U.K. gov't considers Sun in open source software
push
Government begins trials to evaluate costs and
usability of Sun's JDS and JES software
By Scarlet Pruitt, IDG News
Service December 08, 2003
LONDON
-- The U.K. government has signed a five-year agreement with Sun Microsystems
Inc. to potentially offer the company's new Java Desktop System (JDS) and Java
Enterprise System (JES) software to public sector agencies as part of an overall
open source push.
The Office of Government Commerce (OGC) purchasing
authority said Monday that it will soon begin trials of the software to evaluate
costs and usability in the hopes of saving money on hardware and software
upgrades. No definitive agreement has yet been made to purchase and deploy the
software, however, as the OGC said that it is evaluating all of its options
before making a final decision.
The government has already been performing similar
trials with IBM Corp.'s open source server software, according to OGC spokesman
Martin Day, and is particularly interested in an open source alternative for the
desktop.
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
Posted by N.S. Soundara Rajan, Mysore,
India
Freelance IT journalist
Columnist "Deccan
Herald"
Spoken English Teacher
Knowledge networker
...connecting people to people and people to
knowledge