Government & IT
Nick Hockings
s96121272 at tuks.co.za
Sat May 4 21:02:44 UTC 2002
The Economist magazine(Government and IT, May 4th 2002) reports that government
is not only the largest buyer of IT, but it gets extraordinarily bad value for
money. The UK Inland Revenue (tax office) had a £1.4Bn overrun from a single
contractor.(Yes billion not million.)
(Note: the above contracts were all-inclusive hardware, software,
implementation and maitenance.)
The people spending this money are also the ones who write the legislation.
They must have some interest in cost effectiveness, (assuming they are not
swayed by arguments for their own liberty).
1) Are any companies bidding for government contracts with Free Software
solutions?
2) Are we presenting cost related issues of liberty to legislators? (ie if the
solution is free software based you can fire the contractor without scrapping
the project.)
3) Are there any examples of better ways for large institutions to implement
IT. ( eg decentralized, each office looks after its own LAN and outward
connetions. This might involve applying free software development methods to
building the physical network as well as sharing actual software.)
Nick Hockings
<s96121272 at op.up.ac.za>,
<s96121272 at tuks.co.za>,
<nickh at nupedia.com>
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