Click here to receive your FREE subscription to Campus Technology
4/1/2008
Apparently, it's not a joke on this April Fools day that Microsoft's Office Open XML (OOXML) document format was approved as an international standard. Information posted by the OpenDoc Society to its members and unofficial tallies and blogs all suggest it is true.
The decision by the ISO/IEC Joint Technical Committee (JTC) considering the matter is officially scheduled to be publicly disclosed tomorrow, although the group formalized its decision over the weekend. However, Microsoft itself did not wait for the announcement. The company issued a press release today pointing to "publicly available information" suggesting the formal acceptance of OOXML, or Draft International Standard 29500, by the committee.
According to the circulating information, 75 percent of participating national body members voted to approve OOXML as an international standard. Voting no were 14 percent.
ISO/IEC has a formula for determining the votes on international standards. Specifications need at least 66 percent positive votes from ISO/IEC JTC 1 participating national bodies and no more than 25 negative votes to become a standard. Microsoft's press release added the observing national body members to the final tally to suggest a total approval rate for OOXML of 86 percent.
"With 86 percent of voting national bodies supporting ratification, there is overwhelming support for Open XML," stated Tom Robertson, Microsoft Corp.'s general manager of interoperability and standards, in the press release.
Allegations of voting irregularities persist in Web accounts of the ISO/IEC voting process, especially with the vote counts for participating country Norway, as well as observing country Poland. However, Poland has confirmed its yes vote.
Microsoft's OOXML, an XML-based document sharing format used in the Office 2007 suite of applications, is currently approved as an Ecma standard (Ecma 376). It failed the first time it was considered for ISO/IEC international standards approval.
Kurt Mackie is online news editor, Enterprise Group, at 1105 Media Inc. You can contact Kurt at kmackie@1105media.com.
copy text (above) for proper citation
Cedarville University in southwestern Ohio has implemented SonicWALL firewalls to provide high-speed gateway firewall protection for its 3,000 students.
The alumni association for the University of North Dakota has gone public with a data breach that occurred when a laptop belonging to a software vendor was stolen from a vehicle. The computer contained the names of 84,000 university alumni, donors, and others, according to coverage by the Grand Forks Herald.
As competition for students increases, colleges and universities are looking more and more to customer (or constituent) relationship management software for help in remaining competitive.
Intercast Networks has redesigned Kazam, its student Internet TV and video service based on the company's VideoXpress platform. Following a spring semester alpha trial at Columbia and Purdue University, the company redesigned Kazam's interface based on student feedback and added additional content that caters to a student audience.
Doctors at Michigan State University have begun using the Digital Imaging and Communications in Medicine (DICOM) Services Grid from Acuo Technologies to transport and manage magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) results from a hospital in Malawi, Africa in order to monitor the impact of malaria on children.
Administrators at the Indian Institute of Technology Delhi (IIT Delhi) have gone public with their installation of open source database management software from Ingres. IIT Delhi, one of seven leading institutes of technology in India, adopted Ingres Database to support administration functions such as grading, finance, human resources, procurement, and hospital administration.