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ODF Threat to Microsoft in US Governments Grows

Tookis writes "Another setback for Microsoft has cropped up in the space of document formats in government organizations. The state of California has introduced a bill to make open document format (ODF) a mandatory requirement in the software used by state agencies. Similar legislation in Texas and Minnesota has added further to the pressure on Microsoft, which is pushing its own proprietary Office Open XML (OOXML) document format in the recently released Office 2007. The bill doesn't specify ODF by name, but instead requires the use of an open XML-based format."

4 of 269 comments (clear)

  1. History? by mcrbids · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I think that history will point to the Massachusetts move to require an open format as the watershed moment, where Microsoft's stranglehold on the industry began to falter. Because that poor IT director who lost his job in the noise and tumult pointed out to the world that the Emporor, indeed, was not wearing any clothes. Generations from now, ODF will most likely be the standard for public document archives, and the culture and technicalities of documents drawn from our generation will still be available, thanks to the guts and drive of a single man who (ironically) lost his job for accurately identifying one of the most significant problems of the decade.

    --
    I have no problem with your religion until you decide it's reason to deprive others of the truth.
  2. Re:Define Open by Excelcia · · Score: 5, Interesting

    According to Andy Upgrove, the Netherlands essentially were bought out by Microsoft like ANSI was. If Microsoft is successful in getting ISO approval, this California law will essentially get read in as a "Thou shalt use Microsoft Office" law.

    While I hope ISO doesn't ratify OOXLM, the cynical side of me doesn't have a whole lot of hope.

  3. Re:X(HT)ML+CSS? by nick.ian.k · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Lie only ranted about the ridiculousness of going to the trouble to craft new standards, and then suggested that we instead repurpose a set of standards for web documents so that they work for exchanging documents intended for print. As somebody aware of what hell it's been dealing with web standards, your concern should be focusing not just how long it took for XHTML and CSS standards to be sort-of accepted, but how stupid it would be to go and extend something that people have been working hard to simplify.

  4. Re:Define Open by pipatron · · Score: 4, Interesting
    • War is Peace
    • Freedom is Slavery
    • Ignorance is Strength
    • Open is Closed
    --
    c++; /* this makes c bigger but returns the old value */