Novell India
Company name Novell India Pvt Ltd Head office ‘Laurel’, Block ‘D’, 65/2, Bagmane Tech Park, C. V. Raman Nagar, Byrasandra […]
Company name Novell India Pvt Ltd Head office ‘Laurel’, Block ‘D’, 65/2, Bagmane Tech Park, C. V. Raman Nagar, Byrasandra […]
[This article was published in the December 2008 issue of the eGov Magazine (http://www.egovonline.net) ]
The most important step, the industry can take now is to appreciate the need for greater interoperability which is the very future of relevant and reliable Information Technology (IT) that can be of value to the users.
As Vice President (VP) & General Manager (GM)
[This article was published in the August 2007 issue of the eGov Magazine (http://www.egovonline.net) ]
eForm and document management is the backbone of eGovernance. In India, the challenge before the eGovernance architecture and advocates of IT for masses has been to integrate at least 22 languages in various government documents, notices and eForms.
Tamil Nadu (TN) State Government has finalised a bid for 40,000 Lenovo desktops, which can be installed with both Novell’s Suse Linux and Microsoft’s Windows XP Starter Edition in Tamil Nadu, India. The Electronics Corporation of Tamil Nadu (Elcot) will deploy the 40,000 Lenovo desktops in all schools and government departments of the state.
Microsoft is focused on delivering innovative interoperable solutions that connect people, data and diverse systems. The Microsoft-Novell collaboration agreement improves interoperability and enables choice. This agreement forges a new model to enhance interoperability between Windows and Linux. Says, Chris Levanes, Platform Strategy Manager, Microsoft, Asia Pacific Region
Tamil Nadu (TN), the state of India is adopting open source software to solve security and high costs of Windows systems. The State Government has announced that the sate adopting SUSE Linux.
The OpenDocument Format Alliance (ODF Alliance), a broad cross-section of associations, academia and industry dedicated to improve the accessibility to electronic government documents held the first national event in support of the OpenDocument Format (ODF) at New Delhi, which will change the way data is managed across the globe.
[This article was published in the June 2005 issue of the eGov Magazine (http://www.egovonline.net) ]
In most developing countries, the adoption of a national programme can prevent technological lock-in through selective, judicious and
cost-effective use of open source software.