Trimarco Confirms Mass. ODF Support 95
Andy Updegrove writes "After Peter Quinn resigned, only two brief statements -- both from spokesman for Governor and presidential hopeful Mitt Romney -- were made to the press regarding whether Quinn's OpenDocument format policy would survive. Both were vague, and both spoke only of the "rules not changing", leaving ODF supporters worried that ODF would be swapped out for Microsoft's XML Reference Schema, even before its expected approval by Ecma. But today, in a private meeting with ITD General Counsel Linda Hamel, Secretary of Administration and Finance Thomas Trimarco assured her that Peter Quinn's departure "will result in no change to the Administration's position on the ODF standard." Trimarco is the public official that will supervise whoever Quinn's replacement will be until after the deadline for the new Massachusetts' policy is to become effective."
Re:ODF? (Score:2)
Re:ODF? (Score:2)
The creators of those programs are free to support ODF.
Re:ODF? (Score:1)
its a troll thread, but this is worth mention (Score:3, Informative)
Portable OO 2.0 w/ODF + Portable Thunderbird = 154mb
MS Office 2k3 pro = 400mb+ (oh and its not portable and requires activation after each install/reinstall)
Cheers.
well that's good (Score:3, Insightful)
I personally go for open standards in government. I think it makes sense that government would try and stay away from proprietary things. But when you look at the rest of the American government, that is not what you see. Take the military for example: the government hires out everything to be made proprietarily (of course there aren't really that many open options either). Then with technology, us techies critisize the government for using what many others are using and for doing what they always do.
But that's what democracy is for, for us to tell them their idiots and show them the right way to do things.
Re:well that's good (Score:1)
Lesbian Kissing (Score:1, Funny)
then, no one will admit that they actually support it - but they'll make sure it doesn't go away anytime soon...
Re:well that's good (Score:3, Insightful)
That's probably the worst example you could have possibly picked.
The military has standards for EVERYTHING.
The have specs for connectors, components, hardware.
The have specs for environmental tests, electical tests, mechanical tests.
The military has beens pushing standards forever. The first use of interchangable parts was in the military. [blogs.com]
There is no frickin way you're going to be able to get something lik
Re:well that's good (Score:3, Informative)
No, and I suspect Amphenol would be very surprised to hear it as well;
You can read the rest here: http://www.amphenolrf.com/products/bnc.asp [amphenolrf.com]
Re:well that's good (Score:3, Interesting)
Crap, looks like I've opened a can of worms.
Looking around, the sources I see that are not Amphenol seem to list both names, and sometimes a few others as well.
So I highly doubt Amphenol would be suprised to hear about this. Anyways, it does seem like Bayonet Neill Concelman is the correct name. Thanks for the correction.
Re:well that's good (Score:2)
Re:well that's good (Score:2)
Makes sense to me. You want to buy a box to accomplish a task, so you define a spec for this box to a degree of detail such that you could give the spec to two different companies and get back two boxes that are, for your purposes interchangable.
It doesn't really make sense to specfify things that are invisible
Oh, don't be naive (Score:5, Insightful)
Mr. Quinn resigned because he had "become a lightning rod", and that was getting in the way of his work. Anyone who fills his shoes is going to be a similar lightning rod, and that is one thing successful bureaucrats don't like being. Far more likely is that the next person will attempt compromise in order to smooth things over. And that compromise will end up being far more (if not completely) Microsoft centric, unless people stand up and make their voices heard.
This battle is far, far from over, despite what State Officials are now saying. It kind of reminds me of the claims made by Saddams' Minister of Information in the closing days of the Iraq invasion. Personally, I'll believe what I see when this battle has ended.
And IMHO, the odds went way up that closed formats are going to end up ruling here. What was indeed needed was a lightning rod. A pity that Mr. Quinn found the presure to be too onerous.
MS Wins... (Score:2)
Re:MS Wins... (Score:2)
You get credit for calling the first such prediction that I've seen posted here, if it happens. :)
I'll do it... (Score:2)
Justin.
Exactly, "the position has not changed" means... (Score:2)
Re:Exactly, "the position has not changed" means.. (Score:2)
1. It happened suddenly, with no advance notice.
2. Mr. Quinn has been extremely quiet about the matter (making one wonder if there are other reasons for the sudden resignation).
3. His boss has been rather quiet about the issue as well.
It will be extremely interesting to see who gets Quinn's old job. I'm sure MS is in the process of pushing heavily people who are in their pocket. It would be the cheape
Re:well that's good (Score:3, Insightful)
Good, good. Glad to hear it.
I think it makes sense that government would try and stay away from proprietary things.
When you say "things", it's not clear whether you mean "standards" or "products", at not least in the context of the remainder of your post.
For instance:
Take the military for example: the government hires out everything to be made proprietarily (of course there aren't really that many open options either).
You see, when you ta
Re:well that's good (Score:3, Insightful)
It's interesting that your statement, which is commonly taken to be the most rational and balanced view, is actually quite reactionary and dogmatic. In every age, the broad popular understanding of the technology upon which civilization is built was critical to st
Re:well that's good (Score:2)
Principles Won In Massachussetts (Score:1, Insightful)
"It's open enough for most people" says David Coursey, some drone posing as a pundi. Which of course implies "screw the rest of you non-Windows using malcontents, you have no rights as citizens because YOU DARE
TLA (Score:1)
Govt Is The Place It Should Start (Score:5, Insightful)
Ummm..no..open formats are bad...because...ummm...just trust us...Office doesn't use them...and office is so popular so it must be ok!
I mean, seriously, what is the logic?
Re:Govt Is The Place It Should Start (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Govt Is The Place It Should Start (Score:1)
Re:Govt Is The Place It Should Start (Score:5, Interesting)
If governments start to use ODF, MS Office will certainly support the format (either natively or via importing and exporting). It will have to or it will lose revenue. However, I'm sure MS will do what it almost always does with open formats, which is fsck it up just enough to make its output incompatible just enough with other readers to keep those readers from being valid replacements for Word.
Probably the easiest way to do this is to allow importing of an ODF document into native Word DOC format, and then exporting to ODF format. In this way, people will not be restricted to using only features which ODF supports while editing the file in Word. Then, when exporting, they will get a warning message about how features will be lost if they convert this file to ODF. All of a sudden their clip art is grayscale, their title is no longer in 3d and written on a curvature, meta information like comments and 'track changes' is lost or corrupt, etc.
Just enough of a nuisance to keep the status quo and get the user to send their version of the document in Word DOC format.
Re:Govt Is The Place It Should Start (Score:1)
Re:Govt Is The Place It Should Start (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Govt Is The Place It Should Start (Score:1)
Re:Govt Is The Place It Should Start (Score:2)
In any case, if ODF really gets implemented in the end, it going to have at least
Re:Govt Is The Place It Should Start (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Govt Is The Place It Should Start (Score:2)
I deal with Word files from lots of different people; and hardly any of them know how to use the "tools" it offers; I'd say less than 5% ever use anything that's not on the formatting bar (which is virtually identical to the formatting bar on dozens of other word processors). And government workers
Re:Govt Is The Place It Should Start (Score:4, Insightful)
As a technical writer, I would agree wholeheartedly. Sometimes (often) when we design a document, clients request it in word, because if we use a different program (InDesign, Captivate, whatever) they don't have the software to make updates. I would much prefer InDesign for graphic heavy docs (Word doesn't handle vector graphics... I still can't believe that) People don't understand that word is not a publishing program!
I use a ton of Field Codes and Styles in Word. I have, by request of a client, created a 200 page parts catalog in word that was one giant table...
The worst experiences I have had were with Word docs designed with a ton of Field codes and styles, as when a third party updates them they ALWAYS get screwed up. That is why I prefer a program like Framemaker where I can set up a template, and have one person control the template and others only able to make content changes.
The main problem with word (in my opinion) is that people use it for things it isn't, and wasn't ever intended for...
Re:Govt Is The Place It Should Start (Score:2)
Getting OT a bit... but anyway, Word can use EPS files, and WMF (you may have heard of them recently) can also be vector (I think that's what Word clip art is). As for tables, these are a nightmare (I'm now converting a Word file fu
Re:Govt Is The Place It Should Start (Score:2)
I think you can make Word use eps graphics, but that only prints on a PS printer.
You can put a tiff preview in a eps using epstool, but it is bitmapped and crappy. Not sure if that helps Word print on non PS printers.
And I think Word handles wmf (as the recent exploit suggests) and I think you can do some really crappy vector stuff using wmf.
I do all my stuff in lyx -> latex using tgif for eps figs. Makes great eps, and you are not stuck using a propriatary binary format.
Re:Govt Is The Place It Should Start (Score:2)
Re:Govt Is The Place It Should Start (Score:2, Interesting)
I know it misses certain fe
Re:Govt Is The Place It Should Start (Score:3, Insightful)
If Word is so good, why won't Microsoft compete on features instead of formats?
Re:Govt Is The Place It Should Start (Score:2)
So question is - does Microsoft understands that it HAS to change? It is no more age of begemoths when big, fat, j
Re:Govt Is The Place It Should Start (Score:2)
I think you have it wrong. They compete on both features AND formats.
Re:Govt Is The Place It Should Start (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Govt Is The Place It Should Start (Score:1)
Re:Govt Is The Place It Should Start (Score:2)
Re:Govt Is The Place It Should Start (Score:2, Interesting)
I do have a company and I certainly want to persue it. While my word processing requirements are rather simple, they are specialized and aren't dealt with by any word processor on the market, so I want to have my own developed. But, of course, my clients must be able to read the documents and I can't ask my customers to deal with X11 etc. So, I do need word processor developing companies to support
Re:Govt Is The Place It Should Start (Score:1)
If you meant on Windows or Mac, there's no reason to, if NeoOffice/J is what it claims to be.
http://www.neooffice.org/ [neooffice.org]
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Govt Is The Place It Should Start (Score:4, Interesting)
There are about the same level of differences between old and new versions of word, as there are between word and openoffice so any training costs would be very similar..
On the other hand, they don't need to pay for openoffice and can easily install it on as many machines as they have..
Also, the latest version of word no longer runs on older versions of windows (NT4, 9x etc) whereas openoffice does, so upgrading word may also require upgrading windows, at more cost.
Re:Govt Is The Place It Should Start (Score:1)
Converting a Word document to ODF is no big deal. Open in OpenOffice.org, convert to .odf, print and proofread.
It may even be good for small business. A lot of small businesses don't even know about OpenOffice.org and this could act as a way to get the name out. I've switched a few who are using it now.
It's a fair point to raise, though.
Re:Govt Is The Place It Should Start (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Govt Is The Place It Should Start (Score:4, Interesting)
New York City agreed to a proprietary, closed design for their bus/subway card, "MetroCard." Only the company that designed the card knows the information storage format (although hackers have deciphered some of the unencrypted information, like some users' social security numbers!)
The result? As the Village Voice revealed in several investigative pieces in 1997/8, The state (which administers the city's public transportation) is forced to pay an obscene $125,000 for each full-sized MetroCard vending machine they buy. They've lost millions of dollars (money which, for example, might have prevented the recent strike) just because they misunderstood the difference between "proprietary" and "secure."
Re:Govt Is The Place It Should Start (Score:2)
Bravo to MA for standing up to the 800-lb gorilla. I hope they can stick to their guns. MS could trivially implement ODC if they wa
Noone was mentioning open source (Score:1)
Open source was not mentioned in the GP's posting. He was complaining that the state of New York has bought a system based on a closed format instead of an open format for their bus/subway cards. This means that they have locked themselves into a specifik vendor for all new purchases and upgrades to this system.
You do not need open source to get open formats.
Re:Noone was mentioning open source (Score:2)
s/source/format/;
No change on ODF (Score:1, Redundant)
Re:No change on ODF (Score:4, Interesting)
I wrote a paper in OpenOffice once... then I took it to a computer with MS Office to run the grammar check. I think the lack has a serious effect on OO's functionality and as a consequence, its usefulness.
AbiWord has one though.
Re:No change on ODF (Score:1)
Re:No change on ODF (Score:4, Insightful)
does a word processor really need a Grammar Checker? A grammar checker can't substitute for a proper grounding in your language. If you need a grammar checker, then perhaps you, yourself, are lacking somewhat.
Re:No change on ODF (Score:1)
Now I've just switched off Word completely.
Re:No change on ODF (Score:4, Insightful)
A grammar checker can't substitute for a proper grounding in your language. If you need a grammar checker, then perhaps you, yourself, are lacking somewhat.
If you had RTFA, you would have realized that the topic of discussion is use of ODF by government employees.
Seriously, though, there are certain things that aren't really grammar errors in the traditional sense. True grammar errors are difficult to make on accident, when the author truly does comprehend the language but simply slips up. However, other "grammar errors", like the misuse of 'there', 'their', and 'they're' are simple verbal errors that can happen just like a spelling error or typo.
Others more in the gray area but just as easy to make are verb number agreement in comlpex sentences like one I wrote just a few minutes ago: "Meta information like comments and 'track changes' is lost or corrupt." I admit that I had to read it over again to make sure I had verb number agreeing with my subject, because it sounds almost like it should be plural rather than singular.
Writing a 50-page report, these sort of things are easy to miss. If I have to pay attention to these minor grammar details, that will slow me down (however little) and annoy me. If I can use Office, already installed on my computer, with its grammar checker and not have to worry about these things, I might.
Re:No change on ODF (Score:2, Insightful)
If humans have serious trouble spotting that, how could computers, with their admitted inadequacy to process natural languages, do much better? They might easily spot one kind of errors while humans easily spot the other kind - either way, you're left with trickiest of the errors.
I don't trust grammar to algorithms that fail to understand an insect's love of fructose without some severe special-case hackery.
I say if there are cases when good language matters, I mean, really matters, we can just feed the
Re:No change on ODF (Score:2)
"We look forward to hearing your vision, so we can more better do our job. That's what I'm telling you."
"The best place for the facts to be done is by somebody who's spending time investigating it."
"It means your own money would grow better than that which the government can make it grow. And that's important."
"Rarely is the questioned asked: Is our children learning?"
Re:No change on ODF (Score:2)
Re:No change on ODF (Score:2)
Hey, that should be "Meta information likes comments, and 'track changes' are lost or corrupt."
I have no idea what that means. But, as a human emulating a grammar checker, I don't have to understand it; I just have to find a parsing and point out the errors.
[Written as an illustration of why grammar checkers are so often w
Re:No change on ODF (Score:2, Informative)
Re:No change on ODF (Score:2)
Re:No change on ODF (Score:1)
Even though my grammar is quite good, I still run a grammar check and then print my work to proofread it.
Unless you're something special, you're going to make mistakes at 2 AM or 15 pages into a document.
And you know what, everything else aside, it can't hurt for you to run it. The best thing that could happen is the grammar check reports no errors. Even then, I still proofread my work.
Re:No change on ODF (Score:2)
Note, MS-Word did not originally have a built-in grammar checker. In fact, there used to be a very healthy software scene for grammar checkers that could be called by means of hot keys when you actually wanted to do the check. When MS introduced the Grammar checker, this killed that healthy third party market instantly...
This is precisely WHY I beli
Re:No change on ODF (Score:2)
Probably the thing that bothers me the most about them is that they're constantly trying to get me to write at about a 4th grade level. Sorry, I'm not going to do that.
However, I do understand that some people like the crutch, and will whine if someone tries to t
Re:No change on ODF (Score:2)
So if someone just has to have that grammar checker, don't give up on them. StarOffice is still a good, way cheaper alternative to MS Office, and it'll get them in the ODF universe (if not quite the open source universe) all the same.
(Then, once they learn to write, they can just start using OOo and let the grammar checker die the death it deserves.
Re:No change on ODF (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:No change on ODF (Score:2)
Not that this really relates to your comment, but OpenOffice.org doesn't have a grammar checker... I think the lack has a serious effect on OO's functionality and as a consequence, its usefulness.
I agree with you, partly, but I do have a number of reservations. First, I think Word (and most other) grammar checkers are much less useful than many people think. They are incorrect as often as they are correct. Second, I don't think a word processor is the proper place for a spell checker or a grammar checker
Re:RTFA (Score:1)
The only alternative to buying Microsoft? (Score:1, Funny)
Again, what about macros? (Score:2)
So, what about those macros. Those of us working with s
What about 'em? (Score:4, Insightful)
Not so in the case of an Open Format. Both the input and output formats are fully known and so: one can write a program outside the context of the original data processing application in whatever language one chooses. There is zero need for macros when anyone with sufficient skills can write processes to evaluate input data and transform it to useful output data.
Re:What about 'em? (Score:2)
On the other hand
OP's point is "more abstraction" (Score:2)
Like it or not, the tech industry opened up a (extremely useful) can of worms by ma
Re:What about 'em? (Score:2)
And since it's XML, you can also use XSLT, XPath, and DOM processing.
Re:One Step Back... (Score:1, Insightful)
I think OpenOffice is a small step back in comparison to Word 2003. But sometimes you have to take a step back to be able to take a very big leap forward...
OpenOffice still lacks a few things, like working with tables it still is no much to MS
Open Document, open meeting... (Score:4, Funny)
Well I'm sure Mr. Trimarco will be pleased to know that his private comments to Ms. Hamel remained private, leaving bloggers like Andy Updegrove with no choice but to resort to speculation as to the contents of said meeting, in absence of a direct quote from those inolved.
They can't step back... (Score:4, Insightful)
If they would step back, that would be disasterous for Microsoft's future efforts to lobby to use Microsoft Office and their "open" format. See, if someone sees that Microsoft simply forces influence, politicians will get resitant. Not only because they afraid of their outlook in voter's eyes, but also they understand the whole issue - Microsoft is desperate and getting very personal when someone wants to take away their monopoly at least for abit. So they will start to see the whole issue then. And that is what Microsoft wants to avoid, I guess.
So...yes. OpenDocument will be there and Microsoft will make export feature for goverments. And I don't think that they will embrace it or make specially with bugs or errors. They will try to fight it different way.
Workshop on ODF In Government (Score:2)
Re:Workshop on ODF In Government (Score:2)