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With a flurry of big contracts, Linux gains traction at government agencies
Associated Press | May 29, 2002 | JIM KRANE - AP Technology Writer

Posted on 05/29/2002 9:58:19 PM PDT by HAL9000

NEW YORK, May 29, 2002 (AP WorldStream via COMTEX) -- Linux, the open-source operating system with an outsider mystique, is now proliferating on powerful government computer systems in the United States and abroad with technology giants increasingly providing support.

At a Tokyo trade show on Friday, IBM Corp. was announcing the sale of more than 75 Linux-based computer systems to U.S. agencies including the Air Force, the Defense, Agriculture and Energy departments and the Federal Aviation Administration.

Overseas, Linux systems help keep order in Germany's parliament as well as China's post office, France's culture, defense and education ministries and other federal agencies in Europe and Asia.

"It's an interesting trend and we're seeing a lot of organizations who are very interested in open source software in general and Linux in particular," said Dan Kusnetzky of the technology research firm IDC.

Unlike most commercial software, the underlying code in open source software is free and benefits from continual scrutiny and improvements made by a community of programmers.

Proponents say that makes Linux more stable and secure than, say, Microsoft products - a claim Microsoft and others dispute.

Hewlett-Packard Co. recently sold its second Linux system to the U.S. Department of Energy - a dlrs 24.5 million computer fingered as the world's most powerful Linux configuration. The Energy Department will use the machine for biological and environmental research.

And Red Hat Inc., which sells a popular version of Linux software and tools, says the European Commission is running its software, along with ministries in France and Germany.

Now that adoption of Linux is being pushed by the likes of IBM and HP, the once-renegade operating system has gained a gleam of respectability, said James Lewis, a technology analyst at the Center for Strategic and International Studies who helped formulate Clinton administration encryption policy.

Until recently, Linux filtered into U.S. government computers through system administrators who simply installed it because it is cheap. But increasingly, experts say, agencies are willing to pay for high-performance hardware tailored to Linux.

Linux has made little headway in the desktop operating system market dominated by Microsoft because of incompatibilities with popular Microsoft applications that people use every day.

However, Linux is now the world's No. 2 server operating system, with about 27 percent of the market behind Microsoft's various Windows systems, which run more than 40 percent of servers and most desktop computers, according to the technology research firm IDC.

It is most appropriate for certain math-intensive supercomputing applications as well as Internet servers and closed networks that tie together many branch locations such as those of a bank, Kusnetzky said.

The software appears to be winning friends among military and intelligence agencies.

A study completed for the Pentagon by the Mitre Corp. last week identified 249 U.S. government uses of open-source computer systems and tools, with Linux running on several Air Force computers, along with systems run by the Marine Corps, the Naval Research Laboratory and others.

The report recommended further use of open-source computing systems, on the grounds that they were less vulnerable to cyberattacks and far cheaper.

Microsoft has lobbied the Pentagon against certain versions of open source software, claiming that government research into open source software is subsidizing its competitors.

"We have had discussions voicing our concerns," said Microsoft spokesman Jon Murchinson.

At the U.S. Air Force SEEK EAGLE office at Eglin Air Force Base in Florida - the office charged with certifying that bombs and missiles can be safely carried and released by U.S. aircraft - researchers are using a high-performance IBM Linux system to model weapons' trajectories.

The Air Force unit bought a 64-processor IBM Linux computing cluster, along with three years of tech support, for dlrs 130,000 - far less than the dlrs 750,000 Silicon Graphics system it replaced, said Steven Standley, an aerospace engineer working on the project.

IBM said military and intelligence agencies in the United States, Canada, Germany, France, England, Spain, China and Singapore have purchased its Linux systems.

And the U.S. National Security Agency offers its own Security-Enhanced Linux software for free download from its Web site.

With so many software developers tinkering with Linux's open code, new versions of the software show continual improvements, said Steve Solazzo, IBM's general manager for Linux.

"Linux is maturing very quickly, adding feature and function incredibly fast," Solazzo said.

---

On the Net:

http://www.nsa.gov/selinux

Copyright 2002 Associated Press, All rights reserved



TOPICS: Government; Technical
KEYWORDS: government; linux; techindex
When the government starts procuring Linux systems, that will do more to bust up the Microsoft monopoly than all of the antitrust cases.
1 posted on 05/29/2002 9:58:19 PM PDT by HAL9000
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To: *Tech_index

2 posted on 05/29/2002 10:06:16 PM PDT by Libertarianize the GOP
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To: HAL9000
Good for Uncle Sam. Unfortunately, that will still leave Microsoft with six heads and eight horns.
3 posted on 05/30/2002 12:32:00 AM PDT by John Locke
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