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“Updating Ubuntu 5.10 for Current Versions of OpenOffice and Firefox”

February 6th, 2006 Benjamin Horst

Tom Adelstein writes Updating Ubuntu 5.10 for Current Versions of OpenOffice and Firefox for LXer.com.

Ubuntu is my favorite Linux distro, and yet I was having the same problem that Adelsten solves in the linked article. It’s pretty cool–thanks, Tom!

OpenOffice.org Newsletter – January 2006

February 4th, 2006 Benjamin Horst

The January edition of the OpenOffice.org newsletter is out on the net!

Highlights from January include:

There is a lot more in the newsletter that I’m going to skip in this summary. As a closing note, I’ll mention that the OpenOffice.org website has clocked 56,400,000 downloads of OOo as of mid-January. Pretty amazing!

Mass’ New CIO Appointed

February 3rd, 2006 Benjamin Horst

Massachusetts’ Governor Mitt Romney has appointed a new CIO, and through the press release indicates that his ODF support is stronger than ever. Andy Updegrove reports on ConsortiumInfo.org:

“The announcement that Louis Gutierrez would replace Quinn was made today by State Secretary of Administration and Finance Thomas Trimarco, the immediate supervisor of the State CIO. The appointment of Gutierrez will be effective on February 6, 2006.”

A recent Slashdot article links to the story and provides the site’s usual commentary.

In addition, Sam Hiser collects some fine thoughts of his own, in Microsoft, the Paint & the Corner.

NeoOffice “Tipping” Point

February 2nd, 2006 Benjamin Horst

Simon Phipps publishes a piece on his weblog titled NeoOffice Tipping Point.

He discusses the progress Patrick Luby has been making with the Mac OS X port of OOo, NeoOffice. And he helps spread the word that Patrick can do this work because donations from NeoOffice users pay him enough to get by. So, if you can, head on over to Patrick’s tip jar and donate a few dollars!

Two Interviews from Groklaw: Lapeyre and Quinn

January 26th, 2006 Benjamin Horst

PJ of Groklaw interviews the CTO of the French Tax Agency, IT Dept, Jean-Marie Lapeyre. It is an excellent article and clearly shows the real world business case for the use of FOSS.

PJ asks Lapeyre how he first learned about FOSS, and his response is powerful: “When in college, I discovered it and quickly became convinced that behind this philosophy, there is a strong model for mutualization of software costs (design, development and, more important, long-term maintainance), much better than the proprietary model. In fact, it is a realization of knowledge propagation and sharing (better to exchange than to hide).”

PJ also lands the first interview with Peter Quinn since he resigned from Massachusetts’ employ.

The article closes with this Quinn quotation, responding to several of PJ’s questions at once: “I think people are beginning to understand how desktops are being used in the Commonwealth which means that the vast majority of folks are content consumers. They require readers, a robust browser, email and maybe calendaring. Given that reality, it seems to be a blatant waste of the taxpayers’ money to continue to buy MS Office when in fact most people use a very small piece of its functionality. And, as a user of OpenOffice myself for both professional and personal use, it certainly does fulfill all my requirements. And I use more of a suite’s functionality than most folks in the Commonwealth.

So given ODF is the accepted standard and the changing face of desktop utilization, I think it has a real chance to prevail. And I would hope that ECMA would force one standard (not likely as noted above). That is not the Commonwealth’s fight but the world benefits with only one standard. And yes, the MS monoculture is and will continue to be a security risk.”

“Corel Pussyfoots on WordPerfect ODF”

January 25th, 2006 Benjamin Horst

Linux Watch reports Corel pussyfoots on WordPerfect ODF.

SJVN writes, “In particular, the renewed office suite boasts of its ability to import and export documents, spreadsheets, and presentations to Adobe’s PDF (Portable Document Format). What it doesn’t have, however, is the ability to import or export to the open-standard ODF (Open Document Format).

This is somewhat surprising, since Greg Wood, communications manager for Corel WordPerfect, recently pointed out that, “Corel is an original member of the OASIS Technical Committee on the OpenDocument format, and one of Corel’s senior developers is among the original four authors of the ODF specification.”

So, I wonder why Corel hasn’t implemented ODF in its new WordPerfect Office X3. Does Microsoft still own a part of Corel? (Remember how Corel Linux was cancelled after MS stepped in…) Or is this just paranoia?

Their official answer is that they haven’t received enough demand from their customers. However, I think this is a strategic decision that Corel should take—there are 50,000 desktops up for grabs in Massachusetts to any company that will implement ODF. There are probably going to be many more organizations making the same decision in the next few years, and Corel could position itself for strong growth, if they’re willing to take this risk! They are sabotaging their chance for greater future success by not supporting ODF now, and it’s a shame.

Groklaw: “Survey of EU Government FLOSS Use Rebuts MS TCO FUD”

January 23rd, 2006 Benjamin Horst

Groklaw summarizes an EU report in Survey of EU Government FLOSS Use Rebuts MS TCO FUD.

PJ writes, “Look at this EU FLOSSpols survey of FLOSS use by 955 European local governments, which found that “FLOSS users administer 35% more PCs per IT administrator than non-users – FLOSS use appears to reduce administrator workload per PC, and IT departments with high workloads are more likely to want a future increase in FLOSS use.” The survey was done in March of 2005.”

Peter Quinn to Keynote SCALE Workshop

January 22nd, 2006 Benjamin Horst

SCALE 4x will include an OpenDocument Format in Government Workshop, to be keynoted by Peter Quinn!

I’ve been invited to this workshop (cool, a personal invite!), and though it’s on the other side of the country, I would really like to be there. Don’t know yet if I can make it though.

Part of the press release reads,
“Peter Quinn served as Chief Information Officer and Director of the Massachusetts Information Technology division for 4 years. (2002 – 2006). As CIO, Quinn was responsible for setting information technology standards and policy for the state of Massachusetts. Quinn is most well known for initiating Massachusetts’ transition to OpenDocument Format. Mr. Quinn came to public service following a successful career in private sector IT, most recently as the CIO for Boston Financial Data Services.

SCALE’s workshop on OpenDocument format will take place on February 10, 2006. The event will begin at 1 pm with Mr. Quinn’s keynote presentation. Other speakers in the workshop will include:

  • Douglas Heintzman (Director, Technical Strategy – IBM)
  • J David Eiserberg (OpenDocument Fellowship)
  • Gary Edwards (OpenDocument Fellowship)”

HP on Linux and Novell on OpenDocument

January 20th, 2006 Benjamin Horst

HP signs a deal with Mandriva to preinstall Linux on desktop systems it sells throughout Latin America and Brazil. (Matched with all the support Brazil and its neighboring countries are giving to FOSS, this part of the world is becoming Linux country.)

Novell makes a formal announcement reaffirming its support of the OpenDocument Format and will even increase support for it in the next version of Suse Linux. “In addition, Novell is working to promote ODF along with Sun Microsystems–the company that launched OpenOffice.org–Google, IBM and Red Hat. And Novell is a member of OASIS technical committee that publishes and governs the ODF standard.”

Portable OpenOffice

January 19th, 2006 Benjamin Horst

Yet another example of how distributed development (the open source model) can produce superior software innovation, is PortableApps.com. They have customized various FOSS applications to be capable of running from a flash disk, without installation on the host computer.

John T. Haller is the force behind this project, so check out his site too.

Among others, Firefox, GAIM, and AbiWord are all represented, but, Portable OpenOffice is perhaps my favorite.