South Africa, Netherlands and Korea striding toward ODF
As Office Open XML waits for ISO approval, countries forge onward with alternative
Computerworld - As Microsoft Corp.'s Office Open XML document format remains in ISO limbo, a trio of countries are pushing forward an adoption of the alternative Open Document Format (ODF) instead, according to an ODF advocacy group.
Government ministries and state services in the Netherlands will begin to add ODF support next April, according to a statement (PDF format) from the Washington-based ODF Alliance. All other governmental organizations there are set to follow no later than December 2008.
Sander Ruiter of the Netherlands Directorate-General for Energy & Telecommunications presented details (PDF format) of the plan at the International ODF User Workshop in Berlin late last month.
ODF was approved by the ISO as an open standard in 2006.
South Africa sets guidelines
South Africa becomes the first country in Africa to adopt ODF as a government standard for exchanging documents between government agencies and the general public, according to a talk (PDF format) by Aslam Raffee, CIO of the Department of Technology for the South African government, at the same Workshop.
The country's latest Minimum Interoperability Standards (PDF format) v4.1 contains "an explicit definition of open standards as well as the inclusion of the ISO Open Document Format," according to Marino Marcich, executive director of the ODF Alliance. That effectively sets forth guidelines for all IT purchases by South African government agencies.
"We are very happy with the decision," Marcich said.
In Korea, the government's Agency for Technology and Standards approved ODF as a national standard several months ago. Marcich admitted that the Korean decision does not force agencies to use the ODF document format, but he said it "should carry weight" with officials deciding what format or formats to support.
The ODF Alliance now claims 500 members. By the alliance's count, 13 nations have announced laws or rules that favor the use ODF -- the native file format in the free, open-source OpenOffice productivity software -- over Microsoft's Office formats, such as Office Open XML.
Those nations include Russia, Malaysia, Japan, France, Belgium, Croatia, Denmark, Germany and Norway.
There has been no similar move in the U.S., though in a speech at Google Inc. last week Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama called for data to be stored in "universally accessible formats."
"We believe many governments and other organizations will continue to look to Open XML to meet their needs because it is designed to be compatible with billions of existing documents and its advanced technologies," wrote Tom Robertson, general manager of interoperability and standards at Microsoft, in an e-mail. "People and organizations use data in a number of different ways and should have the option to choose the file format that best meets their needs."



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