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Dutch Government Adopts Open Source Software Initiative

christian.einfeldt writes "The Dutch government has set a target date of April 2008 for its agencies to start preferentially using open standards-based software. Organizations in the government will still be able to use proprietary software and formats ... but will have to justify it. A Microsoft Netherlands spokesman claims that Microsoft's Office productivity suite will still be used widely in the Dutch government until April, and that Microsoft Office will comply with the new Dutch rules once Microsoft's so-called "Open Office XML" standard is approved as an international ISO standard in February."

5 of 118 comments (clear)

  1. Re:I love it by Tim+C · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Now if only the Dutch could export this way of thinking across the North Sea to us non-mainland Europeans, we'd all be happy...
    Assuming you mean the UK, you should perhaps have a read of the eGIF rules sometime. They're quite explicit - while proprietary software is not forbidden, open standards and formats are very strongly encouraged. Failing to comply with the rules can result in funding being pulled.

    Now I don't know how vigorously the rules are enforced, but certainly the times that I've worked with various governmental bodies they have been very keen indeed on using open standards and software as far as possible. It's a pragmatic approach though - if a proprietary solution really is the best, all things considered, then that's what'll be used.
  2. Re:Erm? by DFJA · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I'm afraid you're wrong.

    Sorry I missed off the humour tags here.

    In all seriousness, this type of confusion is *exactly* what Microsoft intended when they wanted to call it this. Get people to inadvertently get it the wrong way round so that people think it's the same thing and so forth. Basically just another type of FUD.

    --
    43 - For those who require slightly more than the answer to life, the universe and everything.
  3. Interview with the general manager of Microsoft NL by MadJo · · Score: 3, Interesting

    In a recent Dutch Podcast ictroddels.nl Microsoft was complaining that this brief would hurt their business, and that it was unwise of the Dutch government to opt for the ODF, because MSOffice could not read it natively, and that they should also include OOXML in the brief.
    In the same interview, Theo Rinsema, general manager of MS Netherlands also said that MS doesn't want to compete on Office formats.
    He also mentioned that the .doc format was also open enough, because many open source solutions could read and write to that format.

  4. Re:Open Standards != Open Source by the_brobdingnagian · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Although the primary goal is the use of open standards for documents, they are working on promoting open source software.Last Wednesday I attended a meeting in Den Haag where this plan was discussed. The general attitude of the different political parties was very positive. Most questions where about details. This is going to happen, and I expect most of the government will be switched in between 2 and 5 years. Now open source: It will be used if the quality is equal to the current closed source alternative. All software written for the government will be the intellectual property of the gouvernment and the plan is to release it as open source. But this will probably be more difficult because of vendors using closed source components in the software. And for OOXML: I never heard OOXML in the meeting. They used ODF as example of open documents and did not seem to be happy with Microsoft.

  5. Re:Maybe they didn't want to be "Open Failures" by civilizedINTENSITY · · Score: 3, Interesting

    First, it was "In May 2003 Munich's city council voted to switch its 14,000 desktop and notebook computers from Microsoft products to the Linux operating system and open-source desktop applications", not 2002. Next there was a pilot, then they delayed a year, but the mayor has said last yeat at the Systems IT trade show in Munich,"But we're very happy with the results so far. I'm no technology freak but even I must admit how easy it's been to migrate to the new software." By the end of the year, some 200 workstations close to Lord Mayor Christian Ude and a number of nearby organizational units will be running on a special LiMux client. If everything runs according to schedule, most of the approximately 14,000 PCs will be migrated to Open Source in the next two years.

    Note that the delay began with debates over patent issues, and companies fighting for contracts (the pilot was based on SuSE but "the city finally chose Softcon and Gonicus to install open source software provided through the Debian GNU/Linux project.") There was certainly resistance to change, but the delays have been more political than technical in nature.