Microsoft’s Ballmer fights Linux in Munich

news
Apr 7, 20032 mins

Munich city government postpones software decision until end of May

None other than Microsoft chief executive officer Steve Ballmer paid a personal visit to Munich city mayor Christian Ude at the end of last month to drum up support for the company’s operating system software, which faces growing competition from open-source Linux, according to a report in the German newspaper SüddeutscheZeitung, citing people familiar with the situation.

Munich, which is widely viewed as the IT capital of Germany, is considering a switch from Microsoft to Linux following a study that claims the city will save money and increase security with open-source software, the newspaper reported Friday.

Microsoft is worried that if a big German city like Munich falls into the Linux camp, others will follow, according to the report.

The software company is keeping a tight lid on details of the talk. “We can confirm that Steve Ballmer was in Munich at the end of last month to visit the Mayor,” said a spokesman from Microsoft GmbH in Unterschleissheim, Germany. “Their conversation was confidential, so there’s nothing more we can say.”

The spokesman declined to comment on whether the Munich city government is reviewing its software strategy.

Officials at the city government could not be immediately reached.

Last year, government officials in Munich commissioned the consultancy UnilogIntegrata AG in Tübingen, Germany, to conduct a study on software options, according to the newspaper report. The consultancy recommended the Linux operating system together with free open-source office software.

In an effort to retain the city government as a paying customer, Ballmer has agreed to be flexible on prices, the newspaper reported, without providing details.

The CEO’s visit appears to have paid off. The Munich city government, in a closed meeting on Friday, decided to postpone its software decision until May 28, according to the report.