Nine British government agencies to test open-source software
The software being evaluated includes Linux
October 9, 2003 12:00 PM ETComputerworld -
A British government agency whose mission is to help reduce the cost of government is launching a series of nine IT "proof of concept" trial projects using open-source software, including Linux.
In an announcement yesterday, the Office of Government Commerce (OGC) said the trials will be conducted across a diverse group of government offices to see how open-source software compares with proprietary products -- and to learn where it can be used with comparable or improved performance and lower costs.
The first nine trials will be conducted with the help of IBM, but other vendors will be invited to offer their ideas, said Martin Day, a spokesman for the OGC. The office was established in April 2000 to help U.K. government agencies get the best value for their money from vendors in everything from road building to property management and IT, he said. "IT is a great way of losing money if you get it wrong," Day said.
For more than a year, the OGC has been working on open-source trials that would yield real-world results, he said. In July, the British government's Open Source Software Policy was announced in Parliament, which wanted a level playing field for comparisons of open-source and proprietary software based on value for money.
The nine trials, which will take place during the next six months and could be expanded to more projects, are being coordinated by the Office of the eEnvoy, which is responsible for improving the online delivery of public services and cutting costs, as well as making all U.K. government services available electronically by 2005.
"We're not out here to prove a point" about open-source vs. proprietary software, Day said. "We have no specific religion" about either technology, he added. "Is this about abandoning Microsoft products? No, it's not."
Instead, the idea is to find out if public money can be saved by looking at other ways of doing government business, he said.
Whatever the eventual findings, the OGC can't make open-source software use mandatory, Day said. The agency can only make recommendations, although the findings could hold some weight in future IT decisions.
"Whilst it's not mandatory, if [open-source software] works, it would take a very brave department to rubber-stamp another order" for proprietary software from any vendor, he said. "We're going to want to see what these trials [show]."
The nine departments involved in the trials are the Office of the Deputy Prime Minister; the Department for Work and Pensions; the Department for Culture, Media and Sport; the Office of
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