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Massachusetts' CIO Defends Move to OpenDocument

Mark Brunelli writes "A public hearing concerning Massachusetts' plan to dump Microsoft for OpenDocument featured a fair share of controversy as the state's CIO tried to fight off naysayers. Linda Hamel, the general counsel for the Massachusetts Information Technology Department (ITD), suggested that groups that oppose the OpenDocument file format standard might be influenced by Microsoft." We reported on the bounce back against the OpenDocument move this past weekend.

24 of 274 comments (clear)

  1. The end of his speech: by Anonymous+Crowhead · · Score: 5, Funny

    "Bottom line: OpenDocument is bloated. Just like we like things in government."

  2. Influenced by Microsoft? by honeypotslash · · Score: 5, Funny

    Most likly they think Word Processing IS Microsoft Word.

    1. Re:Influenced by Microsoft? by mysqlrocks · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Pacheco said it appeared that no cost analysis had been done before ITD committed to OpenDocument, and that the agency had moved forward unilaterally without input from other agencies.

      How did they end up using MS Office? Did they get input from other agencies? Probably not. At the time, as the parent comment says, they probably thought "Word Processing IS Microsoft Word".

    2. Re:Influenced by Microsoft? by MBCook · · Score: 4, Funny

      <crazyRant>

      Word processing IS Microsoft Word.

      It was the first word processor.

      Don't let them tell you lies. There were no word processors before word. Why do you think it's called a "Word" processor? That's right, that name comes from MS Word. "WordStar" and "Word Perfect" didn't exist, you just think they did because they put something in your water and brainwashed you.

      And don't tell me about typewriters. Typewriters were based off of the design for Microsoft Word. In the future a time machine will be invented which will be used to go back in time and give the man who invented the typewriter what it should look like to look like MS Word. Why do you think the longest word you can spell on the top row of letters on a keyboard is "typewriter"? That is EXACTLY the kind of easter egg people at Microsoft LOVE. They put it there when they gave the design of the QWERTY keyboard to the guy who designed it (note: I'm not using his name because due to this revisionist history, we don't know the real creator's name).

      And how do I know all this? They told me next Tuesday. Right before they executed me. That wasn't a good day.

      </crazyRant>

      --
      Comment forecast: Bits of genius surrounded by a sea of mediocrity.
  3. $50M verses $5M by Bob_Robertson · · Score: 5, Interesting

    The early audio recording of the two hour meeting between the CIO's office and various members of the vendor population including the idiot... I mean, the representative of Microsoft, is really amazing. If you haven't heard it, I suggest you do a little digging and find it.

    The CIO did make one very interesting statement about money. $50M in order to get Office-12, because of license fees, OS and hardware upgrades, for something that cannot even be tested at this time.

    In comparison, to roll out OpenOffice to every state employee, including training (which never seems to be in the pro-Microsoft column), $5M. Mostly because there is no hardware or OS upgrade requirement since OpenOffice runs on everything. Today. Now. Including using the document specification they really want, which Microsoft says they have no plans on supporting.

    Fascinating. Foot, rifle, Microsoft pulls trigger.

    Bob-

    --
    The Ludwig von Mises Institute. The reasoning individuals economics
    1. Re:$50M verses $5M by Benanov · · Score: 5, Informative

      However, OpenOffice.org does run on Windows 98, which MA has stated they have computers running it. Office 12 will not run on Win 98.

    2. Re:$50M verses $5M by WhiteWolf666 · · Score: 5, Informative

      What planet are you from?

      Of the below, only Office 12, OpenOffice.org 1.1.5, and OpenOffice.org 2.0 have XML document format support. Office 12 is MSXML, and OpenOffice.org are OpenDoc.

      Oh, and don't tell me they shouldn't upgrade from Office 2000, or Office 97, or whatever. I'm 100% Massachusetts has a site licensing policy; Office 2000 went End-of-Life on 6/30/2004. Office XP goes End-of-life on June 30, 2006. Neither of these makes for a good, forward-looking 'upgrade'. It's going to have to be 2003 or newer.

      Office 12 preliminary system requirements:
      Microsoft Office 12 will run on Windows XP Service Pack 2 (SP2) or later, or the Windows Longhorn client. Server components will require Windows Server 2003 or later and, potentially, SQL Server 2000 or later. Office 12 will support x64 platforms natively, though it's not clear whether this support will ship in the box with the initial release, or later as a separate add-on.
      http://www.winsupersite.com/showcase/office12_prev iew1.asp

      Microsoft Office 2003 system requirements:
      To use Microsoft Office Professional Edition 2003, you need:
      Component Requirement
      Computer and processor
      Personal computer with an Intel Pentium 233-MHz or faster processor (Pentium III recommended); optional installation of Business Contact Manager for Outlook® 2003 requires a 450-MHz or faster processor (Pentium III recommended)
      Memory
      128 MB of RAM or greater; optional installation of Business Contact Manager for Outlook 2003 requires 256 MB of RAM
      Hard disk
      400 MB of available hard-disk space; optional installation files cache (recommended) requires an additional 200 MB of available hard-disk space; optional installation of Business Contact Manager for Outlook 2003 requires an additional 190 MB of available hard-disk space

      OpenOffice.org system requirements, version 2.0:
      Microsoft Windows

      * Windows 98, Windows ME, Windows 2000 (Service Pack 2 or higher), Windows XP, Windows 2003
      * 128 Mbytes RAM
      * 200 Mbytes available disk space
      * 800 x 600 or higher resolution with at least 256 colors

      Solaris: SPARC platform edition

      * Solaris 8 OS or higher
      * 128 Mbytes RAM
      * 250 Mbytes available disk space
      * X-Server with 800 x 600 or higher resolution with at least 256 colors

      Solaris: x86 platform edition

      * Solaris 8 OS or higher
      * 128 Mbytes RAM
      * 250 Mbytes available disk space
      * X-Server with 800 x 600 or higher resolution with at least 256 colors

      Linux:

      * Linux kernel version 2.2.13 or higher, glibc2 version 2.2.0 or higher
      * 128 Mbytes RAM
      * 200 Mbytes available disk space
      * X-Server with 800 x 600 or higher resolution with at least 256 colors

      System Requirements for OpenOffice.org 1.1.x
      Windows

      Microsoft Windows 98, ME, NT (Service Pack 6 or higher), 2000 or XP

      Pentium compatible PC, 64 MB RAM, 250 MB available hard disk space
      GNU/Linux ("Linux")

      Glibc 2.2.0 or newer

      Pentium compatible PC, 64 MB RAM, 300 MB available hard disk space

      X server and graphics card capable of 800x600 resolution

      Performance testing, OpenOffice.org versus MS Office 2003:
      http://www.matt13.com/computer/open_office_or_ms_o ffice/

      OpenOffice.org uses less CPU, less RAM, and far less Hard Disk space.

      Does OpenOffice.org start slower on

      --
      WhiteWolf666 an exBush supporter. All you new-school,compassionate,save the children Republicans can rot in hell
  4. Re:Microshaft Influened? by ergo98 · · Score: 4, Informative

    This line kills me: "OpenDocument file format standard might be influenced by Microsoft." Why?

    It's currently reading as - "suggested that groups that oppose the OpenDocument file format standard might be influenced by Microsoft."

    Of course the meaning is that some believe that the big backlash recently (with every "grassroots" group announcing their beefs with the move to OpenDocument) is the result of Microsoft lobbying, which isn't an inconceivable idea.

  5. Obvious Tag by Shadow+Wrought · · Score: 4, Funny
    From TFS: Linda Hamel, the general counsel for the Massachusetts Information Technology Department (ITD), suggested that groups that oppose the OpenDocument file format standard might be influenced by Microsoft.

    Later on in the press conference she goes on to assert that rain is wet and and that 2 plus 2 does indeed add up to 4. She did not, however, make any comments concerning what you get 4 of.

    --
    If brevity is the soul of wit, then how does one explain Twitter?
  6. Step in the right directions by pvt_medic · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Being from Tax-achusetts, i am glad to see that the state continues to move this way. This saves tax payers money, which in the end benefits everyone in the state. But also it is the state realizing that they are doing something that will help allow easier (still far far from perfect) access to state records which we have a right too.

    --
    30% Troll, 50% Underrated, 10% Interesting
    Score:5, Troll
  7. God Damn it, Zonk! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    We reported on the bounce back against the OpenDoc move this past weekend.

    OpenDoc is not the same thing as OpenDocument. If you need to shorten it, you can say ODF.

  8. Re:OpenDoc by erroneus · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Here's the thing though -- It's conceivable that Microsoft, as a means of encouraging people to upgrade would cut off support for older document formats and never release the souce code for the programs that generated the original file format. And in this conceivable future, we would not be able to run the old binaries conveniently or at all. It's a problem.

    With a lot of programs that utilize OpenDocument format, the source code is readily available and can be recompiled for whatever platform is being used as the time. Further, the precise specs for the file format is available for adaptation into whatever platform exists at the moment.

    In short, propritary lock-in and/or lock-out is an important fear that Microsoft is not and will not address. Open specification is just about the only way to avoid this.

  9. Re:OpenDoc by BlogPope · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Just one gotcha and ten years down the road you are left out to pasture - technically speaking.

    Exactly. If only you had access to the document specification, then you might be able to do something to fix that problem.

    --
    My other car is a Popemobile
  10. Re:OpenDoc by aaronl · · Score: 4, Informative

    PDF is only good for fixed content. Anything that you're going to be working with the data in you can't put into a format like that! If it's headed for an archive, then PDF is a fine way to do it. If it's a MS Word .doc now, then it's probably best to convert it to an editable format, so OpenDocument.

    Realistically, if your project to convert things is happening now, what else would you convert to? OpenDocument already has good support, is a very clearly defined format, and is unencumbered. It's also easy to work with to generate documents from other data.

  11. Re:How very /. of him! by jav1231 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    You're missing the point. The Mass. move isn't to OpenOffice, it's to OpenDocument. What they choose to run is a different story. OOo and Wordperfect, for example, plan to support. Microsoft only plans to import it, I believe, and that only recently. Microsoft if fighting the standard. The idea that this state government is moving to OOo is an extension of the MS PR machine. Get everyone worried about losing Office and an outcry will ensue. Nevermind the fact that they're locking themselves into perpetual licensing fees and a proprietary format. Hey, the vendor's benevolent so what's the harm, right?
    More people, more companies, and more governments need to really stand on MS's neck on this and get them to support standard formats. MS doesn't want to because then they have to TRULY compete with other software. Now if Office is so great, why not just support the format? Why not say, "okay, we'll support it and beat you on equal footing!" The mark of a champion is that he will beat you at your best. MS wants to take out your quarterback's legs, get rid of the instant replay and challenge system, AND make you play on their home field before they'll even join the game.
    When are people going to realize they are the software industry equivilents to rapists and pedophiles.

  12. Getting priorities right by daeley · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Frankly, they could take a portion of that $45 million cost savings and dedicate it to making those blind- and deaf-user devices work swimmingly with OOo.... and still have enough to pay Manny Ramirez's salary next season, assuming he doesn't get himself traded to the Angels before then. ;)

    --
    I watched C-beams glitter in the dark near the Tannhauser gate.
  13. "Total Cost of Ownership" vs. Sovereignty by ansak · · Score: 4, Funny

    Microsoft's position:

    * Every new box pre-installed with Windows $100
    * Every new box pre-installed with Office $200
    * Having the option of following up an OS upgrade with an Office Upgrade that renders old file formats unreadable: priceless.

    Everyone else's position:

    * Looking for (and finding) tools to make OpenOffice compatible with any imaginable disabled-persons' enabling tool: probably as little as 10 minutes
    * Off-sourcing production of a filter to convert current word document files to OpenDoc: a little embarassment
    * Having government-provided and -required documents in a format that will never be submerged by near-simultaneous OS and Office Tools upgrades: priceless.

    The cost to a society of having a monopolist control the format that its documents are published in is as desirable as it would be to have to continue paying the Gutenberg family for the privilege of having your book printed in the 21st century.

    nuff said...ank

    --
    Still hoping for Gentle Treatment...
  14. Re:How very /. of him! by The+Cisco+Kid · · Score: 5, Insightful

    You, sir, are either grossly misled, or are an intentionall MS shill.

    It isnt about forcing people to not use MS Word - its about setting a fair, open, and public standard for the file formats used so that *everyone* can decide what tools to use. Making MS secret format the 'standard' *forces* everyone to use Word, unless MS completely and fully opens the specification for it.

    People can use MS Word if they really think its the best tool for them - but they must have a way to read and produce the standard format. That can either mean MS adds native support in Word, or they use a third party plugin or convertor.

    MS was recently quoted as suggested that 'customer demand' might drive their decision to support OpenDoc. Hello? MS? MA is a customer. They are demanding it.

    Once MA stops buying new Word licenses, MS *will* add OpenDoc to Word, and MA can buy Word again. But MS will *only* do that if they are absolutely forced, as it sets a precedent, and once that ball starts rolling it will mean an end to MS lock-in. Word may still be popular, but no one will be forced to use it.

    Yes, converting away from single-source vendor lock-in is hard. But the longer you wait, the harder it gets, and people have been blindly waiting for pretty long already. But once you finally get it over with it gets easier and less expensive in the long run, and switching software in the future (for whatever reason) is no longer a huge issue, since any choice has to support the existing standard format.

  15. Re:OpenDoc by WinterSolstice · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I have this exact problem with all sorts of documents. Products that simply don't exist anymore. Splash. Wordstar. MS Works (though I seem to recall someone found a converter). DeScribe. I have docs I wrote on the Commodore Plus 4 that I was only able to retrieve via some lovely commodore emulation software that allowed copy and paste :)

    My motto these days is that if you can't read it right now in several different tools (ala PDF) and you don't own the code; don't trust it to be there when you need it.

    -WS

    --
    An operating system should be like a light switch... simple, effective, easy to use, and designed for everyone.
  16. It's good that government is a bit inefficient by Safe+Sex+Goddess · · Score: 4, Interesting
    Inefficiency is a safeguard of democracy.

    If things were too efficient and easy to change, you could waking up in a police state overnight.

    --
    Abstinence is a government conspiracy. www.SafeSexZone.co
  17. Re:What a stupid thing to say! by gpw213 · · Score: 5, Insightful
    I would think she'd lose all claims to credibility by making statements like that. For one, she's making an ad hominem (although not against a singular person in this case) argument by arguing that the groups are wrong because they are (allegedly) supported by Microsoft. That argument falls apart, logically, because someone could offer a simple counter statement of "so, why does that make them wrong?"

    And if this were the only argument presented, then you might have a point. However, when the specific points *are* addressed, and then in addition it is pointed out that the majority of the opponents also have a suspicious commonality, then that is no longer an ad hominem attack, is it?

    I do find it interesting to note that the National Federation of the Blind in Computer Science is criticizing the move and I think they offer legitimate reasons for using Microsoft products-- that is, until OpenDocument supports the same braille readers and other screen-reader programs.

    You are making the same error that many of the opponents of this move seem to be making. Namely, confusing OpenDocument with OpenOffice. OpenDocument is the file format. It does not now, nor will it ever "support the same braille readers and other screen-reader programs". That is the job of the application, not the file format. Massachusetts is not mandating any particular application.

    If the blind state workers are using MS products and the other state workers are using OpenDocument, I'd think that might cause some problems.

    This is nothing that they won't be dealing with anyhow. They will not be able to magically switch everyone over in a day, and they will have to deal with all of the pre-existing documents in Word format. Getting the occasional Word document from a blind worker is not going alter things substantially.

    --
    However beautiful the strategy, you should occasionally look at the results. -- Winston Churchill
  18. CAGW statement by srobert · · Score: 5, Insightful

    FTA: "CAGW has issued a statement that said the move to OpenDocument would incur unnecessary costs as the state government would be forced to convert 'more than one million current files to the new [OpenDocument] format.'"

    I presume CAGW refers to Citizens Against Government Waste. But their statement on this doesn't jibe with the fact that most past documents in other formats would have to be converted to be compatible with newer proprietary formats as well. Also, it contains no comparison of the unnecessary costs incurred by not converting to an open format of some sort.

  19. Re:How very /. of him! by 99BottlesOfBeerInMyF · · Score: 5, Insightful

    That is just FUD Microsoft Office 2003 XML schema license.

    Is this even a coherent sentence? I assume you intended to babble some uninformed BS about how MS's new file format is open, even though it isn't, and cannot be implemented by other vendors since it stores vital information as encoded chunks of binary data within the XML.

    But to address your premise, I can't find that anywhere in the state constitution or in any laws. I think that is a nice notion you have, but isn't the job of the CIO of the state.

    Umm, the CIO is supposed to get the best tech at the best price. Just like everything else, he wrote a standard for what he wanted and is accepting bids. Just because the standard they decided upon is the Open Office format instead of a format only one vendor can bid on does not mean he is legislating. You might notice he chose the standard the entire European Union has also decided upon.

    This is not rocket science. Just because you have been buying a special kind of patented electrical plug for years, does not mean you should not choose a new one when it comes time to renovate a building, especially when anyone can bid on the new one, while only one company can bid on the old one. It is common sense and business sense not to lock yourself into on supplier.

    The CIO should be implementing the most compatible solution for the citizens.

    I'm glad you said that. Who can run OpenOffice and write to that format? Anyone, the software is free and runs on all major OS's. Who can run Word and write to .doc? The subset of the population that is running Windows or Mac OS and can afford to spend $100+. I think it is clear which one is more compatible.

    When you have 95% + of a market you are the standard.

    Who cares if it is a de-facto standard. It locks you into one supplier which means you are screwed in purchasing negotiations. Only an idiot would go with a product available only from one vendor. If MS wants to be a supplier then they can meet the product specifications of their customer. Gee what a crazy concept, a supplier providing what the customer wants, and bidding against other suppliers. If MS does not want to bid and compete, well that is certainly there choice. So far your only argument has been, they should do what everyone else does because everyone else is doing it. What a great way to stifle all progress forever. Hopefully the legislators in MA will not be as blind as you are.