Sorry, this is a long rant ... and I dont really have time to finish
it but thank you for sparking things...<p>I am in a similar position, (although the "no problem getting
contracts" is a bit of stretch), a few miles south of you in Kent.<p>I have a vision, of an eco-system of small independant Open Source
developers building, integrating and supporting local and central
government software. (Yes, government)<p>I have a tiny campaign site at www.oss4gov.org/manifesto and there is
a community of OSS developers but the love they get from the billion
dollar government market is tiny.<p>Why .gov? I do not want to write another website for some marketing
agency, I want to write actual software, and I want to write software
that has an actual impact on my community.<p>For example, West Lothian wants an "Election Management System" (#).
This is basically to take the poll register and do everything from
orgnise rotas of poll-helpers, send out the voting cards, and so
forth. Its pretty boring I suspect but it is clearly something that
only governments need. Is there an Open Source version? Not that I
can find. Is it possible to persuade West Lothian to pay for the
development - well I am trying but they state right up front - must
already be in use in another council, tried and tested. THis is for
software that runs <i>elections</i> - what the hell are proprietary
software companies doing in there? If any code should be public and
open it is code that runs elections.<p>There are thousands of government services that have no or terrible
IT, that do not interoperate and yet GDS states that the government
<i>prefers</i> OSS, that GCloud is for open, small businesses. The
rhetoric is good, the reality of risk-averse tenders is much much
different.<p>Somewhere along the line we can see governments stop pouring our money
into proprietary code that only serves public uses and start seeing
small local consultancies, feeding on a eco-system of open source code
and delivering great custom services to government that just keep
getting better, for a decent living wage. (well hopefully better than
that)<p>Bugger it, I am going to release my best shot at an election
management system, and force it into the cracks. There is a lot of
money and a lot of worthwhile projects behind that wall. Despite the
30% cut in services.<p>It is a project with real possibilities<p>- International elections
(<a href="http://aceproject.org/today/feature-articles/open-source-software-and-the-electoral-assistance" rel="nofollow">http://aceproject.org/today/feature-articles/open-source-sof...</a>)<p>- There are organisations doing <i>something</i> like this
(<a href="http://blog.openelections.net/" rel="nofollow">http://blog.openelections.net/</a>)<p>(#) <a href="http://www.publiccontractsscotland.gov.uk/search/show/Search_View.aspx?id=MAR170132" rel="nofollow">http://www.publiccontractsscotland.gov.uk/search/show/Search...</a>