[linux-government] The Manx turn from Unix to Windows

  • From: Joachim Bauernberger <joachim.bauernberger@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: linux-government@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
  • Date: Thu, 2 Dec 2004 09:04:56 +0100

http://news.zdnet.co.uk/software/windows/0,39020396,39175662,00.htm

Matt Loney
 ZDNet UK
 December 01, 2004, 18:10 GMT

The Isle of Man is ditching Unix and shunning Linux as it moves its 
infrastructure from a heterogenous enviornment to Windows

The Isle of Man Government is to standardise on Microsoft's Windows platform, 
ditching its existing Unix operating systems and choosing to not go down the 
Linux path that has attracted some high-profile public sector wins lately. 

Allan Paterson, director of the information systems division in the Manx 
government, said the move was a "strategic position" with no overarching 
contract, but just an intention to standardise on the Windows platform over 
the next five years. 

"We could change that tomorrow, we're not locked down. This is a relationship 
rather than a hard contract." 

When Paterson came to the job, he said, he was struck by "the number of 
products we had in the same space, each requiring different support skill 
sets. We had the kind of scenario where a department would phone up a third 
party supplier for a quote on application outsourcing one week, and another 
department phoning up a week later for the same thing would be offered a 
different platform." 

Now, the Sun, Novell and SCO UnixWare servers spread across 140 locations will 
make way for windows Windows Server 2003 running on Unisys ES7000 and 
Clearpath servers in two data centres. There were many reasons for the move, 
said Paterson. In the case of SCO, it was that different suppliers would 
provide different versions of the software, making management a huge 
headache. 

On the desktop, said Paterson, the government had only just finished upgrading 
to Windows 95 in 2003, but had "all sorts of compatibility problems." Now he 
is upgrading to Windows XP, with Active Directory. 

Asked why other desktop solutions were not considered - such as Star Office - 
Paterson said he was looking for more than just an office suite. "We wanted a 
complete management solution around the desktop. This is about service 
delivery, availability, reliability of desktop services." 

"I am a technical person," continued Paterson, "but this is not a tech 
decision. It is a business decision. Too often it is presented as a technical 
decision, but really it is about the wow you give to the end user at the end 
of the day." 

Because the Isle of Man is not part of the UK -- it is a self-governing crown 
dependency that is able to make its own laws -- purchasing decisions can be 
made independently of the UK's Office of Government Commerce, which recently 
issued report promoting the consideration of open-source software in the 
public sector. "We're not covered by the Office of Government Commerce 
guidelines on procurement. I don't have to look at open-source software every 
time. I can say, "Guys. we have all these Windows skills, let's go this way. 
We don't have to comply with UK targets, but we can learn from the UK." 

-- 
ICQ: 214527045 
URL: http://www.bauernberger.de/

Other related posts: