If people and their authorities want standards, there's ODF. Even Microsoft says it'll use it in 2009. It remains to be seen if Microsoft is committed to its promise of supporting this only international standard for documents (OOXML is in a limbo at the moment).
“People in shared working environments already nag when colleagues send them .DOCX files...”OOXML, like its predecessor containers that are mostly binary, will possibly be viewed as a proprietary format that just happens to be used by many people. In reality, everyone should know that it's the same old Microsoft Office-spewed mishmash that some other applications might be able to parse to a greater or lesser extent.
Given the fact that existing applications (and an even greater number of them) are able to cope with .DOC up to a certain degree, OOXML might actually be less desirable and a lot less ubiquitous. People in shared working environments already nag when colleagues send them .DOCX files (or Microsoft Office equivalents for other programs/modules).
The backlash against OOXML in Europe formally extended to 3 other continents, namely Africa, Asia and America (the three A's), from which appeals came. But it becomes so easy to forget a quiet and ongoing legal process that is bound to burst out later on this year.
The appeals come nearly a month after England’s standards body was taken to court over its support of OOXML, and a week after the European Union launched its own investigation of the matter.
An assistent of Italian MEP Marco Cappato (ALDE) contacted us with the news that an answer to a parliament question has arrived.
Italy has adopted The OpenDocument Format (ISO/IEC 23600) as a national standard. The decision was made by UNI, the Italian Organization for Standardization, which is responsible, under appointment from the Italian Government and the EU, to develop, approve and publish technical standards in all economic sectors (industry, trade and services) except for electric and electro-technical ones.
As reported by the Italian newspaper Repubblica on July 10th, 2007, a plan suggested by the left deputies Pietro Folena and Franco Grillini to migrate all the computers of the Parliament from Windows to Linux was approved by the Chamber.
The migration will affect about 3500 boxes of the Chamber, both desktops and servers, and each Deputy/Party may also ask to migrate his/its (private) computers to the Free System.
A non-profit organization devoted to Linux training and certification has established an affiliate organization in Italy.
A new initiative promoted by the italian association for free software for the next italian political elections (provided that they will actually take place…). The initiative consists in asking the candidates to sign a letter where they engage themselves, in case they will be elected, to promote the use of free software through their political activity.
For Microsoft, Telecom Italia's decision is clearly a blow.