Scotland Yard Ditches Open Source Software in Favour of Microsoft Office

‘The Central Scotland Police is removing Sun Microsystems Inc’s StarOffice productivity software from about 400 PCs and switching to Microsoft Corp’s Office System, citing lower maintenance costs and the need to interoperate more smoothly with other departments running Windows.

‘It’s not really based on any ideological argument about open-source software, it’s based on pure business needs,’ David Stirling, head of IT for Central Scotland Police, said of the decision to switch.

In the past, when the agency deployed a new police application on StarOffice and Linux, the application had to be customized to work with the open-source software, Stirling said. It was also more difficult to configure the open-source software so that police officers could access their files from any police station, he said.

It is the latest anecdote in a wider tussle for business between Microsoft and open-source software in Europe. Several organizations, particularly public bodies, have been adopting or experimenting with Linux and other open-source products, but the move by the Scottish police shows the migrations are not all one-way.’

Source: James Niccolai, IDG News Service.