In August of 2007, the State of New York passed legislation requiring its CIO, Melodie Mayberry-Stewart, to gather information on the advantages and disadvantages of adopting either ODF or OOXML as a document standard, and to report her findings by 15 January 2007. As part of her duties under that legislation, the CIO issued a Request For Public Comment to get feedback on the topic.
Australia’s largest Internet service provider Telstra BigPond has removed the free open source office suite OpenOffice from its unmetered file download area following the launch of its own, free, hosted, office application, BigPond Office.
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Our reader was outraged by Telstra’s move, which he sees as an attack on the open source software movement.
“The principle of the matter upsets me,” he said. “The fact that BigPond has removed previously allowed open source software is un-ethical. They are discriminating against me, even though I pay the same as other customers. They are attacking the Free Software movement.”
On a brighter side of things, eyeOS developers, whom we love for their choice of GPLv3, intend to harness the power of OpenOffice.org and support a large number of formats in their platform.
This will be possible thanks to some hard work on the great OpenOffice platform, that will provide, in the server where eyeOS is installed, conversions between lots of formats to the eyeOS native ones trought some macros that will connect eyeOS with OpenOffice framework.