New Mass. CIO Defends Open Document Plan
Computerworld - Massachusetts CIO Louis Gutierrez said last week that he doesn't envision "a full-scale, completed implementation" of the state's controversial Open Document Format (ODF) policy by its January 2007 deadline. But in his first in-depth interview since Feb. 6, when he became CIO and director of the state's Information Technology Division (ITD) for the second time, Gutierrez told Computerworld that he also doesn't foresee the state taking a "wait position" with respect to the ODF policy, which applies to the government's executive branch. A status update on ODF is due by midyear, he noted. Excerpts from the interview follow:

![]()
Massachusetts CIO Louis Gutierrez ![]()
Do you think your predecessors made a sound decision with respect to ODF? I do think that this was a far-seeing and very thoughtful objective, and I think that's one reason it has resonated the way it has. It has captured the essence of an important notion about openness, about standards, about the way documents are used and will be used. I've signed up to do the execution, and I have a lot of work to do on implementation planning and on addressing concerns of accessibility advocates. But I do think this is the right direction to be going.
Is that based on a desire not to tie up documents in proprietary formats for the long haul? I would add a different angle on this. In the world of government work, we think of these documents as being somehow memos that individuals save to disk, and somehow we want those records to live a long time, and there might be a long thread of arguments around that. But truly, the records management topic is the prerogative of records management people, and I want to focus on the benefits to an executive department of state government. The world that we're entering is one of much more workflow of structured documents and knowing in great detail and controlling your document formats. Open-standard document formats are absolutely the future of where things are heading.
Microsoft doesn't support ODF and has raised objections about the policy. Have you been trying to work out a compromise? We're not talking about a compromise to the policy if Microsoft were able to work with ODF. One benefit of an open-standards policy is to allow much greater competition among office suites on the desktop. And furthermore, there are circumstances where low-cost and open-source office suites are the right solution, and other circumstances where Microsoft Office, were it to comply with the policy, would be appropriate as well.
Additional Resources


White Papers & Webcasts
Differentiating With Technical Support: JBoss Customer Support Study
JBoss' expert technical support services is clearly acknowledged by its client base. The comprehensive nature by which their service is unsurpassed. Every category...
Managing And Protecting Your Ever Increasing Mobile Assets
(Source: Absolute Software) Your users are becoming more mobile each day. This is great for productivity - yet challenging for IT control. Natalie...
The JBoss SOA Assessment Tool: Spend Less, Do More
SOA does not have to be overly complex or expensive. The JBoss SOA Assessment Tool can help you chart a course to a...
IDC Webcast: Linux Adoption in a Global Recession
Join Al Gillen from IDC and Michael Applebaum from Novell in this on-demand webcast to see how Linux has emerged as an even...
The CIO's New Guide to Design of Global IT Infrastructure
Is it possible to eliminate the impact of distance? This paper explores the 5 key principles successful CIOs are using to redesign IT...
Novell Opens PR Video
Is the Linux desktop for me? Customers are looking for ways to be more flexible and save money. Using Linux offers a great...
IBM Lotus Notes Performance Brief
This is a Performance Brief that illustrates how Riverbed Steelhead appliances accelerate Lotus Notes R7....
2 Minutes to IT workload automation
Take just 2 minutes to watch this short CONTROL-M flash video. Well show you how BMC CONTROL-M can put money back into your...
Business Value of Performance IDC Whitepaper
Are you looking for a comprehensive solution that addresses insufficient or congested bandwidth, impaired application performance, slow remote backup and replication or obstacles...
Security Configuration Management
In this web video, follow along with Jim Hansen, Senior Product Manager with Big Fix, as he explains why Security Configuration Management is...
Subscribe to Computerworld
