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October 29, 2009

Los Angeles Dumps Microsoft, Adopts Google

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Los Angeles this week awarded a $7.5 million contract to Google, which will provide cloud-computing email and productivity application services to the city's 30,000 municipal and state workers. The dollar amount of the deal is hardly significant given the quarterly revenues that both companies earn, but it still marks a major victory for the more cloud-savvy Google, which has been making inroads into Microsoft's core markets over the past year.

"The City of Los Angeles, the second largest city in the nation, made a world-class decision today to support a state-of-the-art email system," said LA Councilman Tony Cardenas.

LA's city council voted 12-to-0 to adopt the Google solution, called Google Apps, though numerous organizations around the city, and some privacy advocates, argued against storing crucial data online. But the city council contracted a system integrator to help mitigate the risks of online data storage; the data will be encrypted, always physically stored in the United States, and heavily protected against unlawful access. If data breach occurs, the city will be financially compensated, according to the contract.

The broader concern is the thematic battle between Microsoft's traditional services and the pure cloud services offered by Google. In truth, Microsoft offers both on-premise servers and cloud-based servers, as well as a hybrid approach in which customers can combine the two. And Microsoft's solutions are far more powerful and full-featured than anything that Google offers.

What Google does offer is lower pricing and simplicity. And it appears that these considerations swayed the City of Los Angeles after it overcame any concerns about data security. It's a decision that more and more companies and governments will make in the future, and something that Microsoft will need to address in its product offerings.

End of Article



Reader Comments
If anyone has used the "collaboration" features in Google Docs, they know that it is very lacking. I think we may see LA moving back, or maybe even to an OpenOffice type solution. My recent experience in a couple of instances leaves me thinking that Google Docs is great for one offs. but not collaboration. Just my $.02

win2ktta October 29, 2009 (Article Rating: )


Sounds like LA's city council covered their bases pretty well against the risks. Paul, you hit the nail on the head with your comment on lower costs & simplicity. I would also argue that LA wanted a non-Microsoft vendor.

scottm99999 October 29, 2009 (Article Rating: )


"What Google does offer is lower pricing and simplicity. And it appears that these considerations swayed the City of Los Angeles after it overcame any concerns about data security. It's a decision that more and more companies and governments will make in the future, and something that Microsoft will need to address in its product offerings."

Hmm, looks like Microsoft got beaten at that "new efficiency" game.

chuckb84 October 29, 2009 (Article Rating: )


This is not the end of this for MS, its only the beginning, face it the Pax Romana of MS is now over.

Dude1313 October 29, 2009 (Article Rating: )


Let's not forget it wasn't that long ago that MA voted to leave Office and then went running back.

The biggest thing Microsoft needs to do (besides bringing some pricing down on a couple of their online services) is streamline their offerings. Between their Online Services, Office Live, Mesh, Azure, SkyDrive, ... they've got about 30 different cloud products with a ton of overlap. They need one unified product line that's very aggressive on the pricing front - WalMart aggressive.

jersey72 October 29, 2009 (Article Rating: )


ha ha ha B00ble...

i guess they tried to play Hardball with StevieB and lost big time...

B00ble outage coming soon...hilarity ensues

sx4sport October 29, 2009 (Article Rating: )


Agreed, jersey72...Google will marginalize MS in cloud computing unless MS goes for broke.

scottm99999 October 30, 2009 (Article Rating: )


The most likely reason they went with Google is it was Hardware refresh time, and they couldn't afford to move their infrastructure to 64bit 2k8.
Proably laid of half the IT staff too. But we al know they will move back eventually, most likely once the current IT Director moves on. MS lost te battle but not the War...

juddaustin October 30, 2009 (Article Rating: )


The first time Google apps goes down they will see the folly of this approach. The google email app which sadly the government department I work for changed to for Teaching staff and students averages a major outage at least once a month for upto 2 days. Causing major frustration from users

longsword69 November 02, 2009 (Article Rating: )


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