French MPs dump Windows for Linux

After the gendarmes and the Ministry of Culture, it's the French MPs turn to switch to open source. From June 2007, PCs in French députés' offices will be equipped with a Linux operating system and open source productivity software.

The project, backed by MPs Richard Cazenav and Bernard Carayon of the UMP party, will see 1,154 French parliamentary workstations running on an open source OS, with OpenOffice.org, Firefox and an open source email client.

A spokesperson for the parliament's administration said a decision as to the choice of OS and email client hasn't yet been taken. Currently, some of the parliament's servers have been running Linux, with Apache Web servers and the Mambo content management system.

The project was the subject of a study by Atos Origin, whose conclusions convinced the French parliament, the Assemblée Nationale.

"The study showed that open source software will from now on offer functionality adapted to the needs of MPs, and will allow us to make substantial savings despite the associated migration and training costs," the parliament said.

Open source supporters have welcomed the decision. Benoît Sibaud, president of the Association for the research into and promotion of open source computing, said the decision to migrate to open source will allow the Assemblée Nationale to have greater control over its IT, without depending on any one vendor, and to realise a better use of public money.

This will be the first case of a French public institution switching its PCs onto a Linux operating system. Previous open source initiatives concerned servers, as was the case with the Minstry of Agriculture, or OpenOffice and Firefox, which were brought into use by France's gendarmerie.

Talkback 3 comments

    french and microsoft Anonymous -- 28/11/06

    Are you surprised, only the french know it all the rest of the world are dummies. Here in Quebec Canada we see this everyday as they try to run quebec down the drain.

    prediction... Anonymous -- 28/11/06

    I will make a prediction. This will be a much heralded decision, lets face it, it is an easy decision to sell to the public. But, in three years time, when the true costs become apparent, they will quietly go back.

    Only incompetence will allow the switch to fail Alex Chejlyk -- 28/11/06 (in reply to #320071801)

    I've converted quite a few offices from Windows to GNU/Linux based systems. The main thing is planning and product knowledge. If they utilize virtual machines and run thin clients they are destined to succeed. Many of these migrations fail because the IT staff only know the Windows way, fat client fat server and hours spent running from PC to PC. If you only know Windows then changing is difficult and the tendency is to go back to what you know. I'm hoping that the staff does know what they are doing in terms of GNU/Linux knowledge. If done correctly they will save so much in IT administration costs over the next five years.

    Cheers,

    Alex

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