Din cite am inteles eu nu e o propunere legislativa ci doar un ghid;
mai mult decit atit, din tarile care au contribuit la raport lipsesc doua
cu greutate (UK si Franta).
Personal cred ca o sa mai dureze un pic pina o sa vedem asa ceva,
exista inca aplicatii business care lipsesc sau sunt jalnice pe linux;
exista SCO :( ...
Ghidul in sine reprezinta un pas totusi mare, in special in conextul
problemelor M$ cu UE relativ la monopol si al modelurilor altor tari
care utilizeaza Linux (cred ca in Asia mai ales).

Silviu

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Behalf Of
Sebastian Taralunga
Sent: Thursday, October 23, 2003 2:24 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [rlug] Re: Europe issues open source migration tips


Silviu,

mesajul tau mi se pare extrem de interesant desi, din pacate, pare sa
scape ne-bagat in seama din cauz flame-urilor legate de un articol prost
documentat si de dorinta unora de a se contrazice cu toata lumea numai
de dragul contrazicerii. Daca aceasta intitativa va fi aprobata
(atentie, nu ma pricep prea bine la legislatie sau "IANAL" cum ar zice
altii) atunci implicatiile ei ar fi enorme. Stiu din proprie experienta
ce inseamna pentru o firma mare din Romania faptul ca in legislatia UE
apare o modificare. Mai devreme sau mai tarziu astfel de legi vor
trebuie aplicate si in Romania iar implicatiile sunt enorme. Sa speram
ca nu va fi doar o intiativa ci chiar o lege.

Thanx,

Sebastian
Silviu Simen wrote:

>Am dar de curind peste documentul asta, nu stiu daca e nou sau a mai
>circulat, insa mi s-a parut bine scris si folositor:
>       Atricolul : http://www.vnunet.com/News/1145163
>       Ghidul propriu-zis :
>http://europa.eu.int/ISPO/ida/export/files/en/1603.pdf
>       O comparatie OSS-proprietary :
>http://europa.eu.int/ISPO/ida/export/files/en/1604.xls
>
><<
>A European Commission initiative has issued guidelines to member
governments
>on how to migrate to open source software on both servers and desktops.
>
>Designed to support the rapid electronic exchange of information between
>member states' administrations, the guidelines are aimed at IT managers in
>public administrations, and includes information on staff changes,
>interoperability, security and mobile and remote user support.
>
>Part of the EC, the Interchange of Data between Administrators (IDA) drew
up
>the Open Source Migration Guidelines to set out the basic principles that
>countries should follow.
>
>Nine member states provided input from their own practical experience,
>excluding the UK, which did not participate.
>
>They place considerable emphasis on desktop and groupware migration, with
>details of the open source alternatives to, for instance, Windows
>applications. But it stresses that handling inter-working with existing
>systems is vital.
>
>The guidelines recommend that organisations should:
>
>    * Have a clear understanding of the reasons to migrate before starting.
>    * Ensure active support from IT staff and users.
>    * Have a 'champion for change', higher up in the organisation the
>better.
>    * Build up open source software expertise and relationships.
>    * Start with non-critical systems.
>    * Ensure that each step is manageable.
>
>On its website IDA said: "These guidelines have been designed to help
public
>administrators decide whether a migration to [open source] should be
>undertaken and describe, in broad technical terms, how such a migration
>could be carried out.
>
>"They are based on practical experience of a limited number of publicly
>available case studies, and cover a wide range of management and technical
>concerns."
>
>
>
>Silviu
>
>
>---
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>
>
>



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