The insurance conglomerate chose StarOffice over -- you guessed it -- re-upping its contract with Microsoft for its Office XP suite.
United India Insurance Co. is one of the four subsidiaries of General Insurance Corp., and has its headquarters in Chennai. It is the second-largest insurer by size of premium and market share of the entire general insurance business transacted throughout India.
United India has countrywide presence with 21,565 employees working in 1,123 offices.
"We selected Sun's StarOffice 7 software because it matches our technical specifications and it is very competitively priced," said S.M. John Victor, assistant general manager, Information Technology, UIIC, Limited Chennai India.
Sun on Wednesday also announced the general availability of StarOffice on Solaris x86, which the company has been giving away free of charge since October. The announcement is significant because it is the first indication Sun has given that it will have its Java Desktop System available for Solaris x86 later this year. StarOffice 7 is the main business application suite included in the JDS.
Today, applications such as Mozilla 1.6, incorporating the Firebird Web browser, Thunderbird e-mail and newsgroup client, Macromedia Flash and now StarOffice 7, are supported on Solaris. Additionally, there are more than 100 desktops and laptops listed on the Solaris x86 hardware compatibility list.
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Sun's big deals with China and India don't invalidate the free software model. Sun can throw all the software 'over the wall', and still charge for the implementation and quality assurance. At a few dollars a pop for those billions, it is worth it! And as I said before, the big money is in all those servers to watch over everybody.
Is it just me?
Posted by: Anonymous Coward on February 05, 2004 01:08 PMOr does anyone else think ``THIS IS HUGE!''?
I have to wonder how many unlicensed copies of Microsoft products are running in China. I'm certain it was one heck of a lot but it was a bunch of desktops that Microsoft thought it would eventually get properly licensed and paid for. Even if they dropped to the price of Office to US$10 (which would be unheard of, right?) that would amount to US$2B over the lifetime of this deal. The price of MSFT is bound to be affected by this loss of potential sales.
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