to be a high-margin part of corporate IT is still subjected to shrinking margins.

      Apple simply isn't interested in that market because the purchasers can be quite demanding and unwilling to pay for it. Apple's more than happy to let HP/Dell/etc fight it out on the race to the bottom and continue to enjoy the much fatter margins they're currently earning.

      After all, Dell ships easily 10 times the number of computers Apple does, but in the end the profit Dell makes on computers is very similar to what Apple makes on computers.

      It's also why Apple lacks an entrant in the sub-$500 PC market, or why their Mac Mini wouldn't fit in (still need monitor and keyboard, for example). Or why Apple went "ultraportable PC" with the Macbook Air instead of trying to do a netbook.

  5. Be nice if this actually happened by jimicus · · Score: 2, Interesting

    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.

    1. Re:Be nice if this actually happened by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Extremadura simply cannot afford to renew hardware running Windows XP or worse. Even if Win 7 was for free their hardware is not able to cope with Win 7. Besides - Linux is better anyway. Running Debian and Debian Edu is a natural choice . Better and cheaper - Why buy Microsoft Office when you can install LibreOffice for free?

      Greetings
      Jim Oksvold

    2. Re:Be nice if this actually happened by JasterBobaMereel · · Score: 4, Interesting

      They have no MS licences, they currently run Linux (their own custom Distro) and are migrating to standard Debian

      Perhaps it is a Ploy to get a better price from Apple/Oracle etc ..who they also don't use ...?

      --
      Puteulanus fenestra mortis
    3. Re:Be nice if this actually happened by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not likely in any form - They will simply install Debian Linux and live with it - They still do not have the money. They even sacked the few developers of Linex to save money - I will assume they have licenses for 40000 computers used by the administration - Most computers are delivered with Windows pre-installed So far the Schools and Health sector used Linux but only 1% of the Administration have used Linux so far. Now the administration will get Debian Linux to replace Windows as well - No need to worry - This will happen - The only road ahead unless they have money to burn - And Extremadura does not print it's own money :-)

      Greetings
      Jim Oksvold

    4. Re:Be nice if this actually happened by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I am pretty sure that they have Microsoft licenses. Probably they have some Oracle databases also. they just don't put all the eggs in the same basket.

  6. With EU financial troubles, .... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    how soon before more cities, and states move this direction? As that happens, it will gut America's massive MS exports.

    1. Re:With EU financial troubles, .... by jampola · · Score: 1

      You say that like it's a bad thing!

    2. Re:With EU financial troubles, .... by nadaou · · Score: 1

      > You say that like it's a bad thing!

      to all readers that think the author is MS bashing for MS bashing's sake (or an appeal to the /. groupthink), read this:

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parable_of_the_broken_window

      --
      ~.~
      I'm a peripheral visionary.
  7. Good for them... by j-b0y · · Score: 1

    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?
    1. Re:Good for them... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And once they do, other regions will follow. In fact, once coders start developing some for-profit apps on Linux over there, they will realize that they can make LOADS of money by eating into Windows.
      If lucky, this will stop airbus from trying put Windows in their GD cockpits. Scariest planes going.

  8. So, 2012 is the year of the Linux desktop? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    Finally! Just in time for the end of the world, too.

    1. Re:So, 2012 is the year of the Linux desktop? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So, Linux on the desktop will bring upon the end of the world!

  9. UEFI by peppepz · · Score: 2

    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.

    1. Re:UEFI by ironman_one · · Score: 2

      Or this will make PC manufactures not touching UEFI with a ten foot pole.

    2. Re:UEFI by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Great, a ? :D

    3. Re:UEFI by guabah · · Score: 2

      But Linux distros already support UEFI, it could slow adoption of signed boot or whatever it's called.

    4. Re:UEFI by jampola · · Score: 1

      You have just discovered a gaping hole in the market for non UEFI hardware!

  10. A few clarifications by lufo · · Score: 5, Informative

    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:

    • Extremadura became pioneer in Free SW creating their own Debian-based distro 9 years ago, LinEx (Linux Extremadura)
    • They implanted a PC every two school students (primary education, up to 13 yr) region-wide running LinEx, appart from the Regional Administration
    • Now they're closing the LinEx development project, handing it to a national-level (rather than regional)
    • The information is based in a 2011-12-31 statement by the regional CIO, saying they're migrating from LinEx to "pure" Debian as LinEx is orphaned
    • I've tried to find additional info (like planning, additional commentaries, etc) in newspapers, the official regional citizen-info site, etc. on the subject but I've found nothing
    • I've found some statements from LinEx project (now ex-)workers but these statements where just suppositions
    • Regarding to a HW and UEFI related comment I've seen, I don't think they will replace any hardware, they will just migrate the OS in those systems already owned by the regional administration
    1. Re:A few clarifications by lufo · · Score: 1

      handing it to a national-level (rather than regional) free-software promotion organisation

      Sorry about that. The parent author.

    2. Re:A few clarifications by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They implanted a PC every two school students

      While it is nice to read about advances in desktop Linux usage, they are implanting a PC on every other student? Now that's just awesome.

    3. Re:A few clarifications by lufo · · Score: 4, Informative

      It was done some years ago: in 2002 they bought 70.000 PCs and put the first 50.000 one for every 2 high-school students (so my first information was wrong, it's not under 13 but 13 to 17 years old) and the remaining 20.000 for primary education (under 13 yo.)

      Here is a blog entry (in Spanish) from 2009 in which one of the responsibles comments on the conversion of the original PCs into thin clients:
      http://www.itais.net/2009/01/26/reutilizando-70000-ordenadores/

    4. Re:A few clarifications by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In 2002 we implanting a new table with a PC between the students desktops.
      In 2008 we started the migration to Netbooks because it was cheaper than buying new tables to put 2 PCs.
      But crisis comes and this year the government doesn't have money to buy more netbooks, so we have some class with a Netbook for every student and others with a PC for 2 students.

      Extremadura is testing every year many technologies that works ok in other countries, but doesn't scale with so many computers. Wifi-g didn't work for 360 computers in 12 different classrooms, so we use ethernet cable the first year. Then, we tested wifi-n. Wifi-n hardware are expensive, so we tested a Wifi-n PC Card to transform the teacher PC from a Terminal Server to a wifi-n access point. And so on. In some years I expect that we can buy all the new hardware, with all the systems ready.

    5. Re:A few clarifications by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
  11. Isn't this an old story? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I thought they did this back in 2005.
    http://www.osnews.com/story/12611

    1. Re:Isn't this an old story? by lufo · · Score: 2

      They created LinEx and migrated back then. Now they're migrating back to Debian as they end development of LinEx.

  12. Re:Typical misleading summary by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    such negative vibes man.. try to relax.

  13. Re:Typical misleading summary by lufo · · Score: 4, Informative

    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.

  14. Re:Europe is broke , Linux to the rescue by unixisc · · Score: 1

    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.

  15. Re:Europe is broke , Linux to the rescue by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I don't see "conservatives" using "Debian kFreeBSD", "Debian" is THE OS of Conservativity.

  16. Its not much of a migration by voss · · Score: 1

    LinEX is a debian based disto, so switching over to regular Debian is fairly simple and requires less maintenance.

  17. Cool name by sirdude · · Score: 1
    Extremadura is one cool sounding name for a province! I haven't been this impressed since I came across the prison planet of Crematoria.

    P.S. Hear, hear for more Debian users!

    1. Re:Cool name by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You should check this Band..."Extremoduro" http://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Extremoduro ....good rock and very very very good lyrics...but the only sing on spanish.Good reason to learn Cervantes Lang!

    2. Re:Cool name by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's called Extremadura because it's far away in the middle of nowhere.

    3. Re:Cool name by Sique · · Score: 1

      It is named thus, because it is in fact extremely dry. If it was in Asia or in Africa, we would classify the Extremadura as a desert.

      --
      .sig: Sique *sigh*
    4. Re:Cool name by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Being native of the area, I would say you are not 100% correct.

      It is very dry in summer... period. The name Extremadura mixes the words "Extreme" and "Harsh" signaling the fact that it is more Continental (climate wise) and has more temperature delta between winter and summer than the rest of the country.

      I doubt the following could be classified as a dessert anywhere in the world: Extremadura

      Please, please... ;o)

  18. Where's Microsoft? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    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.

  19. 40,000 desktops regional population 1,000,000 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    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.

  20. Torquemada by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    unavailable for comment

  21. Re:Typical misleading summary by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    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.

  22. Re:Europe is broke , Linux to the rescue by columbus · · Score: 1

    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
  23. Re:Typical misleading summary by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    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.