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Texas Bill For Open Documents

Ditesh Kumar tips us to a blog entry by Sam Hiser noting a bill filed in Texas that would require state agencies to conduct their work in an open document format. After Microsoft's grueling battle against ODF in Massachusetts, bluest of blue states, it must be galling to face te same fight in the reddest of the red. Hiser notes that the bill includes a rigorous and sound definition of an open document format, which ODF would meet but Microsoft's current OOXML submission would not.

5 of 197 comments (clear)

  1. Re:I'm a Texan! Who do I write to? by mrchaotica · · Score: 4, Informative

    Well, I'm not a Texan, but since it's a bill in the Texas state Senate, I figure you probably ought to contact your state Senator.

    Also, since it's going to have to get out of committee before anyone else sees it (unless your state government is unusual), you could contact the other Senators who make up whichever committee it goes into -- which, based on a 10-second scan of the list of committees, I'm guessing is this one. But I could be wrong.

    --

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

  2. State-sponsored OSS in Texas is reality already by pongo000 · · Score: 4, Informative

    Unfortunately, it's in the form of a recommendation, but it's better than nothing. In a nutshell, it directs Texas state agencies and higher education institutions to consider OSS for all IT procurements. I believe it was originally the brainchild of a Dallas-area senator named John Corona.

    I referenced it quite often while pushing for OSS-based IT implementation at the college I was teaching at...most administrators were ignorant that this even existed.

  3. OOXML and ISO approval by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative
    Hi folks,

    Microsoft went for ISO fast-track approval which allows only one month for dissenting countries to speak out (and with 6000 pages in the spec it's not enough time -- there hasn't been any public standardisation prior to this fast track as is normal with fast-tracked standards).

    Anyway, as I understand it there only needs to be one single vote against in order to force a fast-tracked proposal down the long and arduous path of open evaluation, analysis, and justification. Canada and Britain have voted against Microsoft. Thanks Canada, thanks Britain!

    OOXML is now considerably more shakey with governments around the world, and other countries, like Texas.

    -- Matt Carter

  4. Go figure by ChromeAeonium · · Score: 3, Informative

    It may be Texas, but the bill was filed by Rubén Hinojosa, a Democrat representative from the U.S. House. They'll shoot it down.
    ...and that's why George Washington said to stay far away from political parties. I love how well America listened.

  5. Re:Why not OpenXML? by mrchaotica · · Score: 5, Informative

    The author is pretty dismissive about OpenXML, yet doesn't explain why OpenXML wouldn't meet the criteria.

    Okay, then I will instead:

    OpenXML doesn't meet the criteria because parts of it are patented. Besides, even if it weren't patented parts of the "standard" essentially say "re-implement the behavior of Word" which, for obvious reasons, is entirely unreasonable and should also disqualify it.

    By then OpenXML will probably be an ISO standard...

    If this post above yours is accurate, no it won't.

    "published without restrictions or royalties": OpenXML already fulfills this today

    No, you're wrong. Patents qualify as restrictions.

    --

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