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French Government Recommends Standardizing on ODF

Juha-Matti Laurio writes "From the InfoWorld article: All French government publications should be made available in OpenDocument Format (ODF), according to a report commissioned by the French prime minister. The new report also suggests that France ask its European partners to do likewise when exchanging documents at a European level. It is recommended that the government will fund a research center dedicated to open-source software security as well, adds the article."

210 comments

  1. You can have any flavor you like, if it's vanilla by BadAnalogyGuy · · Score: 0, Troll

    Standards are great tools. They provide everyone a level playing field to begin development. You have a defined target, and you can build your application directly to spec.

    But what about innovation? If we cry foul that monopolies stifle innovation, then we should also be decrying standards that may not adapt easily to future problems.

    The IHWB (Institute of Horse Whip Buggy manufacturers) can't compete with someone who develops a cheaper, faster, and safer means of transportation than on top of some unpredictable animal.

  2. This won't spread to Stalingrad... by Lord+Aurora · · Score: 1

    Because in Soviet Russia, the government writes your documents for you!

    --
    The heavens do not fall for such a trifle.
    1. Re:This won't spread to Stalingrad... by sporkme · · Score: 1
      Nice one, but it should read:
      In Soviet Russia, document mandates standard for you!
    2. Re:This won't spread to Stalingrad... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In the USA, the government listens in on you. Precisely the thing that they always looked down upon when it happened in Soviet Russia.
      They then said that the Soviets had no Freedom and the Americans had.
      Now it turns out that this was just a convenient way to make Americans believe they had an enemy, and when this enemy was gone, so was the Freedom.

    3. Re:This won't spread to Stalingrad... by mrchaotica · · Score: 1

      That sounds more like Redmond than Russia, especially since the .DOC "format" was merely a side-effect of how Word happens to serialize its memory.

      --

      "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

  3. Lol by george_e · · Score: 0

    STANDARDISE THIS!

  4. misread by macadamia_harold · · Score: 2, Funny

    It is recommended that the government will fund a research center dedicated to open-source software security as well, adds the article.

    Wouldn't that make it a prediction, rather than a recommendation?

    1. Re:misread by joto · · Score: 1

      Apart from the funny grammar, no! Just remove the word "will", and you'll feel ok again.

    2. Re:misread by Elektroschock · · Score: 1

      One reason behind the ODF adoption is the aggressive Public Diplomacy funded by Microsoft and their continous bashing of France. France is sensitive. France always understood very well how dangerous ressource dependencies are.

      Or think of the European Parliament. Who was the supporter of the freedom of software development and opposed Microsofts aggressive lobbying groups? Michel Rocard, former French prime minister.

    3. Re:misread by the_cosmocat · · Score: 1

      I think there is another big misread : it's the fact that it's just a report like all the government like to do but failed to follow. It's far from being adopted. It's just a little step for the standardisation but nothing is very conclude. Will the government will be a decret from this report, only the futur will say that.

  5. How long before the Microsoft rebuttal report? by Mostly+a+lurker · · Score: 1, Interesting

    I am sure the French report's recommendations are sound, but much less sure they will be implemented. Microsoft has plenty of money to produce its own "independent" reports objecting to the imposition of a "monopoly" based on open standards, as well as playing up areas where MS Office is arguably superior. That same Microsoft money can also buy support for their point of view in influential circles.

    1. Re:How long before the Microsoft rebuttal report? by bahbar · · Score: 4, Informative

      That would be forgetting that the french state is a recognized monopoly in a lot of areas (in France), and that few French have an issue with it.

      As for buying viewpoints in influencial circles, the french politics are far from the US lobbying model. Don't assume what works in the US works everywhere.
      Is it going to spread throughout Europe ? I would hope so, but it is unlikely to be made a requirement.

    2. Re:How long before the Microsoft rebuttal report? by howlingmadhowie · · Score: 0

      i trust when you say 'state' you mean 'government'.

      well, state services have monopolies in a lot of areas, and with good reason. state services are the only people that are allowed to print money, raise or lower taxes, employ police, judges, create laws, permit patents, declare infrastructure to fulfil legal requirements, create an army, etc.

      so what do you mean when you say that the french state is a recognised monopoly in a lot of areas? isn't that true of all states? are you referring to nationalised services (water, gas, electricity, roads and motorways)?

    3. Re:How long before the Microsoft rebuttal report? by zeux · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Unfortunately for them, Microsoft's money doesn't buy a lot in France. Recently, the whole administration switched to Firefox and Thunderbird. It started with the state police (300000 computers if I remember correctly) and then continued with the rest of the state employees (I don't have the number but it's definitely a lot).

      Basically, and from what I heard, the idea is to first swith the Windows softwares the administration uses to equivalent softwares that do exist on other OS the ultimate goal being to switch from Windows to Linux when all the applications are replaced. I guess the ODF switch is just another step in that direction.

      Government websites and web services are already all built on open source software. I'm happy to hear that my government is spending less on windows licences and I do really hope that they'll make it and that it will be used as an example for other European countries.

    4. Re:How long before the Microsoft rebuttal report? by ronanbear · · Score: 1
      This actually seems a much more effective strategy than trying to force Microsoft to behave using massive, complicated legal actions. Enforcing them has proved next to impossible at every step and when Microsoft does eventually comply it's only becuase it's too late by then to affect them.

      A much more effective response for EU governments is simply to stop buying Microsoft themselves. France trying to lead the EU governments into a switch to ODF will go a long way towards removing Microsofts ability to manipulate the market in the EU.

      Of course, reducing their costs in the long-term helps too.

      --
      the more they over-think the plumbing the easier it is to stop up the pipe
    5. Re:How long before the Microsoft rebuttal report? by CaptainZapp · · Score: 1
      Government websites and web services are already all built on open source software.

      It was only a few years ago, when a French friend of mine pointed out that SNCFs (The french national railroad, a government entity) was IE only.

      I was completely flabberghasted, since I thin it's outrageous for any government entity to implement browser specific websites. I trust that this changed then.

      --
      ich bin der musikant

      mit taschenrechner in der hand

      kraftwerk

    6. Re:How long before the Microsoft rebuttal report? by frenchbedroom · · Score: 2, Informative

      Absolutely, the SNCF's website now works very well with Firefox & friends. It's one of the most successful websites in France, they sell a sh*tload of train tickets through that site every day.

      I buy all my tickets from that site, and I haven't been in a waiting line at a station for ages.

    7. Re:How long before the Microsoft rebuttal report? by PainBot · · Score: 1

      Oh I assure you that we get our share of lobbying. Don't worry about that. Just this week I heard they were judging a case where construction industry lobbies did all they could for like 15 years to stop the public from being informed about the danger of asbestos.
      And yes, most people here, and I am talking about work-class type of people have no problem with lots of big industries being mostly managed by the state. However, for some reason, more and more of them are being sold to private companies, and for some reason, it looks like we can only watch and moan. Can you say lobby ?

    8. Re:How long before the Microsoft rebuttal report? by ogrizzo · · Score: 1

      I've never used Windows (I went from DOS to HP-UX to Linux) and I have never used IE; I lived in France from 1998 to 2000, marrily and frequently buying tickets on SNCF web site. Since then I've been using their site at least every three months, and I occasionaly still buy train tickets there.

      If what your friend told you is true, it must have been a temporary glitch.

    9. Re:How long before the Microsoft rebuttal report? by HuguesT · · Score: 1

      Yes, it has changed, the SNCF site is now quite browser-agnostic.

  6. Re:You can have any flavor you like, if it's vanil by macadamia_harold · · Score: 4, Insightful

    But what about innovation? If we cry foul that monopolies stifle innovation, then we should also be decrying standards that may not adapt easily to future problems.

    You're confusing a product with a business method.

    A monopoly is created and maintained through business tactics (i.e. flooding the market with (initially) cheap product to kill off competition, strongarming resellers and OEMs, etc).

    An open standard, on the other hand is just a tool. If a better tool is made available, there's nothing preventing the market from switching over to the new tool and phasing out the old one (i.e. the transition from ISA to PCI)

  7. Re:You can have any flavor you like, if it's vanil by Penguinoflight · · Score: 4, Insightful

    While that may become an issue in the future, at the moment the only thing stifiling innovation (and competition) is microsofts memory-dump file format. The ODF is a standard composition format; Any well written program should be able to read ODF files, and should be able to write out an ODF in a similar way that photoshop or your favorite graphics program can output JPEGs. The resulting file may be slightly less useful, but it's a platform.

    --
    "And we have seen and do testify that the Father sent the Son to be the Savior of the World"
    1 John 4:14
  8. Once Again Europe shows how it ought to be done... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Here in the US if some naive idealist came out with this idea he'd be on the MS payroll in a heartbeat.

  9. ohhh, finally a standard! by sporkme · · Score: 1, Interesting
    While I do wish that this order was that documents would be distributed *only* in .ODF, that is just blue-sky-software-politics.
    The headline should read "French Government Recommends Standardizing on ODF, too!"
    Because most people use .DOC, that is the de facto 'standard' wether we like it or not.
    The real news here is the big F-U to Microsoft: We are sick of using only your software. Our governments are beginning to reccommend using alternate methods because we do not trust you. If you continue to develop software the way you do, we will proceed with our plans to isolate our governments from you. To illustrate, TFA:
    --
    In the report, Carayon also recommended the government fund a research center dedicated to open-source software security, and set up a system to help national and local government agencies exchange information about best practice in the use of open-source software. He also suggested that the European Union should create an agency with the ambitious goal of ensuring its technological independence.
    Technological Independence. It is almost like there is going to be a Bretagne Tea Party, complete with euro-geeks dumping crates of Microsoft software into the Atlantic; What a sight they would be acting out in defiance of a monopoly of taxation without defragmentation. Bleh. Not bloody likely. Bring on the funding for OSS security, François!
    1. Re:ohhh, finally a standard! by kripkenstein · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Technological Independence. It is almost like there is going to be a Bretagne Tea Party, complete with euro-geeks dumping crates of Microsoft software into the Atlantic

      Amazing that this hasn't happened yet, though, isn't it? Europe's entire IT economy dependent on a single corporation somewhere in the US, and they don't seem to mind.

      What if tomorrow US law causes Microsoft to make changes to Windows (say, to enforce the DMCA somehow), and Microsoft decide to keep a single code base in the rest of the world (less effort, since the changes are deep in the kernel)? If asking Microsoft politely for a 'clean' version fails, how would you prevent this scenario - legislation? Might work, but only partially (witness the fines from recent history against Microsoft in the EU). This is only one example, admittably highly speculative; but nations need to consider worst-case scenarios.

      And this is to say nothing about nations which have a less-friendly relationship with the US. What if the US and China find themselves at war tomorrow, and Microsoft immediately stop releasing patches for Chinese IP addresses? Will the Chinese IT war effort be contingent upon successful hacking of WGA and so forth? Yes, this is a possible fix, but again - how can they not consider the worst-case scenario where this does not work very well?

    2. Re:ohhh, finally a standard! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "What if tomorrow US law causes Microsoft to make changes to Windows (say, to enforce the DMCA somehow), and Microsoft decide to keep a single code base in the rest of the world (less effort, since the changes are deep in the kernel)? If asking Microsoft politely for a 'clean' version fails, how would you prevent this scenario - legislation? Might work, but only partially (witness the fines from recent history against Microsoft in the EU). This is only one example, admittably highly speculative; but nations need to consider worst-case scenarios.

      And this is to say nothing about nations which have a less-friendly relationship with the US. What if the US and China find themselves at war tomorrow, and Microsoft immediately stop releasing patches for Chinese IP addresses? Will the Chinese IT war effort be contingent upon successful hacking of WGA and so forth? Yes, this is a possible fix, but again - how can they not consider the worst-case scenario where this does not work very well?"

      Worst case, I guess the result would be that the EU would make it legal to break Windows protection or would break it itself, replacing it with a EU version (so that the EU could act as a middle-man for handling MS sales). If that does not help, I guess the EU could fork Windows (the source is largely out there; change would not have to be overnight; Wine might even be a reasonable starting point)

      This could result in a trade war which, in turn, could lead to real war, but I would expect that both parties would realize that that would be a lose-lose situation.

  10. The French attitude by Flying+pig · · Score: 5, Insightful
    The French have a confused view of the US. On the one hand they like the style of some American popular culture and, contrary to what many people think, they were rather grateful to be liberated in WW2 (even now it's not generally appreciated that the Germans were progressively starving many of the French to death.) On the other hand, they still have a big thing about Francophone culture, and they absolutely adore standards (as a Frenchwoman once said to me at a conference, "My husband is a count, but I am in charge of electrical standards."), probably because Napolean was keen on them.

    So France is actually a pretty good place to promote ODF. It checks all the boxes. It's a standard. Any particular Francophone bits of it, the French government can influence by providing support. It is not anti-American but it is independent of America. Work on French support for ODF brings together France, Belgium, the doms and toms, Canada and Francophone Africa - so it is another small step in building links in the French speaking world.

    And ODF should be relatively easy to sell to the bureaucracy. Gentlemen and ladies, this is a French solution to an international problem. No longer will we bound by the constraints of the Anglo-Saxons...

    The only negative is that, in accordance with the immutable rules of French abbreviations, they will want to call it FDO.

    --
    Pining for the fjords
    1. Re:The French attitude by Anpheus · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      Mod this man up.

    2. Re:The French attitude by howlingmadhowie · · Score: 1

      good god, can we please stop talking about 'the french' or any other nation as if it were some sort of collective? this reeks of xenophobia.

    3. Re:The French attitude by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      rather grateful to be liberated in WW2

      I invoke Godwins Law

    4. Re:The French attitude by tygerstripes · · Score: 0, Troll
      You're right, the French do adore standards - but if and only if they get to set them.

      You'll notice there are two standards of Sea Mark (buoys) in existence globally. The reason? The french insisted on keeping their own standard when everyone else had a different one in place. So, everyone changed to the french standard. And when half the world had changed over, the french relented and went with the original standard...

      I know, it's a bit silly to discuss "the french" as a generic collective, but this does rather smack of their culture. I love France personally, but sometimes they drive me mad too...

      By the way, "My husband is a count...". I think you misspelled.

      --
      Meta will eat itself
    5. Re:The French attitude by bloblu · · Score: 1
      You're right, the French do adore standards - but if and only if they get to set them.


      Well, what is happening is that as the US is so against any standard (as they supposedly restrain freedom), that europeans are the main force behind current standardization. People in Asia are well aware of the need for standards, and the european commission is willing to draft them. The US refuses to take parts in the talks.

      Eventually, everybody will use european standards (bigger market than that of the US, plus using those standards don't prevent products to be sold in the US).

      You may well mock french willingness to define standards, but the truth is that we are somewhat successful in that particular game. (metric system, Code Civil used in many countries, and so on).
    6. Re:The French attitude by rozz · · Score: 2, Interesting
      u may be right that the french like standards ... and a lot of the standards used today have french originsd or connotations ... like the metric sytem which afaik was set at a conference in paris and some french museum has the honour of keeping THE meter ... and the circulation on the right side of the road which afaik was set by napoleon

      but your "french attitude" is a bit missplaced .. if u want a sample of stubborness in applying standards, u better look at the UK.
      they are quite funny in that respect too ... they "proudly" refused napoleon's standard and kind of forgot they use the left side of the road because the romans imposed that on them ... they refused the metric system and also forgot that their system was imposed by another conqueror (the measurement system based on multiples of 3, 4 and the dozen is actually germanic)
      history is quite funny sometimes ;)

      --
      "There is nothing more frightful than ignorance in action." Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
    7. Re:The French attitude by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes you're right, if french government choose ODF it's because of Napoleon and WWII and this has nothing to do with interoperability, price of software, strong open source lobby in France...

    8. Re:The French attitude by infofc · · Score: 2, Interesting

      What confused view are you talking about. You mean like torn between hate and love? Nah, the only ones that look at the world in a WW2 perspective are anglo-saxons. The french are just bitter that they invented pride, and the US hijacked the pride concept. i.e. bitter that they lost the cultural dominance game. And what a shame it is, french culture is 10x more charming.

    9. Re:The French attitude by tygerstripes · · Score: 1
      Couldn't agree less. The UK has adopted the metric system in pretty much all things, the only notable exception being the reference to miles rather than kilometres in signage.

      The reason they haven't changed to kilometres is the same as the reason they haven't adopted right-hand-side driving - as an island nation there was no need to integrate their road systems with the rest of Europe - note that you'll find a similar situation in many island nations: see Japan, Australia. Modifying their entire road system, signage etc would be a monumentally expensive and disruptive task, with very little real benefit. The benefits of converting the imperial monetary and scientific measurement systems to metric are obvious, however, and the cost was not so outrageous, so they went ahead and converted.

      To suggest that these decisions were made out of "stubbornness" is like suggesting that they maintained a large navy out of pride. It's just a matter of practicality, and attributable to geographic isolation. It's all a case of analysing the relative cost/benefits of any proposed change, and making rational decisions, which seems to have been the case in the UK.

      They didn't refuse Napoleon's standard out of pride - they repelled any attempts of invasion, so no attempt to impose a standard has been made since Roman times. The original reason for adopting left-hand-side driving is irrelevant when deciding whether or not to adopt a different standard.

      --
      Meta will eat itself
    10. Re:The French attitude by mxolisi06 · · Score: 1

      This story has little to do with the French's view of the US, nor does it have anything to do with Francophony. It has to do with technical independance of Europe in general and France in particular. In fact, the bits about ODF and open source are only a small part of the report wich is about economic intelligence.

      What is really interesting here is that if the recommendations are actually implemented and result in a wider use of ODF, it would not only benefit to European companies, but also to American ones ("more and more of my business partners use ODF, at least in Europe, hmm, I might recalculate my TCO numbers for MS Office vs OSS alternative").

    11. Re:The French attitude by pubjames · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The French have a confused view of the US.

      And the US has a confused view of the French. Especially recently.

    12. Re:The French attitude by masklinn · · Score: 2, Funny

      And the US has a confused view of the French. Especially recently.

      The current administration is not confused about France, France disagrees with the views of the current administration, France therefore has it's place on the Axis of Evil list, and it probably hosts terrorists. A lot of them.

      Don't move from where you are by the way, the police will be at your place soon to make you realize that the current administration is not "confused" in any way, and that you shouldn't voice such anti-american thought as they support terrorists, undermine the current administration's War on Terror efforts and show a distinct lack of support for the american troops in Iraq.

      --
      "The way we can tell it's C# instead of Haskell is because it's nine lines instead of two." -- wadler
    13. Re:The French attitude by mgblst · · Score: 1

      The US stepped into Europe for its own reasons, just as the UK did. Did you know that one of the reasons the US is so independent from the British is because the US waited so long to join the war. The UK had to sell of most of its US assets to fight the war on its own.

      And don't think that France is grateful for the part that all nations played (especially the US), but how far should that gratitude go?

    14. Re:The French attitude by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      the doms and toms

      The what and the who?

    15. Re:The French attitude by jabuzz · · Score: 4, Interesting

      For over 30 years the USA harboured convicted terrorists and openly allowed them to fundraise. This included the current administration. It was not till 9/11 that they decided to clamp down on it. In the meantime hundreds of innocent victims in Western Europe suffered or died as a result of US financed terrorism. Oh I forgot the IRA are not terrorists because they are not Muslims. I believe the French had issues with some Algerian terrorists being given haven in the USA.

    16. Re:The French attitude by rozz · · Score: 1
      Couldn't agree less.

      and you couldn't be more wrong ;)

      The UK has adopted the metric system in pretty much all things

      yeah sure, ~100 later than almost everyone else did it .. which of course proves they are not stubborn at all ;)

      The reason they haven't changed to kilometres is the same as the reason they haven't adopted right-hand-side driving - as an island nation there was no need to integrate their road systems with the rest of Europe

      that only proves lack of vision

      - note that you'll find a similar situation in many island nations: see Japan, Australia.

      yes u do have a similar situation there.. because the japanese train system was built by the english and i dont have to tell u who build the australian one.

      Modifying their entire road system, signage etc would be a monumentally expensive and disruptive task, with very little real benefit.

      it could be a monumental task now, it would have been a small one when the other countries did it... and at the time, UK had a single reason not to do it - stubborness

      The benefits of converting the imperial monetary and scientific measurement systems to metric are obvious, however, and the cost was not so outrageous, so they went ahead and converted.

      the benefits of converting to EURO now are also obvious but the UK still doesnt do it, although almost everyone else in the EU did it .. stubborness again

      To suggest that these decisions were made out of "stubbornness"

      umm.. sorry .. i'm not making a Suggestion i am stating a Fact!

      is like suggesting that they maintained a large navy out of pride.

      nice fallacy

      It's just a matter of practicality, and attributable to geographic isolation. It's all a case of analysing the relative cost/benefits of any proposed change, and making rational decisions, which seems to have been the case in the UK.

      your "rational decisions" sound more like a bunch of kids on the playground with the good old "we just dont wanna do it"

      They didn't refuse Napoleon's standard out of pride - they repelled any attempts of invasion, so no attempt to impose a standard has been made since Roman times.

      yes there were a lot other attempts .. and even more, a lot of them succeeded .. like the french invasion from 1066 and so on

      The original reason for adopting left-hand-side driving is irrelevant when deciding whether or not to adopt a different standard.

      and who said that's relevant ?

      someone pls mod this guy "+1 british stubborn" ;)

      --
      "There is nothing more frightful than ignorance in action." Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
    17. Re:The French attitude by tygerstripes · · Score: 1
      Wow, where to start. It's said that you can't win against fools, and you are the proof.

      yeah sure, ~100 later than almost everyone else did it .. which of course proves they are not stubborn at all ;)

      You talk as though France and the rest of the world took metrication on board at the turn of the 19th century, and then the UK brought up the rear. Do even a little cursory research and you'll realise how wrong you are and how rocky the global adoption of metric measurements was.

      that only proves lack of vision

      How exactly? What disadvantage does the left-side-drive give to the UK? The only shred of possible contention is that it means left-hand-drive cars are more popular (though by no means necessary), but since car markets are internationally segregated anyway, and since this is no more expensive than right-side-drive, it makes no difference. So what is it you envisage that the UK hasn't and that my statement proved?

      yes u do have a similar situation there.. because the japanese train system was built by the english and i dont have to tell u who build the australian one.

      And? Doesn't change the fact, does it. They are island nations with left-side-drive, and because they are island nations this has not been a disadvantage for them. What difference does "who built it" make to whether it's a workable system?

      it could be a monumental task now, it would have been a small one when the other countries did it... and at the time, UK had a single reason not to do it - stubborness

      Nooo I think the reason they didn't do it was because it was an unnecessary upheaval and cost - no matter how small - so would have been a wasted effort. I think we've covered this.

      the benefits of converting to EURO now are also obvious but the UK still doesnt do it, although almost everyone else in the EU did it .. stubborness again

      Riiiight. If this were such a clear-cut debate, I don't think there would have be so much discussion of it in the European and British parliaments, do you? Joining the Euro (and EU) is of clear benefit to those nations whose economies and standards of living are below that of other member nations, but that's hardly the case with the UK. There are positive and negative aspects to the single currency, and different nations have different priorities. There are people better informed and wiser than I, and certainly than you, who have not come to a firm conclusion either way, so I don't consider your uncorroborated opinion to be gospel in this.

      umm.. sorry .. i'm not making a Suggestion i am stating a Fact!

      Uh-huh. Kind of losing the initiative of debate and recourse here, aren't you.

      your "rational decisions" sound more like a bunch of kids on the playground with the good old "we just dont wanna do it"

      ...and this after you saying, one line earlier, "What I say is not opinion but fact" without backing it up with argument or, indeed, fact? How about children in a playground saying "why on earth should we?" - if there's no advantage in doing so, it's a wasted effort. I think I'll manage to live with your taunts...

      yes there were a lot other attempts .. and even more, a lot of them succeeded .. like the french invasion from 1066 and so on

      All such attempts were made at times when there either was no traffic-passing convention, or when the invading forces were using the Roman-instated left-side rule. All the successful invasions resulted in the island adopting any newly imposed systems... which included left-side drive at the time. So that kind of fucks your "stubbornness" argument over, doesn't it. There has never been an appreciable attempt by right-side-dr

      --
      Meta will eat itself
    18. Re:The French attitude by TheRaven64 · · Score: 1
      Not to mention another reason the US is so independent of the UK; the fact that the French lent them massive military aid during the revolution.

      Of course it can't have made much difference because every American knows that the French always run away or surrender when it comes to a battle.

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    19. Re:The French attitude by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      even now it's not generally appreciated that the Germans were progressively starving many of the French to death.


      Citation please? I know it's easy to beat up on the bad guy and suddenly make him guilty of all the ills in the world, but it seems some things still need proof.

      I would think in 3+ years of occupation, they would have done a noticeable job you accuse them of.

      Perhaps it's not accepted because it did not happen?
    20. Re:The French attitude by petermgreen · · Score: 1

      Couldn't agree less. The UK has adopted the metric system in pretty much all things, the only notable exception being the reference to miles rather than kilometres in signage.
      it did EVENTUALLY but really only because the EU forced it down thier throats.

      --
      note: i'm known as plugwash most places but i screwd up registering that here somehow in the past and now can't register
    21. Re:The French attitude by rozz · · Score: 1
      responding to your first reply was kind of fun, trying to do the same for this one would be a waste of time .. i'm not gonna even read such a huge rant.
      and it's not like anyone could convince a stubborn englishman that his island-mentality may be wrong... that "thinking on an island" is same as "thinking in a box" ... same as u cannot convince a bunch of kids that their block is not better than the entire neighbourhood/country/continent/etc

      but i can wish u a lot of happiness ;)

      --
      "There is nothing more frightful than ignorance in action." Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
  11. Why doesn't this sort of thing happen more often ? by Shadukar · · Score: 4, Insightful

    "Change is always forthcoming, except from a vending machine"

    I don't think the main reason why this sort of thing (ODF and open source in general) is not more widely accepted is money (tco, licenses, etc) or political/economic pressure (gates/bush pressuring someone to spend their $ the right way).

    I think the main reason why ODF/Open source/etc is not more widely accepted is reluctance to change.

    To butcher a Dune quote, "They think in circles. Their minds resist squares"

    A lot of businesses (and lets face it, government administration is a business) know that pdf/ms-doc works, they have been using it for a long time. They are used to the crappy interface, they are used to the updates/pop ups/etc. They are used to the fact that it works and they are used to the error messages that pop up. They and their accountants are used to the monthly charges for PDF/office software.

    It is very, very hard to beat/argue against that sort of habbit. Yes, to us logical slashdotters (l0lz111) ODF makes perfect sense. Its great, we should bathe in it, eat it and breath it. It has word 'open' in it? great! More please!

    But a lot of the established businesses/governments/organisations, it is not the same. An argument "but it is cheaper" or "but it is better" can be meat with "but what we have works well enough" and "but we have always done it this way and there has never been a problem" and then there is of course "why fix it if it isn't broken?" and "ok but what if we change over and it doesn't work?"

    It is very hard to argue against established procedures/models/etc. What is plain to technical people is not always so to managers and accountants (often the same person). My point? More technical people in management.

    So yeah, big cheers to the French government. they are definitely doing the right thing, in the right way.

  12. Fench ODF by SeaFox · · Score: 4, Funny
    From the InfoWorld article: All French government publications should be made available in OpenDocument Format [CC] (ODF), according to a report commissioned by the French prime minister.
    Does that mean we have to start calling it "Freedom Format" in the U.S.?
    1. Re:Fench ODF by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Once more (I keep telling people about that), fries are *not* french, they are belgium. Oh well, not that I care, I just like to point this out for the sake of correctness.

    2. Re:Fench ODF by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, you USians call it the "500 pound gorilla with cheese", also known as Steve Ballmer and MS Office.

    3. Re:Fench ODF by rozz · · Score: 1
      Does that mean we have to start calling it "Freedom Format" in the U.S.?

      u may have to welcome your new freedom overlords too ;)
      and if u study a bit of history, u will realize that wont be the first time either .. just check the connections between the founding fathers and the french revolutionaries, remember where the statue of liberyty is coming from, etc...

      --
      "There is nothing more frightful than ignorance in action." Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
    4. Re:Fench ODF by prefect42 · · Score: 1

      Or belgian even, for the sake of correctness. ;)

      --

      jh

    5. Re:Fench ODF by Shotgun · · Score: 1

      Actually, Freedom Format would be a perfect name, even if the French choose to ignore it. It makes an excellent point and is much catchier that ODF or OpenDocument.

      --
      Aah, change is good. -- Rafiki
      Yeah, but it ain't easy. -- Simba
    6. Re:Fench ODF by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That is correct. The new name is OpenDocument Freedom Format.

      The file extension will be .odff but Microsoft will truncate it to .odf so we'll have to change... oh nevermind.

  13. Re:You can have any flavor you like, if it's vanil by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You mean, like the copy of Microsoft Word which got bundled with my new computer?

  14. reading comprehension? by macadamia_harold · · Score: 1

    where did I say that because something is free, it's better?

  15. Re:Breaking news from Paris by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    I don't understand why some people can continue to bash French with what happens in Iraq. The "coward" French were right to refuse this silly war and false proofs from US government. If you are pleased to see some Americans back from Iraq in plastic bag you should volunteer and don't speak about bringing Freedom to Iraqi people, more than 50000 have been killed since "Mission accomplished".

    Beside that, ODF like many standards helps people to communicate or exchange better. Try to use your NTSC TV or your CDMA mobile in Europe and you will be a little disappointed.

  16. Re:Before we get too excited by Rix · · Score: 1

    I'm sure they can find a way for it to explode in mid flight, too.

  17. Re:Before we get too excited by antoinjapan · · Score: 1

    I doubt it, how are they going to stick an intel chip into a document format.

  18. Re:Why doesn't this sort of thing happen more ofte by pandrijeczko · · Score: 3, Insightful
    I can't see where you get this idea from that there is a "reluctance to change" open standards.

    TCP/IP is an open standard that has changed drastically over the past 15-20 years or so as the Internet has created a demand for new er application services like HTTP or SSH. By virtue of the fact that open standards are created by an open commitee, for any formal change to a standard, there needs to be lengthy discussion amongst everyone as to whether a change is of benefit to everyone or not - yes, those changes can appear to be slow to appear but I wouldn't call it "reluctance".

    And as regards ODF, Microsoft have as much right as you or I to contribute to the definition of the standard and, based on their experience already with documents of various formats, can probably bring much "to the table" in ideas anyway.

    What Microsoft don't seem to realise is that they cannot have it all their own way - on one hand, they want to now restrict piracy of their products (and good luck to them) but, on the other hand, by doing this they will force out a proportion of their user base (who simply won't or cannot afford to pay for MS products) meaning that the potential demand for ODF will increase. It strikes me as inevitable that MS will have to recognise and support ODF in the future, whether they like it or not.

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  19. Re:Before we get too excited by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    bullshit #1
    SSL certificates aren't provided in .exe format. I wonder how I would have done to pay online my taxes on my linux ? Using wine ? lol

    bullshit #2
    Online Tax service doesn't ask to ignore any security warning. It just ask you to accept to run the java applet.

    Don't drink too much if you cannot take it.. you better smoke m****

    try again pti melon

  20. I foresee a problem by tygerstripes · · Score: 1

    Where will the EU get the money for such a centre of innovation? They're already putting money into fining M$, so... ooooh, I see.

    --
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    1. Re:I foresee a problem by enrevanche · · Score: 1

      Even though this is not really the case, it would be just if it happened as MS has removed many billions of dollars from the European economy through its deceptive and illegal practices.

  21. Mod parent up! by FST777 · · Score: 1

    I have a hard time at work trying to get OOo through. The MS-Office licences we hold aren't even valid and there is no money for buying new ones in budget (small company), but that still isn't enough reason. My boss wants to switch, but his dad (and co-owner) is STRONGLY opposed to it. Not for any particular reason, but only because "I never used anything else, and I'm not going to learn something new now".

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  22. Re:Why doesn't this sort of thing happen more ofte by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    There is the fact that more and more often the MS proprietary formats *don't work*. I don't know if it's particular to governments? Maybe it's because local government seem to have run EVERY version of MS software ever created and to have kept them going longer than MS ever believed, as a result they have versions of .doc and other MS formatted documents from the DOS days and cannot read them. Maybe the churn in business and the tendency to get rid of older documents means businesses don't suffer so much?

  23. Re:You can have any flavor you like, if it's vanil by MojoRilla · · Score: 5, Insightful
    But what about innovation?
    Ah, the Microsoft whipping horse. Innovation will be hurt by these pesky open standards and open source software.

    I can't think of a computing standards process that has hurt innovation. Certainly there are plenty examples of standards that have succeded versus their proprietary counterparts (TCP/IP instead of NetBEUI or AppleTalk, the HTTP and HTML instead of MSN or Rainman (AOL's proprietary page definition language)).

    If someone has a great new idea, why can't they get it added to an existing open standard? Or even create a competing open standard. If it is innovative enough, it will be adopted. Standards aren't a monopoly. Standards still have to compete for mindshare.

    The problem with open standards, for companies like Microsoft, is that they discourage lock in. If every word processor could edit all your files with full fidelity, you would have a lot less incentive to stick to Microsoft Word. If all server software worked perfectly with Microsoft Windows clients, there would be a lot less Microsoft server licences sold.
  24. Re:Why doesn't this sort of thing happen more ofte by Fred_A · · Score: 1
    I can't see where you get this idea from that there is a "reluctance to change" open standards.
    I don't think you got his point. Open (or closed for that matter) standards change all the time. But people certainly don't like change. If they have some kind of cruddy gimmick in place that they are used to even though it's broken and you offer a simpler, overall better and mostly seampless replacement, people *will* resist it because it's different.

    In my experience, it certainly is the main hurdle that OSS have to face. It's not being open, free, or whatever else, it's being different from what the people were using up to there.

    For a lot of readers here, a new OS or a new piece of software is a new playground that is fun to explore. For most users it's like a nasty corner of town at night (and it looks like rain too). It's not rational but then people seldom are.
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  25. Re:Breaking news from Paris by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    That attempt at a joke isn't funny at all and very demeaning towards the french. That's how I see it and I'm not even french.

  26. More than Napoleon... by orzetto · · Score: 4, Insightful
    [The French] absolutely adore standards [...], probably because Napolean was keen on them.

    Rather than assuming a cult of Napoleon and the Revolution, I would say they just are better bureaucrats. A lot of US political culture assumes the market "takes care of itself", and is almost ideologically against state intervention, to the point the US are the last country still using medieval units of measure because no one enforces the metric system.

    In France (and most other countries in Europe) the government can own large strategic companies (Renault, for example) and that's considered alright; I do not know what US citizens would say if Bush tried to buy Ford for the government for "strategic economic reasons". Frenchmen are mostly fine with the idea of a state intervening directly into the economy.

    Now that's true that politicians in charge of the economy can do a lot of bullshit, but so can CEOs (one word, Enron). The French system may be stiffer and less adaptable, but allows top-down decisions to trickle down better.

    The only negative is that, in accordance with the immutable rules of French abbreviations, they will want to call it FDO.

    Probably FOD, "Format OpenDocument", as OpenDocument is a proper noun.

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    1. Re:More than Napoleon... by tygerstripes · · Score: 1

      Excellent - when can we expect the FODder WP app? Wonderfully appropriate, in a government context :-)

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    2. Re:More than Napoleon... by giorgiofr · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      almost ideologically against state intervention

      And why do you make it sound like a bad thing? I for one would LOVE it if the EU gov't incinerated itself or at least stopped regulating my whole life. First my gov't told me what level of RAID I must be running in my own f'ing company, then the Eu gov't comes and tells me what program I must use? Well fuck that, I'll do as I like. They can come and get me if they want... the weapons that I am NOT allowed to buy will protect me...

      --
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    3. Re:More than Napoleon... by naapo · · Score: 1

      Could we perhaps settle for .FUD (Format UserDocument) instead?

    4. Re:More than Napoleon... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In France (and most other countries in Europe) the government can own large strategic companies (Renault, for example) and that's considered alright; I do not know what US citizens would say if Bush tried to buy Ford for the government for "strategic economic reasons".

      Um, you must not be old enough to remember that the US government almost bought Chrysler back in the 1980's. Having only Ford and GM was considered not enough competition. It ended up Chrysler got a loan which was surprisingly paid back.

    5. Re:More than Napoleon... by value_added · · Score: 1

      Rather than assuming a cult of Napoleon and the Revolution, I would say they just are better bureaucrats. A lot of US political culture assumes the market "takes care of itself", and is almost ideologically against state intervention, to the point the US are the last country still using medieval units of measure because no one enforces the metric system.

      Nicely summarised. I'd add that there's a corollory inherent in the above which can be expressed as "You get what you deserve." In the US, we have lousy bureaucrats, so people expect lousy results. People get lousy results, so they demand lousy bureaucrats, hence the right-wing mantra of reducing government size.

      It's a shame really. Government does have an important role to play, and irrespective of political ideologies or utopian visions, governments have played and will continue to play a role. And that role includes just about everything.

      As for ODF, such things belong in the hands of governments and academics, not in the pockets of large corporations. The trouble is that in the US, with its tradition of lousy bureaucrats and a populace with low expectations, governments, academia and corporations are often one and the same.

    6. Re:More than Napoleon... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "A lot of US political culture assumes the market "takes care of itself", and is almost ideologically against state intervention, to the point the US are the last country still using medieval units of measure because no one enforces the metric system."

            Capitalist religion myopia. When did the DCMA lose its status as government intervention? The American government is currently on a massive campaign to force its style of interventionist security and IP laws across the globe. To hear fables of a 'hands-off' approach is bitter humour at best for non-Americans. You're not hands-off, you're handing power to corporations, as well in some cases services once the government's sole domain. The only sense in which you may be right is the one in which Corporatism can be considered hands-off.

    7. Re:More than Napoleon... by dfghjk · · Score: 1

      "...to the point the US are the last country still using medieval units of measure because no one enforces the metric system."

      If the metric system provided tangible benefits rather than just being aesthetically pleasing then the switch would have occurred already. The US government did plan at one time to force conversion to the metric system until it realized it was an expensive solution in seach of a problem. I suppose we just expected a return on our investment that the metric switch couldn't deliver. Anyone who wants to use the metric system in the US is free to do so and I'm sure in some applications it is the standard, but I don't really give a shit whether I buy a gallon or a liter at the gas pump. My tank is the same size either way.

      The UK isn't entirely metric either. If the metric system were really such an advantage you'd think the Europeans would be kicking the American's technical asses.

    8. Re:More than Napoleon... by 4of12 · · Score: 1
      A lot of US political culture assumes the market "takes care of itself", and is almost ideologically against state intervention, to the point the US

      The US hasn't completely foresworn state intervention in the market. In fact, the US political systems is setup to receive bids so that state intervention in the market is dictated according to the wishes of the market.

      The large amplification of this particular feedback mechanism makes me nervous about the stabilty of both the state and the market.

      --
      "Provided by the management for your protection."
    9. Re:More than Napoleon... by TheRaven64 · · Score: 1
      In aviation circles, FOD stands for Foreign Object Damage. When used as a noun, it means 'any crap on the runway that can get into the engines and cause expensive damage.'

      Personally, I like the the idea of OpenDocument being FOD to Microsoft's aircraft...

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    10. Re:More than Napoleon... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, it converrts quite nicely to French as in "Format Document Ouvert", so yes, FDO would fit :)

    11. Re:More than Napoleon... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > If the metric system provided tangible benefits rather than just being aesthetically pleasing then the switch would have occurred already.

      The metric system DOES provide tangible benefits. The fact that you don't even realize that is indicative of the real reason why the US hasn't totally switched: ignorance and inertia.

      In fact, the US industry has largely switched to metric. For example, the US car industry switched to metric (at least for motors) under pressure from Japanese and European manufacturers.

      Even if the metric system was awful, it would still be beneficial for the US to switch, because the entire fscking world is metric. Even if there is no particular advantage to driving to the right side of the road, rather than the left side, it's generally a good idea to have everyone agree on one side.

      If you don't believe in the advantages brought about by universal standards, look at cell phone standards. The US cell phone market is a mess, and way behind its European counterparts, because there are 3 or 4 different cell phone standards in the US, whereas Europe uses GSM, period.

          - Anonycous Moward

    12. Re:More than Napoleon... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "If the metric system were really such an advantage you'd think the Europeans would be kicking the American's technical asses."

            Right, because the General so kicks a Mercedes' ass. Or a Lexus for that matter. In fact Hyundai is giving them a run. Harley? Maybe you meant the American electronics industry? Scratch that. Medical? Not really. Optics? No. Beyond lawyers I'm not sure in which field America leads any longer.

      "The US government did plan at one time to force conversion to the metric system until it realized it was an expensive solution in seach of a problem."

            Problems such as NASA's?

    13. Re:More than Napoleon... by dfghjk · · Score: 1

      "The metric system DOES provide tangible benefits. The fact that you don't even realize that is indicative of the real reason why the US hasn't totally switched: ignorance and inertia."

      Explain my "ignorance" then. You're quick to offer an insult. Now prove your case.

      If there were real, tangible benefits then the switch might have happened. I'm old enough to remember the plan for it to happen. No one cared.

    14. Re:More than Napoleon... by dfghjk · · Score: 1

      "Right, because the General so kicks a Mercedes' ass. Or a Lexus for that matter. In fact Hyundai is giving them a run. Harley? Maybe you meant the American electronics industry? Scratch that. Medical? Not really. Optics? No. Beyond lawyers I'm not sure in which field America leads any longer."

      Was that you case for America being technically behind? How would the metric system help those things?

      "Problems such as NASA's?"

      Yes, if only NASA was metric.

    15. Re:More than Napoleon... by orzetto · · Score: 1
      If the metric system provided tangible benefits rather than just being aesthetically pleasing then the switch would have occurred already.

      You assume the best technical solutions always win. As the Betamax/VHS war showed, this is not always the case. The Imperial system has the advantage of being the legacy platform: if no one had ever seen two Office-like suites and were presented OpenOffice.org and Microsoft Office (with respective price tag), I have no doubt buyers of Microsoft would be ridiculed as idiots. Yet, MS Office came first and it still leads the market, years after the appearance of a free competitor.

      The metric system provides plenty of advantages:

      • Consistent and coherent, with a clear structure of basic and constructed units;
      • No weird double-naming for units of the same type, like gallons/fluid ounces; in the case of litres, it's just a dm^3.
      • Globalisation: the rest of the world (except Liberia and Jamaica, I think) uses metric for everything.
      • Simple conversion factors: you need only to move the point and/or add zeroes, you do not need multiplication.
      • Context-independent: for some reason, nutritionists used "great calories", physicists used ergs, chemists "small calories", engineers BTUs. Everybody using the joule and its multiples is much simpler.

      Just because Esperanto (or Spanish for that matter) is simpler and less dyslexia-inducing than English, does not mean you can start talking it yourself and expect it to take on. Some decisions have to be taken top-down, or people will just maintain the status quo because they cannot do otherwise.

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    16. Re:More than Napoleon... by dfghjk · · Score: 1

      "You assume the best technical solutions always win."

      No I've argued the exact opposite. What are you thinking?

      "Consistent and coherent, with a clear structure of basic and constructed units;"

      Yes, aesthetically pleasing. So what?

      "No weird double-naming for units of the same type, like gallons/fluid ounces; in the case of litres, it's just a dm^3."

      There's no "double-naming" in the imperial system. You're arguing conversion factors.

      "Globalisation: the rest of the world (except Liberia and Jamaica, I think) uses metric for everything."

      Not true, but so what? If there was an economic hardship then the conversion would happen. That's actually the plan.

      "Simple conversion factors: you need only to move the point and/or add zeroes, you do not need multiplication."

      Yes, logical and aesthetically pleasing. So what? Rarely does the average consumer need to do conversions. Meaningless to engineers since they're free to use metric if they want except where metric is mandated (and it is in some cases).

      "Context-independent: for some reason, nutritionists used "great calories", physicists used ergs, chemists "small calories", engineers BTUs. Everybody using the joule and its multiples is much simpler."

      Ah, back to conversions again. What does this mean to the average American? How often do nutritionists talk to physicists? Conversions are not a concern to the general population.

      "Just because Esperanto (or Spanish for that matter) is simpler and less dyslexia-inducing than English, does not mean you can start talking it yourself and expect it to take on. Some decisions have to be taken top-down, or people will just maintain the status quo because they cannot do otherwise."

      The metric system offers about as much benefit to the typical American as Esperanto does. That's why both are ignored.

      Just because a technically superior system exists doesn't mean that it offers real benefits. Human language, to take your example, is inefficient and can be easily improved upon yet I don't see anyone, especially the French, arguing to discard what they already speak.

      http://ts.nist.gov/ts/htdocs/200/202/lc1136a.htm

      This article presents a brief history of metric conversion in the US. Some quotes:

      "The efforts of the Metric Board were largely ignored by the American public...Due to this apparent ineffectiveness, and in an effort to reduce Federal spending, the Metric Board was disestablished in the fall of 1982."

      Metric conversion failed in the US because the public didn't want it and the cost wasn't justified.

      "Congress, recognizing the necessity of the United States' conformance with international standards for trade, included new encouragement for U.S. industrial metrication in the Omnibus Trade and Competitiveness Act of 1988. ...Federal agencies were required by this legislation, with certain exceptions, to use the metric system in their procurement, grants and other business-related activities by the end of 1992. While not mandating metric use in the private sector, the Federal Government has sought to serve as a catalyst in the metric conversion of the country's trade, industry, and commerce."

      The US government's approach on metric conversion is to allow it to proceed naturally at its own pace. The belief is that economic benefits will eventually cause the conversion to occur. Frankly, that alone is proof of my position. Once the benefits truly exist then metric will be used. I doubt anyone would argue with me on the matter if they were alive in 1975 to see the wasted money and effort. All we got out of the deal was liter bottles of Coke instead of quarts.

  27. Re:You can have any flavor you like, if it's vanil by mwvdlee · · Score: 2, Informative

    ODF is meant to be extensible.

    It should be no problem for innovating companies to add new XML tags to the ODF document formats or include entirely new components to it. The good things is that other programs that don't support those new features should still be able to load the document, albeit without the new feature.

    ODF is designed for both backward and forward compatibility.

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  28. Re:Breaking news from Paris by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You mean, they surrender like the US soldiers, who abandoned truck drivers ?

  29. Not at all by andersh · · Score: 1

    I have to point out that the EU is NOT the government of Europe. And that the national governments of member nations like France are not like U.S. states! It means the EU fines go towards the EU budget whilst any French government bureau is financed by French taxes and regulated by French law.

    1. Re:Not at all by Kijori · · Score: 1

      Money from the EU coffers does go towards some member states though, for example through the Common Agricultural Policy.

    2. Re:Not at all by tygerstripes · · Score: 1

      I know. I live there too. It was a joke. I don't think anybody really expects the fines to be funnelled directly into anti-proprietary avenues. Just imagine the PR stink...

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  30. Buying support by jesterzog · · Score: 2, Insightful

    That same Microsoft money can also buy support for their point of view in influential circles.

    I don't doubt that Microsoft will fight this and attempt to drag it out as long as possible, but I'm not convinced that Microsoft will be able to buy its way into French politics, or many other countries. The US Federal Government is quite an unusual form of democracy when compared with the rest of the world, considering some of the things that seem to go on. Not every democracy is designed such that mega-corporations to fund both sides of a two party system and effectively buy their favourite policies. If it were so easy outside the US, I doubt Microsoft would have had so many problems with the European Union already.

  31. Buoyage by Epeeist · · Score: 5, Informative

    > You'll notice there are two standards of Sea Mark (buoys) in existence globally.

    True

    > The french insisted on keeping their own standard when everyone else had a different one in place.

    False. IALA System B is used in the Americas, the Philippines and Japan. Everywhere else in the world uses IALA System A.

    Now if you had wanted to bring up prime meridians...

    FYI - I teach the UK RYA (Royal Yachting Association) yachtmaster course.

    1. Re:Buoyage by tygerstripes · · Score: 1

      It's silly really, everyone knows Greenwich is not the centre of the world... it's the centre of the Universe!

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  32. Re:Before we get too excited by melonman · · Score: 1

    Well, I would have said that making filling in a tax return over a secure connection platform-specific was pretty tricky, before trying to fill in my French tax return. (And with Windows you have to be an administrator for their java app to work properly.) As I said, just providing a certificate as a .exe is a good way to make using that certificate without Windows relatively difficult.

    See here for the .exe certificate example (link 2).

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  33. Re:Breaking news from Paris by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The US hasn't won a single war where France wasn't fighting along their side.

  34. Re:You can have any flavor you like, if it's vanil by jesterzog · · Score: 2, Insightful

    But what about innovation? If we cry foul that monopolies stifle innovation, then we should also be decrying standards that may not adapt easily to future problems.

    In general commercial terms, I agree that legislation shouldn't (usually) require companies to avoid innovation -- that's how innovation happens, after all. With government entities, though, I have no problem with solid standards being adopted for communicating information. I'd quite happily accept a mandate stating that government documents have to be available in ASCII text, although these days HTML would probably be better since it'd allow for better markup and internationalisation.

    The problem with innovative technologies is that with a few exceptions, they typically focus on the largest part of the market, and this ignores all sorts of niche markets. (eg. Disabled people, people who don't use Windows or have access to a major web browser, people who don't have cell phones, and whatever else.) This is where standards shine, if they're designed well, because it lets the people in the niche areas develop their own tools for handling the standard formats instead of having to hope that someone in the commercial world will decide it worthwhile to take notice of them. The fact that they're standards means that there's enough time (without change) for tools to actually be developed and be useful. And this is why organisations whose job it is to communicate should be adopting standards to do so, rather than trying to innovate too much.

    Besides, vanilla or not, there's nothing wrong or limited with ODF if your goal is to communicate information, and this is what most government entities will be aiming to do.

  35. Re:You can have any flavor you like, if it's vanil by testadicazzo · · Score: 5, Insightful
    But what about innovation? If we cry foul that monopolies stifle innovation, then we should also be decrying standards that may not adapt easily to future problems.

    The grandparent would seem to be a reasonably well masked troll, since the counterpoints to this statement are obvious and well rehearsed here on slashdot. But I'll throw my 2 cents into the pot.

    In addition to the other fine comments regarding standards, let us not forget that this proposes an exchange standard. There's nothing stopping anyone from using propietary MS Word formats all the way until they need to send the document to someone in the French (and hopefully later the EU ) government. Well, there's nothing stopping anyone as long as MS implements the standard. Do they?

    The problem with the current situation is the presence of de-facto propietary standard. Other word processors can't compete because everyone already has Word, and thus people buying new software want ot be able to read and write the latest propietary Word documents. MS exploits this, using it as a tool to ensure the eventual adoptation of it's newer version releases. This is good short term business strategy, but it's harmful for the rest of us. In that sense one can see this as the workings of the free market. If MS were a more benevolent monopolist, allowing open access to its document standards so other OS's and Word Processor developers could follow their standards, there would almost certainly be less anti-monopoly activity against them. One could say they are following, in tradtional corporate strategy, a greedy algorithm to formulate its strategy.

  36. Re:fair? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    What prevents MS from implementing ODF filters in Office? If that's what's used in Europe then they should - just as they have to have A4 as the standard paper size in Office (+ other localization features). Besides, the EU has fined European companies for much larger amounts but the MS case has probably been in the news in the US more than any of the others (and MS has put up more resistance than any other company).

  37. What does that have to do with "IT economy" ? by SgtChaireBourne · · Score: 3, Insightful
    Amazing that this hasn't happened yet, though, isn't it? Europe's entire IT economy dependent on a single corporation somewhere in the US, and they don't seem to mind.

    What does that have to do with the IT sector? Or do you mean that the entire economy is based on IT?

    If it's the former, then that's wrong. IT is (or shoud be) just a tool that you use to get your work done. That's the same whether it's coordinating a fleet of taxis or running a governement or anything else. "making" and "selling" software is such a miniscule part of the economy that it's truly bizarre that it is such a focus of attention.

    Pretty much every aspect of society and the economy nowadays is depended in someway on using ICT for most basic activities.

    That's pretty scary when you consider that nearly each and every board room, meeting room and government office has a system that is exposed to the net with what amount to standardized backdoors into the system. Yes standardized, the same exploit working on 90% of the desktops can be called standard. In many cases there are even microphones built into or attached to the systems which can be activated.

    That's really scary when you realize that no one outside of the original vendor can do code audits. It's the only one with access to or use of the source code. So in principle anything could be hidden there on purpose or by accident, by the vendor or by intruders. So called Anti-virus programs detect massproduced intrusion tools, but only after they've been collected and analysed. Custom or targeted intrusions using code that is not wide spread have a much lower chance of detection.

    So making a backdoor for the one brand /model of system gives you a backdoor into not just part of the IT sector, but really a majority of the rest of the EU economy. France's move is a good one. Moving to open standards for government documents, will enable at the least diversification. Who knows how big the final gain will be. Few if any really predicted how (pre-spam) e-mail (aka SMTP + ISO-8859-x) would take off and drive advancement. Few if any really predicted that the WWW (aka HTTP + HTML) would take off and drive all kinds of improvement. However, everyone, even Chairman Gates' fanbois and catamites, is experiencing a need for document interoperability. Interoperability is something which we have seen can only be provided by open standards, in this case OpenDocument.

    --
    Beta is broken and the link to classic doesn't work. Stop wasting our time or there won't be anybody left here.
    1. Re:What does that have to do with "IT economy" ? by LaughingCoder · · Score: 1
      That's pretty scary when you consider that nearly each and every board room, meeting room and government office has a system that is exposed to the net with what amount to standardized backdoors into the system.
      Ahhh, you have hit upon it. You have uncovered the hidden agenda.
      So in principle anything could be hidden there on purpose or by accident
      Exactly.
      That's really scary when you realize that no one outside of the original vendor can do code audits.
      And of course no one outside of the original vendor can *change* the code either.
      --
      The more you regulate a company, the worse its products become.
    2. Re:What does that have to do with "IT economy" ? by Calinous · · Score: 1

      There is a customer program at Microsoft that allows them "read-only" access to Windows source code. However, as you can not compile it yourself, you can not know that what you see is the "real thing"

  38. OK, sorry by Flying+pig · · Score: 2, Funny
    Let's say "a substantial part of the ENArchy, and the national bureaucracy, speaking from personal experience over a number of years"

    Good Lord, this is Slashdot. If you want academic standards of discussion and analysis, you could always try Digg!

    And in case you are wondering, I think they have the right attitude. It's _your_ interpretation that suggesting that the French want to encourage the use of French and international standards, and mentioning Napoleon is xenophobia. Which suggests that you think those are bad things. Which, friend, makes you the xenophobe.

    --
    Pining for the fjords
    1. Re:OK, sorry by howlingmadhowie · · Score: 1

      i don't see how i was interpreting anything. i was just objecting to the attributing of qualities to 'the french' as a group. if you want to say 'a tendency in the french government or certain government departments' than say it, don't say 'the french', it's impolite and wrong. and you also ascribed some negative qualities to 'the french' (maybe i should conduct a poll of 'the french' to see how accurate your picture is). the problem is, the world consists of individuals.

      if you herd people into boxes, you will always find one or two to justify the etikettenschwindel you're perpetrating.

  39. Serial numbers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Because in Soviet Russia, the government writes your documents for you!

    Actually there were periods when they used to tattoo serial numbers on prisoners in the Gulags. So your statement should have read:
    "In Soviet Russia the Goverment writes a serial number on you!"
  40. Re:Breaking news from Paris by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Awwww, still upset that France wouldn't rubber stamp
    your imperialist adventure? What a pity.

    How's that whole Iraq thing going by the way?

  41. Re:Breaking news from Paris by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Try using your Europe-standard PAL TV in France and you'll be disappointed. They use SECAM.

  42. Re:You can have any flavor you like, if it's vanil by bit01 · · Score: 1

    The grandparent would seem to be a reasonably well masked troll,

    It's probably an astroturfer, that's why such messages keep getting repeated.

    This single decision could cost M$ hundreds of thousands of euros. You honestly think that a company that fine and upstanding isn't flooding every discussion they can with their propaganda?

    ---

    New game: Spot the lying astroturfer on /.!

  43. Cheese... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny
    No, you USians call it the "500 pound gorilla with cheese", also known as Steve Ballmer and MS Office.

    No, no, no... If it's Steve Ballmer we are talking about it's a "500 pound gorilla with a chair" not cheese, a chair...
    1. Re:Cheese... by rolfwind · · Score: 1

      No no no.

      The correct saying is a "900 pound gorilla and a chair", to be used in humor, even though 500 pounds is closer to his actual weight. But that's only because he's been dancing around, sweating to the oldies.

  44. Re:You can have any flavor you like, if it's vanil by testadicazzo · · Score: 1
    You're probably right. I've never heard the term astroturfer before though.

    On the other hand, there are plenty of MS zealots out there, for a variety of wierd reasons. So who knows?

  45. Agree, except by Flying+pig · · Score: 1

    Rather than owning strategic companies, the US just has a system of pork barrel politics to keep them going (e.g. anybody making airplanes, and the amazing system under which American farmers have their surplus corn bought to make ethanol which needs as much fossil fuel to produce as it replaces, for no net gain whatsoever (source: Scientific American, this month). It is also good at protectionism when required - look at how online betting companies suddenly got hit when the US realised they were foreign owned and extracting US dollars. I bet you before long they will find a way covertly to fund GM and Ford, because after the midterms the Republicans won't want any more vote losses. Any government that wants to stay in business has to find a way to rebalance the economy, because there is no such thing as a free market. Europe just tends to be a little more blatant (transparent) about it.

    --
    Pining for the fjords
  46. Re:You can have any flavor you like, if it's vanil by CastrTroy · · Score: 1

    You mention MSN, but you fail to mention that MSN Messanger, is the defacto messaging standard. Some others use ICQ/AOL or Yahoo IM. They are all closed standards. There's an open standard called Jabber, yet I don't think it's managed to gain much of a foot hold. Your forget that when HTML was created, there was no Rainman (definitely, definitely no Rainman). There was no NetBEUI or AppleTalk when TCP/IP was created. I think that open standards are great, however, I'm not really aware of any real open standards that have won when proprietary standards have beat them to release. We still user MP3,MPG,JPG,GIF (which is finally patent free), DOC, and many other formats that are propriety, yet accepted as the defacto standard, because it's what people have always used.

    --

    Anthropic principle: We see the universe the way it is because if it were different we would not be here to see it.
  47. What are you smoking? Give us some. by jotaeleemeese · · Score: 1

    In the stupid scenario you are describing MS products would be the least important of preocupations.

    Any computer systems any country uses are securely built around products they can control during a crisis situation (if you think the Chinese military waits for patches released directly by MS for vital equipment, then you are watching too many bad movies).

    --
    IANAL but write like a drunk one.
    1. Re:What are you smoking? Give us some. by kripkenstein · · Score: 2

      if you think the Chinese military waits for patches released directly by MS for vital equipment, then you are watching too many bad movies

      Yes, I agree. But even if all the frontline and otherwise critical systems are MS-free, the economy and industry supporting the Chinese war machine is based (IT-wise) on Microsoft. So, the effects might not be immediate, but would eventually be tremendous.

    2. Re:What are you smoking? Give us some. by petermgreen · · Score: 1

      don't confuse the tactical (short term during battle) with the strategic (long term)

      strategically the milatary especially during wartime NEEDS civilians to serve it in order to keep functioning. and civilian industry is often very reliant on computers some of them MS based and (indirectly) connected to public networks.

      --
      note: i'm known as plugwash most places but i screwd up registering that here somehow in the past and now can't register
  48. Re:You can have any flavor you like, if it's vanil by CastrTroy · · Score: 1

    No, you can't use undefined tags and still call your product ODF compliant. That's just asking for a company (MS most likely) to release MS word with a bunch of their own extensions, and maintain their monopoly because nobody else will be able to read the format. Granted, OASIS can make changes to the ODF format (ODF Version 2?) such that future programs can make use of new features we hadn't envisioned. There's no point in creating an open standard if you let everybody just change it however they like.

    --

    Anthropic principle: We see the universe the way it is because if it were different we would not be here to see it.
  49. Re:Breaking news from Paris by masklinn · · Score: 1

    Most frenchs don't care though, I'm french and I mostly don't give a damn about these jokes.

    --
    "The way we can tell it's C# instead of Haskell is because it's nine lines instead of two." -- wadler
  50. Re:Why doesn't this sort of thing happen more ofte by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    perfectly said. MS wants total market dominance. they decide to kill all competition, and also they want to decide that everyone pays them their tax. and they blame anyone who cannot afford their fees but still use it illegally as pirates. so, if there's an option they kill it - they are perfectly to blame no one else but themselves for piracy. they are also happy for pirates because some day the pirates will be forced to buy thier stuff whether they can afford it or not. win-win in any case. only thing is that us lemmings have been very very quite about it. switch to linux, OOo, and spread ODF ! hurrah to free sfware and open standards! its happening slowly here and there, but at least a 20% market for alternate products will be a very good: even for windows customers, because internt explorer wont be ignored for another 7 years! and maybe in 2014 be labelled as IE 14!

  51. Re:You can have any flavor you like, if it's vanil by 1u3hr · · Score: 1
    But what about innovation? If we cry foul that monopolies stifle innovation, then we should also be decrying standards that may not adapt easily to future problems.

    So Microsoft's proprietary standard(s) is/are future proof? And open standards never evolve?

    Anyway, we're talking about a file format for exchanging documents. Necessarily there has to be a high degree of standardisation. The question is, who defines it -- Microsoft, or a public institution.

    Customers are free to purchase software that meets their needs. MS is free to implement standard file formats.

  52. Re:You can have any flavor you like, if it's vanil by masklinn · · Score: 1

    Innovation?

    Well, you can innovate in your user interface (see Office 12's Ribbon), or in quite a lot of UI features and stuff (spell & grammar checking) without the need for your own format.

    And if you need to make the format evolve, just get on the format's standardization comitee/board, argue your point, and make the format evolve.

    What do you say, others will be able to implement the innovations you add to the format? Why yes, that's called levelling the playing field, and it gives you (as a user) stuff like intercommunication (which is the point of a standard), competition, choice, ...

    --
    "The way we can tell it's C# instead of Haskell is because it's nine lines instead of two." -- wadler
  53. Re:You can have any flavor you like, if it's vanil by 1u3hr · · Score: 4, Insightful
    We still user MP3,MPG,JPG,GIF (which is finally patent free), DOC, and many other formats that are propriety, yet accepted as the defacto standard, because it's what people have always used.

    The first four you mention are all openly defined and stable, if perhaps encumbered with patents. They're implemented by literally thousands of small and large software applications. DOC is a messy unpublished format (I hesitate to use the word "standard") and it's a great effort for other vendors to reverse-engineer it, a situation MS is very happy with and is unhappy if required to use a less obscure format.

    As for "it's what people have always used", you are obviously very green (well, in comparison with myself). In the early 80s, "everyone" used WordStar. In the late 80s, "everyone" used WordPerfect. Only with Windows did MS leverage its inside knowledge of the OS and its drivers to take a lead with WinWord. The early versions took great pains to be able to use WordPerfect files (which of course were also prorietary, but well-understood) and to emulate its features.

    By all accounts, the DOC format is full of kludges and is not somethgn to be proud of or emualte by choice. I doubt I am alone in having Word documents corrupt spontaneously, or balloon unaccountably to gigantic sizes.

  54. Re:You can have any flavor you like, if it's vanil by mwvdlee · · Score: 1

    So ODF is not upwards compatible?

    If I create a document in a future version of ODF, I won't be able to load it into an old appliction using a previous version of ODF? So basically ODF will force you to upgrade your software (and hardware) to match the latest features required by the latest ODF specs used? That would really suck if that were true.

    --
    Slashdot social media options: AIM, ICQ, Yahoo, Jabber and Mobile Text. Why no MySpace?
  55. What a lot of ignorance is displayed there. by jotaeleemeese · · Score: 1

    France fought from the start the Nazi invation, they were at war with Germany 20 years ealier as you may recall, so they were under no illusions of what a German, revengful ocupation, would be like (Versailles is in France you know).

    The French resistence from the start looked for US and British support, they were unequivocal about who were friends and who were foes.

    US people do not appreciate other countries pride for their own culture because the US has none of its own. Say what you meay, but the US is a young country with immigrants from all over the globe, thus the mere thought of a national culture is alien.

    France has, understandably so, pride on all things French. Is what distinguishes them from the rest of Europe and what many other Europeans try to emulate (the food, the laid back attitude, the galantry, the language). Many US people tire of mocking that, or look at it in wonderment. The res of the world understand the US is the big world's melting pot, but the US does not reciprocate and tries to understand nothing about countries with homogenous cultures.

    As for adoring standards, what exactly is wrong with that? The metric system, the most famous of French standards, has made international commerce and science possible. The Napoleonic code is the basis for legal systems in many countries, it was French compromise which allowed the meridian in Greeenwich to be considered the basis of UCT thus laying the fundation for a coherent, worldwide, time system.

    As for French influence in the world you are painting a sorry pantomime of today's situation.

    France can suggest things like adoption of this format, but with an EU of 20 something countries nothing that France says nowadays is gospel, not even for Belgium, if you think that tin pot despots in Africa care about what France does regarding a matter that most likely affects them little or not at all, then you need to read more newspapers.

    --
    IANAL but write like a drunk one.
    1. Re:What a lot of ignorance is displayed there. by TrancePhreak · · Score: 1

      I'd say it's not that France takes pride in all things France, it's more that they wont consider anything outside France to be better in any way. Something similar happens in Japan. The Japanese will often only buy Japanese products, because they don't like helping outside companies.

      --

      -]Phreak Out[-
    2. Re:What a lot of ignorance is displayed there. by Fire+Dragon · · Score: 1

      I'd say it's not that France takes pride in all things France, it's more that they wont consider anything outside France to be better in any way. Something similar happens in Japan. The Japanese will often only buy Japanese products, because they don't like helping outside companies.

      Buying local goods has almost nothing to do with the pride of goods made locally, but the economical need of developed countries to support local companies. Made in insert your home country doesn't really tell you where it was originally made, not just assembled. In developed countries local goods usually are more expensive, not counting govermental substitutes. By buying local goods I know that that I'm paying my neighbours salary so that they can by goods that my company produces. Therefore whole pride of local goods thing is just thinking of your own income.

      Of course you have the possibility to compare local products, products from other developed countries and products made in sweatshops in developing countries. Then you have to deside price/quality ratio to make your purchasing decision.

  56. Re:fair? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You mean, like the US imposing a 80% import tax on steet? Or outlawing Internet gambling sites?

  57. Re:You can have any flavor you like, if it's vanil by imroy · · Score: 1
    There's an open standard called Jabber, yet I don't think it's managed to gain much of a foot hold.

    I think a little company called Google will help there with Google talk.

  58. much more hardcore by spectrokid · · Score: 1
    Been flippin' through the report. This is not just about ODF. His proposition 3.7:
    Compléter le mémorandum pour une Europe numérique, en proposant à nos partenaires européens d'établir l'interopérabilité comme règle de droit commun fondamental en matière de développement informatique.

    This calls for making IT interoperability a "fundamental rule of common law". Somebody 'sgonna be kissing their secret network protocols goodbye! The report also calls for closer cooperation with the Russians, proposes a legal framework for RFID, explains the GPL, promotes the Quaero project...
    --

    10 ?"Hello World" life was simple then

    1. Re:much more hardcore by Edoko · · Score: 2, Interesting

      There are risks to legislating compatibility. However, in this case, legislation is probably required.
      • One useful piece of legislation would be to require that all software marketed in the European community be compatible with the open source standard. This would require Microsoft as a matter of law to provide compatibility "save as" with ODF.
      • Legislation could also require Microsoft to set as its default format ODF.
      • Finally, should Microsoft fail to comply, it could be subject to "conversion" fines to compensate users for the cost of converting their files to ODF format.
      • An even better solution would be to place an extra 10% tax on all Microsoft products with that 10% of revenue being targeted for support of European research on ODF type standards.
      • Another useful idea would be to hold Microsoft liable for the costs and damages of security failures and vulnerabilities in its software if it could be shown that it was negligent in design of its software, e.g. knowingly allowed defective software to be placed on the market.
      • And one final idea is that software should be treated like pharmaceutical patents: the copyright should be set to expire after a few years, whereupon it becomes legal to "clone" it.

  59. Re:You can have any flavor you like, if it's vanil by Daytona955i · · Score: 2, Interesting

    There's a difference between "free" and "open." The internet was built on open standards. This is why when you get e-mail or access a web page, you can use any e-mail client and any web browser. (We'll ignore the html restrictions certain browsers have imposed and focus instead on the http protocol)

    Open standards actually encourage innovation because no one has to write their own e-mail protocol or web protocol. It also does not hinder the adoption of new products because if I can just replace my current e-mail client with a new one seamlessly, I'm more likely to try it out.

    This is why MS Word is the defacto standard. Because it's the best product? No, because anytime someone else tried to come out with a different product there was a high barrier to entry because the new word processor would not be able to use the current word processor files.

    I think Open Standards help innovation because they allow anyone to create new software that can be easily adopted. The only person they don't help is any current monopoly. And as others have mentioned, if a newer, better way of doing things come up, there's no reason you couldn't adopt the new standard while retaining backwards compatibility with the old open format.

  60. doms toms by chro57 · · Score: 0

    french oversea territories and departments.

  61. Re:You can have any flavor you like, if it's vanil by swv3752 · · Score: 1
    --
    Just a Tuna in the Sea of Life
  62. Re:You can have any flavor you like, if it's vanil by CastrTroy · · Score: 1

    Well, it could upwards compatible in that sense. I guess you could implement and ODF reader that would ignore any tags it didn't understand. I'm not sure how current programs are made, but I imagine that they use some kind of DTD to decide what is and what isn't allowed. The point is, is that you can't call a program ODF compliant unless the files it creates use only what is defined in the current standard. MS can't just make up their own tags, because everyone else would be "forced" to implement them. ODF is just a standard for document formatting, and doesn't define any software you want to use. If they come up with ODF version 2, and your software doesn't support it, then you are free to make your interpreter for your desired office suite, pay someone else to make it, nag your software company that sold you the software in the first place to make it or whateter. You can go ahead and make an ODF module for WordPerfect 5.1 if that's what you want to use to type your documents in.

    --

    Anthropic principle: We see the universe the way it is because if it were different we would not be here to see it.
  63. Re:You can have any flavor you like, if it's vanil by CastrTroy · · Score: 1

    And I can count on my two hands the number of people I've physically met that even know about Google Talk, and can count on one hand the number of people who actually use it. I don't even use it myself, and I use a lot of open source software (Linux, Firefox, OO.o,...). Why would I? There's nobody to talk to on there, and everybody I know who has GoogleTalk also has MSN installed, so it's not like I can't talk to them. Google has failed to make any impact that i've seen on the Messaging front. I can release a messanger too, but that doesn't mean that it will be popular. And the reason why MSN will continue to win out over google, is because MSN is included on almost every PC that ships from every factory.

    --

    Anthropic principle: We see the universe the way it is because if it were different we would not be here to see it.
  64. Re:Breaking news from Paris by pascalc · · Score: 1

    All TVs in Europe use both PAL/SECAM standards and not only France had SECAM has a standard in Europe, Greece, and Eastern Europe used it as well. Which is why I can buy a TV in Madrid and have it working in Paris.

    The last time I saw a PAL only apparel, it was a VCR made in Taiwan my cousin had brought back from Germany, it was about 15 years ago...

    PAL is just as standard as SECAM and NTSC and in the same vein, English being the Standard language in anglo-saxon countries doesn't make it the standard in Poland or China.

  65. Re:You can have any flavor you like, if it's vanil by CastrTroy · · Score: 1

    Yes, I remember the days when everyone used wordstar, wordperfect, or whatever. Things weren't really any different. There was much less functionality in those formats, and computers were much slower, so things had to be easy to understand. But there was still problems with incompatibilities between processors. Just ask anybody who used AmiPro instead of wordperfect. Things didn't always convert that well.

    --

    Anthropic principle: We see the universe the way it is because if it were different we would not be here to see it.
  66. format != program by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Dude, when you sober up re-read the article. There is nothing there about specifying particular programs. The entire statement is about specifying particular data formats. In this case it's one that any vendor can implement, even M$

    A format is not a program. Programs use formats.

  67. Re:Breaking news from Paris by pascalc · · Score: 1

    Anyway, these jokes tell more about the people that make them than about the French. And if you want my opinion, they give quite a sad picture of the average US-american...

  68. Re:Breaking news from Paris by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Dude, don't you know this is /.? Sure it looks like the slash is to the right, but the crowd here definitely shows it is to the left, ie liberal pussies. Ergo, any jokes about anyone else being pussies will not be taken well.

    Personally I found your comment quite humorous. Too bad most folks here only laugh at jokes that fit their politics.

  69. Re:You can have any flavor you like, if it's vanil by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    But what about innovation?


    Because Word has been the shining example of innovation. Grammar checking that hasn't been improved since the mid-90s (and killed off the thrid party market) and such helpful tools like Clippy. [/sarcasm]
  70. Re:You can have any flavor you like, if it's vanil by ElleyKitten · · Score: 1
    I don't even use it myself, and I use a lot of open source software (Linux, Firefox, OO.o,...).
    It's not open source.

    Why would I?
    I don't know about you, but I started using it because it was integrated into my GMail. Most of my friends use GMail now, because it's such a good webmail, and so instead of trading IM names and what programs we use we now just click on eachother's names in the contact list. I've had the same AIM name for about 8 years, but since I got GMail I've hardly even bothered with it.

    There's nobody to talk to on there, and everybody I know who has GoogleTalk also has MSN installed, so it's not like I can't talk to them.
    Wait, you use Linux yet you also use MSN? Why? Even my Windows-only friends don't use MSN.
    --
    "What is Internet Explorer 7? Are you saying we can't access the normal internet?" - I love tech support. Really.
  71. Rip and replace myth by SgtChaireBourne · · Score: 1

    Don't let your boss's dad bullshit you. There's no need to "rip and replace" like his hero Ballmer talks about. Any smart business phases in new technology. The way to do that with OOo is to get it installed along side all the illegal MS Office licenses. At the beginning make sure it is set to save in the same format as everyon esle is using. That way, those that wish to can try it out. It's also a useful tool to recover corrupted MS Office files.

    After key people have tried OOo, and you have some feedback, then make a migration plan. The boss's dad can keep using his copy of MS Office for the forseeable future. But keep in mind that he can lose the business lots of money that way. Going to OOo can reduce the company's liability there. Given all the phone home features in MS Windows, does he feel like continuing to take the risk?

    --
    Beta is broken and the link to classic doesn't work. Stop wasting our time or there won't be anybody left here.
    1. Re:Rip and replace myth by FST777 · · Score: 1

      There are currently a few running OOo on their laptops, with consent of all. If I want to, I can install OOo on the Terminal Server, but he (and some others) have already stated that they won't be using it anyhow.

      Even if we are going to gradually phase out, he will block the decision to do so. And it won't work, since most will continue to use MS Office (some because they don't want to use anything else, others out of convenience). So eventually there will be a "rip and replace" anyhow, albeit non-technical.

      Believe me, I've given up hope after years (litterally) of trying. They want to take the risk with the licenses, stating that they will buy them "sometime". My only hope is that we will have to move on to a newer version eventually (there is a learning curve for MS-Office 2007), and by then I will enforce OOo, or die in the process :-)

      --
      Free beer is never free as in speech. Free speech is always free as in beer.
    2. Re:Rip and replace myth by SgtChaireBourne · · Score: 1
      Even if we are going to gradually phase out, he will block the decision to do so. And it won't work, since most will continue to use MS Office (some because they don't want to use anything else, others out of convenience).

      Eventually, MS will try to shoehorn your boss's company into MSO 2007 or later. The differences there will kill any of the argument about him using the "same" program. Bosses like safety nets, especially those that don't have licensing fees. OOo gives him that safety net.

      Looking ahead, if MS rolls out new product activation or DRM that checks with a home sever every time an application or document is opened, then he'll be SOL with any unlicensed copies of MS Office. The DRM, and maybe the product activation, have been rolled out so far as inexctable parts of "security" upgrades. Turning on those functions could easily come the same way.

      --
      Beta is broken and the link to classic doesn't work. Stop wasting our time or there won't be anybody left here.
  72. Re:Breaking news from Paris by Anne+Honime · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Microsoft has threatened to invade France to reimpose "order" on the chaos of the ODF. France has pre-emptively surrendered.

    This idotic attempt at making fun should not call for an answer, but it is offensive enough that I'm making one. France casualties in WWI alone were higher than the total of USA casualties among all wars they fought, american civil war included, while our population ratio has been a steady one fifth of yours (sources : http://www.infoplease.com/ipa/A0004615.html, http://europeanhistory.about.com/library/weekly/bl ww1castable.htm). WWII was a sad mess, we were thrown to war without adequate preparation by politicians who betrayed us, and we were beaten fair and square by Germany (which was a nation of strong warriorship traditions too). So, I don't think we need to take any lesson of fighting spirit from anyone, considering that after France liberation in WWII our Free French Forces kept fighting along with Allied forces all the way up to Berlin.

    But if you still want to dig into this, let me just remind you that we're currently the only european nation with independent nuclear power with a worldwide strike capacity (usa included, in case you ask).

    We are currently a pacific nation, and being perceived as harmless may not be bad advertising ; but don't get fooled by your own propaganda. We're not in the habit of making the same mistakes twice, and any hostile power would have a surprise trying to play fool with us.

  73. Your intial comment is lousy. by jotaeleemeese · · Score: 1

    Read it again later, it gives the impression you were saying what now you are denying you said.

    --
    IANAL but write like a drunk one.
  74. Re:Why doesn't this sort of thing happen more ofte by Half-pint+HAL · · Score: 1

    I can't see where you get this idea from that there is a "reluctance to change" open standards. TCP/IP is an open standard that has changed drastically over the past 15-20 years or so

    TCP/IP is a standard for techies & geeks. Techies and geeks (A) Like shiny new things & (B) Like things that work better.

    Joe Bloggs MBA is not a techy and not a geek. He likes what he knows. He is happy with "good enough", and doesn't wire his washing machine to a 100 Base T network just so his PC will tell him when his clothes are clean!

    HAL.

    --
    Got them moderator blues I blieve I walk out the do', With these mod-points I been gettin', I 'most never post no mo'
  75. Re:You can have any flavor you like, if it's vanil by CastrTroy · · Score: 1

    I don't have a GMail account, and I don't feel like changing my email address (to one controlled by a corporation) just to get some flashy new interface. I've been screwed over too many times by companies offering great features, luring everyone to their email service, and then cutting down the features and making you pay for stuff you were previously getting for free. I use MSN exactly for the reason I said I did. Because everybody I know talks on MSN, and even those who have something else installed, also have MSN installed. I don't want to manager multiple accounts for messaging, so I just stick with what I know 100% of the people I talk to have.

    --

    Anthropic principle: We see the universe the way it is because if it were different we would not be here to see it.
  76. Open standards -- why? by Half-pint+HAL · · Score: 0

    I fail to see the point in an open standard document format.

    In photos, sound and video: yes. Umpteen different photo programs can perform umpteen transformations on photos in umpteen different ways, and then save the file as a picture again, without needing to encode any information about what was done. A picture is a picture is a picture. A sound is a sound is a sound. A video is a video is a video.

    Documents, however, are a little different. The file is a series of transformations. The functions of a word-processor are thus totally prescribed: the standard and nothing more. That leaves next to nothing for Word Processor X to differentiate itself from Word Processor Y -- so why bother writing one? Why not just use OpenOffice.

    In case you still don't see what I'm saying, an example:

    I take a picture with my camera, and load it into Photoshop. I apply a pincushion effect to squeeze the middle of the picture in, giving it a "waist". I save it in .JPG and put it on my webpage. I can open it in Opera, Mozilla, IE etc, and none of the browsers need know how to "pincushion" a picture.

    I open a text document in a word processor, apply formatting and then apply a pincushion effect to squeeze the middle part of the text in. Format X saves it as blahblahblah. If I open it in a word processor without pincushion, it doesn't work.

    HAL.

    --
    Got them moderator blues I blieve I walk out the do', With these mod-points I been gettin', I 'most never post no mo'
    1. Re:Open standards -- why? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I fail to see the point in an open standard document format.

      Then you are very stupid, as you proceed to demonstrate with the rest of your post.

    2. Re:Open standards -- why? by Calinous · · Score: 1

      What if HTTP wouldn't have been an open standard but a Microsoft one? Using the DMCA, Microsoft would be able to stop everyone from building web browsers. In the end, you would be forced to use just Internet Explorer. Let's take it another way. There was a time when power distribution in cities (in 1920s and so) used several systems - with different voltages and different frequencies. One open standard - imposed by a government maybe - changed these so that everyone would now use the same electric devices in any place of the city. What would happen if company X has leased Microsoft Office, but due to some problems, the payment didn't reach Microsoft? Microsoft could ask the removal of all Office instances from the company computers. In this moment, all your data is kept hostage by the will of Microsoft (until they won't give you back the programs, you can not access your documents, your emails, your spreadsheets, part of your applications that use - let's say - interfacing to Excel, and so on. Your arguments are flawed: the image editor (photoshop, let's say) have the image saved as an internal, undocumented, unknown format (.psd I think). In order to have the image visible to every other image viewer, you NEED to export it. Just like you would export the document with the image into a printable format, or into http, or whatever. What you say seems to be just what Microsoft did with all the standards it tainted. Java embedded in Windows XP was not compatible with the license they got from Sun. They don't ship Java in XP any longer, and they paid their way out of the judgement (I think they paid $2 billions to Sun to drop the case). And in the end, what you say is an argument for an open standard, not against: As long as the format of the document is kept hidden, if you format an embedded image to have a pincushion effect, no other word processor would be able to read it.

  77. Re:Breaking news from Paris by KutuluWare · · Score: 0, Flamebait
    The US hasn't won a single war where France wasn't fighting along their side.
    I'm not one for unsubstantiated France bashing, but that statement is one hell of a non squitur. Factually, it's MOSTLY correct. Arguably, we "won" the War if 1812, which France not only didn't fight with the US (Napoleon was kinda busy then), but partly caused the US to start in the first place. More to the point, one could just as easily make the same statement about Canada, Portugal, Belgium, and Australia; none of which have the same history of military loss as France. For whatever reason, France has found itself on the losing side of the majority of wars it gets itself involved in, and given the age of that country, there's been a lot. Their solution is quite freqently to concede, withdraw, or pay off their opponent to get the war over with. It's To an All American Patriot, that's surrender. To a French citizen, its probably considered "sane foreign policy that keeps our citizens alive and our cities in one piece in exchange for not fighting people we really don't give a crap about." It's all about perspective. In closing, to counter one non sequitur with another, for as long as there has been a US, France hasn't won a single war that the US didn't do most of their fighting, to wit: American Revolution, WWI, WWII, Desert Storm. There's a reason that the most famous French military unit is the French Foreign Legion. :)
  78. you mean, selling software? by everphilski · · Score: 1

    you mean, selling software?

  79. Re:Breaking news from Paris by mrchaotica · · Score: 1

    But if you still want to dig into this, let me just remind you that we're currently the only european nation with independent nuclear power with a worldwide strike capacity (usa included, in case you ask).

    We are currently a pacific nation...

    Although your post is otherwise very informative, you seem to be confused in your geography: the USA is not in Europe, and France is not in the Pacific, currently or otherwise. ; )

    --

    "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

  80. Re:Breaking news from Paris by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ehmm no, Soviet Russia invaded Berlin. Later Saxony was handed over to the communists, and a sector of Berlin was returned to the West. Not to mention that without the Versailles Treaty neither WWII nor Hitler would be possible. Thank you France.

  81. Warning! Object In Mirror May Be Closer... by andersh · · Score: 1

    Sure, but this is an American website - can we trust people to know these things? :) There is just too much French-bashing going on already.

  82. Re:Breaking news from Paris by Anne+Honime · · Score: 1

    Let me clarify : France is the only european nuclear power independent enough to have worldwide strike capacity, even against the USA if need be.

    Also next time you check a map of the Pacific Ocean, try to find the New Caledonia, the French Polynesia, and Wallis & Futuna. Those are french overseas territories.

  83. Moo by Chacham · · Score: 1

    Of course, the official definition of the format will be in French, and all dates must use Paris Mean Time.

  84. Re:Breaking news from Paris by mrchaotica · · Score: 1
    Let me clarify : France is the only european nuclear power independent enough to have worldwide strike capacity, even against the USA if need be.

    Russia is European too (in terms of genealogy and culture, if not entirely in terms of geography). I know they haven't been doing so well since the Cold War, but I'm sure've still got some of their arsenal left.

    (By the way, my previous post was intended as a joke.)

    --

    "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

  85. Re:You can have any flavor you like, if it's vanil by mrchaotica · · Score: 1

    You are aware that MSN is controlled by a corporation just as much as Google Talk is, right? If you want to be free of corporations, Jabber is perfect for you because you can run your own server (and use transports to bridge to the MSN network until your friends switch).

    --

    "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

  86. To a certain extent... by blorg · · Score: 1

    ...certainly changing the side of the road at _this_ point would be a gargantuan challenge; however changing speed limits/distances to kilometres would not (Ireland completed such a change last year, and at minimal cost - 9 million euros for the entire country.)

    Would make a lot of sense as (as you say) Britain otherwise uses metric almost everywhere (pints being the notable exception; but it's hard to see how you could reduce them to 500ml without formenting revolution!)

    1. Re:To a certain extent... by tygerstripes · · Score: 1
      Okay, this may be slightly flamebaity but... aren't there far fewer roads and road-signs in Eire? I may be wrong, never having been there myself, but that's the impression I've received from other people and reading. If that's the case, I imagine it would cost far less.

      As for the advantages, I don't know how significant they'd be. Has it really made much difference in Eire? How often do we have a use for scaling things from mm & m to national kilometric distances? Not all that often, I'll wager.

      --
      Meta will eat itself
    2. Re:To a certain extent... by blorg · · Score: 1

      Well Ireland is a smaller country, so sure, there are fewer roads and road signs; Britain has circa 15 times the population (and thus potential tax receipts to spend on such a project) but probably not 15 times as many signposts. Besides, Ireland has been replacing distance signs with km versions on a continual basis over the last decade or so as they wear out; only the speed limits were done all at once.

      With regard to the advantages, little things like Ordnance Survey maps and the British national grid being metric (since 1936!) would suggest there might be advantages to using the same system on signposts.

      P.S. Using "Éire" while speaking English is about as appropriate as using "Deutschland" or "Suomi" in English - e.g. not very!

  87. Re:You can have any flavor you like, if it's vanil by mrchaotica · · Score: 1
    I'm not sure how current programs are made, but I imagine that they use some kind of DTD to decide what is and what isn't allowed. The point is, is that you can't call a program ODF compliant unless the files it creates use only what is defined in the current standard.

    Can you include other namespaces? For example, can you have an ODF file with a big chunk of SVG in it and still call it ODF?

    --

    "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

  88. Re:Breaking news from Paris by Anne+Honime · · Score: 1

    Russia is European too (in terms of genealogy and culture, if not entirely in terms of geography).

    Hahaha, very funny !!!

    err...

    (By the way, my previous post was intended as a joke.)

    Meaning you were serious about Russia being European ? OMG, OMG...

  89. I only wish the US had done this years ago... by Shipwack · · Score: 1

    One of my major complaints against US military idiotic IT policies was when, back in the '80s, they "standardized" on Microsoft Word documents for all official correspondance. I wonder who got paid off for that little fiat? There's no document that couldn't have been done just as well in, at most, ".rtf" format.

  90. MS do accept ODF by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    http://odf-converter.sourceforge.net/

    The goal for this project is to provide an Add-in to Microsoft Word 2007 to allow opening and saving OpenDocument format (ODF) files.

    But they're not going to back-port, so you'll need Vista to do it.

    So your average joe is forced to buy Vista and get used to the new interfaces, Aero, ribbons, etc, etc, as opposed to loading a COMPLETELY FREE software and relearn a few bits and pieces where the menus have changed.

    Do you really want your own government shelling out MILLIONS for Vista or retraining and converting to free ODF-compatible software that means you can get Freedom-of-information requests fulfilled without requiring a MS contract ?

    Looks like them "surrender monkeys" are no longer going to surrender their sovereignty to MS, unlike the beknighted citizens in the "land of the free" ... how ironic.

  91. Oh those funny Europeans by 500HP · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    What exactly is the problem here? They want on Open Standard. Why? Nearly everyone already uses .DOC. If they don't like it why not author their own OS or Productivity Suite? Why not buy one from IBM or Sun or some Unix derivative. Ohhhh, that's right...they can't make it work as well as those authored by Microsoft. So, instead of innovating, they are going to litigate and legislate the hard working Americans in Redmond to GIVE IT TO THEM. That's so European...let's whine until somebody else does it for us.

  92. Re:You can have any flavor you like, if it's vanil by 1u3hr · · Score: 2, Interesting
    Things didn't always convert that well.

    I know all about that. I work in DTP and have had to deal with all kinds of files. Now of course when people say "file" they mean "MSWord file", and are baffled at the idea that there is any alternative, which makes me rather sad; especailly as I am forced to use this myself. But "MSWord file" is no guarantee of compatibility. After a file has been passed back and forth between several people the style, layout, spelling, fonts, page size.... all change with no one really knowing how or why. A good part of my work is stripping layers of crap from such files before I can actually get to the creative part of the job.

  93. Re:You can have any flavor you like, if it's vanil by CastrTroy · · Score: 1

    I don't care about messenging services that are controlled by evil corporations. I'm care about my email address and services that go along with it being controlled by evil corporations. I don't use MSN hotmail or GMail for my email purposes. Unfortunately, I have to use MS's Service if I want to talk to others who use MS's service, so I use it. I don't have to use Hotmail or Gmail to communicate with people who choose to use those services, so I don't.

    --

    Anthropic principle: We see the universe the way it is because if it were different we would not be here to see it.
  94. Re:You can have any flavor you like, if it's vanil by TheRaven64 · · Score: 1

    I've started seeing Google talk accounts in the wild recently. The new firmware for my Nokia 770 comes with a Google Talk client (which is not actually very good, but does integrate nicely with the system). Since Google Talk uses XMPP, I can talk to any GT people with my existing Jabber account. Most of the people on my contact list have a Jabber account and an account with one other IM network, but it is not the same other IM network for all of them, so Jabber is the only thing I can use to talk to all of them.

    --
    I am TheRaven on Soylent News
  95. Re:You can have any flavor you like, if it's vanil by ACMENEWSLLC · · Score: 1

    >>While that may become an issue in the future, at the moment the only thing stifiling innovation (and competition) is microsofts memory-dump file format. The ODF is a standard composition format; Any well written program should be able to read ODF files, and should be able to write out an ODF in a similar way that photoshop or your favorite graphics program can output JPEGs. The resulting file may be slightly less useful, but it's a platform.

    Don't we already have this? Isn't it .RTF? I use OpenOffice at home and I use Office 2003 at work. When I create documents, I use .RTF for the file format. Heck, even my AS/400 can read/write .RTF. But if I embed an Excel document inside my Word document and use external links to populate calculations, there is no way in the world OpenOffice will open this document. I don't see how ODF could help this.

    We have HTML standards per W3C. Can anyone name a site that actually conforms to W3C standards? Mine don't. So we end up with browsers that display these standard pages differently.

    If ODF moves forward, what are the odds that we end up adding more vulnerabilitys? As with HTML, IE and Mozilla trying to display non-W3C comliant documents have ended up with coding that allowed exploit. Let us hope ODF is explicit, refusing to display a non compliant document.

  96. Re:You can have any flavor you like, if it's vanil by ElleyKitten · · Score: 1

    So it's ok to be locked into some services, but not others? That doesn't make sense.

    Anyways, GTalk doesn't blow just because you and your stupid friends are attached to Microsoft.

    --
    "What is Internet Explorer 7? Are you saying we can't access the normal internet?" - I love tech support. Really.
  97. Re:Breaking news from Paris by bug · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I agree with your reply. Up until Napleon's final defeat, and later France's humiliating loss in the Franco-Prussian War, France had for centuries been one of the most successful warrior nations on the planet. Living as an expatriate in Germany, I am surrounded by historic reminders like Heidelberg's castle ruins of how France constantly defeated the fragmented German states in warfare for centuries. More recently, despite not being a formal part of the NATO's military organization, France has frequently been key allies of America, including important roles in the first Gulf War and in the Balkans. That said, France does sometimes repeat its mistakes in war. From the citadel of Bitche up through the Maginot line and later Dien Bien Phu, France took a very long time to realize the limitations of fixed defenses.

    As an American who has always been treated well whenever I've visited France, I'm somewhat embarassed by the tired old "cheese eating surrender monkey" jokes. I think that America's popular disdain for France stems from a perception (much of it quite valid) that France has recently adopted certain foreign and domestic policies that work against our interests. In fact, it is a common perception in America that many of these French policies were adopted for the primary purpose of frustrating what the French people perceive (much of it quite validly) as American hegemony. Let's face it, while France was correct in opposing war with Iraq, your prime minister's (then foreign minister's) world tour to oppose the war wasn't purely for altruistic motives; France wanted to test the waters to see if it could unite other countries in opposition to American foreign policies in general. Many Americans also view France's foreign policies as over-reliant on diplomacy without any real teeth, especially when one party involved clearly can't/won't offer what the other parties require. Of course, France's over-reliance on diplomacy isn't as big a sin as America's disgusting under-reliance on it. Hopefully one day soon American and French foreign policies and methods will become most closer together, and "freedom fries" and "cheese eating surrender monkey" jokes will just be an embarassing footnote in the history books.

  98. Re:Breaking news from Paris by monkeySauce · · Score: 1

    Appareil does not translate directly; 'apparel' means clothing in english. ;)

    You we're probably looking for the word 'device' or 'apparatus'.

  99. Re:Oh those funny Americans by pascalc · · Score: 1

    You sound so American, and you call the European whiner !! Look at yourself, always complaining and being persuaded that all that is done in the world is meant to be against you.

    I am always amazed to see that in definition of freedom from US-Americans, other people's freedom of choice is negligeable compared to your mega-corporation's freedom of establishing monopolies abroad and behaving as leeches on foreign economies. Sorry dude, our freedom of choice and decide our lifestyle and future will always be more important than your freedom to "innovate" (loot). By the way, all international labour stats show that the French have one of the highest productivity rate in the world, higher than the "hard-working Americans", basically, the Europeans work more and produce way more value than the US, but it's not as if you were really interested in understanding the true economic situation, it's so much easier to think that the US-Americans are always right and the rest of the world is wrong.

  100. Re:Breaking news from Paris by pascalc · · Score: 1

    yes of course, thanks! these bad translations happen when you have slept less than 10 hours in the last 3 days :)

  101. Re:You can have any flavor you like, if it's vanil by mrchaotica · · Score: 1
    Unfortunately, I have to use MS's Service if I want to talk to others who use MS's service, so I use it.

    No you don't; you can use Jabber and an MSN transport.

    --

    "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

  102. Re:Breaking news from Paris by goodben · · Score: 1

    Nitpick: The US military contribution to World War I wasn't that large.

    Since sometime in the Hundred Years War (which ended in 1453), Paris has fallen 3 times: Napoleonic War, Franco-Prussian War, and World War II. Probably the only European capital to fair better during that time was London only because of Britian's huge geographic advantages. If it weren't on an island, England would have fallen to the French, Spanish, and Germans on numerous occasions.

    France's problem is that it went from having the premier army of Europe to the second best somewhere in the late 1800s. Americans' love to see the top dog knocked down and second place is little better than worst (better to be middle of the pack). Post World War II saw globalization and the end of conventional warfare which further limited French power, but I imagine they still have one of the better European armies.

    While the French were grossly incompetent in World War I because of lack of adjustment in methodologies due to changes in technology and some atrocious leadership theories, they still managed to keep the Germans out of Paris.

  103. Re:Breaking news from Paris by Anne+Honime · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I agree with your reply. Up until Napleon's final defeat, and later France's humiliating loss in the Franco-Prussian War, France had for centuries been one of the most successful warrior nations on the planet.[...]That said, France does sometimes repeat its mistakes in war. From the citadel of Bitche up through the Maginot line and later Dien Bien Phu, France took a very long time to realize the limitations of fixed defenses.

    Thank you for having taken the time to write a documented answer. Truth is, France hasn't really been an expansionist country for most of its existence, save Louis the XIVth and Napoleonics ventures. Most of the time, we had to fight in wars we didn't choose to engage in, inside our boundaries, with our civilians in the front line. This creates an enormous difference between us and the USA. We know the true price of war, we paid more than our share in blood. I don't think any US citizen can imagine the scale of it ; just to stick to recent history, 2 out of my 4 grand-grand fathers died in ww1, 1 was maimed for life. Only 1 on 4 lived through it untouched. Both my grand fathers were POW for 5 years in Germany in WWII ; luckily, none died, but it was a close call for one who faced execution after his 2nd evasion attempt. And we are a lucky family !

    Nonetheless, we didn't do bad under those adverse conditions, retaining most of our boundaries throughout centuries. When we finaly ventured into expansion wars under Napoleon's rule, it took the whole Europe to ally to bring us back home. Even though, we left a legacy of laws and public services behind us, as well as seeds of democracy for most of the countries we invaded. But truly, we were never really at ease outside home. This explaining probably our choice of fixed defenses as a primary tactical tool.

    As an American who has always been treated well whenever I've visited France,[...]I think that America's popular disdain for France stems from a perception (much of it quite valid) that France has recently adopted certain foreign and domestic policies that work against our interests. In fact, it is a common perception in America that many of these French policies were adopted for the primary purpose of frustrating what the French people perceive (much of it quite validly) as American hegemony.

    There, I have to disagree, I fear (while I wouldn't treat you bad for your opinion). The clear feeling here is that you know jack about Islamic terrorism, to put it mildly, while we've been confronted to it for 20 years already. Mind you, the algerian GIA even hijacked a plane in the intent of throwing it somewhere in Paris, and we managed to forcefully land it, kill the terrorists and rescue the hostages before they had time to reach "La défense" tower. We had bombs in the subway, and we live with a combined army-police watching force in all stations and airport since then. In the same time, we gave support to Algeria get rid by themselves of their terrorists, with results. Not to say we are sheltred from terrorism, but we deal with it since longer than you, we have better overall results, and yet we didn't felt the need to invade Switzerland to make our point through, we didn't enforce anything remotely as coercitive as the PATRIOT act, and we didn't see fit to torture some unnamed prisonners on a remote island. I don't think that would have been supportive for us to go forward on the sloppy road the USA are on for the fun of it, and really, I think the reasons why we didn't go, and the way we explained them, were a much better support ; it takes a true friend to give impopular advices.

  104. The French attitude explained by thesnide · · Score: 1
    And the US has a confused view of the French
    I couldn't agree more. It's a whole different society with different manners and cultures than the US. The one thing is that it's called a western country, so since foreigners expect less differences than in Japan or in India they are usually in a unexpected culture shock. A nice book to read to understand more France and french people is Sixty Million Frenchmen Can't Be Wrong
  105. Re:Oh those funny Americans by 500HP · · Score: 0

    Interesting...I suppose those French that are actually employed work harder. Probably to keep their jobs because of the 24% unemployment rate. I just don't understand why the Europeans don't develop a BETTER OS and Productivity Suite?

  106. Re:Why doesn't this sort of thing happen more ofte by TrancePhreak · · Score: 1

    We tried to change to OpenOffice at my work once. We found it slow, buggy, and it didn't do things as well. I know ODF != OO, but what other big suite of Office apps is there? And OO is still pwnd on Exchange, unless you pay for more stuff.

    --

    -]Phreak Out[-
  107. Re:You can have any flavor you like, if it's vanil by CastrTroy · · Score: 1

    But I still have to have an MSN account, and go over the MSN network, which isn't much different than using Kopete (which is what I use) to access MSN.

    --

    Anthropic principle: We see the universe the way it is because if it were different we would not be here to see it.
  108. Re:Breaking news from Paris by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Russia is very european, as opposed to asian. In other words, Russia is much more european than it is asian.

    So he was serious, and rightly so.

  109. Re:Once Again Europe shows how it ought to be done by burndive · · Score: 1

    Yeah, in France, even MS is afraid to hire anyone.

    --
    ...because "hacker" sounds way sexier than "code drone."
  110. Re:Breaking news from Paris by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Imagine if there was no standard for spelling. The slashdot 'grammar police' would have nothing to do.

  111. Re:You can have any flavor you like, if it's vanil by heinousjay · · Score: 1

    There's no mystery behind the changes. People do things to the documents, then forget about what they did, didn't notice they did it, or lie about it. I spend a portion of my time analyzing usage reports for applications I develop, and one constant is that people will randomly click around like monkeys, then give a "who, me?" look when asked about it.

    --
    Slashdot - where whining about luck is the new way to make the world you want.
  112. Re:Oh those funny Americans by Fire+Dragon · · Score: 1

    I just don't understand why the Europeans don't develop a BETTER OS

    I think one of the Northern Europeans did something like this, but it didn't get that popular. I think it was called Linux or something. Sorry, no links, it doesn't seem to exist in any servers in internet.

  113. Re:Once Again Europe shows how it ought to be done by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I normally don't laugh at French jokes, but I found that strangely amusing.

  114. Re:Breaking news from Paris by Laz10 · · Score: 1

    "a number of military officers, including Generals Aussaresses and Jacques Massu, publicly admitted their involvement in torture and extrajudicial executions"

    http://www.web.amnesty.org/library/Index/ENGEUR210 022001?open&of=ENG-313

    There is no such thing as a clean war. I think you sound too smart to claim otherwise, even in a moment of patriotism.

  115. Re:Why doesn't this sort of thing happen more ofte by Fire+Dragon · · Score: 1

    A lot of businesses (and lets face it, government administration is a business) know that pdf/ms-doc works, they have been using it for a long time. They are used to the crappy interface, they are used to the updates/pop ups/etc. They are used to the fact that it works and they are used to the error messages that pop up. They and their accountants are used to the monthly charges for PDF/office software.

    The GUI that people are used to work with has next to nothing to do with the format it saves the information. My home Windows-machines Word 2000 allows me to work with older Word formats with several other possibilities, like WordPerfect. Saving file in different format might lose some of the formating options that certain format allows. I write documentation most of the day(working hours) and haven't really had any problems on different formats. It's all about well designed templates.

    Article is suggesting that the documentation should be availeble in ODF for the public. And that the new created documents should be in ODF. It has nothing to do with open source software. Just the format that should be used. Goverment can use whatever piece of software they want, but they have to distribute public documents in such format, that I can read them without buying a new version of certain software that will only work on half of my home machines.

    I have all rights to have access to goverments public information. If they require me to upgrade my soon illegal sutdent version of MS Office to have access to their information, they should pay for it. Or they can just publish it in such format, that I can read it without paying to third party.

  116. Re:Breaking news from Paris by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    We are currently a pacific nation...
    I am pretty sure that he meant pacifist.
  117. Re:Breaking news from Paris by Anne+Honime · · Score: 1

    Precisely ; we learned in Algeria that tortures and extrajudicial executions don't give any satisfactory results when fighting against terrorists. There's absolutely no interest for you to do the same stupid mistakes we did. We finaly left Algeria, we changed our constitution, we learned, and we changed our methods accordingly. Moreover, you should have known it since 'Nam, where it didn't work either for you. And let me stress it : I'm speaking about *terrorists*, this is completely different than a war where there are 2 sides, a begining and an ending. The USA face 2 options now, but those will utimately yield the exact same result : 1) immediate shameful return home, with a tarnished reputation for years, and leave Iraq crumble on itself or 2) escalation of tortures, massive spying on domestic and foreign populations, global pissing off of the world, tarnished reputation for years and final shameful withdrawal from a crmbling Iraq. Nobody can 'win' away from home when the local population doesn't support your views, that means a daily increasing bodycount, and one of those days your own population want their soldiers home - and votes accordingly.

  118. Re:Breaking news from Paris by Laz10 · · Score: 1

    You are assuming that everybody that disagrees with you is an american.

    I am not. I am a dane, your friends and faithful allies since the napolion times :p

  119. Re:Breaking news from Paris by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Let's drop at.om bom.bs to New York and Washington and Los Angeles !

  120. Re:Oh those funny Americans by 500HP · · Score: 1

    I apologize for not being clear. I meant better...that Linux thing is really grabbing market share!

  121. Re:You can have any flavor you like, if it's vanil by Randle_Revar · · Score: 1

    Don't we already have this? Isn't it .RTF?

    RTF displays differently in different programs and depending on what program you used to create it. An RTF made with Word can look different in Wordpad.
    And RTF is much more limited than .doc or .odt.

    But if I embed an Excel document inside my Word document and use external links to populate calculations, there is no way in the world OpenOffice will open this document. I don't see how ODF could help this.

    ODF can help if MS ever supports saving as ODF well enough, because you can have .ods data in .odt files.

    We have HTML standards per W3C. Can anyone name a site that actually conforms to W3C standards? Mine don't. So we end up with browsers that display these standard pages differently.

    I am not a web developer, but the HTML I have written is all valid. I see "valid [X]HTML" buttons fairly often. Also, CSS is often a bigger problem than the HTML, due to IE having rather poor CSS support.

    If ODF moves forward, what are the odds that we end up adding more vulnerabilities? As with HTML, IE and Mozilla trying to display non-W3C compliant documents have ended up with coding that allowed exploit. Let us hope ODF is explicit, refusing to display a non compliant document.

    You can have a web page with completely valid HTML and CSS and still have exploits. Just as Javascript tends to be the most dangerous part of Web pages, the most dangerous thing in ODF is the ability to embed macros.

  122. Re:You can have any flavor you like, if it's vanil by Randle_Revar · · Score: 1

    ODF is forward compatible. ODF 1.1 will be out fairly soon (it adds some tags for accessibility issues), and programs that use 1.0 will simply skip the new tags they don't understand.

  123. Re:You can have any flavor you like, if it's vanil by Randle_Revar · · Score: 1

    Can you include other namespaces? For example, can you have an ODF file with a big chunk of SVG in it and still call it ODF?

    You can include other namespaces. In fact, the ODF standard calls for the use of SVG for vector graphics, MathML for mathematical formulas and Dublin Core for metadata. ODF also uses SMIL, XLink, XForms and other XML standards. Basically, if it existed for XML, they didn't reinvent it.

  124. Re:You can have any flavor you like, if it's vanil by 1u3hr · · Score: 1
    People do things to the documents...

    I can't blame them too much. With Word files particularly, the model for styles and formatting is so convoluted and screwed up that no one understands how to use it effectively. Back with Word 5 for DOS, styles made sense, though you did have to RTFM to use them. but in an unceasing campaign to add more powerful features, and yet remain user-friendly, so many automatic or default adjustments are made silently (e.g.: missing fonts are substituted, with no sign that this has been done; styles are overridden, local formatting changes a basic style universally, etc, etc). I deal with university professors' documents; they're mostly just as clueless and treat it as a typewriter, and I've never met one who actually used heirarchical heading styles consistently, for instance. A chapter heading is likely to be "Normal" text with "24 pt Arial Bold" applied; a paragraph of text is actually Heading 1 formatted 12 pt Times.

  125. Re:Breaking news from Paris by HuguesT · · Score: 1
    Hello


    Truth is, France hasn't really been an expansionist country for most of its existence, save Louis the XIVth and Napoleonics ventures.


    Well, tell that to the countries of Maghreb, West Africa, ex-Indochina, etc etc. French colonies were quite extensive and have nothing to do with Napoleon or Louix XIV. Decolonisation was a painful process in France and is still generating discontent to this day.
  126. Re:You can have any flavor you like, if it's vanil by mwvdlee · · Score: 1

    So that basically makes the format extensible too.
    Anybody could add new, non-standard, tags that are ignored by programs that don't recognize them and could be used by others to implement new features (even if that would piss off every ODF user in the world).

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