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Dec. 15, 2004 Issue of CIO Magazine | In this section....

ALTERNATIVE PLATFORMS

What It's Like To....
Move a Company to Open Source

BY T.J.* | director of it at a manufacturing company


In this section....
Introduction
Achieve 100% Uptime
Send People into Danger
Survive Charley
Take Your Application Source Code Out of Escrow
Bear Witness To IT History
Walk In Your Customers' Shoes
Move a Company to Open Source
Work For A 24/7 Entrepreneur
Be The Last Man Standing
Bond On Mt. Fuji
Be An Early Adopter
Lose Your Job
Save Four Lives
Pull The Plug On A Multimillion-Dollar Project
Brief The President
Testify Before Congress
Be The First CIO Of The U.S. Senate
Walk Into An IT Disaster
Get The Job
Not Get The Job
Build The World's Most Powerful Supercomputer
Be The Fall Guy
Live In A Two-CIO Family
Move To A New Industry
Survive The Pentagon Attack
Take A Real Vacation
Be Treated Like A Rock Star
Be An American Abroad
Catch A Killer
Be Different
Work In Iraq
Be A Man In A Woman's World
Be Hired By The FBI
Start Your Own Company
Save $55,000
Fire Half Your Staff
Downshift Your Life
Go From CIO To CEO
 
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About three months ago, I was hired by an 80-person manufacturing company as director of IT, primarily because of my experience with Linux. Job number one, they said, was to ditch as much Microsoft software as possible. They had just acquired a company that used Linux; it was time for the home office to switch over too.

The company's motivation was price and stability. It needed $50,000 just to catch up on its Microsoft licenses. At the same time, several Windows servers—including the mail server—were crashing daily. My initial research showed that if we spent $1,000 on hardware and software, we could save $10,000 to $50,000 per year in license fees and other maintenance costs.

But as soon as I settled in, my boss, the CIO, began to get cold feet. Most of her objections were to changing "where people would have to click."

When I tried to push for the changeover to Linux by mentioning the license issues, the CIO's response was, "Well, we haven't been audited yet." Cost and compliance were taking a backseat to comfort with where people clicked.

And suddenly there was doubt about maturity. I'm constantly asked, "So, what makes this ready for the enterprise?" I hate that.

At least I've got a few Linux boxes inside the building. We've also laid out a long-term agenda that includes open source as the primary domain controller. In six months, I hope to have moved a few functions over to Linux: printing, some file-sharing, backup, DNS, FTP, routing/firewall and the primary domain controller.

On the other hand, the e-mail system—the single biggest problem on the network—is going to live on MS Exchange/NT4 (which, by the way, hasn't been patched in years), probably until the sun goes supernova. I've demo'd Linux mail servers running with Evolution, the Linux mail client (which is really quite good), but my boss thinks people wouldn't know where to click.

It looks like the weaning process is going to take longer than I thought.

—As told to Scott Berinato

* TJ requested anonymity.



 Work For A 24/7 Entrepreneur




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In the Dec. 15, 2004 Issue of CIO:

http://www.cio.com/CIO

CIO Magazine - December 15, 2004
© 2004 CXO Media Inc.


http://www.cio.com/archive/121504/cio_open.html




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