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The U.K.'s National Health Service Licenses JDS
Posted by
timothy
on Mon Aug 30, 2004 01:03 AM
from the licensing-tactics dept.
from the licensing-tactics dept.
deputydink writes "Recently the NHS licensed from Sun 5000 seats of its JDS system for tactical deployments within the health care service, adding that it deemed JDS a viable desktop alternative for certain types of user communities. The NHS has already deployed JDS in its back-office. This could be the high profile boost for JDS subscription services that Sun needs."
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The U.K.'s National Health Service Licenses JDS
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Yikes. (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Yikes. (Score:5, Interesting)
As an ex Sun guy with plenty of JDS experience let me just say this is farking insane unless these tactical deployments are not mission critical deployments.
Don't worry, I imagine the deployments will be standard desktop use. However, from the article:
An NHS representative could not elaborate on exactly where in the agency's sprawling system, incorporating tens of thousands of users, the software would be deployed.
This makes me concerned that the NHS administration is adopting the classic 'head up arse' approach to IT administration, buying 'cool' new kit before they have any clue what they will be using it for.
Re:Yikes. (Score:5, Funny)
(http://www.whitepost.org.uk/)
Not a troll, but you're not very familiar with UK governement IT projects, are you?
Re:Yikes. (Score:5, Insightful)
(http://www.gorby.be/)
Isn't it so that Sun for example may well be making money on open source, but has also made Openoffice.org possible by releasing the source code for their office suite? Red hat has also done some good things.
Furthermore, the developpers that do the work for (almost) nothing do that of their own choice, and if they wouldn't like that someone else would profit from that, they wouldn't work on open source software. The fact that some large companies make money with open source is even a good thing, since that kind of industry backing will make linux and open source a more credible alternative for closed source software in some cases.
All this support from those large companies is certainly good for extending the user base, which IMHO gives those aforementioned developers a good feeling, because more people are able to enjoy their work.
Re:Yikes. (Score:4, Insightful)
(http://slashdot.org/)
No. I don't.
First, they're not making much if anything.
Second, much of the payback of open source is in collaboration; I craft a stick to scratch an itch, and you improve on it so we both benifit. If you sell that improved stick for a profit, I still get the improvements free.^
The amount of waste and rework involved in closed + propriatory software is amazing, so using that instead of OSS has a steep cost.
I don't feel bad about Microsoft or Corel loosing out when OpenOffice is used, let alone when FreeBSD or Linux are used instead of OSX or Windows.
IT and the NHS (Score:5, Interesting)
(Last Journal: Friday September 24 2004, @01:13AM)
Just a question- (Score:5, Interesting)
(http://homerengineeringcorp.net/)
Are we talking ER situations? Homeland Defense/Emergency offices? I mean, the article leaves little mention, just stating that they are to be used in "tactical deployments"?
Any docs out there who can explain?
-thewldisntenuff
Re:Just a question- (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Just a question- (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Just a question- (Score:5, Funny)
(Last Journal: Friday February 18 2005, @07:04PM)
They don't even know what hit them.
Re:Just a question- (Score:4, Interesting)
(http://www.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~sal)
* the NHS direct call centre operation
* the huge adminstration that tracks monitors and pays for
all non-hospital NHS prescriptions
* central and regional management and support -- allocating money
Medical records and open source (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Medical records and open source (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Medical records and open source (Score:4, Insightful)
And that's just one package. The same could be said for glibc, GNOME, XFree, CUPs, Samba, Apache - you name it.
Likewise, the kernel is 2.4.19 based and therefore wouldn't pick up any driver or security fixes that have appeared since. Perhaps Sun / SuSE have retrofitted critical patches, you're still left with a heavily forked and obsolete kernel used by no one else. There have been eight 2.4.x releases since, and already most other dists are on 2.6.x with a 2.4.x fallback if need be.
And perhaps the update mechanism itself is less friendly than other systems causing users to ignore it. It's fairly trivial to update SuSE or RH, but apparantly you have to type your serial number to update in JDS. Who is going to bother with that?
Also, JDS has a bunch of proprietary Sun code sitting on top for network deployment & management. Who's to say what remote exploits are lurking within it since no one has had the chance to review it?
So old doesn't imply secure. Of course the same could be said for Red Hat, but to be honest, their QA and hardware support is miles better, upgrading is easy, and their tools are open source and can be reviewed by any one.
Re:Medical records, open source and security (Score:4, Interesting)
(http://bcgreen.com/~samuel | Last Journal: Friday April 30 2004, @02:42PM)
The last thing you want to hear in the middle of an emergency resuscitation is: "I can't pull the chart up, I've got a virus!"
Re:Medical records and open source (Score:5, Interesting)
You mis-spelled "cost".
But here we don't have HIPPAA, and everyone in the NHS runs windows computers with viruses on them (not as much of an exaggeration as you think), it's common for whole departments to lose their computing facilities when a new virus hits, it's common for confidential information to make its way from a virus-infected computer to the internet. Many [most?] computers are never patched, and while they've got a firewall "around" the whole lot, everyone who's got laptops in their office (many doctors use tablet PCs) knows how effective one exterior firewall is.
They were once trying to roll-out an entire public-key cryptosystem in one go, which was the last time security was mentioned. I don't know if they were going to install a separate "prescription-signing" computer in each doctor's office, or install something on their Windows machine, but either way the talk is of extremely high cost, and extremely low value. Perhaps all the years of removing "non-medical" administrative positions are taking their toll, but more likely it's this way because everything related to UK government is that way.
Of course, people on slashdot will say that nothing should be connected to the internet, but then medical researchers are just the same as physics researchers -- websites and email addresses and newsgroups are very useful tools for doing research. And the surgeries in the shetland-end of nowhere with dial-up access to the mainland probably aren't going to have security of any sort, indeed I doubt that anyone has the funds to implement "military grade" 2-unconnected-networks security.
They just signed another contract for a quintillion windows licenses a year ago for both government and the NHS, if that gives any idea of their preferred platform
JDS has been a Godsend for me (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:JDS has been a Godsend for me (Score:4, Insightful)
(http://thekerrs.ca/ | Last Journal: Tuesday October 01 2002, @05:40PM)
Re:JDS has been a Godsend for me (Score:5, Insightful)
If you want to make it easy for non-gurus to manage Linux, you need some management tools with GUI - and in the end, that is what JDS is.
Re:JDS has been a Godsend for me (Score:5, Funny)
(http://bcgreen.com/~samuel | Last Journal: Friday April 30 2004, @02:42PM)
....
When all you know is garbage, mediocre looks like heaven.
This is on the Desktop! (Score:1, Insightful)
Mozilla on JDS (Score:4, Interesting)
The last time I used JDS, the version of Mozilla preinstalled was 1.4, which did not support NTLM proxy authentication and thus I had major issues getting the computer on the Internet.
In the end, I just installed Firefox.
Re:Mozilla on JDS (Score:5, Informative)
(Last Journal: Friday February 18 2005, @07:04PM)
It would be unwise for Sun to run Mozilla 1.5 or 1.6, because in between the 'extra stable' releases a lot of things change and (historically) break.
Once a year or so, the code gets the big projects landed and the tree gets a more thorough debugging than normal, any forks happen (camino, netscape, galeon), and a 'benchmark' release is made.
JDS Back Office ? (Score:5, Informative)
Probably not, although I hesitate to suggest that a
Could be a ploy (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Could be a ploy (Score:5, Insightful)
(http://bcgreen.com/~samuel | Last Journal: Friday April 30 2004, @02:42PM)
If, on the other hand, MS realizes that you're bluffing, (and they'll probably get real good at sussing out badly designed deployments, if they haven't already), they might just deide to play hardball.
The deployments that have caused MS to really cut their prices were deployments where the customer was very serious about going to a non-MS solution.
In the Munich case, they went Linux in spite of MS's price cutting, In the British case, they had already done a (successful) pilot.
Now, if I were the CIO of a large company, I would definitely look at doing a couple of pilot projects. Worst case, I might get MS to drop their prices by a few extra points. Best case, I might find that the Open Source is a huge step better than the MS product, and worth changing to at any price.
Two key issues... (Score:5, Interesting)
(Last Journal: Monday August 22 2005, @11:02AM)
1. Printing: Best way forward is internet printing. Very difficult to get the right drivers working the right way on each desktop, but for internet printing.
2. Drivers for medical devices: Most devices come with Windows drivers only. Hardware mfrs. and Linux distors really need to take some effort here. By the way, this is a weal area for Windows versions as well. Every new OS release or Service Pack screws up some or other device driver or dll, and some app stops working!
Currently I use Windows on those m/cs that are interfaced to these devices or printers. There's no major issue with plain Linux distros and no major advantage having JDS instead.
-
5K is not that much is it? (Score:4, Interesting)
Don't get me wrong. I am glad there are 5K more linux desktops in the world but Sun was hinting at much bigger numbers.
Re:5K is not that much is it? (Score:4, Interesting)
(http://www.whitepost.org.uk/)
However, it can't have escaped NHS management attention that a high-profile pilot of Linux on the desktop is an excellent way to negotiate discounts on Windows. Given the quantities involved, it is possible that the discounts could be worth considerably more than 5000 "throwaway" JDS licenses.
WTF is JDS? (Score:1)
Just to confirm (Score:4, Insightful)
Microsoft selling software by subscription = bad.
Correct ?
Open Source term being abused as per usual (Score:5, Insightful)
(http://hands.com/)
StarOffice == Open Source? I think not.
If we'd stuck to calling Free Software, Free Software, we wouldn't have to put up with this nonsense, but as it is we have a situation where people are in the throws of defining new government policy in the UK stating that the default purchasing policy in the UK should include "Open Source" software, despite the fact that nobody involved seems to have any clear idea what Open Source means.
That allows Sun to come in and say something like "StarOffice is Open Source becasue you get to see some of the source" and the NHS folks presumably say "Fair enough, where do we sign for a site license?"
I'm surprised Microsoft don't go totally ape about this, but then again, they probably think that JDS is open source too. It wouldn't surprise me if the Sun sales folks think that it's Open Source, in the same way that most SUSE sales folks used to think that SuSE was Open Source, despite the old YaST license.
Re:Open Source term being abused as per usual (Score:4, Insightful)
(http://www.usermode.org/ | Last Journal: Tuesday April 17 2007, @09:13PM)
Oh poppycock! 99.99% of the world has never seen "The GNU Revised English Dictionary", let alone opened it up to read its particular definition of "free". Most people using English terms and phrases will be using a more traditional dictionary such as Webster's or Oxford's.
You can bitch all you want about the poor state of English having only one word for "free" and two for "freedom", but it is the language people will most likely be using when they run across the phrase "Free Software". No amount of linguistic redaction can change this.
The fact of the matter is that people will confuse "Free Software" with something other than what RMS intended. You cannot change this. Go tell your Grandma that a piece of software is "free", and the very last thing she will think is that it confers the right to redistribute modifications of the source code. Ask her if Internet Explorer is free, and she will most likely say yes. After all, it *IS* free. The FSF's intended definition just isn't being transmitted successfully by capitalizing the word "Free".
Yes, people get confused with the term "Open Source Software". No, it's not the most precise term in the universe. But it's far more accurate and unambiguous than "Free Software".
Not Enough Information (Score:1)
(Last Journal: Tuesday October 02, @09:54AM)
[Yes, I know. It wouldn't be /. without rampant assumptions being made.]
JDS is not Linux? (Score:1)
Sun's Linux distribution is not Linux anymore?
Re:Thats good... (Score:3, Informative)