tala ko news mou sign garne hamro mantri or sachib ko hunlai ek patak
padna bhandinu paryo.


Government/Public Sector
Entity Background
German Bundesagentur fuer Arbeit (BA) The German government's agency
for labor has migrated 13,000 information terminals from Windows to
Linux.
French Ministry for Education The ministry has migrated over 3,000
servers to Linux - nearly all of their servers - with the majority
running Red Hat.
Library of Congress, USA Thousands of rare historic documents housed
by the Library of Congress are being digitalized using Linux clusters
and other Linux-based systems and the open source Scribe system.
Portuguese Ministry of Justice The Ministry of Justice of Portugal is
implementing a plan called LISA to incorporate Free and Open Source
software into their IT infrastructure as a way to be innovative while
also cutting costs.
Swedish Armed Forces The Armed Forces of Sweden announced in February
of 2007 that they would be migrating their servers from Windows NT to
Red Hat Enterprise Linux.
Government of Switzerland In mid-December 2005, the Swiss government
announced that it would be carrying out a large-scale migration of
servers to Novell's SUSE Linux.
Berlin, Germany The city government of Berlin announced in early
December, 2005 that they would be migrating most of their 58.000
Windows desktops to Linux.
New Zealand's Inland Revenue The Inland Revenue Department of New
Zealand announced in late October 2005 that they would be migrating
7,000 desktop systems to Linux.
Munich, Germany Munich's city government announced it was migrating
its entire IT operations to the Linux platform in 2002. Despite a
personal visit from Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer, the German city is
continuing with its plans to switch 14,000 desktops to Linux.
The Government of Japan The Ministry of Internal Affairs and
Communications announced in early October 2005 its plans to key
government systems to Linux in order to decrease its dependency on
Microsoft products.
Junta de Extramadura, Spain The Junta de Extremadura, the regional
government of Extremadura, is a pioneer in the use of Linux in the
public sector. They have also developed their own Linux distribution
called LinEx. The have embarked on a large-scale migration of their IT
infrastructure, which includes switching 14 hospitals and over 400
local health care centers to Linux. The have also installed Linux in
80,000 computers in their public schools.
Vienna, Austria Officials in Vienna's city government announced at the
beginning of 2005 that they would be migrating one third of their
desktops to Linux. Other desktops, though still running Windows, would
be using OpenOffice. They are also reportedly developing their own
Linux distribution, called Wienux.
Bergen, Norway Norway's second largest city announced in June, 2004
its plans to migrate its core IT infrastructure to Linux. A
combination of Unix and Windows servers will be phased out and
replaced with servers running Linux.
South African Revenue Service The South African Revenue serviced
announced in April of 2005 that it was moving its SAP system on to
Linux servers running Novell's SUSE Linux.
Ministry of Health, New Zealand New Zealand's Ministry of Health
announced in February 2005 that they were migrating servers running
Windows to Linux.
Largo, Florida, USA The city of Largo, Florida was one of the first
high-profile migrations to Linux in the public sector. The switch
began in 2000 when David Richards, the systems administrator for the
city began switching webservers to Red Hat Linux. He followed in 2001
by beginning the change to thin clients running Linux.
Pinellas County, Florida Public access to county court records
database is provided by servers running Linux.
Bloomington, Monroe County, Indiana The city of Bloomington's
emergency dispatch system runs on Linux. Police and fire crews are
managed by the system.
United States Postal Service One of the earliest known Linux adoptions
was the U.S. Postal Service's switch to Linux in 1997. A Linux-based
system was set up to run OCR equipment that recognizes the destination
addresses on letters.
Administrative Office of the U.S. Courts It was announced in November
of 2003 that PEC Solutions of Fairfax, Virginia would be taking on the
task of migrating the Federal Judiciary's entire national IT
infrastructure to Linux. The system will handle case management,
finance and accounting, probation and pretrial services, and case-
tracking management.
The Federal Government of Brazil Linux and Open Source software will
be mandatory for government agencies in Brazil according to a
presidential decree being drafted in early 2005.
Mexico City, Mexico The capital of Mexico has been migrating its IT
infrastructure to Linux since the election of Mayor Andrés Manuel
López Obrador in 2000.
National Security Agency, USA One of the pillars of the intelligence
community of the United States, the NSA developed its own custom
enhancements to the Linux kernel, known as Security Enhanced Linux or
SE Linux.
Department of Human Services, New Jersey, USA State IT officials
migrated the Child-Welfare Implementation System to Linux, greatly
speeding up the time it takes case workers to access records.
The State of Nebraska, USA The State of Nebraska has migrated some of
its key IT infrastructure to Linux.
United States Census Bureau The Fast Facts website is a Linux-based
web application.
United States Department of Energy Pacific Northwest National
Laboratory uses a Beowulf cluster powered by Linux servers. In 2002,
it was the most powerful Linux-based system in the world.
Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), USA The FBI's Dallas, Texas
office uses a LAMP (Linux, Apache, MySQL and PHP/Perl/Python) solution
to provide an Emergency Response Network. The system links federal,
state and local agency and insures fast response times in the event of
emergencies.
National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA), USA NASA has
been a long time user of Linux and Open Source software. Debian GNU/
Linux was used to control experiments on the Space Shuttle mission
STS-83 in April, 1997
State of Mississippi, USA The state's Automated System Project, which
runs on Linux servers, coordinates state, local and federal law
enforcement agencies' access to information. The project, funded by
the US Department of Homeland Security, serves as a model for a future
nationwide system.
Ministry of Information and Communication, South Korea The ministry is
funding projects within the South Korean government that use Linux and
Open Source.
The Government of Venezuela President Hugo Chavez issued a decree in
December 2004 that calls on the Minister for Science and Technology to
draw up a national plan for transition of Venezuela's public
administration to Open Source software. The Ministry of Sports and
Education, which has already made the switch, saved up to 4 billion
Bolivares in 2004 on their IT costs.
Government Open Code Collaborative, USA The states of Massachusetts,
New York, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Texas, Utah, Virginia and West
Virginia share Open Source applications through a repository at the
University of Rhode Island. GOCC hosts these applications for sharing
among government entities and non-profits.
Central Scotland Police, Scotland, UK Central Scotland Police have
developed a Linux-based system to facilitate the public's access to
government data as mandated in the Freedom of Information Act.
Centrelink, Australia Centrelink is the government agency that
distributes social security payments in Australia. The agency's 27,000
staff will use a Linux-based system to distribute $55 billion AU to
over 6 million users.
Ministry of Finance, Denmark The Ministry uses a JBoss application
server running on Red Hat Linux to exchange XML data among ministries
in Denmark.
United States Navy The US Navy employs Linux clusters to run sonar
systems on nuclear submarines.
Federal Ministry of Education, Nigeria Education officials in Nigeria
had migrated 35 high schools to Linux in 2003.
Northern Territory, Australia The government of the Northern Territory
has pledged to increase the use of open source technologies. As of May
2005, $35 million AU has been spent already migrating desktops to
Linux.


If you know of any government or public sector Linux deployment that
we haven't listed here, please contact the webmaster:
webmaster**AT**linux.org

Source: http://www.linux.org/info/linux_govt.html


On Jun 15, 9:30 pm, prabin gautam <[email protected]> wrote:
> its a mindblowing article which is not only balanced but also with
> identified consequences in near future.
>
> I think as a response to this or to make this issue regular in nagarik
> paper, We should either write article or help the writer preparing article
> on benifit of Nation and FOSS Nepal.
>
> On Mon, Jun 15, 2009 at 10:00 PM, Bibek Paudel <[email protected]>wrote:
>
> > The article is very balanced and informed, especially in Nepal's context.
> > In my opinion, we should encourage the writer by commenting positively on
> > his post. Here is the link:
> >http://nagariknews.com/economy/consumer/1960-2009-06-15-06-41-21.html
>
> > Bibek
>
> --
> Prabin Gautam
> Open Source Developer
> prabin AT prabin DOT net DOT np
> Mob: +९7७9८4१२5९00१
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