French government to test open source on the desktop
The French government will install open source software on the desktop as part of Project ADELE, a plan to computerize much of the country’s administration by 2007, a government official said Wednesday. The administration will migrate a significant number of its desktops to open source operating systems and application software, according to Jacques Sauret, director of the French Agency for the Development of the Electronic Administration.
Read the complete story .
Yankee Group: Voice over wireless LAN is picking up steam
- Gigabyte moves Firewire and USB port
- Intel claims breakthrough in silicon optical products
- Gateway has fastest-growing revenue in volume server market
- Cracks appear in Bluetooth security
- Dell offers flexible, mobile presentation solution
- Tax-free Internet days numbered
- DRAMeXchange: DDR spot prices drop slightly
- Nintendo N5 set to make E3 2005 appearance
- More ATI R420 details emerge
Report: Taiwan's motherboard makers may have passed their peak
- Doomjuice.B attacks Microsoft's website
- Nvidia develops graphics accelerators for Palm handhelds
- SGI in talks to sell Alias graphics business
- Lite-On IT reportedly obtains orders for slim 8x DVD burners from Dell
- Motorola counts on new phones to boost market share in China to 25%
- Intel executive touts Grantsdale chipset, assures sufficient supply of DDR2
- VIA Announces KT880 Dual Channel Chipset for the AMD Athlon XP Processor
- D-Link Corporation Promotes Steven Joe to CEO of North American Region
- W3C Approves Pair of Semantic Web Specs
Sponsored
See more
Latest news
Miscellaneous Previous news
Partners




