South Africa Adopts ODF as a Government Standard 107
ais523 writes "As reported by Tectonic, South Africa's new Mininimum Interoperability Standards (pdf) for Information Systems in government (MIOS) explain the new rules for which data formats will be used by the government; according to that document, all people working for the South African government must be able to read OpenDocument Format documents by March, and the government aims to use one of its three approved document formats (UTF-8 or ASCII plain text, CSV, or ODF) for all its published documents by the end of 2008. A definition of 'open standard' is also included that appears to rule out OOXML at present (requiring 'multiple implementations', among other things that may also rule it out)."
Ironic (Score:2, Funny)
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Re:Ironic (Score:5, Interesting)
It works fine in both xpdf and gs. In fact I've never encountered a PDF which doesn't display in either of those. Further more, as well as high-quality Free (tm) readers, there are also plenty of high quality Free tools for generating PDFs.
Seeing as the readers are small and lightweight, PDF is a better choice for final documents than ODF.
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Re:Ironic (Score:4, Insightful)
Although PDFs are great when you view them in Xpdf or Evince or the Mac OS X viewer thing, the common PDF viewer for Windows - Adobe Acrobat Reader - is a bloated piece of crap that makes Firefox freeze while it loads as a browser plugin. I'd guess that most of the PDF haters are Windows users, or users who install Acrobat Reader out of habit rather than using the native viewer that their Unixish system provides.
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Ohh and it's very modular, preventing it from loading crap plugins when you don't need javascript and what not in your pdfs will speed it up to almost zippy.
Re:Ironic (Score:4, Insightful)
So ODFs would be better for viewing in Firefox? Seems to me they would be even slower, while waiting for OpenOffice to load.
Anyway, for faster speed you can use the 2MB Foxit [foxitsoftware.com] PDF reader. I don't think an ODF reader would be easy to do in that size/speed, if possible at all. (But who knows - 15 years ago word processors fit on a floppy or two, and a reader would be a subset of its functionality.)
ODF reader plug-in for FireFox (Score:1, Informative)
Actually, viewing ODF in Firefox [mozilla.org] is quite fast. No need for any suite to load. Besides, the are other suites beyond OpenOffice. Koffice and Workplace are two readily available examples.
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That's what I usually recommend to Windows users who complain about PDFs, but the existence of software that sucks less doesn't change the fact that the "normal" software is horrible - and thus gives the format a bad rep.
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Great, maybe they'll consider that. And for the other 99.9% of documents ODF is the choice.
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If I'm on the Web I expect HTML web pages, not flash/PDF/whatever else the author decides is best for me.
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The whole 'document inside a browser' concept irritated me from the beginning.
explanation (Score:2)
The irony is because South Africa didn't say PDF is a standard, yet they use it.
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Because they're really annoying to read, that's why. Trying to read a document that's formatted to be printed on paper on a screen that's a different shape is an exercise in frustration --- you get the choice of seeing the entire page (with the text too small to read) or seeing only part of a page (which means you lose out on all the benefits of using a page-centric format).
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CastrTroy wrote:
In my opinion, it
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Re:Ironic (Score:5, Informative)
OK, I've just RTFA.
This is all relevant only for "Working Office Document formats". For final presentation, they're using PDF. For web pages, they're using HTML 4 or XHTML with testing in Firefox 2 and IE6, plus later versions. What is it with this tradition of inaccurate summaries on Slashdot?
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It's been hashed over a lot, but basically there are limited submissions for a particular article to choose from, and when one is chosen, it's based on time submitted and completeness more than accuracy.
Then, there are the cynics who believe that flamebait/inaccurate summaries == more comments/pageviews == more income.
I personally like them because they provide a way to easily determine whether someone bothered to RTFA as the discussion g
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PDF as a government document standard would be, quite simply put, mind bogglingly stupid and completely pointless.
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Are you joking?
The government is using plain text and ODF for documents that need to be edited (whether they are incoming or outgoing). They are using PDF for final documents that ought not to be edited, such as proclamations of laws.
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No, it is for all the other government documents. Documents sent out for tender, documents relating to
Any need for editing: ODF. 100% final: PDF. (Score:2)
Non-editable PDFs since when.
PDFs have always been intended to be a read-only, final-document format. We geeks have tools to edit PDFs, but hardly anyone else does. Even a document carved in stone could be photographed, then OCRed and edited in a word processor. That doesn't stop it being the proverbial ultimate final document.
The only copies of the law that should be un-editable are those housed with in the government and of legal government record.
No, it is obvious to everyone but you that finished government documents such as laws ought to be distributed to the public in a form that presents them as uneditable (PDF, paper booklet, brass plaque, TV br
Re:Ironic (Score:4, Insightful)
It only sucks if you want to edit the document.
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A PDF basically guarantees that what you see is what you get. Well, better than almost any other document format at least. No, image formats do not count.
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I have seen some software like kghostview having a hard time while others like kpdf or xpdf do great opening those same documents.
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He explained, however, that there was "space for pragmatism" in deciding on what formats to be used. He gave PDF as an example, which was not technically an open standard but did not have comparable open equivalents. He said that when faced with a choice of standards, the most open would be chosen.
(emphasis mine) Sounds good to me, PDF is widely readable, and ODF is not the best format for distribution when you don't want the document to be altered. It would have been ironic if it was a .doc file.
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- The average user is not very educated in IT. If something *minor* changes, you will get a helpdesk call.
- The level of IT skills at this point in time is low. The major complement of IT staff at departments are contractors. Very little skills transfer is taking place to permanent staff, and they just mostly sit around and do nothing.
- Implementing change management will be an issue. The chan
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Sean
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Like any IT admin, I don't give a flying f for whichever vendor, fanboi, holy wars etc. that goes on, just so long it works. As far as astroturfing is concerned, I can see the FUD factor implied here, but it is not intended.
Compare the fanboi movement in Slashdot: mostly Google, Apple, Linux,
Re:Politics For Nerds?!! (Score:5, Funny)
It gives you the chance to compare your government with one which takes a common-sense approach to document formats.
You can cry now, if you want to.
Why not let their computers do it? (Score:5, Funny)
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And ofcourse we will see support in other software aswell, I wonder if it's worth NOT implementing it just to make it harder for OOXML to kickoff?
Guess not since less people will use openoffice and similair then.
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Breaking news: (Score:5, Funny)
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Good point... (Score:1, Interesting)
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Future for FLOSS, ODF for internal docs (Score:4, Interesting)
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OSS has a big following in SA for many reasons. One of the obvious benefits is that OpenOffice [translate.org.za] and many other open source programs are available in all 11 official languages [wikipedia.org] - something that the likes of MS can't offer.
The celebrity of Mark Shuttleworth in SA and the success of Ubuntu no doubt played its part as well.
Damn, they beat us at the rugby... (Score:5, Funny)
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South Africa may indeed be beating the US in terms of freedom, but that's not something you can tell by looking at a piece of paper. No matter which document format it uses.
Hell, look at the US constitution some time and compare.
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Google Support for ODF (Score:1)
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Thanks!
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In this Corner (Score:1)
This guy better watch out for Steve "The Chair" Ballmer.
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But, thanks, I lolled anyway...
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Do you mean guys other than Flip Wilson? http://www.imdb.com/gallery/mptv/1024/Mptv/1024/4543-3.jpg.html?path=pgallery&path_key=Wilson,%20Flip [imdb.com]
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Actually, as soon as Ballmer heard, he despatched one of Microsoft's Special Ops "negotiators" in a private jet to Pretoria.
Fortunately for the Africans, the "negotiator" bailed out halfway across the South Atlantic ocean. In a statement released later he said;
The flight had been going well until I dozed off for a minute or two, then woke to see blue screens on the panel in front of me. By the time I realised it was just the sky, I had my chute on and was halfway out the escape hatch...
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Damn. (Score:1)
Multiple implementations (Score:1, Flamebait)
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I'm confused... (Score:2, Interesting)
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Multiple, COMPLETE implementations? (Score:5, Insightful)
The thing to consider is that SA requires That could be a problem when trying to get the various old-versions-of-Word things to work, since the "intellectual rights" to "FuckShitUpLikeWord97" and "BreakCrapLikeWord95" are a) inextricably tied into the spec and b) absolutely not going to be forthcoming from MS for anyone who wants to actually produce a complete, fully-compliant implementation. Anyone think they even have those things defined in writing? I don't!
I'd say this one is game, set, and match to ODF. OOXML just cannot fulfill the access requirements if anyone tries to actually implement it in its entirety, and since it sounds like SA is on a total OSS kick one can probably safely assume that they will be demanding multiple implementations that comply down to every last comma, semi-colon and full-stop.
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Sean
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In order for an app to implement the entire format, it must have every feature the format supports. Since ODF, by definition, supports the entire OpenOffice feature set, that means that any app that doesn't support every OpenOffice feature cannot implement the entire spec.
Need more documentation, please (Score:1, Insightful)
However, does anyone have links to their analyses? One criticism in Massachusetts was that the Massachusetts CIO Office did not sufficiently evaluate all of the factors relevant to a transition to ODF. The Massachusetts comptroller issued a scathing audit listing the many items which their CIO should have looked at first, and failed to.
I have read the linked South African document and it is filled with the same types of conclusory st
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XPS (Score:2)
The document also does not forbid the use of Microsoft products for the authoring of these documents, only the file format. If Microsoft were to create an upgrade/plugin save as ODF, then they could still use Office. Even without, they can save files as HTML, TXT, or CSV.
Applause (Score:1)
It has already been a number of years since a government advisory panel in South Africa produced a survey and guidelines for open-source adoption. It was previously covered on Slashdot [slashdot.org].
Unfortunately the original link has gone stale; here is one that works [naci.org.za]. The first version of the NACI document makes for interesting reading for the lay person.
Good to see ever-increasing open thinking there!
Salani kahle.
Ubuntu (Score:2)
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It's only because Microsoft have been so successful in binding their software to their formats, that when someone chooses another format, people think it's about the software!
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The SA government probably cares more about Ubuntu than about MS.
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I guess using ODF rather than the current MS Office formats would make using Ubuntu easier right now. However, if OOXML is ratified as a standard (and is actually implementable by anyone other than Micros
CSV? (Score:1, Interesting)
This news makes... (Score:2)
Governments are supposed to lead, this is good. (Score:4, Insightful)
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Fixed.