This story is from Economics Times, Delhi edition/India 24 June 2006,
frontpage. Economic Times is a sister publication of Times of India
(www.timesofindia.com)

http://epaper.timesofindia.com/Repository/ml.asp?Ref=RVRELzIwMDYvMDYvMjQjQXIwMDEwNQ==&Mode=HTML&Locale=english-skin-custom

Our Bureau NEW DELHI


    IN A MAJOR victory for the open document format (ODF) alliance
spearheaded by Sun Microsystems, IBM, Novell, Red Hat and Oracle in
India and a setback to Microsoft, a slew of departments of government of
NCT of Delhi have decided to switch over to ODF-based and free open
office suite from proprietary Office Suite (mostly MS Office). Initiated
as a costcutting exercise, the move is expected to save government
departments crores spent each year in buying licences for Office Suite.
    The Indian chapter of ODF alliance includes CDAC, faculty of
IIT-Delhi, IIT-Mumbai and IIM-Ahmedabad (IIMA).
    According to an IIMA study, out of Delhi government’s IT software
purchases of Rs 31 lakh between September ’04 and December ’05, over Rs
24 lakh was spent on buying licences for Office Suites. A similar move
is now taking place at Life Insurance Corporation, Delhi High Court and
Election Commission.
    The central government also plans to use ODF-based software in the
national egovernance project. The project envisages setting up of over
one lakh IT kiosks in rural areas across the country.
    ODF is an open XML-based document file format that enables retrieval
of information and exchange of documents (including spreadsheets, charts
and presentations) without regard to the application or platform in
which the document was created. What it means is that a file
saved/written in ODF can be opened or read in any software complaint
with the standard. In contrast, a document created in proprietary format
such as MS Office or Adobe PDF can be opened only in their respective
software or compliant software.


-- 



---------Email Security--------------
Your business information is important.

Sign and encrypt your mail using PGP/GPG to prevent identity frauds and
leakage of sensitive information.

Use Thunderbird mail client from http://www.mozilla.com/thunderbird/ and
GPG from http://enigmail.mozdev.org/

An excellent note on email security is at
http://www.tim-richardson.net/misc/security.html

You can check the authentication, contents and date/time stamp of this
mail by downloading my  ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) pgp public key from
pgp.mit.edu  .

---------------------------------------------------------------------
To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Reply via email to