LiMux review 2009

Again one more year is over now and yes, it’s time to look back what has happened in 2009 in and around the LiMux project. That’s my personal look back, not neccessarily the one of the City of Munich.

There are again some rumors about LiMux’ dead here in Munich. I don’t want to comment on the origin of them, but to the responsible company: This doesn’t work out. LiMux is more alive than ever and the story goes on very well. Sure ;-)

To encounter the many rumors and anti-lobbying activities, I’m running my personal comments in this blog. And in 2009, I started an own category “LiMux questions” with the first article “Why did Munich choose free software“. Feel free to ask questions to me.

ODF as standard, OpenOffice.org everywhere

LiMux has achieved one very important goal. The open standard Open Document Format (ODF) is now Munich’s primary used internal document exchange standard, beside of PDF for non-editable documents. Congratulations to all, who made this great success happen! Our standard office workplace consists now of OpenOffice.org (Writer, Calc, Impress, Draw), Mozilla Firefox and Thunderbird and many other sometimes needed apps like e.g. GIMP.

This achievement is not just replacing one office software by another. Well, every workplace is migrated to OpenOffice.org, but it was an almighty effort to be able to do this switch, to get rid of many vendor lock-ins created in the past. Over 20,000 templates have been consolidated and migrated, either to templates, macros or web apps. Most of them use our self developed free software WollMux to assist our employees in the administration’s template jungle. A number of business apps had to be adapted to use ODF instead of vendor locked-in Microsoft mechanisms.

SAP is one of them, one of the apps penetrating many of our business processes, the same like in other big companies/administrations. We did some self customizations to enable the communication with OpenOffice.org. And of course, we shared our experiences (at Linuxtag, thx to Uwe Hähle). We want to publish our customizations, but at the moment the SAP company is examining the legal aspect for some months now. We’ll see, if 2010 might be a break-through.

LiMux Basisclient pilots ready

Another achievement in 2009 was the establishment of linux client pilot areas inside every of our 12 departments. This was, beside the OpenOffice.org migration, the fundamental step to increase the drive for our client migration in general during the upcoming years. Yes, these are only small areas (together with our completely migrated departmetns round about 2,500 clients), but to get them up and running is important to be able to get a closer look into the IT infrastructures, the needed business apps and their interfaces inside of every single department (which invented the wheel for its own in the past). And of course, to train the IT staff step-by-step for this technical change.

LiMux’ Community Engagement

We try to be part of as many as possible events to actively share our experiences and to show: YES, Munich can! If interested, I try to put them into LiMux’ google calendar. We also started our inofficial twitter feeds or identi.ca dents. And I upload some of our talks at planetlimux.

Important for me was the winning of the German DebConf 2011 bid, so I hope to win the global bid in March 2010 and to welcome the Debian community in Munich in 2011.

We’re also part of the Open Source Meeting, a new event created by OpenOffice.org and Mozilla in Munich, which will take place every month from 2011 and targets interested beginners and professional free software enthusiasts as well. @Florian and Carsten: good job, go on!

Of course, I have to mention our WollMux. This year we started the WollMux Roadshow together with DBI company and the Linux Solutions Group (LiSoG), including events in Munich, Stuttgart and Hamburg. It’s like a promotion tour for OpenOffice.org as basis, WollMux for template management and Munich as the one bringing both together. Every event got well criticisms and we’re planning to go on next year.

Improving ODF as leading open standard was the goal of the first ODFplugfest in The Hague. I took part to get an impression of things moving in this (former) battlefield and I was amazed about the team work done there.

We’re committed to give others back our experiences after 2 years of office migration and we took part in the first OpenOffice.org congress of Economy and Administration in Wiesbaden, and we also joined the OOoCon in Orvieto later this year.

LiMux – the upcoming future

The whole project will be adapted during the next months for the final big step, the client migration in general. Some improvements and optimizations in the project structure, to learn from the past and be ready for continuing the success story.

For me there is a big change, a good one in my opinion. From 2010 on I will be responsible for just one topic: Munich’s external IT communication and relationships, especially in the field of open standards and free software. Yes, I worked on this topic also during the last years, but from now, it’s the only one I can improve in a more general view, not only with LiMux as focus. Interesting times ahead for me :-)

And now finally…

I’d like to thank all of my team members, all of our partners, thanks to everyone giving us feedback and helping us by writing free software!

Thank you all and see you next year!

Florian

21 Antworten zu “LiMux review 2009”

  1. Munich Migrates to GNU/Linux, ODF and OpenOffice.org; Microsoft EDGI Still Lurking | Boycott Novell sagt:

    [...] versus Google. Munich’s mayor has protested against OOXML and on they go with ODF. Check out this latest update from the ground: ODF as standard, OpenOffice.org [...]

  2. Cemil sagt:

    Great work, guys!

  3. Oswald Prucker sagt:

    Sehr interessantes update. Verfolge die Geschichte lose seit einiger Zeit und aktuell bei Heise. Die Kommentare dort sind unter aller Kanone. Mir scheint, der größte Teil der Arbeit ist eine plattformunabhängiges Ausmisten. Sowas macht immer mächtig Arbeit. Die Migration ist dann eher nebensächlich. Ich wünsche viel Erfolg. Gar nicht, weil ich so ein Linux-Fanatischer bin (lebe in beiden Welten), sondern weil Vielfalt nun mal das Leben bereichert.

  4. Thomas Weber sagt:

    Hi Florian,

    could you comment further on the need for GIMP, e.g. what it is used for in the Municipality?

    Thanks
    Thomas

  5. Florian Schießl sagt:

    Hi Thomas,

    GIMP is used for a very long time now and the number of employees using this software is increasing. At first it was used by some our IT staff not wanting to waste license fees for “simple” image editing jobs. After this idea spread, these people advised the normal users who need image editing at their departments to try GIMP instead of e.g. Photoshop.

    Nowadays it’s common to use GIMP whenever possible, but of course there are execptions. Our highly skilled PR workers and media designers (regrettably) depend often on proprietary formats and use special apps, sometimes running a MAC. But that’s OK for us, we never wanted to migrate 100% of PCs and apps.

    So overall, GIMP is now on every Windows PC whose owner needs it and GIMP is on every linux client. We offer trainings for GIMP.

    Florian

  6. ac sagt:

    Congratulations to everyone involved.
    The SAP-OOo stuff is especially cool.

  7. Rich on Linux and FOSS! » Blog Archive » h-online.com : Munich administration switches to OpenDocument Format sagt:

    [...] in Munich, the capital of Bavaria, has reached another milestone. According to a 2009 development review that the deputy project leader Florian Schießl  has posted on his blog, open source OpenDocument [...]

  8. Bristol Wireless News » Blog Archive » Free software finds favour in Munich sagt:

    [...] on his blog, deputy project leader Florian Schießl notes a number of major [...]

  9. ODF es el formato de documentos oficial en Munich : Blogografia sagt:

    [...] – Munich administration switches to OpenDocument Format (The H Open) – LiMux review 2009 (blog de Florian Schießl) – GNU/Linux Migration in Munich is in Good Shape (blog de Robert [...]

  10. ODF es el formato de documentos oficial en Munich | Noticortos.com sagt:

    [...] – Munich administration switches to OpenDocument Format (The H Open) – LiMux review 2009 (blog de Florian Schießl) – GNU/Linux Migration in Munich is in Good Shape (blog de Robert [...]

  11. Munich se inunda de documentos ODF | MuyLinux sagt:

    [...] Grandes noticias que esperemos que se extiendan a muchas otras administraciones. Tenéis más detalles sobre el proceso tanto en el citado post de H-Online como en el del blog de SchieBl. [...]

  12. jürgen burmeister sagt:

    Setzt Ihr in München für DTP statt Adobe Scribus ein?

  13. Proyecto LiMux: FOOS en la Administración Pública « Libertad Zero sagt:

    [...] SchieBl, responsable del proceso, cuenta en su blog cómo ODF es ya el estándar para documentos más impotante entre esos organismos públicos, [...]

  14. Florian Schießl sagt:

    Nicht generell Scribus statt Adobe. Für eine Vielzahl der bisherigen Adobe-Lizenzen lässt sich Scribus verwenden, aber nicht für alle. Es bleiben Spezialarbeitsplätze, die aufgrund ihrer besonderen Anforderungen ganz bestimmte Software einsetzen.

  15. Linux Treff » Blog Archive » Münchner Verwaltung hat auf offenes Dokumentenformat umgestellt sagt:

    [...] für den Dokumentenaustausch, teilt der stellvertretende Projektleiter Florian Schießl in einem Rückblick auf das vergangene Jahr in seinem Blog mit. Dazu komme PDF als Standard für nicht-veränderbare [...]

  16. Florian Schießl sagt:

    I received a comment from a@b.com with name dgfh. I do not answer these anonymous comments. If you don’t want to occur on this site, feel free to contact me via limux (at) muenchen (dot) de.

  17. Múnich: un caso de éxito en la migración al software libre | sagt:

    [...] hito importante. El formato ODF es ya el formato estándar por defecto en la administración y su responsable confirma el avance exitoso de la migración que concluirá en [...]

  18. ODF Alliance Newsletter: February 2009 | Boycott Novell sagt:

    [...] MUNICH COMPLETES MIGRATION TO ODF [...]

  19. Mathias Habel sagt:

    Eine Frage: ihr habt jetzt nach sieben Jahren 20% der Clients auf Linux gehoben? Was hat das gekostet? Bis wann sollen die restlichen Clients migriert sein? 2012?
    Sind 9 Jahre nicht was heftig für eine “einfache” Clientmigration?

  20. Floschi’s Blog» Blogarchiv » Quality over time in Munich sagt:

    [...] By the successful switch to the open standard “Open Document Format” (using OpenOffice.org on all desktops) we cut off the plenty lock-ins from one (business) app to one single office suite, only available for – you got it! – one single operating system. Now we are free to chose whatever we want! I blogged about this in my 2009 review. [...]

  21. Florian Schießl sagt:

    Hi Mathias,

    ich hab gerade einen umfangreichen Beitrag zur zeitlichen Komponente geschrieben: Quality over time.

    In Sachen Budget kann ich nur wiederholen, was in den aktuellen Vortragsfolien steht: wir haben knapp über 50% des veranschlagten Budgets ausgegeben.

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