Czech Post Turns to SUSE Linux 21
ssbljk writes "Czech Post is the second largest employer in the Czech Republic with nearly 3,400 post offices and 40,000 employees. The company delivers nearly a billion letters and receives more than 100 million postal orders each year. Czech Post relies on APOST, a customized system used by 20,000 employees for all postal operations. APOST had been running on a range of operating systems including DOS and Microsoft Windows NT, but reached a point where running in a proprietary environment was proving too costly. With a disparate environment across 3,400 locations, Czech Post was experiencing increased administration costs, as well as downtime and security issues. In just 10 months, Czech Post installed the new SUSE LINUX-based APOST system on 4,000 servers at 3,400 post offices across the country, as well as at 12,000 client terminals used by 20,000 employees. The company now has a centralized infrastructure with support for remote monitoring that will significantly reduce administration costs. "
Not on the front page? (Score:3, Interesting)
Excellent news... (Score:2)
Re:Excellent news... (Score:2, Insightful)
If you can get everything you need for your business to run under Linux, the productivity time you'll save due to the prevention of people downloading games, demos, and possibly other movies to their desktop will no doubt be significant.
And the fact that your average user probably wouldn't know how to get a program like a movie viewer
File this (Score:3, Funny)
Re:File this (Score:1)
At least it isn't the banks bouncing the Czech's...
A New Hope? (Score:5, Informative)
In a wider context, unfortunately Ministery of Education [www.msmt.cz] is still under heavy M$ lobby influence and a bilions of CZK costly Internet for schools [indos.cz] project is still chained to Windows, no open data formats for documents available but the IE's nonstandard HTML dialect (generated by winword) and only Windows applications could apply for the project.
As a result, typical czech school network is a paradise tool for spammers.
In a related story... (Score:4, Funny)
Frontpage (Score:1)
So what do they use? (Score:1)
More of this to come (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:More of this to come (Score:2)
Ah, I get it. (Score:1, Offtopic)
Web Server (Score:1)
Re:Web Server (Score:2)
The webserver's probably running on openBSD
Re:Web Server (Score:1)
Re:Web Server (Score:2)
Re:Web Server (Score:1)
Well Done ... (Score:3, Insightful)
I've worked in and with several eastern european state sponsored organisations and it was the most godawful experience. Tenured civil servants with little impetues or motivation to change the status quo just love to block or ignore change until it either goes away or they retire. Co-ordinating between the number of people who need to sign off on even the most mundane aspects of organising just an infrastucture review can be one of the most challenging aspects to pulling this sort of project off.
Given that backround and the horrendously splintered and fractured set-up they appear to have had this project is nothing short of fantastic. It's the kind of thing we all read about in the text books and can make the correct arguements for. While switching an entire orgnaisation across is something we know to be possible and advantageous there are precious few opportunities for it to be implemented in the world.
So Bravo to the team , moving from fractured to streamlined centralised management , fine tuning processes and and trimming operations down is no small feat , particularly in the state environment.
On the Tech side , Bravo too , I would have stayed with the MS side but that's because it's my forte and I know I could have reduced costs in a comporable fashion. Hat's off though , such a shift in logic and thinking shows real
Novell making good progress (Score:1)
Definitely front page material.