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Primed for desktop Linux

Posted by Steven Deare @ 11:41 5 comments

The consultants that rolled out Australia's biggest known Linux desktop project are backing themselves for more.

A while back I wrote about Kennards Hire's deployment of about 400 desktops running Fedora release 3.

For all the claims we hear about Linux being ready for the desktop from vendors like Novell, Sun, and IBM, Kennards is just one of a few known organisations using Linux desktops in Australia. Another is De Bortoli Wines.

That gives the consultants, and their fledgling Linux desktop company Ordinate Systems, tremendous bragging rights.

Ordinate director Jim Russell recently told me why he thought the time was right to create a company based around desktop Linux.

"Kennards has just shown us that there are needs out there and that suitable solutions based on Linux and open source are reality," he said.

"We're now seeing that there are other people who are either waiting in the wings or have got solutions and want to progress those."

Russell said Fedora desktops were currently installed at over 90 Kennards branches around the country. The point of sale application's rollout, key to the success of the project, is "imminent", he said.

For me though, the most interesting part was the genesis of the desktop Linux idea.

"When I got on board one of the clear directions that was stipulated from the IT director, Tony [Still], was that he wanted to entertain the possibility of a Linux-based solution," Russell said.

For me, the fact the Linux idea was explicitly stated by the CIO and did not arrive via a pre-existing vendor relationship or sales pitch is a poignant one.

However compelling the case for desktop Linux may be, the Kennards example suggests Linux vendors are yet to win over unsuspecting IT managers on claims alone. Rather, the case for desktop Linux (at the moment) must come from the IT department itself.

Vendors like Ordinate will do their best to educate the market about desktop Linux, but it seems at the moment, it's still a hard sell.

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Talkback 5 comments

  1. The ONLY Linux Desktop site in Australia? Rick Coenen -- 29/11/06

    I don't think so - De Bortoli Wines have been using open-source for years now. See: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/De_Bortoli_Wines

    I'm sure Kennards and De Bortoli can't be the only companies - We probably just haven't about them because Linux doesn't attract the same marketing hype as other OSes.

    1. De Bortoli noted Steven Deare -- 29/11/06

      Thank you Rick. I stand corrected.

      De Bortoli Wines do indeed use a Debian-based distribution on about 70 of 200 desktops throughout the organisation.

      The story has been corrected to reflect this.

    2. And prisons too Ron Fabre -- 03/12/06

      Another recent 100% Linux desktop solution was for the Victorian Department of Justice where Linux desktops are currently in use by prisoners themselves.

      Which avoids these types of issues; http://preview.tinyurl.com/yyolbu

      Previous zdnet story here; http://preview.tinyurl.com/y62qg5

  2. who pays for your words steve? ricardomardi -- 06/12/06

    Seems like you are bent on pushing the glass half full with linux. Typical.

    I have a computer shop that services windows machines, guess what? we could never run windows on our shop PCs, we would go broke with all the viruses & trojans. But most importantly, while M$ Paid mouthpieces like you only mention Linux as a subject when you are short on exposure, I see a quiet revolution happening. Every day , more & more, I see people switching over to linux quietly. NOT what you M$ Paymaster would like you to advertise is it Steve??????

  3. Fedora3??? Anonymous -- 14/12/06

    what idiots!
    Well, they will find out why soon enough.

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Scott Mckenzie

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