New Zealand Open Source Awards 2010 Focus on
Innovation as Entry Deadline
Approaches
Auckland, Thursday 9th
September 2010 – Previous Award-winner Radio New
Zealand lists innovation as a leading reason for using free
software on its website
Radio New Zealand won the ‘Open Source in Government’ category at the 2008 New Zealand Open Source Awards. The boost in confidence gained from the Award has helped it to progress its use of free and open source software (FLOSS) to continue its innovation. It now uses FLOSS to run its internet and intranet.
“The free and open source software ecosystem allows certain freedoms, so you can change and adapt software to meet specific and changing needs, which I believe is necessary if you want to innovate,” says Richard Hulse, New Media Manager, Radio New Zealand.
Awards judge and President of the New Zealand Open Source Society (NZOSS), Rachel Hamilton-Williams, agrees. “Open source software is competitive on features, performance and price. Having a healthy FLOSS sector reduces barriers to entry for both service providers and customers; it puts more control and options in the hands of the user and provides a fertile ground for innovation.”
Hulse says Radio New Zealand’s 2008 New Zealand Open Source Award “was an acknowledgement that our approach was mainstream; that it is possible to use free software to run a high-profile, high-traffic site, and to do this alongside other organisations with much larger budgets”.
Nominations for the 2010 New Zealand Open Source Awards close on Wednesday 15th September, and innovation in FLOSS will be lauded at a gala event in October. Don Christie, Director of Catalyst IT, which runs the Awards, says they are “an opportunity to celebrate excellence and innovation in open source software and services”.
To enter the 2010 New Zealand Open Source
Awards, visit www.nzosa.org.nz.
About
the New Zealand Open Source Awards
The New Zealand
Open Source Awards are run by open source IT house Catalyst
IT. The New Zealand Open Source Awards 2010 recognise and
promote the contributions of New Zealanders to free and open
source projects, to free and open source philosophy
and the exemplary use of free and open source software by
New Zealand organisations. The 2008 New Zealand Open
Source Awards featured 32 finalists and 10 category winners.
The Awards gala attracted over 200 of New Zealand's leading
business people, government representatives, creatives and
open source community contributors and advocates.
About free and open source
technology
Free and open source technology are two
separate but related things. Free software is software that
carries no licensing fees or charges for use. Open source
software is when the software writers leave the code used to
create programmes accessible to others so that the programme
can be improved, changed and added to by any programmer. It
is changing the way people and organisations collaborate and
innovate to achieve common goals. For New Zealand, free and
open source technology not only represents an opportunity to
contribute and be recognised on the world stage, but also to
deliver real competitive advantages to the business sector,
show leadership in government and the public sector, and
provide more effective tools for organisations public and
private as they meet the challenges of the 21st
century.
About Radio New Zealand
Radio New
Zealand is a Crown entity established under the Radio New
Zealand Act 1995. It provides listeners with exciting and
independent radio programmes in accordance with the Radio
New Zealand Charter and broadcasts over three nationwide
networks; Radio New Zealand National, Radio New Zealand
Concert and the AM network which relays Parliamentary
proceedings. Radio New Zealand International (RNZI) is its
overseas shortwave service, broadcasting to the South
Pacific and beyond, while Radio New Zealand News provides
comprehensive, up-to-the-minute news and current affairs
information.
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