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Linux: Paris weighs a shift to open-source camp

by Khairil Yusof last modified 2004-10-17 02:30 AM
Contributors: Jennifer L. Schenker
2004 the International Herald Tribune All Rights Reserved

PARIS The open-source computer system known as Linux won a tough battle over Microsoft earlier this year when the city of Munich decided to change the operating software of 14,000 government computers, despite the personal intervention of Steve Ballmer, Microsoft's chief executive.

Now, it is the city of Paris that is in the sights of the open-source software camp, which has emerged as the only serious competitive threat against Microsoft's 90-plus percent hold on the world market for computer operating systems.

Factors of cost, security and a reluctance to be beholden to a single American software vendor have led governments in Europe and elsewhere to take a hard look at open software like Linux, which is freely modified and shared over the Internet.

Paris's decision on whether to embrace Linux could come as soon as this month and have an impact on the way the rest of Europe swings.

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Source: International Herald Tribune


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