Linked by Thom Holwerda on Tue 29th Nov 2005 18:48 UTC, submitted by jayson.knight
Features, Office In a reversal, the state government of Massachusetts has thrown its support to Microsoft in an ongoing battle over office software formats and has launched an investigation into the state's former IT chief, who had been championing open-source software. "The Commonwealth is very pleased with Microsoft's progress in creating an open document format," said the state's Administration and Finance Secretary Tom Trimarco in a short statement on Thanksgiving eve. "If Microsoft follows through as planned, we are optimistic that Office Open XML will meet our new standards for acceptable open formats."
Thread beginning with comment 66800
To view parent comment, click here.
To read all comments associated with this story, please click here.

Member since:

It's not that; it's the double-standards -- praising Mass. one minute for being so open minded, then suddenly deciding they're all a bunch of corrupt beaurocrats when they make another decision.

If Red Hat pushed a lot of money for them to use OpenDoc, we'd hear nothing about back-handers etc. (Yeah, OpenDoc is more open, but the principle would still be the same about coercing politicians.)

Reply Parent Score: 0

ma_d Member since:
2005-06-29

The reality is that before they were praising a bunch of corrupt beaurocrats who were acting open minded. I don't know Kriss, but it seemed like he was one the right path; he's no longer a part of MA government though...

I sincerely doubt RedHat would expend its scarce resources on lobbying for OpenDocument. If they wanted to lobby, it'd be more funding for projects which actually benefit RedHat. RedHat seems to be clear that they've given up on desktop linux, for a while. And when they tried, they didn't try very hard at all.

I'd look harder for Sun to be pushing things like this. They stand to gain more, at least in a PR sense. But I don't think it'd even be financially worth it for them either.

But the article did say, they haven't made a decision. They just said they'd keep Office if Microsoft does what it said it'd do on opening their standard.

Reply Parent Score: 1