Israel Stops Buying Microsoft Software

By Peter Enav, AP

http://www.crn.com/sections/BreakingNews/dailyarchives.asp?ArticleID=46931


In an apparent showdown over price, Israel's government has suspended
purchases of Microsoft productivity software and is encouraging the
development of an open source alternative.

A spokeswoman for the Finance Ministry, which oversees government
purchases,  said Tuesday that government agencies would use existing
Microsoft Office  products for the time being rather than upgrade to
newer versions.

The Israeli government also will encourage the development of
lower-priced  alternatives to Microsoft software in an effort to help
expand computer use  by the public.

To that end, the Finance Ministry has cooperated with Sun Microsystems
and IBM  in designing the Hebrew language version of OpenOffice
software, a freely  distributed open-source alternative to Microsoft
Office.

"The move with Microsoft was a purely economic decision," said the
Finance  Ministry spokeswoman, speaking on condition of anonymity. "The
Israeli  government will not be purchasing new products from Microsoft,
but will  implement its contract to secure existing systems."

"On a policy level, the government is committed to expanding computer
use. We  want open source technology to spread, so more people will be
able to afford  computers," she said.

The spokeswoman said the government was unhappy with Microsoft's refusal
to  sell individual programs from its standard Office package, which
includes an  e-mail client, spreadsheet and word-processing
applications. Not all  departments require the entire suite of programs,
she said.

Microsoft representatives in Israel did not immediately return phone
calls  seeking comment.

The Israeli move comes amid growing public sector interest in open
source, or  non-proprietary, software led by the Linux operating system.

Some federal agencies in France, China and Germany, as well as the city
government of Munich, have opted to use Linux not just on servers but
also on  individual workstations. Entire national governments, including
those in  Britain, Brazil, Japan, South Korea (news - web sites), China
and Russia, are  exploring open source alternatives to Microsoft.

Governments are a huge software market, accounting for about 10 percent
of  global information technology spending, according to research firm
IDC.

Federal, state and local governments in the United States spent $34
billion  last year on huge systems to track everything from tax
collection to fishing  licenses.

Copyright � 2003 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. The
information  contained in the AP News report may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or  redistributed without the prior written
authority of The Associated Press.





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