A group of more than 35 U.S. and international IT vendors, organizations, academic institutions and industry bodies is due
to announce the formation of the OpenDocument Format (ODF) Alliance Friday.
The new body, whose initial members include IBM, Oracle, and Sun Microsystems, will focus on further evangelizing the OpenDocument
electronic file format.
Open Document Format for Office Applications, also known as OpenDocument, is being developed by the OASIS standards body as
an XML (extensible markup language) file format. The format covers text, spreadsheets and other document types created by
office productivity suites. Supporters of OpenDocument include offerings from open-source players and Sun's StarOffice and IBM's Workplace software suites.
The ODF Alliance has formed under the auspices of trade association the Software & Information Industry Association (SIIA).
Other IT vendors in the alliance include Corel, EMC, Novell, and Red Hat. The initial member roster lists a variety of organizations
from France, India, Japan and the U.K., according to Ken Wasch, SIIA president.
If such a body had existed last year, it's possible the organization could have provided much needed support to an embattled
U.S. chief information officer, Wasch said in a phone interview Thursday.
In September of last year, Massachusetts CIO Peter Quinn finalized a policy for state agencies to develop a gradual plan for
migration to OpenDocument, beginning Jan. 1, 2007. The plan would involve phasing out the state's use of Microsoft's Office
software suite. With Massachusetts one of the very first U.S. states to espouse such a decision, the move placed Quinn under
intense public scrutiny and political pressure.
Quinn quit his job in early January after becoming in his own words "a lightning rod" with respect to any IT initiative under consideration
by the Commonwealth. "A tragedy happened in Massachusetts," Simon Phipps, chief open source officer at Sun, said in a phone
interview Thursday. "Cynicism allowed a good man to be hounded out of his job for no reason."
Quinn's permanent replacement Louis Gutierrez has already pledged to continue the state's move towards OpenDocument.
If a similar situation was to occur now, the ODF alliance would help to support a CIO with white papers and case studies of
successful ODF adoptions as ammunition to counter any naysayers, according to Wasch. One of the alliance's missions is to
"remove the FUD [fear, uncertainty and doubt] factor of adopting OpenDocument," he said.
The American Library Association decided to join the ODF alliance at the inception of the organization to ensure that the
voice of libraries and non-profit organizations is represented, according to Patrice McDermott, ALA deputy director, office
of government relations. "It's a natural alliance for us because the goal of the ODF alliance is in tune with our goal to
provide access to information," she said in a phone interview Thursday. "The alliance is a very positive development."
However, one issue the ALA is very concerned about is whether software using OpenDocument will be compatible with existing
computer applications used by people with disabilities, McDermott said. She added that she's been assured that such issues
will be resolved by the end of this year. "If it's not solved over the next nine months, we would have to withdraw from the
alliance," McDermott said. "We can't be party to something that doesn't provide access to all."
The plan to put the ODF alliance together came about when a number of vendors met at IBM's offices in Armonk, New York, in
early November last year, according to Sun's Phipps. "We've reached a nexus as we move from binary file formats to XML."