Dutch City of Haarlem migrates to OpenOffice
Earlier
this year, the city was faced with an annual bill of about 500 000 Euro
in licensing fees related to an upgrade from Microsoft Office 97, which
accounted for the majority of its office productivity software. The
city decided to investigate alternatives, and conducted a detailed
function-per-function study comparing the features of OpenOffice.org
(v1.1) with Microsoft Office 2000 in order to evaluate alternative
upgrade paths.
Jan
van de Straat, Director of R&D for the City, and the external IT
consultants conducting the study found that OpenOffice did not lack any
functionality that was used and needed by the City’s employees. The
main issue was the compatibility between the file formats of OpenOffice
and Microsoft products, but this was not a problem for the majority of
applications used. The main problem was that previously developed
customised applications expect Microsoft Office (Word, in particular).
Therefore, for the moment the City continues to use Microsoft Office as
well as OpenOffice.
The
city found its costs for training, development and migration to
OpenOffice to be 50 000 euro, roughly 90% lower than its licence costs
for an upgrade to Microsoft Office 2000.
With regards to open standards,
http://europa.eu.int/ida/en/document/3434/469
Last modified 2004-11-22 02:32 PM