[LINK] McNealy pumps open standards at gov't trade show

Bernard Robertson-Dunn brd at iimetro.com.au
Thu Mar 9 10:02:00 EST 2006


McNealy pumps open standards at gov't trade show
Grant Gross
IDG News Service
Computerworld
09/03/2006 08:22:45
http://www.computerworld.com.au/index.php?id=576886683&eid=-255

Government agencies need to move toward open standards and managed services to
cut IT costs and improve service to customers, Sun Microsystems Chief Executive
Officer Scott McNealy said Wednesday.

McNealy used part of his keynote and a later press conference at the FOSE
technology-in-government trade show to trumpet Sun products and push for open
standards, saying open standards and open-source software can reduce the exit
costs associated with IT products.

Vendors like to brag about the acquisition and maintenance costs, but few talk
about exit costs that can dwarf those other expenses, even though technology
products have the "self life of a banana," he said.

McNealy, whose company pushes the open standards Java platform and participates
in the Open Document Format Alliance, recommended government agencies buy
commercial software built on open-source code, instead of downloading
open-source software and running it without commercial support. But software
built on open code allows customers to change vendors without massive exit
costs, he said.

"Sharing ... lowers your barrier to exit," he said. "By building on open-source
software, you're guaranteed that if I overcharge, somebody else will start a
business based on the reference code and charge less."

McNealy also focused on managed services, saying nearly all computing
functions, including storage and computing power, will soon be available on a
managed grid. The U.S. Congress might have to change some procurement laws to
allow many government agencies to take advantage of this computing services
grid, but most agencies not affiliated with military or intelligence functions
could benefit from a grid of managed services, he said.

"The barrier to exit on the grid is zero," he said. "When you're done, you
leave."

Sun's computing grid has been delayed, however, partially because of U.S.
Department of State concerns about foreign governments using it. Sun had
planned to implement its grid in early 2005, but Sun officials said last month
that State Department concerns about the computing power used as a weapon by
foreign governments have held up the project.

McNealy defended the grid concept in a press conference, saying it makes sense
for government agencies to in effect outsource their computing functions. "The
point is, is the government in the business of maintaining [IT]
infrastructure?" he said. "I don't think so."

The concept of software as a managed service is already popular, he added.
"We're taking it one step down -- computing as a service," he said.

Asked about the security implications of government agencies moving many
functions to a commercial managed service, McNealy said he saw little cause for
concern. Security breaches happen, he acknowledged, but the private sector
already holds much more valuable personal information about most people than
the government does, he said.

"The problem with the government blowing it is, we can try to vote them out,
but that's hard," he said. "If an enterprise blows it, we can move to another
supplier, and they're out of business. The government never goes out of
business."

--
Beware geeks bringing gifts
-- adapted from Cassandra, by brd

Regards
brd

Bernard Robertson-Dunn
Sydney Australia
brd at iimetro.com.au



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