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By Matthew Broersma
Posted on ZDNet News: Dec 18, 2003 3:34:00 PM

Government bodies in Israel and Texas are starting to shift from Microsoft Office to open-source alternatives, driven by budget pressures.

Two significant government bodies, the Israel Department of Commerce and the City of Austin, Texas, are moving toward replacing Microsoft Office installations with the OpenOffice.org productivity suite. This continues a worldwide trend of governments attempting to cut costs with open-source software.

The Department of Commerce has made a strategic decision to reduce government dependency on Microsoft, and is to replace most of its Microsoft Office desktops with OpenOffice, according to a report this week in the Israeli business daily Globes. The software is to run on Windows using IBM hardware, the paper said.

Also this week, the City of Austin said it would migrate several hundred Microsoft Office installations to OpenOffice beginning in January, as part of an ongoing testing program.


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OpenOffice is an open-source office suite based on Sun Microsystems' StarOffice. Open-source software is not controlled by any one company, making it attractive for organizations wary of paying steep licensing fees to a single supplier.

Many public-sector bodies are also eyeing, or actively migrating to, the open-source Linux operating system for desktop use. Linux is widely used on servers, but has yet to make a serious dent in Microsoft's dominance of the desktop.

Austin made the decision to shift 300 desktops in the Communications Technology Management department to OpenOffice after testing the software on 30 desktops for several months, according to Austin's acting chief information officer, Pete Collins. He said that testing would continue, with the possibility of more of the city's 5,200 desktops shifting to OpenOffice.

He stressed that there are no plans for the city to drop Microsoft Office, partly because applications such as the City Council's agenda management system depend on Microsoft software.

The city is paying more than $3 million for Office under a 2-year-old licensing agreement, and is facing a $30 million budget deficit.

Organizations that shift away from Microsoft Office are cutting themselves short, according to Oliver Roll, Microsoft general manager for Asia-Pacific and Greater China.

Speaking at the Singapore launch of the new Office System 2003 productivity suite in November, Roll argued that packages such as OpenOffice or StarOffice lack the sophistication of Microsoft's latest offerings, and instead "replicate the Microsoft Office of six or seven years ago".

Although there has been speculation that cheaper Office alternatives such as StarOffice and OpenOffice would eat into Microsoft's overwhelming share of the desktop software market, analysts said that has yet to happen.

Though Office revenue was essentially flat in Microsoft's fiscal year 2001 compared to a year earlier, sales rebounded following the introduction of the controversial Software Assurance licensing program in 2002. Wall Street analysts expect Office sales to grow to more than $10 billion in fiscal year 2004, compared with $9.23 billion in 2003.

Matthew Broersma of ZDNet UK reported from London.

CNET News.com's David Becker and CNETAsia's John Lui contributed to this report.

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  • Talkback
  • Most Recent of 113 Talkback(s)
Doesn't have Clippy !!!!
And exports to PDF slicker than snot. So what's not to like about OO? (Read the rest)
Posted by: vandamme Posted on: 02/04/05 You are currently: a Guest | | Terms of Use
Small accounts, no big deal  Mike Cox | 12/18/03
Another hilarious Satire from Mike  nucrash | 12/18/03
How come Mike Cox is always first?  Jomo_z | 12/18/03
When you use MS products you are always ahead.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 12/18/03
Ahead of what?  Squawkbox | 12/18/03
of everyone else when to comes to beg for money  nucrash | 12/18/03
re: How come Mike Cox is always first?  stephen732@... | 12/18/03
Breakfast again?  ShadeTree | 12/18/03
SHHHHH don't tell anyone  Squawkbox | 12/18/03
i was actually thinking  ryusen | 12/18/03
Get a clue...  MalumRegnat | 12/18/03
NASDAQ (tech stocks) is %40 for year, MS up 0%  km4hr@... | 12/18/03
why?  stephen732@... | 12/18/03
MS Rep or bag man  halmin | 12/18/03
Using inferior software will cost more in the end.  pa2004 | 12/18/03
Yer right..M$ Office is looking like it costs a bundle!  GRindinAxTaRupy | 12/18/03
I agree about the inferior software part costing more  nucrash | 12/18/03
"Much lower productivity"  IT_User | 12/18/03
Cost will be zero...  ordaj@... | 12/18/03
Everything 90% of people need is in OpenOffice  agramont@... | 12/18/03
OK, where's the remaining 10%  nucrash | 12/18/03
The wrong tool for the job  Yagotta B. Kidding | 12/18/03
Tool choice is  Update victim | 12/18/03
Correct, check the  Update victim | 12/18/03
Exactly!  michael-t | 12/18/03
lower productivity?  NemesisNL | 12/19/03
Now M$ Office is finished!!!  GRindinAxTaRupy | 12/18/03
Way to go OpenOffice!  prime21 | 12/18/03
OpenOffice = MS Office of 6 years ago???  John E Wahd | 12/18/03
Office versions  voska | 12/18/03
I agree  el1jones | 12/18/03
You're right - MS needs to change its tune  IT_User | 12/18/03
Office 2003  vfrvtec | 12/18/03
Can't fool me  Bill4 | 12/18/03
What happened to the export as PDF feature of Office 97  Richard Flude | 12/18/03
Doesn't have Clippy !!!!  vandamme | 02/04/05
Does ZDNet troll?  Anton Philidor | 12/18/03
It's about timing  IT_User | 12/18/03
Microsoft vs Microsoft  Anton Philidor | 12/18/03
No, it works fine  IT_User | 12/18/03
OO - A disruptive technology?  snorthover@... | 12/19/03
If they have low requirements, its a good deal.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 12/18/03
This is intriguing!  IT_User | 12/18/03
I can only speak of our use...  No_Ax_to_Grind | 12/18/03
What, no replies???  No_Ax_to_Grind | 12/18/03
I've found that OO and MS Office work together very well  voska | 12/18/03
I prefer to have one tool that does the job.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 12/18/03
I agree, would be nice  voska | 12/18/03
I agree, competition is always good.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 12/18/03
I agree. If not open office then stick with office97.  jjon2121 | 12/18/03
Yup, as long as your needs are limited.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 12/18/03
Sure if there were such thing  IT_User | 12/18/03
I do agree there, no one tool does it all.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 12/18/03
power point works great in OO  JWatson77 | 12/18/03
I think I understand  IT_User | 12/18/03
As I said,  No_Ax_to_Grind | 12/18/03
"What corporate use is all about"  IT_User | 12/18/03
It really does boil down to what your needs are  NemesisNL | 12/19/03
How about StarOffice?  michael-t | 12/18/03
No one said it was useless.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 12/18/03
I have to know...  Laff | 12/18/03
Well, for starters.....  John E Wahd | 12/18/03
Suggestion, comedy is hard, don't quit the day job.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 12/18/03
Oh come on, I thought it was pretty good!  John E Wahd | 12/18/03
Ah, thinking without prior approval again huh.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 12/18/03
The answer will be a long time coming  Taz_z | 12/18/03
Gee, 15 minutes is a 'long time"???  No_Ax_to_Grind | 12/18/03
TAZ, where did you go?  No_Ax_to_Grind | 12/18/03
Automation & Customization  chrichton99 | 12/18/03
You're right, it can't even come close.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 12/18/03
Does it need to?  Jomo_z | 12/18/03
As I said, OO works for limited needs.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 12/18/03
That's the *real* problem  Jomo_z | 12/18/03
Yeah, we got caught in that one!  IT_User | 12/18/03
That's too bad  chrichton99 | 12/18/03
I'm reporting what happened  IT_User | 12/18/03
Sounds like you need to hire better people.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 12/18/03
Actually, that's they did, eventually  IT_User | 12/18/03
Actually Open Office Can do that  voska | 12/18/03
I found that building...  No_Ax_to_Grind | 12/18/03
So True  voska | 12/18/03
Yes, but....  Jomo_z | 12/18/03
See my reply to IT User.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 12/18/03
Pls Explain  michael-t | 12/18/03
See my above posts...  No_Ax_to_Grind | 12/18/03
You should say "typical" requirements.  DonnieBoy | 12/21/03
Ok, and this is a bad thing... ?  BitTwiddler | 12/18/03
For shame  IT_User | 12/18/03
Unless of course you do need it.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 12/18/03
I keep hearing about how users don't use many features of office  JoeMama_z | 12/18/03
Here's the thing:  chrichton99 | 12/18/03
Exactly!  No_Ax_to_Grind | 12/18/03
You know  voska | 12/18/03
More to it...  No_Ax_to_Grind | 12/18/03
hey, if you need it...  ryusen | 12/18/03
I would  JoeMama_z | 12/18/03
Top management's position?  IT_User | 12/18/03
It's universal distribution  IT_User | 12/18/03
I could make an argument...  No_Ax_to_Grind | 12/18/03
Go back to joemama's dilemma  IT_User | 12/18/03
what job function would that be?  JoeMama_z | 12/18/03
Some of us have jobs  IT_User | 12/18/03
WHY?!?!?  NemesisNL | 12/19/03
We are keeping Offcie, but  rkadowns | 12/18/03
you forget "I lov you"  JWatson77 | 12/18/03
What to choose  TooLongInTheBiz | 12/18/03
But they are.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 12/18/03
Careful what you wish for...  first last | 12/18/03
Amen!!!  No_Ax_to_Grind | 12/18/03
OO vrs MS Office  nite_w0lf | 12/18/03
look to the titles  JoeMama_z | 12/18/03
we need a businesses reason  JWatson77 | 12/18/03
Sticking with MS Ofc2k for now  FilledOut | 12/21/03

What do you think?

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