http://www.zdnetasia.com/news/software/0,39044164,62056398,00.htm

--------------------------------------------------------------
This story was printed from ZDNet Asia.
--------------------------------------------------------------

M'sian public sector bolsters OSS adoption
By Lee Min Keong
Tuesday, July 28 2009 03:48 PM
URL: http://www.zdnetasia.com/news/software/0,39044164,62056398,00.htm

KUALA LUMPUR--The number of public sector agencies adopting open source
software (OSS) continues to rise rapidly, with 71.1 percent of the
country's government offices having deployed OSS so far.

According to the Malaysian Administrative Modernisation and Management
Planning Unit (Mampu), as of mid-July, 515 of the country's 724 public
sector agencies have adopted OSS. This compares with 354 agencies in
2008 and 163 in 2007.
The OSS Master Plan

Launched in July 2004, Malaysia's Public Sector OSS Master Plan was
designed to encourage and guide government agencies to adopt and deploy
OSS. The initiative included the establishment of the Open Source
Competency Centre, tasked to lead and support OSS implementation across
the public sector.
The plan outlined a roadmap comprising three phrases, including early
adoption spanning 2004 to 2006. Now in its second phase, which ends
2010, the initiative is focusing on accelerated adoption nationwide.

Of the 515 agencies, 435 have deployed OSS in its backend infrastructure
and 404 are using OSS desktop applications. A total of 223 were federal
government agencies while the remaining 292 were state government agencies.

Noting that the Malaysian government is an early adopter of OSS, Mampu's
director-general, Normah Yusof, said: "We launched our Public Sector OSS
Master Plan in 2004 and have been actively executing the plan ever
since." The government unit focuses on various efforts aimed at
improving the efficiency of Malaysian public services, including IT
initiatives such as open source, Normah told reporters at the recent MSC
Malaysia Open Source Conference.

A year before the ambitious 2004 master plan was launched, only 25
public sector agencies had adopted open source, she added.

To date, the public sector has implemented 1,674 OSS projects with total
savings exceeding 48.8 million ringgit (US$14 million). According to a
June 2009 issue of the Open Source Competency Centre (OSCC) Mampu
newsletter, 295 agencies have deployed OpenOffice.org, totaling almost
20,000 installed seats and saving the Malaysian government over 18.8
million ringgit (US$5.4 million) in licensing fees.

An OSCC official said the increase in OSS adoption among government
agencies has been "exponential" in recent years. "Without doubt, there
has been a big surge," said Stanly Tan, knowledge bank manager at the
OSCC, which was established and currently operated by the Mampu to
facilitate OSS implementation in the public sector.

Tan attributed the rapid adoption of OSS to the effective implementation
of the Public Sector OSS Master Plan. Under this initiative, the Mampu
and OSCC extensively promoted the use of OSS and invited government
agencies to attend workshops on open source adoption and implementation,
he said.

To further boost adoption of OSS, the center also made available various
open source applications and toolkits to public sector agencies, he
added. For example, it developed a package for OpenOffice.org
implementation, providing a step-by-step guide to help agencies migrate
to OpenOffice from other office productivity suites such as Microsoft
Office, said Tan.

The OSCC also developed the OSS Development Toolkit, a collection of OSS
tools suitable for use in a Windows environment and application
development. Available for free distribution, the toolkit was compiled
and documented to provide a set of common tools needed in a typical
software development lifecycle (SDLC). Other open source applications
available to government agencies include MyMeeting, MySpamGuard,
MyNetWatch and MyWorkSpace.

According to Tan, the OSCC and Mampu are hopeful of achieving 100
percent OSS adoption across all government agencies before the Master
Plan enters its third phase of implementation next year.

The Malaysian government's progress in OSS adoption has not gone
unnoticed by other countries. The Mampu's Normah said: "Saudi Arabia has
requested our assistance to establish its own OSCC, and we have obliged."

Lee Min Keong is a freelance IT writer based in Malaysia.


-- 
- --

Harisfazillah Bin Jamel

R&D Team Lead
Open Source Competency Centre (OSCC), MAMPU
Lot E302-E304, Enterprise Building 3,
63000 Cyberjaya, Malaysia.
Tel. 603 83191200, Fax: 603 83193206
Mobile : 019-6085482
Email : haris at oscc.org.my linuxmalaysia at gmail.com
OSCC MAMPU http://www.oscc.org.my/
Profile http://knowledge.oscc.org.my/author/linuxmalaysia




--- 

MyGOSSCON 2009 Call for Papers
http://mygosscon.oscc.org.my/2009/call-for-papers/

_______________________________________________
OSCC Knowledge Bank Mailing List

*  To visit MAMPU Opensource on the web, go to: 
    http://opensource.mampu.gov.my

*  To visit OSCC Knowledge Bank on the web, go to: 
    http://www.oscc.org.my
       
*  To unsubscribe from this group, please go here:
     http://lists.oscc.org.my/mailman/listinfo/oscc-discuss

OSCC MAMPU Facebook.
http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=4999664916

Kirim email ke