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French Police Migrating To Linux 44

kernel_dan writes "According to heise online, la Gendarmerie Nationale française (French police) will be changing all their computers to Linux. The numbers: 35,000 computers by the end of this month and 80,000 by the end of the summer will be running Linux."
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French Police Migrating To Linux

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  • RTFA (Score:5, Informative)

    by madaxe42 ( 690151 ) on Wednesday January 19, 2005 @10:33AM (#11407595) Homepage
    It'd be great if the moderators bothered to read the article. They are NOT switching to Linux, they are switching to OPENOFFICE.
    • Re:RTFA (Score:2, Informative)

      by madaxe42 ( 690151 )
      Ok... Replying to my own comment - how sad!

      According to the linked article (in French) they have been evaluating open source solutions, however want to wait and see how things pan out for Munich before moving to Linux altogether, as it is, there have been worries about compatibility with openoffice of XML documents which they apparently generate with MSOffice. Also, 35,000 machines in a month is one hell of a quick rollout.
      • OpenOffice.org is a big step and allows the Frensh police to decide what platform they will use. If they stay with MSO, then they are stuck on MS-Windows. If they start producing documents in the DRM'd MSO 2003 format, then migration to *any* competing product will be virtually impossible.

        Just talk of dropping MSO will get Ballmer or Gates on the way soon. Right now Gates is running around the yard in Brazil [tietokone.fi] trying to get President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silvan back on the leash.

    • +5 insightful.
    • Damn, I was really hoping they were switching, because I had this great French bashing joke:

      They aren't switching because of the performance/reliability/security/price of Linux, but rather because of the cute penguin.

      Oh well...
    • Huh. Still... I half expect to see a followup to this, 6 mos down the road... "Secret Negotiations Revealed! French Police Exchange Putain et Fromage for Office and XP"
  • by jamsho ( 721796 ) on Wednesday January 19, 2005 @10:33AM (#11407603)

    "French police to switch to OpenOffice
    The French police are planning to switch from Microsoft Office to OpenOffice, the French industry news service Toolinux reports. By the end of January some 35,000 PCs and workstations are to be equipped with the open source office suite; by this summer the number is to reach 80,000. The French police expect to be able to cut costs amounting to more than two million euros by this move. (Robert W. Smith) /
    (jk/c't)"
  • Another inaccuracy (Score:5, Informative)

    by LeninZhiv ( 464864 ) * on Wednesday January 19, 2005 @10:38AM (#11407647)
    La gendarmerie nationale [defense.gouv.fr] is not the same thing as la police nationale [interieur.gouv.fr]--the latter of whom I would call "the French police". The gendarmerie would be better described as "the French military police", since they are considered part of the armed forces whereas the police are civilian--although they do also take on roles analagous to those of US State troopers.
    • The gendarmes also act as "State troopers" (and military police, Secret Service, etc.), that is. I just realised that the "they" in parent was a little ambiguous.
    • by imr ( 106517 )
      They are not "considered part of", they ARE military.
    • Well Actually, the Gendarmerie Nationale is the French counter-part of the FBI and the State troopers combined. And no they are not the Military police, since france has their own MP corp. The fact that they are part of the military is really just a historical tradition.

  • Did the submitter not read the article himself? It clearly says that the French Police will be migrating to OpenOffice from MS Office; nothing is said of Linux.

    You realize there's a difference, right? And while this is an important change, it's not the same.
  • by AtariAmarok ( 451306 ) on Wednesday January 19, 2005 @10:48AM (#11407766)
    Here's a new logo [internoodle.com] suggestion.
  • The article reads, in full:

    French police to switch to OpenOffice

    The French police are planning to switch from Microsoft Office to OpenOffice, the French industry news service Toolinux reports. By the end of January some 35,000 PCs and workstations are to be equipped with the open source office suite; by this summer the number is to reach 80,000. The French police expect to be able to cut costs amounting to more than two million euros by this move. (Robert W. Smith) / (jk/c't)

    While it's good to see

  • Microsoft move all internal support to linux - see their site [microsoft.com].

    Oh no, I misread that, it say 'we hate linux'. Fuck it, let's post the article anyway.
  • by file-exists-p ( 681756 ) on Wednesday January 19, 2005 @11:50AM (#11408552)
    It may seem confusing, but the "gendarmerie" is not the police. It is an army force dedicated to civil troubles and criminal investigation.
    • if not an "army force dedicated to civil troubles and criminal investigation"?

      Down here we do have a lot of different police forces:

      Each city can have its "city guard"... they must only guard the City's property.

      Each state has up to three police forces: "military police" (they do rounds and prevent crime... they are called "military" because they have a military-like organization), "civil (or judiciary) police" (they investigate crimes) and "military fire corps" (they fight fires and do other disaster re
      • military police is not called "military" because it has military-like organisation. it is called "military" because it is part of armed forces and is policing members of armed forces.
        • Our military police is called military not because it is armed (civil police is armed too), not because it is an "armed force" (military polices are incorporated state-wide, not country-wide and they do not have armed force status, their heads do not make part of any Major State as the Army, Air Force and Navy do) but because of its command structure and the status of its men as military personell (some priviledges, low salaries, lots of things that are not criminalized to a civilian are to a military perso
      • The difference between french "police" and "gendarmerie" is clear: the former is part of the "ministere de l'interieur" (minister of internal affairs ?) and the second is part of the "ministere de la defense" (minister of defence).

        From a more practical perspective, there seem to be far more discipline and order in the gendarmerie than in the police.
  • for Inspector Clouseau? [imdb.com]
    "Now then, what do we know? One, that Professor Fassbinder and his daughter have been kidnapped. Two, that someone has kidnapped them. Three, that my hand is on fire. "
    "You fool! You have broken my pointing stick! Now I have nothing to point with! "

A morsel of genuine history is a thing so rare as to be always valuable. -- Thomas Jefferson

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