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posted by LaminatorX on Wednesday August 13 2014, @05:37AM   Printer-friendly
from the foss-busting-out-all-over-dept. dept.

Softpedia reports:

The number of local authorities that decide to switch to open source to match the IT needs of a city is slowly increasing and now it looks like the city of Turin in Italy is also doing the same thing.

One of the main tools that are available for the local governments to decrease the public spending is to make some changes when it comes to upgrading the proprietary software. Usually, this procedure costs a lot of money and the only way that you can save funds is to adopt open source solutions.

In the case of Turin, that can be done by adopting Ubuntu, which is a Linux distribution developed by Canonical and which has complete support for the Italian language. Ubuntu is a free operating system and it's supported for a period of five years. Even when the support ends, the IT department only has to upgrade to the next release.

According to a report on repubblica.it Google translation, Turin wants to become the first city in Italy to move completely to open source for its 8,300 PCs used by the local authorities.

"The transition will begin this fall and it will take a year and a half to complete. It will become the first Italian open source city and we'll to get a saving on expenses for the computers that will go 20-40 percent compared to today," says [City Manager], Gianmarco Montanari.

"If we abandon proprietary software we will save EUR6 million ($8 million) in five years. The initial investment is low but, once installed programs and taught employees how to use them, the system will go ahead on its own feet, allowing the city to lower the cost even more," notes the Director of Information Systems, Sandro Golzio.

The complete price of migrating the PCs from a version of Windows to another, together with the Office suite, would cost the city EUR22 million ($29.5 million) over a five-year span, but with the adoption of Ubuntu, that price will go down to EUR16 million ($21.4 million).

A flurry of cities in Europe are doing similar things. In Germany, the city of Munich has already finished the transition to their own Linux distribution, and in Toulouse, France, the process is ongoing and it will be over in a couple of years.

 
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  • (Score: 3, Funny) by aristarchus on Wednesday August 13 2014, @06:28AM

    by aristarchus (2645) on Wednesday August 13 2014, @06:28AM (#80715) Journal

    Love it, Turin! Go, go, with that shroud of yours and free software! We await what great things Italia will do, after being cleared of the trauma of Il Duce, and Berlesconi, and the Vatican Bank, and the Rape of the Sabines, and the whole Spartucus thing. And Sicily.

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  • (Score: 2) by frojack on Wednesday August 13 2014, @06:53AM

    by frojack (1554) on Wednesday August 13 2014, @06:53AM (#80719) Journal

    Wait, what? Rape of A linux Distro?

    You misspelled Sabayon: http://www.sabayon.org/ [sabayon.org]

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  • (Score: 2, Funny) by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday August 13 2014, @07:18AM

    by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday August 13 2014, @07:18AM (#80721)

    but besides all that... what have the romans ever done for us?

    • (Score: 3, Funny) by mendax on Wednesday August 13 2014, @07:35AM

      by mendax (2840) on Wednesday August 13 2014, @07:35AM (#80724)

      What have they done for us? Well, watch this [youtube.com].

      --
      It's really quite a simple choice: Life, Death, or Los Angeles.