(no title)
alerter | 2 years ago
We could build a public sector cloud and/or adopt a sensible on-prem approach. This requires funding, coordination and technical leadership, but would save the taxpayer an enormous amount over the long term.
Public sector IT is a disaster in general ofc, but I know there are good engineers working there.
berkes|2 years ago
Why would this be any different for a government?
We don't expect our government to build their own cars, but to buy them from Volkswagen or Renault. Even when the government has a clear need for transport. Why do we then insist they build their own IT infrastructure?
0dayz|2 years ago
ris|2 years ago
If you think government needs and demands are predictable, you don't follow politics (particularly uk politics in the last decade).
And then there are these things like pandemics that completely come out of left field. Being able to scale things on demand over the pandemic was one of the key demonstrators for use of the public commercial cloud by the public sector.
objektif|2 years ago
jamietanna|2 years ago
I'd very much recommend watching https://youtube.com/watch?v=mpY1lxkikqM&pp=ygUOUmljaGFyZCB0b... from September about Gov.UK's various iterations and some of the migrations across cloud that they've had to do.
One thing about (at least UK government) is that procurement requirements means that they go to market for quotes around usage every few years. If ie Oracle Cloud was 1/10th the price, it would likely mean they'd win the deal, and so would have to migrate to Oracle for the duration of the contract, and then potentially do the same to another cloud if that was cheaper
StupidOne|2 years ago
AWS, Azure, GC are at least written with thought about end users (us, developers) while government cloud was architectured, designed and built by the lowest bidder whose first goal was to cut and cut and cut his costs whenever possible.
rjzzleep|2 years ago
j-krieger|2 years ago
If you really think the public sector could build anything closely resembling any cloud, you are dreaming. Imagining that one cloud working for the entire public sector, we are entering delusional territory here.
Public sector projects are insanely expensive, take ages to develop and often flat out fail.
Not only that, we are starved for engineers even now. If we ran such a custom cloud, we would shoot ourselves in the leg by not being able to hire from a pool of experienced engineers.
alerter|2 years ago
I don't think this means "government = bad at tech" though. You sometimes see smaller in-house teams do really good work. The biggest issue seems to be with contracting and procurement policy. For example, on the Police Scotland i6 program they hired a bunch of consultancies to write a tender document, and then hired CGI for the final project. That turned out to be a copy of the Spanish system, which turned into a huge and expensive disaster as the requirements differed.
Feels like government has a similar problem to a lot of legacy non-tech companies. They don't have much technical leadership, don't understand the problem, and decide to hand it off to the lowest bidder. Doesn't help that they are often legally obliged to act this way. But the underlying engineering problems aren't unsolvable, and don't need to become a huge mess every time. (Your point about recruitment is fair though)
chasd00|2 years ago
plugin-baby|2 years ago
MrBuddyCasino|2 years ago