Archive for the ‘government’ Category

Ask What Your Database Can Do for Your Country

Август 31st, 2011
Adding Machine

How many in your household again?

One of President John Kennedy’s most memorable phrases is “ask not what your country can do for you –  ask what can you do for your country”.  I got to thinking about this over lunch with a fellow colleague in the big data space. After comparing named customers for a while, we realized we had forgotten one of the biggest “big data” customers whom we both have in common – the government.

Whether you believe in small or big government, one thing is for certain – it has some very big data on its hands. Some of this is freely available, such as the census data that was recently released. They have so much “big data” in fact, that the US government even went so far as to set up an entire subcommittee on the topic.

Tokutek has been privileged to be in the middle of many of these conversations. This includes discussions at the state level, where Tokutek was the sole database company recently invited to an international business discussion at the Massachusetts statehouse. Several of our recent talks and product enhancements have also squarely hit upon federal government needs, including:

  • Keeping the Earth Green
  • Ensuring Defense
    • Big Data presents a wealth of information; however harnessing it can be a struggle. One area for this is machine-generated data, such as sensor networks, can provide a fire hose of useful data, but can also be burdensome to work with. Earlier this year, our CTO spoke at the Morrelly Homeland Security Center about how to handle data ingestion rates, a critical area for defense systems.

The US government certainly has some sizable challenges these days, with large deficits and rancorous politics. Some of these issues almost seem intractable. But one area where technology has a clear way to help the government is with its big data problems. We’ve been grateful to be able to work on some of the most interesting challenges and learn quite a bit from the community.


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CAOS Theory Podcast 2010.11.12

Ноябрь 13th, 2010

Topics for this podcast:

*Our latest CAOS Special Report – Control and Community
*Red Hat releases RHEL 6
*Symbian and Oracle highlight community challenges
*The latest on government adoption of OSS from GOSCON
*Open core issue continues, now with Linux and evil twins

iTunes or direct download (31:02, 8.5MB)


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Open Source Saves Malaysian Government RM188 Million

Июль 5th, 2010

A money clipBack in January 2009, we found out that the Malaysian Government had saved about RM40 million using open source. In a little over a year, that number has been topped: over the past six years, the total costs savings are now quoted to be RM188.39 million (USD$58.54 million)! That’s a hell of a lot of money for software licenses, don’t you think?

Worth noting is that before the OSS Master Plan started, there were zero companies supporting OSS registered with the Ministry of Finance. Now more than half of the 4,000 companies do (53% is the quoted number). For more information, read the latest newsletter from MAMPU’s OSCC. Key takeaways:

  1. Saved RM188.39 million on software licenses over six years
  2. Successful OSS adoption in 691 government agencies by the end of 2009 (till April 1 2010, the number looks like it has increased to 699 agencies).
  3. In total, 95% of agencies are adopting some form of OSS solution, 87% are using it for back-end infrastructure (here its clear there’s Linux, MySQL in use), and 66% are using OSS on the desktop! (via OpenOffice.org and Firefox)*

* – Software use extrapolated from the actual OSS Master plan, and what was in the report in January 2009. I’m sure Joomla! is also used quite heavily, but never recall seeing it as the choice for CMS in the plan.

Related posts:

  1. Open Source saves Malaysian Government RM40 million
  2. Open Source saves Malaysian Government RM40 million
  3. Open Source saves Malaysian Government RM40 million



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