Mass. Moves Ahead with OpenDoc Plan

By Nate Mook | Published January 31, 2006, 4:44 PM

Publicly reaffirming its intent to transition away from Microsoft Office to the OASIS backed Open Document format, Massachusetts has appointed a new Chief Information Officer to oversee the switch. Louis Gutierrez will replace Peter Quinn, who resigned due to the controversy and personal attacks he received.

When announcing his resignation in late December, Quinn stressed to employees of the state's Information Technology Division (ITD) that his departure did not mean that Massachusetts' progress towards ODF was ending. Indeed, Gutierrez will be tasked with final implementation of the proposal.

The move to standardize on the Open Document format for all electronic documents in Massachusetts began last September, when the proposal was first approved. The ITD set a deadline of January 1, 2007 for migrating to applications that work with Open Document. Such programs include OpenOffice.org, StarOffice, KOffice, and IBM Workplace among others.

The plan was quickly attacked by Microsoft, which called it "inconsistent and discriminatory." Microsoft has since submitted its new Office Open XML formats to Ecma International for standardization, but says it has no plans to support Open Document in Office 12, due late this year.

Controversy stemming from the decision centered on Quinn, who was accused of taking money to travel to a conference, but later cleared of any wrongdoing. Quinn's former boss, Eric Kriss, said that he was ill-prepared for the game of political football that the ODF proposal had created.

Gutierrez is currently the chief technology strategist at the Commonwealth Medicine Division of UMass Medical School, and will take up his post as state CIO beginning February 6. Prior to his position at UMass, Gutierrez served as CIO for the Massachusetts Executive Office of Health and Human Services, overseeing 23,000 staff and $12 billion in annual spending.

In a statement, Gutierrez spoke of the use of open standards to interoperate between many kinds of technology and vendors. "As technology continues to evolve there remain substantial opportunities to transform services and a need to plan for the long-term future," he said.

Comments

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Who cares. Ted K. will just drive it all into another creek on a dark night. :)

Oh yeah, I thought we already have an "open" document format that support graphics and formatting. It's called RTF.

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For the common knowledge, salesmen know that no small sell opportunity is worth loosing. For the rest of us, this may seem as a logic "choice" that shouldn't affect a monster corporation... still, corporations of this kind are driven by sales people who must meet their revenue goals... or heads roll-off. :)

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Who really cares if Massachusetts is switching to a different office format?

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TBH who cares?
Its like in the UK saying Cornwall County Council has decided to use fire fox...SO?

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Is this the state we're talking about, or is there a business by this name? If it's the state... Why the HELL do they need a CIO?

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Um...because they have computers and application systems...duh.

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You really should change your username. Why WOULDN'T a state with thousands upon thousands of users and a rediculously large IT infrastructure need a CIO?

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Ummm... because it's a STATE not a CORPORATION.

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So? Any organization over a certain size needs a CIO. The C stands for Chief, not Corporation.

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Your point is what? I bet it would really light a fire under you then to know that they also have a CTO, CSO, CAO, and COO.

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Just do it!

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One small step for man ..

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I hope they know what they're doing--wait, no I don't! (kidding)

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