Louis Suarez-Potts, an employee of Sun Microsystems, was speaking at the Australian national Linux conference in Hobart about the OpenDocument Format and OpenOffice.org and the reasons for using it. He argued strongly for the use of ODF in order to prevent lock-in,
pointing out that people should start thinking about the consequences
of trusting their data to proprietary formats. He gave the example of coal; 50 years ago nobody had ever given a
thought to what the burning of coal would do to the environment and now
the effects were being felt. The same could happen with our own
personal data, he warned. The arguments of cost, flexibility, interoperability and community were
cited to push the case of open formats like ODF and software like
OpenOffice.org.
There was no argument for governments to continue using free and open
source alternatives; there was technical support available both from
the community and companies, and open source alternatives worked well
with proprietary applications as well, he said.
Given that the FOSS alternatives have no big budgets to spread their
message through advertising - while Microsoft has limitless money to
spend - Suarez-Potts said formats like ODF should be pushed to people
like archivists and educators, groups that were interested in the
virtues of these formats.
Read the complete article by Sam Varghese on IT Wire.