The City of Munich has chosen to migrate its 14,000 desktops to a free Linux distribution, rather than a commercial version of the open source operating system.
Munich has started to migrate to Linux on the desktop -- a year later than planned.
In Mannheim, a preference for "open" standards -- not cost -- is driving the German city's shift to Linux.
Peter Hofmann, the project leader of the Linux migration in the City of Munich, code-named LiMux, told ZDNet UK on Tuesday what it feels like to become a star in the Linux world.
The UK government is carrying out nine Linux tests with IBM, to find out how much it could save by switching to open source.
In Mannheim, a preference for "open" standards -- not cost -- is driving the German city's shift to Linux.
The software maker introduces a version of Linux aimed at enterprise customers, hoping to move the open-source software beyond servers and low-cost PCs.
Linux seller Red Hat has announced its first version of the open-source operating system for desktop computers, taking direct aim at Microsoft. Additional reading: Open Source Resource Centre
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