Anil Patel used to work for a public utility district in Washington State and introduced a
number of OFBiz-based solutions there, including one to do fleet management.
Hans Bakker did some stuff with this a few years ago in Thailand.
A company called Integral Business Solutions did a bunch of US Air Force contracting based
on OFBiz.
Currently Ean Schuessler and Adam Heath of Brainfood put together a site for (if I understand
it right) a US Govt lobby for open source software, and the site itself runs on OFBiz and
Webslinger. It's just the site though, this isn't any sort of OFBiz lobby and the people there
are generally big wigs from larger organizations pushing various different things in government.
I've been contacted by a number of government contractors (typically larger organizations,
or companies that specialize in govt contracting) over the years with proposals for everything
from payroll and human resources for tens of thousands of people, to equipment planning and
maintenance for emergencies. However, it seems like these larger contracts are a HUGE uphill
battle and almost impossible to get unless you already have an "in" with the buying organization
(yes, the revolving door is a HUGE deal here, and usually those who help drive industry after
being in govt stick with larger companies where there is more money).
Those are just off the top of my head. There are definitely various government sponsored projects
that use OFBiz. Still, especially for larger projects it's tough for open source based solutions
to even get a foot in the door, which I guess is what the organization the Brainfood has been
working with is trying to fix.
If you're hoping to get a slice of the ever-growing world-wide "economic stimulus" spending
that is going on these days there may be better ways to go about it than to try to leverage
open source software (unless perhaps it is the variety like RedHat Linux or OpenOffice that
might have a multi-million dollar support contract to go along with it).
Of course, that's just my opinion... and I'd be delighted if someone would prove me wrong!
-David
On Feb 3, 2010, at 4:04 AM, Gavin Mabie wrote:
> Hi list
>
>
>
> Is there anybody on the list that tried or implemented OfBiz in the public
> sector / government?
>
>
>
> Gavin
>
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