The Commonwealth of Massachusetts has
ratified its Enterprise Technical Reference Model which allows use of both the
Open Document Format (ODF) and Microsoft's Office Open XML (OOXML) format.
"Document formats play a part in this vision by serving as containers for the
information rather than being the end goal. The availability of open,
standardised XML document formats without vendor bias will move us further along
in realising this vision," Bethann Pepoli, acting chief information officer and
Henry Dormitzer, undersecretary of administration and finance wrote in a
statement posted on the state's website.
The ratification ends the two-year debate in the state over which document
format will be mandated for official documents, and ensures that Microsoft will
be able to continue to sell its Office software to state agencies.
The Open Document Format is supported by a group of companies including
Adobe, IBM and Sun Microsystems. It is governed by the by Oasis and has been
ratified as an open standard by
International
Standards Organization (ISO).
Microsoft is the sole developer of OOXML. The format has been ratified as an
open standard by the
European
Computer Manufacturers Association and is pending certification
by ISO.
Massachusetts in September 2005 unveiled a plan that would order the use of
the Oasis-governed ODF standard. Because Microsoft does not support the format
in its Office suite, the decision would force local government workers to switch
to the open source Open Office suite.
The state later settled on allowing software translators that ensure
that Microsoft Office applications can open, edit and save ODF documents.
Microsoft in July last year kicked
off an open source project that sought to create such a translator.
Proprietary file formats prevent the proper archiving of digital information.
Organisations for instance are often unable to access 10-year old documents
because the hardware and software used to create it is no longer available. An
open format however ensures that information is always accessible.
Massachusetts started a trend, with multiple nations and states now
considering adopting an open document format. The broad support for ODF is
generally believed to have played a large role in Microsoft's decision to open
up its OOXML format.
Massachusetts also sparked a heavy lobbying offensive from both sides of the
debate. In their statement, Dormitzer and Pepoli said that they received many
concerned comments about OOXML.
Critics for instance have questioned Microsoft's intensions, and particularly
the firm's poor track record in dealing with open standards. Microsoft on its
part has argued that ODF lacks maturity, as initially it lacked accessibility
support. Microsoft's OOXML by contrast comes with 6,000 pages of documentation
that address a plethora in potetnial usage scenarios.
Dormitzer and Pepoli however expressed confidence that all issues will be
worked out.
"We believe that these concerns, as with those regarding ODF, are
appropriately handled through the standards setting process, and we expect both
standards to evolve and improve," the two justified their decission.
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