European Governments Help Increase ODF Interoperability
Representatives from three European member states, Italy, Belgium and the Netherlands, took part in the second Open Document Format (ODF) interoperability workshop held in the
Fabio Pistella, president of Italy's Center for ICT in Public
Administrations (CNIPA), in his opening address told the attendees of
the workshop that Italy is about to start a three-year promotion
campaign on open source software, writes Roberto Gallopini, one of the
organisers of the ODF workshop on his web blog.
The ODF plugfest
in Orvieto brought together about thirty ODF developers and government
representatives. It was the second such meeting, the first of which
took place in the Netherlands in June.
Bart Hanssens,
interoperability expert at Fedict, the Belgian Federal ICT advisory
body, showed attendees how to sign ODF documents using the country's
electronic identity card. He explained that Fedict wants users to be
able to sign sourcedocuments, not only PDF.
The application,
written in Java and at the moment only fit to be used in combination
with OpenOffic, is in beta, Hanssens said. "But it is already very
stable."
NOiV, the Dutch resource centre on open source and open
standards, on 3 November announced its Officeshots web service, that
allows users to compare the output of their ODF documents in several
competing office applications. The service is available in a number of
languages, including English, French, German, Chinese and Dutch.
Translation
Next to representatives and developers from large IT firms such as
Google, IBM, Microsoft and Sun Microsystems, the plugfest also attracts
a number of other IT companies. Jakub Ondrušek, a developer at
Comsultia, a Slovakian IT company, for instance discussed his work on
converting DocBook and ODF documents. The Hungarian IT company
Multiráció and the University of Szeged presented their joint research
and development work on EuroOffice, an version of OpenOffice extended
with tools such as translation services and ways to display geographic
data. Dirk Vollmar, from the German IT company Dialogika updated the
attendees on the company's work to convert OOXML and ODF.
"This
is a unique workshop where commercial vendors, governments and open
source developers discuss updates to their implementations of ODF. For
example, we showed Microsoft that it could improve how it stores
illustrations and graphics in ODF", commented Michiel Leenaars,
director of the Dutch Internet Society and one of the organisers of the
plugfest.
Galoppini, institutional relationship manager of the
Italian OpenOffice association: "These workshops are useful to educate
governments about the fact that open standards are first and foremost
about participation. True interoperability demands implementers’
good-will, but also more participated open standards processes and
practises."
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