Heather Carver faced major dilemmas when she became the IT director at Windsor Unified School District in California one year ago. There was no virus protection, no data backup, and upgrading to current Microsoft technologies would have cost more than $100,000, half of the district’s IT budget. Buying security from Trend Micro to cover all seven schools would have cost $200,000 a year.
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“When I got here a year ago they did not have an IT manager or director,” Carver said this week while giving a presentation at the Gartner Open Source Summit in Las Vegas. “It was basically someone who had some computer experience who fell into it. I had to do a complete review of my entire district, the desktop and servers, software licensing.”
The solution to most of Windsor’s problems boiled down to two words: open source.
Carver dramatically reduced costs by moving about 60% of software to open source, while also saving on hardware expenses by employing virtualization and thin client technology.
Windsor spent about $2,500 on AVG security products designed for open source operating systems, a fraction of the prices charged by Trend Micro, according to Carver.
Windsor’s “mixed source” approach includes OpenOffice, SuSE Linux Enterprise Server, SuSE Linux Enterprise Desktop, and proprietary technologies like Microsoft Windows Server, Novell NetWare and Novell ZENworks.
IT operating expenses and travel time were cut by 50%, since the new products can be managed remotely for the most part, and have fewer problems. “OpenOffice doesn’t have bugs like Microsoft Office has,” Carver said in an interview after her presentation.
Reducing travel time was crucial for Windsor’s staff of four technicians, a number that includes Carver.
After the staff workload was reduced, “of course I gave them more workload,” Carver said. “More projects and more projects, that’s how technology works, always going forward.”
Carver’s small team manages 70 servers, two full racks at each school, 2,000 computers and 200 thin clients.
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How did she get AVG for that price? By Ron Peters on September 22, 2007, 7:27 pm Reply | Read entire comment How did Carver acquire 70 server licenses and 2,000 client licenses for AVG at $2,500? It's neither open source nor free (contrary to the implication in the article),...
just a thought but they By Anonymous on September 26, 2007, 2:42 pm Reply | Read entire comment just a thought but they probably only have licenses for avg on the servers. AVG for linux is still kind of infant compared to clamav
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