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Posts Tagged ‘Government’

A cartel of IT vendors supply the UK Government with £3,500 PCs

July 29th, 2011 No comments

OPEN SOURCE VENDORS have leapt onto a report published by the Parliamentary Public Administration Systems Committee (PASC) that slated the IT procurement style of the UK government.

In the PASC’s report, entitled “Government and IT – A Recipe For Rip-Offs: Time For A New Approach” the committee found that “The Government’s own information about its IT is woefully inadequate” and that the “government is currently over-reliant on a small oligopoly of large suppliers, which some witnesses referred to as a cartel.” It reported that the average spend in some departments is a “ridiculous” £3,500 for a desktop PC, figures that would make even an Apple fanboi blush.

The INQUIRER got in touch with HP, the government’s biggest IT supplier, for its view on the matter and HP referred us to a statement issued by Intellect, which it claims speaks for the industry as a whole. The short statement read, “The recent PASC report on government and IT includes allegations of anti-competitive behaviour and collusion, and suggestions of a ‘cartel’ operating in the ICT industry. The implication is that leaders of public sector businesses in our industry have been involved in criminal activity. As the trade body for the ICT sector, we want to make it clear that this is not the case and cartels do not exist in our industry. On the contrary, this is a highly competitive market. Intellect would cooperate with any investigation into such allegations, but we believe it would be a waste of public money.”

In June, Nick Wilson, managing director of HP UK, told our sister IT news web site V3.co.uk that the public sector “buys badly” and it seems he wasn’t far wrong. Now open source vendors are claiming that the time is right for the UK Government to embrace alternatives in order to deliver better value-for-money.

Phil Scott-Lewis, head of UK public sector at Red Hat said, “It is clear that openness has to be at the heart of public sector IT policy – that means openness in procurement process and openness in the technology being selected and deployed. This report is an opportunity for government to spell the end of the costly proprietary lock-in that has seen some projects spiral out of control. This report should add further weight and urgency to government’s commitment to open source technology and drive the introduction of open standards throughout the IT procurement process so that interoperability and openness can once again place delivering responsive services for citizens and business at the heart of government IT policy.”

Bertrand Diard, CEO and co-founder of Talend also advocated the use of open standards, saying, “I find it bizarre that given the enormous emphasis placed on reducing the budget deficit, a simple change in direction on procurement, that could cut swathes from spending, continues to be ignored. Open standards and open source software will provide the public sector with flexibility and scalability that not only reduces costs, it also implements with existing legacy systems.”

There’s no doubt that the PASC’s report on UK Government IT procurement is damning, with a number of firms cozying up to the Government and getting some very lucrative contracts out of it. The insistence to ignore open source, whether it be operating systems or application software is another area that should be looked at very closely, because not all of the £3,500 that the UK Government spens on a desktop PC goes for the hardware.

Perhaps the government should considering cutting closed source software and the use of closed standards and using the money it saves on vital services. We’re pretty sure that won’t result in strikes or demonstrations. µ

US government interrogates a Wikileaks associate

August 2nd, 2010 No comments

THE US GOVERNMENT, which was formed by French backed terrorists in the former British colonies of North America south of Canada on the pretext that the common folk would be a bit freer, has apparently started rounding up geeks at its borders to ask them if they know anything about Wikileaks or Tor.

On his way home from a security conference Jacob Appelbaum, a Seattle-based programmer for the online privacy protection project Tor, arrived at the Newark, New Jersey airport from Holland on a flight Thursday morning when he was pulled aside by US Customs and Fatherland Homeland Security agents.

According to Cnet, he was initially told that it was just a routine security search but it turned out that he was detained and questioned for three hours about Wikileaks.

Appelbaum, a US citizen, was taken into a room, frisked and his bag was searched. Anything in it that was in written form was photocopied and his laptop was scanned.

Officials from US Immigration and Customs Enforcement and the US Army then told him he was not under arrest but that he was being detained, the sources said.

They then proceeded to ask him about his opinions regarding the arguably illegal wars launched by the US in Iraq and Afghanistan and demanded he tell them the whereabouts of Wikileaks founder Julian Assange.

He told them to go forth and multiply unless he had a lawyer present, but he was not allowed to call one.

After about three hours, Appelbaum was given his laptop back, but the agents kept his three mobile phones, sources said. Obviously a techie who needs three mobile phones must be a terrorist, or at least knows some.

Later at the Black Hat conference he was approached by FBI agents who were apparently also interested in having a word.

Appelbaum did not make many friends in the US government with his speech at Black Hat, either. He urged the throngs to support Wikileaks by volunteering or donating money.

He challenged current US foreign policy and called for civil disobedience through exposing the heavily guarded secrets of the US imperium.

“You can try to take us down… but you can’t stop us,” he said. µ

Indian Government announces $35 laptop

July 23rd, 2010 No comments

THE INDIAN GOVERNMENT has cooked up a touchscreen laptop pitched at students.

The low cost device, which naturally runs Linux, is being readied for production with India’s Human resource development minister Kapil Sibal saying that “The motherboard, its chip, the processing, connectivity, all of them cumulatively cost around , including memory, display, everything.”

While is pretty impressive, even for a nation that is known for cutting costs, according to Sibal, the aim is to bring the cost down to just . While the minister pointed out that the system would have many of the same amenities found on more expensive machines, he also mentioned that the hardware was designed to accept new components should user’s needs change.

It seems the Indian Government felt it was necessary to go it alone, even with the One Laptop Per Child (OLPC) and Intel’s Classmate on the market. Those machines do cost significantly more and given the growing technological prowess of India, it’s little surprise that a home grown design is about to out do more mature rivals.

Sibal said that the Indian Government is looking for hardware manufacturers to make its design a reality. µ