Malaysia formally embraces Open Document Format

By Lynn Tan, ZDNet Asia
Monday, August 13, 2007 09:15 PM

The Malaysian government today announced plans to adopt open standards and the Open Document Format (ODF) within the country's public sector.

The Malaysian Administration Modernization and Management Planning Unit (MAMPU) last week issued a tender for a nine-month study to evaluate the usage of open standards in its information communications technology (ICT) deployment. The study will also look into how the Malaysian public sector should migrate to open standards and the ODF, according to the Malaysia Open Source Software Alliance (MOSSA).

"The decision taken has been deliberated carefully for a considerable amount of time, and much thought process has been put into it," Nor Aliah Mohd. Zahri, ICT deputy director general at MAMPU, said in a statement.

"These discussions centered on open formats, particularly as they relate to office documents, their importance for the current and future accessibility of government records, and the relative 'openness' of the format options available to us," Nor Aliah explained.

The study will document the benefits of open standards, suggest policies and guidelines for achieving openness and provide a roadmap for implementing the ODF in Malaysia' public sector, added MOSSA.

The country unveiled its intentions to consider the ODF as a national standard for office documents in July last year. A month later, Hasannudin Saidin, a technical committee member of Sirim, the country's standards development agency, said on his blog that the proposal would have to gain approval from a higher-level committee within Sirim before it could proceed.

In July this year, Japan became the first country in the Asia-Pacific region to embrace open software standards. Last August, the United Nations urged countries in the region to adopt the ODF.

Published by OASIS (the Organization for the Advancement of Structured Information Standards), the ODF--or Open Document Format for Office Applications--is an XML-based open standard, enabling any office software to format, save and exchange file documents such as spreadsheets, databases and text.


See also:  Open source
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Wow - these are good news indeed! Congratulations for Malaysia.
Posted by Wolfgang Lonien on Tuesday, August 14 2007 02:05 AM

Government of malaysia has already spend billions in failed IT Projects mainly for embracing so-called open source initiative, not knowing the cost of training and maintaining it. Malaysian goverment IT projects are some of the worst and lowest quality in the industry. A simple PHP site cost hundreds of millions because of information minister's vision. ODF will cost tax payers even more. No congratulations for malaysia. There is almost no transparency in handling money in malaysia.
Posted by anonymous on Wednesday, August 15 2007 12:50 PM

couldn't agree more with anonymous...
Posted by braindead on Thursday, August 16 2007 10:54 AM

how mch does m$ pay u guys to do that? unbelievable :) totally braindead :)
Posted by sportsfest on Thursday, August 16 2007 01:18 PM

This is probably *MS* sponsored FUD -Fear, Uncertainty & Doubt tactics spread by rumour mongers. The same was FUD was spread when WWW was in it's infancy. See where it is today...
Posted by Open Source Friend on Friday, August 17 2007 01:10 PM

I'm not sure which 'side' is using FUD... you both to be at it with child like exuberance on most sites. Grow up and make a comment on topic perhaps?
Posted by On the fence on Tuesday, August 21 2007 07:07 AM


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