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Well, not quite, but it does look like Microsoft Office will not be the text editor of choice in Massachusetts by January 1, 2007, as they are going to switch to an OpenDocument format, which Office does not currently support.
The state of Massachusetts unveiled plans to officially end use of Microsoft Office, instead switching to an open document format currently implemented by many open source groups. Massachusetts is believed to be the first major public-sector group to implement such a plan in the United States.
Target implementation date is January 1, 2007. The task is considered challenging, as most government documents were created in closed-source programs such as Office, Lotus Notes, and Corel WordPerfect.
OpenDocument is an XML-based standard for creating documents, spreadsheets, charts and graphs. The OpenDocument format is supported by many software suites, including OpenOffice and Star Office. While Microsoft document formats are generally the most commonly used, government officials worried about the proprietary nature of the formats.
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4 Responses for "Massachusetts says “No More Microsoft”"
September 3rd, 2005 at 11:38 pm
1that is pretty wicked, considering the canadian governament just finally moved to windows XP last year (from windows 2000). would be nice to see them (and everyone) switch away from M$ as much as possible, even if it’s just using OpenOffice or another open source package instead of Microsoft Office. Any step in the right direction is a good step.
September 5th, 2005 at 8:08 am
2I’m not really surprised. The price Microsoft sells Office for is ridiculous.
February 13th, 2006 at 6:17 am
3Exactly, Microsoft products cost too high. They are giving people a reason to consider piracy is reasonable, or leave their products at all.
December 18th, 2006 at 8:17 am
4I liked this site, it’s neat. Good job!
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