Nick Heath reports
[Munich's city] council is intending to conduct a study to see which operating systems and software packages--both proprietary and open source--best fit its needs. The audit would also take into account the work already carried out to move the council to free software.
Now, in a response to Munich's Green Party (PDF), Mayor Dieter Reiter has revealed the cost of returning to Windows.
Reiter said that moving to Windows 7 would require the council to replace all the PCs for its 14,000-plus staff, a move he said would cost €3.15 million. That figure did not include software licensing and infrastructure costs, which Reiter said could not be calculated without further planning. He said a move to Windows 8 would be far more costly.
Reiter said going back to Microsoft would mean writing off about €14M of work it had carried out to shift to Limux, OpenOffice, and other free software. Work on project implementation, support, training, modifying systems, licensing of Limux-specific software, on setting up Limux and migrating from Microsoft Office would have to be shelved, he said.
He also revealed that the move to Limux had saved the council about €11M in licensing and hardware costs, as the Ubuntu-based Limux operating system was less demanding than if it had upgraded to a newer version of Windows.
Related: No, Munich Isn't About To Ditch Free Software and Move Back to Windows
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Friday October 17 2014, @07:14AM
The editor removed the mode#articles part from the link when he added the summary from that story to this page, so the hyperlink there works.
That part should have had a & ahead of it in my link.
I wanted a link such that Google et al would index that and get a page with lots of comments, but I borked the link.
-- gewg_
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Friday October 17 2014, @07:22AM
That should be &mode=threaded#articles.
Actually, I did get it right. [soylentnews.org]
It was the editor that borked it.
-- gewg_