User: jpmcc   
Date: 2009-07-01 23:00:36+0000
Modified:
   native-lang/www/planet/atom.xml
   native-lang/www/planet/index.html
   native-lang/www/planet/opml.xml
   native-lang/www/planet/rss10.xml
   native-lang/www/planet/rss20.xml

Log:
 Planet run at Thu Jul  2 00:00:38 BST 2009

File Changes:

Directory: /native-lang/www/planet/
===================================

File [changed]: atom.xml
Url: 
http://native-lang.openoffice.org/source/browse/native-lang/www/planet/atom.xml?r1=1.1851&r2=1.1852
Delta lines:  +25 -33
---------------------
--- atom.xml    2009-07-01 17:00:36+0000        1.1851
+++ atom.xml    2009-07-01 23:00:33+0000        1.1852
@@ -5,9 +5,31 @@
        <link rel="self" 
href="http://native-lang.openoffice.org/planet/atom.xml"/>
        <link href="http://native-lang.openoffice.org/planet/"/>
        <id>http://native-lang.openoffice.org/planet/atom.xml</id>
-       <updated>2009-07-01T17:00:45+00:00</updated>
+       <updated>2009-07-01T23:00:42+00:00</updated>
        <generator uri="http://www.planetplanet.org/";>Planet/2.0 
+http://www.planetplanet.org</generator>
 
+       <entry xml:lang="en">
+               <title type="html">OpenOffice.org at the Linuxtag 2009</title>
+               <link href="http://andreasmaooo.blogger.de/stories/1438923/"/>
+               <id>http://andreasmaooo.blogger.de/stories/1438923/</id>
+               <updated>2009-07-01T17:28:57+00:00</updated>
+               <content type="html">Last week I held a presentation about 
OpenOffice.org Portable at the Linuxtag 2009 in Berlin (see picture below). 
There was a track about OpenOffice.org at this leading event of openSource 
software in Europe. As last year I had to open this track with my presentation. 
So I had to leave the social event &quot;Linuxnacht&quot; on Thursday not too 
late ;-)
+
+
+
+We got one of the bigger lecture halls for our OOo-Track and there were many 
people to follow our presentations. Florian spoke about central 
configuration...</content>
+               <author>
+                       <name>Andreas Mantke</name>
+                       <uri>http://andreasmaooo.blogger.de/</uri>
+               </author>
+               <source>
+                       <title type="html">andreasma_at_ooo</title>
+                       <link rel="self" 
href="http://andreasmaooo.blogger.de/rss"/>
+                       <id>http://andreasmaooo.blogger.de/rss</id>
+                       <updated>2009-07-01T23:00:39+00:00</updated>
+               </source>
+       </entry>
+
        <entry>
                <title type="html">COPU 2009: Community Matters: Participation, 
Production, and Sponsorship</title>
                <link 
href="http://ooo-speak.blogspot.com/2009/06/copu-2009-community-matters.html"/>
@@ -43,7 +65,7 @@
                        <title type="html">andreasma_at_ooo</title>
                        <link rel="self" 
href="http://andreasmaooo.blogger.de/rss"/>
                        <id>http://andreasmaooo.blogger.de/rss</id>
-                       <updated>2009-07-01T17:00:42+00:00</updated>
+                       <updated>2009-07-01T23:00:39+00:00</updated>
                </source>
        </entry>
 
@@ -127,37 +149,7 @@
                        <title type="html">andreasma_at_ooo</title>
                        <link rel="self" 
href="http://andreasmaooo.blogger.de/rss"/>
                        <id>http://andreasmaooo.blogger.de/rss</id>
-                       <updated>2009-07-01T17:00:42+00:00</updated>
-               </source>
-       </entry>
-
-       <entry xml:lang="en">
-               <title type="html">Standards for Change</title>
-               <link 
href="http://standardsandfreedom.net/index.php/2009/06/01/standards-for-change/"/>
-               
<id>http://standardsandfreedom.net/index.php/2009/06/01/standards-for-change/</id>
-               <updated>2009-06-01T16:42:07+00:00</updated>
-               <content type="html">&lt;p&gt;Dear Readers&lt;/p&gt;
-&lt;p align=&quot;left&quot;&gt;As many of you know, Ars Aperta has been 
active in standardization ever since its inception. Shortly after starting our 
business in 2006, we realized how critical a standard like OpenDocument Format 
would become for the ICT world.&lt;br /&gt;
-By creating an effective, xml based format for office documents, the OASIS 
Consortium has not only developed an alternative solution to the office format 
imposed to the market: It has set a defining moment, after which both the 
industry and the ICT users were no longer forced to use closed and unreliable 
formats, but instead had the choice between those and an open and sustainable 
standard. For the qualities of OpenDocument do not just lie in its technical 
capabilities. OASIS-developed standards are among the best ICT standards 
around, thanks to the contributions of world-class experts and a constant, 
steady work towards the advancement of the state of the art. OpenDocument is 
the first standard to be called &amp;#8220;open&amp;#8221;, because its 
intellectual property regime, as much as its development processes and 
inclusive nature allow the contributions of the largest number of stakeholders 
and have been thought to design an unique alternative that will help drive the 
ICT industry towards a more sustainable, open, and interoperable era.&lt;/p&gt;
-&lt;p&gt;I am grateful for all this to the OASIS Consortium. It would be 
pretty difficult to return the favor to this honorable institution, but today I 
would like to contribute something back by taking one extra step. I am running 
as a candidate for the election of the Board of Directors of the OASIS 
Consortium, and I intend to serve the OASIS together with my colleagues for the 
benefit of the whole ICT community: software vendors, users, governments, 
citizens, integrators, developers, etc. All have their importance, and every 
single one of them can be an OASIS stakeholder.&lt;/p&gt;
-&lt;p&gt;What can I bring to the Consortium?&lt;/p&gt;
-&lt;p&gt;First, it is important to realize that we are standing at a turning 
point for standardization. The way ICT standards are developed today may not 
seem much different from the way they were just ten years ago, but 
standardization processes are facing an increasing pressure from various 
players and emerging, collaborative ways to develop common sets of protocols 
and formats among I.T. experts. It is no mystery that several technological 
revolutions have changed the ICT landscape in the last few years: Free and Open 
Source Software brought, among other things, the fundamental demand for 
transparency, users and developers&amp;#8217; rights and the quest for 
uncompromising quality in code. Collaborative methods have shown that they were 
not so much methods than a succession of epiphanies based on the careful 
observation of the power of people sharing their skills and knowledge in a 
networked mode. Last but not least, the network gave birth to an economy of 
abundance of knowledge, which in turn made possible the appearance of ad-hoc, 
online standardization teams working on specific technologies designed to 
provide the answers to technological problems. All this does put a strain on 
traditional standardization methods; we may want to think how best to adapt 
ourselves to them. The time of ICT standards designed by and for the sole 
benefit of their authors is now over: We must accept the fact that the 
normative power previously devolved to a few has now become inherently 
distributed across the Internet. We must also realize that although standards 
should always been designed in order to solve one identified set of problems, 
we develop standards not just for our own benefit, but for the benefit of all; 
and by its ubiquity, the Internet and Cloud computing made this an even more 
stringent reality. In short, our industry is changing, and we have to embody 
this change ourselves, for our constituencies, our peers, and our 
communities.&lt;/p&gt;
-&lt;p&gt;Second, our demand for uncompromising quality in the standards our 
consortium develops relies not just on the best will of our men and women, but 
on effective tools and adequate answers to the everyday&amp;#8217;s work going 
on inside our technical committees. We should make sure we continue along the 
path that the OASIS Consortium has taken a few years ago, by using and 
integrating our wikis more effectively in the OASIS website and improve the 
access to collaborative tools and documents repositories. More to the point, we 
should help the various committees developing and using online conformance and 
test tools. These tools should be easy to access, reliable and transparent for 
the sake of peer review and efficient work inside the committees.&lt;/p&gt;
-&lt;p&gt;Third, we should explore new potential markets. Standards form an 
integral part of many industries; but as the usage of ICT grows exponentially 
across industries that were previously thought immune to the field of ICT, so 
does the need for digital standards. In this area, the OASIS consortium has 
already a position that is strong enough to put us in the front seat of this 
standardization field, as we focus on developing xml standards that serve 
entire vertical markets.&lt;br /&gt;
-But this is a mere stand only, and we should strengthen it by not just 
focusing on xml standards, but expanding our reach to encompass markets that 
strive for sustainable digital standards. By doing this, we will not just 
protect and grow our reach across the standardization field, but we will also 
serve our constituencies and the ones who will come after us in developing 
unique standards for tomorrow.&lt;/p&gt;
-&lt;p&gt;I will be happy to work on all this with my colleagues at the OASIS, 
and also with you, members of the broader Internet community: Citizens, small 
and large businesses, government, developers, and others. If you are a voting 
member of the OASIS consortium, don&amp;#8217;t forget to cast your ballot this 
month, it is important. If you are outside the OASIS voting members category, 
you can help too: By communicating around you about this election, by finding 
out if you know people at the OASIS and telling them about this project that I 
believe is comprehensive, pragmatic and at the same time, I hope, 
inspiring.&lt;/p&gt;
-&lt;p class=&quot;akst_link&quot;&gt;&lt;a 
href=&quot;http://standardsandfreedom.net/?p=127&amp;akst_action=share-this&quot;
 title=&quot;E-mail this, post to del.icio.us, etc.&quot; 
id=&quot;akst_link_127&quot; class=&quot;akst_share_link&quot; 
rel=&quot;nofollow&quot;&gt;Share This&lt;/a&gt;
-&lt;/p&gt;</content>
-               <author>
-                       <name>Charles Schulz</name>
-                       <uri>http://standardsandfreedom.net</uri>
-               </author>
-               <source>
-                       <title type="html">Moved by Freedom - Powered by 
Standards » OOo Postings</title>
-                       <subtitle type="html">A weblog by Charles-H. 
Schulz.</subtitle>
-                       <link rel="self" 
href="http://standardsandfreedom.net/index.php/category/ooo-postings/feed"/>
-                       
<id>http://standardsandfreedom.net/index.php/category/ooo-postings/feed</id>
-                       <updated>2009-06-27T05:01:01+00:00</updated>
+                       <updated>2009-07-01T23:00:39+00:00</updated>
                </source>
        </entry>
 

File [changed]: index.html
Url: 
http://native-lang.openoffice.org/source/browse/native-lang/www/planet/index.html?r1=1.1851&r2=1.1852
Delta lines:  +20 -27
---------------------
--- index.html  2009-07-01 17:00:36+0000        1.1851
+++ index.html  2009-07-01 23:00:33+0000        1.1852
@@ -29,8 +29,27 @@
 <a href="rss20.xml"><img src="rss2.gif" alt="Link to RSS 2 feed" /></a>
 </div>
 
-<p><em>Bloggings on native language topics by project members - see <a 
href="#disclaimer">disclaimer</a>.<br />Last updated: July 01, 2009 05:00 PM 
GMT</em></p>
+<p><em>Bloggings on native language topics by project members - see <a 
href="#disclaimer">disclaimer</a>.<br />Last updated: July 01, 2009 11:00 PM 
GMT</em></p>
 
+<h2>July 01, 2009</h2>
+<h3>
+<a href="http://andreasmaooo.blogger.de/"; title="andreasma_at_ooo">
+Andreas Mantke</a>&nbsp;:&nbsp;
+<a href="http://andreasmaooo.blogger.de/stories/1438923/";>
+OpenOffice.org at the Linuxtag 2009</a>
+</h3>
+<p>
+Last week I held a presentation about OpenOffice.org Portable at the Linuxtag 
2009 in Berlin (see picture below). There was a track about OpenOffice.org at 
this leading event of openSource software in Europe. As last year I had to open 
this track with my presentation. So I had to leave the social event 
"Linuxnacht" on Thursday not too late ;-)
+
+
+
+We got one of the bigger lecture halls for our OOo-Track and there were many 
people to follow our presentations. Florian spoke about central 
configuration...</p>
+<p>
+<em><a href="http://andreasmaooo.blogger.de/stories/1438923/";>by andreasma at 
July 01, 2009 05:28 PM GMT</a></em>
+</p>
+<br />
+<hr />
+<br />
 <h2>June 27, 2009</h2>
 <h3>
 <a href="http://ooo-speak.blogspot.com/"; title="ooo-speak">
@@ -129,32 +148,6 @@
 <br />
 <hr />
 <br />
-<h2>June 01, 2009</h2>
-<h3>
-<a href="http://standardsandfreedom.net"; title="Moved by Freedom - Powered by 
Standards » OOo Postings">
-Charles Schulz</a>&nbsp;:&nbsp;
-<a 
href="http://standardsandfreedom.net/index.php/2009/06/01/standards-for-change/";>
-Standards for Change</a>
-</h3>
-<p>
-<p>Dear Readers</p>
-<p align="left">As many of you know, Ars Aperta has been active in 
standardization ever since its inception. Shortly after starting our business 
in 2006, we realized how critical a standard like OpenDocument Format would 
become for the ICT world.<br />
-By creating an effective, xml based format for office documents, the OASIS 
Consortium has not only developed an alternative solution to the office format 
imposed to the market: It has set a defining moment, after which both the 
industry and the ICT users were no longer forced to use closed and unreliable 
formats, but instead had the choice between those and an open and sustainable 
standard. For the qualities of OpenDocument do not just lie in its technical 
capabilities. OASIS-developed standards are among the best ICT standards 
around, thanks to the contributions of world-class experts and a constant, 
steady work towards the advancement of the state of the art. OpenDocument is 
the first standard to be called &#8220;open&#8221;, because its intellectual 
property regime, as much as its development processes and inclusive nature 
allow the contributions of the largest number of stakeholders and have been 
thought to design an unique alternative that will help drive the ICT industry 
towards a more sustainable, open, and interoperable era.</p>
-<p>I am grateful for all this to the OASIS Consortium. It would be pretty 
difficult to return the favor to this honorable institution, but today I would 
like to contribute something back by taking one extra step. I am running as a 
candidate for the election of the Board of Directors of the OASIS Consortium, 
and I intend to serve the OASIS together with my colleagues for the benefit of 
the whole ICT community: software vendors, users, governments, citizens, 
integrators, developers, etc. All have their importance, and every single one 
of them can be an OASIS stakeholder.</p>
-<p>What can I bring to the Consortium?</p>
-<p>First, it is important to realize that we are standing at a turning point 
for standardization. The way ICT standards are developed today may not seem 
much different from the way they were just ten years ago, but standardization 
processes are facing an increasing pressure from various players and emerging, 
collaborative ways to develop common sets of protocols and formats among I.T. 
experts. It is no mystery that several technological revolutions have changed 
the ICT landscape in the last few years: Free and Open Source Software brought, 
among other things, the fundamental demand for transparency, users and 
developers&#8217; rights and the quest for uncompromising quality in code. 
Collaborative methods have shown that they were not so much methods than a 
succession of epiphanies based on the careful observation of the power of 
people sharing their skills and knowledge in a networked mode. Last but not 
least, the network gave birth to an economy of abundance of knowledge, which in 
turn made possible the appearance of ad-hoc, online standardization teams 
working on specific technologies designed to provide the answers to 
technological problems. All this does put a strain on traditional 
standardization methods; we may want to think how best to adapt ourselves to 
them. The time of ICT standards designed by and for the sole benefit of their 
authors is now over: We must accept the fact that the normative power 
previously devolved to a few has now become inherently distributed across the 
Internet. We must also realize that although standards should always been 
designed in order to solve one identified set of problems, we develop standards 
not just for our own benefit, but for the benefit of all; and by its ubiquity, 
the Internet and Cloud computing made this an even more stringent reality. In 
short, our industry is changing, and we have to embody this change ourselves, 
for our constituencies, our peers, and our communities.</p>
-<p>Second, our demand for uncompromising quality in the standards our 
consortium develops relies not just on the best will of our men and women, but 
on effective tools and adequate answers to the everyday&#8217;s work going on 
inside our technical committees. We should make sure we continue along the path 
that the OASIS Consortium has taken a few years ago, by using and integrating 
our wikis more effectively in the OASIS website and improve the access to 
collaborative tools and documents repositories. More to the point, we should 
help the various committees developing and using online conformance and test 
tools. These tools should be easy to access, reliable and transparent for the 
sake of peer review and efficient work inside the committees.</p>
-<p>Third, we should explore new potential markets. Standards form an integral 
part of many industries; but as the usage of ICT grows exponentially across 
industries that were previously thought immune to the field of ICT, so does the 
need for digital standards. In this area, the OASIS consortium has already a 
position that is strong enough to put us in the front seat of this 
standardization field, as we focus on developing xml standards that serve 
entire vertical markets.<br />
-But this is a mere stand only, and we should strengthen it by not just 
focusing on xml standards, but expanding our reach to encompass markets that 
strive for sustainable digital standards. By doing this, we will not just 
protect and grow our reach across the standardization field, but we will also 
serve our constituencies and the ones who will come after us in developing 
unique standards for tomorrow.</p>
-<p>I will be happy to work on all this with my colleagues at the OASIS, and 
also with you, members of the broader Internet community: Citizens, small and 
large businesses, government, developers, and others. If you are a voting 
member of the OASIS consortium, don&#8217;t forget to cast your ballot this 
month, it is important. If you are outside the OASIS voting members category, 
you can help too: By communicating around you about this election, by finding 
out if you know people at the OASIS and telling them about this project that I 
believe is comprehensive, pragmatic and at the same time, I hope, inspiring.</p>
-<p class="akst_link"><a 
href="http://standardsandfreedom.net/?p=127&akst_action=share-this"; 
title="E-mail this, post to del.icio.us, etc." id="akst_link_127" 
class="akst_share_link" rel="nofollow">Share This</a>
-</p></p>
-<p>
-<em><a 
href="http://standardsandfreedom.net/index.php/2009/06/01/standards-for-change/";>by
 Charles at June 01, 2009 04:42 PM GMT</a></em>
-</p>
-<br />
-<hr />
-<br />
 <a id="disclaimer" name="disclaimer"></a>
 <p><em>Disclaimer: all views expressed on this page are those 
 of the individual contributors, and may not reflect the views of the 

File [changed]: opml.xml
Url: 
http://native-lang.openoffice.org/source/browse/native-lang/www/planet/opml.xml?r1=1.1851&r2=1.1852
Delta lines:  +1 -1
-------------------
--- opml.xml    2009-07-01 17:00:36+0000        1.1851
+++ opml.xml    2009-07-01 23:00:33+0000        1.1852
@@ -2,7 +2,7 @@
 <opml version="1.1">
        <head>
                <title>Native Language Confederation Planet</title>
-               <dateModified>Wed, 01 Jul 2009 17:00:45 +0000</dateModified>
+               <dateModified>Wed, 01 Jul 2009 23:00:42 +0000</dateModified>
                <ownerName>Native Language Confederation</ownerName>
                <ownerEmail>[email protected]</ownerEmail>
        </head>

File [changed]: rss10.xml
Url: 
http://native-lang.openoffice.org/source/browse/native-lang/www/planet/rss10.xml?r1=1.323&r2=1.324
Delta lines:  +11 -18
---------------------
--- rss10.xml   2009-06-27 11:00:45+0000        1.323
+++ rss10.xml   2009-07-01 23:00:34+0000        1.324
@@ -13,17 +13,27 @@
 
        <items>
                <rdf:Seq>
+                       <rdf:li 
rdf:resource="http://andreasmaooo.blogger.de/stories/1438923/"; />
                        <rdf:li 
rdf:resource="tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4649039904546083564.post-8310278998588697404"
 />
                        <rdf:li 
rdf:resource="http://andreasmaooo.blogger.de/stories/1432133/"; />
                        <rdf:li 
rdf:resource="tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4649039904546083564.post-3131720890077326755"
 />
                        <rdf:li 
rdf:resource="http://standardsandfreedom.net/index.php/2009/06/07/its-official-ms-office-looks-like-the-gimp/";
 />
                        <rdf:li 
rdf:resource="tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4649039904546083564.post-3404809581266549923"
 />
                        <rdf:li 
rdf:resource="http://andreasmaooo.blogger.de/stories/1417482/"; />
-                       <rdf:li 
rdf:resource="http://standardsandfreedom.net/index.php/2009/06/01/standards-for-change/";
 />
                </rdf:Seq>
        </items>
 </channel>
 
+<item rdf:about="http://andreasmaooo.blogger.de/stories/1438923/";>
+       <title>Andreas Mantke: OpenOffice.org at the Linuxtag 2009</title>
+       <link>http://andreasmaooo.blogger.de/stories/1438923/</link>
+       <content:encoded>Last week I held a presentation about OpenOffice.org 
Portable at the Linuxtag 2009 in Berlin (see picture below). There was a track 
about OpenOffice.org at this leading event of openSource software in Europe. As 
last year I had to open this track with my presentation. So I had to leave the 
social event &quot;Linuxnacht&quot; on Thursday not too late ;-)
+
+
+
+We got one of the bigger lecture halls for our OOo-Track and there were many 
people to follow our presentations. Florian spoke about central 
configuration...</content:encoded>
+       <dc:date>2009-07-01T17:28:57+00:00</dc:date>
+</item>
 <item 
rdf:about="tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4649039904546083564.post-8310278998588697404">
        <title>Louis Suarez-Potts: COPU 2009: Community Matters: Participation, 
Production, and Sponsorship</title>
        
<link>http://ooo-speak.blogspot.com/2009/06/copu-2009-community-matters.html</link>
@@ -71,22 +81,5 @@
        <content:encoded>In the last weeks Marko and myself worked on a new 
Plone instance for OOoAuthors.org. The new instance is used now for production. 
You can find this new Plone 3.3 instance under her URL http://oooauthors.org. 
Thanks to the OOoAuthors team (inside the Documentation team of OOo) for the 
feedback.</content:encoded>
        <dc:date>2009-06-03T20:45:44+00:00</dc:date>
 </item>
-<item 
rdf:about="http://standardsandfreedom.net/index.php/2009/06/01/standards-for-change/";>
-       <title>Charles Schulz: Standards for Change</title>
-       
<link>http://standardsandfreedom.net/index.php/2009/06/01/standards-for-change/</link>
-       <content:encoded>&lt;p&gt;Dear Readers&lt;/p&gt;
-&lt;p align=&quot;left&quot;&gt;As many of you know, Ars Aperta has been 
active in standardization ever since its inception. Shortly after starting our 
business in 2006, we realized how critical a standard like OpenDocument Format 
would become for the ICT world.&lt;br /&gt;
-By creating an effective, xml based format for office documents, the OASIS 
Consortium has not only developed an alternative solution to the office format 
imposed to the market: It has set a defining moment, after which both the 
industry and the ICT users were no longer forced to use closed and unreliable 
formats, but instead had the choice between those and an open and sustainable 
standard. For the qualities of OpenDocument do not just lie in its technical 
capabilities. OASIS-developed standards are among the best ICT standards 
around, thanks to the contributions of world-class experts and a constant, 
steady work towards the advancement of the state of the art. OpenDocument is 
the first standard to be called &amp;#8220;open&amp;#8221;, because its 
intellectual property regime, as much as its development processes and 
inclusive nature allow the contributions of the largest number of stakeholders 
and have been thought to design an unique alternative that will help drive the 
ICT industry towards a more sustainable, open, and interoperable era.&lt;/p&gt;
-&lt;p&gt;I am grateful for all this to the OASIS Consortium. It would be 
pretty difficult to return the favor to this honorable institution, but today I 
would like to contribute something back by taking one extra step. I am running 
as a candidate for the election of the Board of Directors of the OASIS 
Consortium, and I intend to serve the OASIS together with my colleagues for the 
benefit of the whole ICT community: software vendors, users, governments, 
citizens, integrators, developers, etc. All have their importance, and every 
single one of them can be an OASIS stakeholder.&lt;/p&gt;
-&lt;p&gt;What can I bring to the Consortium?&lt;/p&gt;
-&lt;p&gt;First, it is important to realize that we are standing at a turning 
point for standardization. The way ICT standards are developed today may not 
seem much different from the way they were just ten years ago, but 
standardization processes are facing an increasing pressure from various 
players and emerging, collaborative ways to develop common sets of protocols 
and formats among I.T. experts. It is no mystery that several technological 
revolutions have changed the ICT landscape in the last few years: Free and Open 
Source Software brought, among other things, the fundamental demand for 
transparency, users and developers&amp;#8217; rights and the quest for 
uncompromising quality in code. Collaborative methods have shown that they were 
not so much methods than a succession of epiphanies based on the careful 
observation of the power of people sharing their skills and knowledge in a 
networked mode. Last but not least, the network gave birth to an economy of 
abundance of knowledge, which in turn made possible the appearance of ad-hoc, 
online standardization teams working on specific technologies designed to 
provide the answers to technological problems. All this does put a strain on 
traditional standardization methods; we may want to think how best to adapt 
ourselves to them. The time of ICT standards designed by and for the sole 
benefit of their authors is now over: We must accept the fact that the 
normative power previously devolved to a few has now become inherently 
distributed across the Internet. We must also realize that although standards 
should always been designed in order to solve one identified set of problems, 
we develop standards not just for our own benefit, but for the benefit of all; 
and by its ubiquity, the Internet and Cloud computing made this an even more 
stringent reality. In short, our industry is changing, and we have to embody 
this change ourselves, for our constituencies, our peers, and our 
communities.&lt;/p&gt;
-&lt;p&gt;Second, our demand for uncompromising quality in the standards our 
consortium develops relies not just on the best will of our men and women, but 
on effective tools and adequate answers to the everyday&amp;#8217;s work going 
on inside our technical committees. We should make sure we continue along the 
path that the OASIS Consortium has taken a few years ago, by using and 
integrating our wikis more effectively in the OASIS website and improve the 
access to collaborative tools and documents repositories. More to the point, we 
should help the various committees developing and using online conformance and 
test tools. These tools should be easy to access, reliable and transparent for 
the sake of peer review and efficient work inside the committees.&lt;/p&gt;
-&lt;p&gt;Third, we should explore new potential markets. Standards form an 
integral part of many industries; but as the usage of ICT grows exponentially 
across industries that were previously thought immune to the field of ICT, so 
does the need for digital standards. In this area, the OASIS consortium has 
already a position that is strong enough to put us in the front seat of this 
standardization field, as we focus on developing xml standards that serve 
entire vertical markets.&lt;br /&gt;
-But this is a mere stand only, and we should strengthen it by not just 
focusing on xml standards, but expanding our reach to encompass markets that 
strive for sustainable digital standards. By doing this, we will not just 
protect and grow our reach across the standardization field, but we will also 
serve our constituencies and the ones who will come after us in developing 
unique standards for tomorrow.&lt;/p&gt;
-&lt;p&gt;I will be happy to work on all this with my colleagues at the OASIS, 
and also with you, members of the broader Internet community: Citizens, small 
and large businesses, government, developers, and others. If you are a voting 
member of the OASIS consortium, don&amp;#8217;t forget to cast your ballot this 
month, it is important. If you are outside the OASIS voting members category, 
you can help too: By communicating around you about this election, by finding 
out if you know people at the OASIS and telling them about this project that I 
believe is comprehensive, pragmatic and at the same time, I hope, 
inspiring.&lt;/p&gt;
-&lt;p class=&quot;akst_link&quot;&gt;&lt;a 
href=&quot;http://standardsandfreedom.net/?p=127&amp;akst_action=share-this&quot;
 title=&quot;E-mail this, post to del.icio.us, etc.&quot; 
id=&quot;akst_link_127&quot; class=&quot;akst_share_link&quot; 
rel=&quot;nofollow&quot;&gt;Share This&lt;/a&gt;
-&lt;/p&gt;</content:encoded>
-       <dc:date>2009-06-01T16:42:07+00:00</dc:date>
-</item>
 
 </rdf:RDF>

File [changed]: rss20.xml
Url: 
http://native-lang.openoffice.org/source/browse/native-lang/www/planet/rss20.xml?r1=1.324&r2=1.325
Delta lines:  +11 -18
---------------------
--- rss20.xml   2009-06-27 11:00:45+0000        1.324
+++ rss20.xml   2009-07-01 23:00:34+0000        1.325
@@ -8,6 +8,17 @@
        <description>Native Language Confederation Planet - 
http://native-lang.openoffice.org/planet/</description>
 
 <item>
+       <title>Andreas Mantke: OpenOffice.org at the Linuxtag 2009</title>
+       <guid>http://andreasmaooo.blogger.de/stories/1438923/</guid>
+       <link>http://andreasmaooo.blogger.de/stories/1438923/</link>
+       <description>Last week I held a presentation about OpenOffice.org 
Portable at the Linuxtag 2009 in Berlin (see picture below). There was a track 
about OpenOffice.org at this leading event of openSource software in Europe. As 
last year I had to open this track with my presentation. So I had to leave the 
social event &quot;Linuxnacht&quot; on Thursday not too late ;-)
+
+
+
+We got one of the bigger lecture halls for our OOo-Track and there were many 
people to follow our presentations. Florian spoke about central 
configuration...</description>
+       <pubDate>Wed, 01 Jul 2009 17:28:57 +0000</pubDate>
+</item>
+<item>
        <title>Louis Suarez-Potts: COPU 2009: Community Matters: Participation, 
Production, and Sponsorship</title>
        
<guid>tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4649039904546083564.post-8310278998588697404</guid>
        
<link>http://ooo-speak.blogspot.com/2009/06/copu-2009-community-matters.html</link>
@@ -60,24 +71,6 @@
        <description>In the last weeks Marko and myself worked on a new Plone 
instance for OOoAuthors.org. The new instance is used now for production. You 
can find this new Plone 3.3 instance under her URL http://oooauthors.org. 
Thanks to the OOoAuthors team (inside the Documentation team of OOo) for the 
feedback.</description>
        <pubDate>Wed, 03 Jun 2009 20:45:44 +0000</pubDate>
 </item>
-<item>
-       <title>Charles Schulz: Standards for Change</title>
-       
<guid>http://standardsandfreedom.net/index.php/2009/06/01/standards-for-change/</guid>
-       
<link>http://standardsandfreedom.net/index.php/2009/06/01/standards-for-change/</link>
-       <description>&lt;p&gt;Dear Readers&lt;/p&gt;
-&lt;p align=&quot;left&quot;&gt;As many of you know, Ars Aperta has been 
active in standardization ever since its inception. Shortly after starting our 
business in 2006, we realized how critical a standard like OpenDocument Format 
would become for the ICT world.&lt;br /&gt;
-By creating an effective, xml based format for office documents, the OASIS 
Consortium has not only developed an alternative solution to the office format 
imposed to the market: It has set a defining moment, after which both the 
industry and the ICT users were no longer forced to use closed and unreliable 
formats, but instead had the choice between those and an open and sustainable 
standard. For the qualities of OpenDocument do not just lie in its technical 
capabilities. OASIS-developed standards are among the best ICT standards 
around, thanks to the contributions of world-class experts and a constant, 
steady work towards the advancement of the state of the art. OpenDocument is 
the first standard to be called &amp;#8220;open&amp;#8221;, because its 
intellectual property regime, as much as its development processes and 
inclusive nature allow the contributions of the largest number of stakeholders 
and have been thought to design an unique alternative that will help drive the 
ICT industry towards a more sustainable, open, and interoperable era.&lt;/p&gt;
-&lt;p&gt;I am grateful for all this to the OASIS Consortium. It would be 
pretty difficult to return the favor to this honorable institution, but today I 
would like to contribute something back by taking one extra step. I am running 
as a candidate for the election of the Board of Directors of the OASIS 
Consortium, and I intend to serve the OASIS together with my colleagues for the 
benefit of the whole ICT community: software vendors, users, governments, 
citizens, integrators, developers, etc. All have their importance, and every 
single one of them can be an OASIS stakeholder.&lt;/p&gt;
-&lt;p&gt;What can I bring to the Consortium?&lt;/p&gt;
-&lt;p&gt;First, it is important to realize that we are standing at a turning 
point for standardization. The way ICT standards are developed today may not 
seem much different from the way they were just ten years ago, but 
standardization processes are facing an increasing pressure from various 
players and emerging, collaborative ways to develop common sets of protocols 
and formats among I.T. experts. It is no mystery that several technological 
revolutions have changed the ICT landscape in the last few years: Free and Open 
Source Software brought, among other things, the fundamental demand for 
transparency, users and developers&amp;#8217; rights and the quest for 
uncompromising quality in code. Collaborative methods have shown that they were 
not so much methods than a succession of epiphanies based on the careful 
observation of the power of people sharing their skills and knowledge in a 
networked mode. Last but not least, the network gave birth to an economy of 
abundance of knowledge, which in turn made possible the appearance of ad-hoc, 
online standardization teams working on specific technologies designed to 
provide the answers to technological problems. All this does put a strain on 
traditional standardization methods; we may want to think how best to adapt 
ourselves to them. The time of ICT standards designed by and for the sole 
benefit of their authors is now over: We must accept the fact that the 
normative power previously devolved to a few has now become inherently 
distributed across the Internet. We must also realize that although standards 
should always been designed in order to solve one identified set of problems, 
we develop standards not just for our own benefit, but for the benefit of all; 
and by its ubiquity, the Internet and Cloud computing made this an even more 
stringent reality. In short, our industry is changing, and we have to embody 
this change ourselves, for our constituencies, our peers, and our 
communities.&lt;/p&gt;
-&lt;p&gt;Second, our demand for uncompromising quality in the standards our 
consortium develops relies not just on the best will of our men and women, but 
on effective tools and adequate answers to the everyday&amp;#8217;s work going 
on inside our technical committees. We should make sure we continue along the 
path that the OASIS Consortium has taken a few years ago, by using and 
integrating our wikis more effectively in the OASIS website and improve the 
access to collaborative tools and documents repositories. More to the point, we 
should help the various committees developing and using online conformance and 
test tools. These tools should be easy to access, reliable and transparent for 
the sake of peer review and efficient work inside the committees.&lt;/p&gt;
-&lt;p&gt;Third, we should explore new potential markets. Standards form an 
integral part of many industries; but as the usage of ICT grows exponentially 
across industries that were previously thought immune to the field of ICT, so 
does the need for digital standards. In this area, the OASIS consortium has 
already a position that is strong enough to put us in the front seat of this 
standardization field, as we focus on developing xml standards that serve 
entire vertical markets.&lt;br /&gt;
-But this is a mere stand only, and we should strengthen it by not just 
focusing on xml standards, but expanding our reach to encompass markets that 
strive for sustainable digital standards. By doing this, we will not just 
protect and grow our reach across the standardization field, but we will also 
serve our constituencies and the ones who will come after us in developing 
unique standards for tomorrow.&lt;/p&gt;
-&lt;p&gt;I will be happy to work on all this with my colleagues at the OASIS, 
and also with you, members of the broader Internet community: Citizens, small 
and large businesses, government, developers, and others. If you are a voting 
member of the OASIS consortium, don&amp;#8217;t forget to cast your ballot this 
month, it is important. If you are outside the OASIS voting members category, 
you can help too: By communicating around you about this election, by finding 
out if you know people at the OASIS and telling them about this project that I 
believe is comprehensive, pragmatic and at the same time, I hope, 
inspiring.&lt;/p&gt;
-&lt;p class=&quot;akst_link&quot;&gt;&lt;a 
href=&quot;http://standardsandfreedom.net/?p=127&amp;akst_action=share-this&quot;
 title=&quot;E-mail this, post to del.icio.us, etc.&quot; 
id=&quot;akst_link_127&quot; class=&quot;akst_share_link&quot; 
rel=&quot;nofollow&quot;&gt;Share This&lt;/a&gt;
-&lt;/p&gt;</description>
-       <pubDate>Mon, 01 Jun 2009 16:42:07 +0000</pubDate>
-</item>
 
 </channel>
 </rss>




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