By
Martin LaMonica
Tuesday, September 27 2005 03:47 PM
URL:
http://www.zdnetasia.com/news/software/0,39044164,39259182,00.htm
The commonwealth of Massachusetts has finalized its decision to standardize
desktop applications on OpenDocument, a format not supported by Microsoft
Office.
The state on Wednesday posted the final version of its Enterprise Technical
Reference Model, which mandates new document formats for office productivity
applications.
As it proposed late last month before a comment period, Massachusetts has
decided to use only products that conform to the Open Document Format for Office
Applications, or OpenDocument, which is developed by the standards body
Oasis.
State agencies in the executive branch are now supposed to migrate to
OpenDocument-compliant applications by Jan. 01, 2007, a change that will
affect about 50,000 desktop PCs. The reference model also confirms that Adobe's
PDF format is considered an "open format".
The move to adopt OpenDocument shuts Microsoft out of the state's procurement
process because the software giant, which dominates the office application
market, has said it does not intend to support the OpenDocument format.
Microsoft's Office 12, which is due in the second half of next year, will
store Office documents in an XML format. XML is also the basis of OpenDocument.
However, Microsoft executives have consistently said that the company will not
support OpenDocument natively and rely instead on "filters" to convert
formats.
OpenDocument is used in open source application products, such as OpenOffice
and variants of it from companies including IBM, Novell and Sun
Microsystems.
On Friday, a Microsoft manager questioned whether the IT division's technical
reference model is really the last word on state policy.
Alan Yates, Microsoft general manager of information worker business
strategy, said in a statement: "We understand that this is not a final decision
for the commonwealth and that state lawmakers and the secretary of state have
raised some of the same questions and concerns about this proposal that many
others have raised.
"Some in state government have talked about potential hearings to delve into
this issue further, and we encourage that additional public review and
evaluation."
Even before finalising its plan, Massachusetts' embrace of OpenDocument has
stirred strong reactions, both positive and negative.
Some have praised the state's policies as the best way to break Microsoft's
monopolistic control of the PC software market. Others, including Microsoft and
software industry groups, have criticised the state, saying its decisions narrow
choices to open source products.
Bob Sutor, IBM's vice president of standards, said in an email on Friday:
"The commonwealth's decision is a watershed event for the adoption of open
standards. Massachusetts residents, rather than any one vendor, now control
their own information."
The OpenDocument format is being considered by some European governments,
including Denmark and Norway, and also by Japan, as well as other US state
governments, an IBM representative said.
Meanwhile, foes of Massachusetts' policy said the state is acting
unfairly.
During a hearing regarding the proposal last week, Jonathan Zuck, president
of the Association for Competitive Technology, said Massachusetts was moving
ahead with a policy before it had adequately considered the cost or the
potential impact.
He also questioned the state's endorsement of Adobe PDF and the decision to
rely on standards organisations.
Zuck told Peter Quinn, the state's CIO, and Eric Kriss, the state's secretary
of administration and finance: "You seem to have selectively chosen one format
[Adobe's PDF] that has some IP associated with [it] and said, 'That's OK, but
this one [Microsoft Office] isn't.' So I'm curious about the consistency.
"We all know that standards groups are not hives of innovation by any
means."
Massachusetts officials defended their decision, saying the move will save
the state money, make sure that state records will be preserved over time, and
ensure the state's "sovereignty".
On the question of why Adobe's PDF format meets the definition of "open
format", state officials said it was a "grey area" but that Adobe's legal and
licensing terms were deemed sufficiently open.
At an open-format meeting, which was held last Friday with the Mass
Technology Leadership Council, Kriss said the state would save significantly by
migrating to OpenDocument-based products rather than going with Office 12- on
the order of US$5m for OpenDocument versus US$50m for Office 12, including hardware
and operating-system upgrade costs.
But he said that fundamentally the state's policy is based in the notion of
sovereignty: "Here we have a true conflict between the notion of intellectual
property and the notion of sovereignty, and I'd say that 100 per cent of the
time in a democracy, sovereignty trumps intellectual property. That's the issue
we're grappling with."
However, Kriss said, Microsoft could still become part of the state's
procurement policy by meeting its definition of open formats.
In order to qualify for consideration, Microsoft's Office formats would have
to be free of or have minimal legal encumbrances and be a standard that is
subject to peer review by organisations outside Microsoft. In addition,
Microsoft document formats would have to be subject to "joint stewardship" by a
standards body not controlled by one company or a small consortium.