Government falls in love with open source
By Maggie Holland,
The government is championing open source, vowing to boost its uptake in public services to reduce costs and risk and boost innovation, according to a newly published report.
Unveiled yesterday, the 'Open Source, Open Standards and Re-Use: Government Action Plan' extols the virtues of non-proprietary technologies.
In a statement accompanying the report, Tom Watson MP, Minister for Digital Engagement, said that open source was a great example of how people working together can come up with products to “rival and sometimes beat those of giant corporations.” He added that open source use encourages greater innovation, supports agility and cost cutting and sophisticated and beneficial information re-use.
Watson said that the key was to ensure solutions were selected based on their ability not only to do their job, but also to ensure the best value for money and that both overheads and risks could be somewhat reduced simply by re-using technologies where appropriate.
“Over the past five years many government departments have shown that Open Source can be best for the taxpayer – in our web services, in the NHS and in other vital public services,” he said.
“So we consider that the time is now right to build on our record of fairness and achievement and to take further positive action to ensure that Open Source products are fully and fairly considered throughout government IT; to ensure that we specify our requirements and publish our data in terms of Open Standards; and that we seek the same degree of flexibility in our commercial relationships with proprietary software suppliers as are inherent in the open source world.”
Many vendors have been quick to come forward in support of the government’s plans, including open source veteran Sun Microsystems.
"In the current economic climate, attention is focused on ways to keep down costs while increasing return on investment. The UK Government could save millions of pounds every year if it made more use of open source as part of a competitive procurement system. We are convinced that open source and open standards drive much needed choice, competition and innovation in the market," said Kim Jones, president and managing director for Sun Microsystems in the UK and Ireland, in a statement.
Simon Phipps, the company’s chief open source officer, added: “Sun views, open source as an ideal foundation for development and business in today's massively connected economy. And we believe an open source model offers liberties to every user and developer that encourages genuinely collaborative innovation, especially by allowing rapid, adoption-led approaches to software acquisition."
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Linutop says: Public sector must embrace open source systems
For too many years the public sector has been held hostage by the constraints of proprietary software, locked into bloated, inflexible cost structures. In a time of shrinking budgets this doesn’t make any sense at all. Public sector organizations must have the ability to introduce new technologies that are more flexible and can reduce costs. The government's decision to support open source systems for the first time provides an effective foundation that will promote cost-efficient systems that are of better use of tax-payers money.
The bold move to open source is even more compelling when evidenced by other successful examples of public sector organizations across Europe. In Spain, for example, the city of Saragossa recently migrated to Linux and OpenOffice.org with 3,000 users. As a result of this move, the city is expecting cost savings of almost £1,000,000 per year. Migrating this policy to the UK could result in savings of hundreds of millions. The message is clear: in order to keep public services afloat, the public sector must embrace open source systems. Open source operating systems like Linux could prove to become so efficient that it should become mandatory.
By Ip_philipphaberl on Tuesday Mar 3