User: jpmcc   
Date: 2009-12-24 16:52:36+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 Dec 24 17:52:27 CET 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=1.2528&r2=1.2529
Delta lines:  +26 -32
---------------------
--- atom.xml    2009-12-24 16:40:00+0000        1.2528
+++ atom.xml    2009-12-24 16:52:33+0000        1.2529
@@ -5,9 +5,28 @@
        <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>2009-12-24T16:39:59+00:00</updated>
+       <updated>2009-12-24T16:52:31+00:00</updated>
        <generator uri="http://www.planetplanet.org/";>Planet/2.0 
+http://www.planetplanet.org</generator>
 
+       <entry xml:lang="fr">
+               <title type="html">Merry Christmas!</title>
+               <link 
href="http://sophiegautier.com/blog/index.php/2009/12/24/135-merry-christmas"/>
+               <id>tag:sophiegautier.com,2009-12-24:/blog/135</id>
+               <updated>2009-12-24T16:44:41+00:00</updated>
+               <content type="html">&lt;p&gt;With or without the magical light 
of the snow, with or without a Christmas tree, may these holidays be the 
sweetest for all my friends around the world!&lt;/p&gt;</content>
+               <author>
+                       <name>sophi</name>
+                       <uri>http://sophiegautier.com/blog/index.php/</uri>
+               </author>
+               <source>
+                       <title type="html">Sgauti at OOo</title>
+                       <subtitle type="html">Histoires OpenOfficiennes et 
autres...</subtitle>
+                       <link rel="self" 
href="http://sophiegautier.com/blog/atom.php"/>
+                       <id>tag:sophiegautier.com,2009:/blog/index.php/</id>
+                       <updated>2009-12-24T16:52:30+00:00</updated>
+               </source>
+       </entry>
+
        <entry xml:lang="en">
                <title type="html">Links for mid-December</title>
                <link 
href="http://standardsandfreedom.net/index.php/2009/12/16/links-for-mid-december/"/>
@@ -49,7 +68,7 @@
                        <subtitle type="html">Histoires OpenOfficiennes et 
autres...</subtitle>
                        <link rel="self" 
href="http://sophiegautier.com/blog/atom.php"/>
                        <id>tag:sophiegautier.com,2009:/blog/index.php/</id>
-                       <updated>2009-12-24T16:39:57+00:00</updated>
+                       <updated>2009-12-24T16:52:30+00:00</updated>
                </source>
        </entry>
 
@@ -70,7 +89,7 @@
                        <subtitle type="html">Histoires OpenOfficiennes et 
autres...</subtitle>
                        <link rel="self" 
href="http://sophiegautier.com/blog/atom.php"/>
                        <id>tag:sophiegautier.com,2009:/blog/index.php/</id>
-                       <updated>2009-12-24T16:39:57+00:00</updated>
+                       <updated>2009-12-24T16:52:30+00:00</updated>
                </source>
        </entry>
 
@@ -120,7 +139,7 @@
                        <subtitle type="html">Histoires OpenOfficiennes et 
autres...</subtitle>
                        <link rel="self" 
href="http://sophiegautier.com/blog/atom.php"/>
                        <id>tag:sophiegautier.com,2009:/blog/index.php/</id>
-                       <updated>2009-12-24T16:39:57+00:00</updated>
+                       <updated>2009-12-24T16:52:30+00:00</updated>
                </source>
        </entry>
 
@@ -139,7 +158,7 @@
                        <subtitle type="html">Histoires OpenOfficiennes et 
autres...</subtitle>
                        <link rel="self" 
href="http://sophiegautier.com/blog/atom.php"/>
                        <id>tag:sophiegautier.com,2009:/blog/index.php/</id>
-                       <updated>2009-12-24T16:39:57+00:00</updated>
+                       <updated>2009-12-24T16:52:30+00:00</updated>
                </source>
        </entry>
 
@@ -162,7 +181,7 @@
                        <subtitle type="html">Histoires OpenOfficiennes et 
autres...</subtitle>
                        <link rel="self" 
href="http://sophiegautier.com/blog/atom.php"/>
                        <id>tag:sophiegautier.com,2009:/blog/index.php/</id>
-                       <updated>2009-12-24T16:39:57+00:00</updated>
+                       <updated>2009-12-24T16:52:30+00:00</updated>
                </source>
        </entry>
 
@@ -203,7 +222,7 @@
                        <subtitle type="html">Histoires OpenOfficiennes et 
autres...</subtitle>
                        <link rel="self" 
href="http://sophiegautier.com/blog/atom.php"/>
                        <id>tag:sophiegautier.com,2009:/blog/index.php/</id>
-                       <updated>2009-12-24T16:39:57+00:00</updated>
+                       <updated>2009-12-24T16:52:30+00:00</updated>
                </source>
        </entry>
 
@@ -228,29 +247,4 @@
                </source>
        </entry>
 
-       <entry xml:lang="en">
-               <title type="html">Politicians, lobbyists and scapegoats: When 
choosing not to choose should make you vote the next time</title>
-               <link 
href="http://standardsandfreedom.net/index.php/2009/11/19/politicians-lobbyists-and-scapegoats-when-choosing-not-to-choose-should-make-you-vote-the-next-time/"/>
-               
<id>http://standardsandfreedom.net/index.php/2009/11/19/politicians-lobbyists-and-scapegoats-when-choosing-not-to-choose-should-make-you-vote-the-next-time/</id>
-               <updated>2009-11-19T11:40:02+00:00</updated>
-               <content type="html">&lt;p align=&quot;left&quot;&gt;The famous 
and much awaited &lt;a 
href=&quot;http://www.references.modernisation.gouv.fr/sites/default/files/RGI_Version1%200_0.pdf&quot;&gt;RGI
 (Référentiel Général d&amp;#8217;Interopérabilité)&lt;/a&gt; has 
officially been published and enacted. This announcement was met with mixed 
reactions and as I have been following the RGI for quite a few years now, I 
thought I would write some of my thoughts about it.&lt;/p&gt;
-&lt;p align=&quot;left&quot;&gt;The RGI is actually old, not just because it 
was already online as a final draft in May 2009, but because the RGI as a 
project dates back several years. Its story goes like this: Somewhere in 2006 
the decision is made by the French government to draft a public sector-wide 
policy on IT matters. This policy is to be published in several parts, one on 
security, another on accessibility and the last one on interoperability. The 
last one, called the RGI, is published as a draft on the same year and 
submitted for public comments on a wiki, which was at the time something daring 
and courageous. The feedback that was received was ominously  good. In fact 
the first version of the RGI was mandating the use of Open Standards, and most 
notably ODF throughout the whole administration. At that very moment, Microsoft 
decided it was time to intervene and through a violent strategy of pressure and 
influence, managed to repel the RGI and have the process restarted. The process 
did restart and the same document finally got finalized for official approval 
in 2007. There the RGI progressively fades away, partly because of the 
presidential elections taking place in France at that time, partly because of 
a strongly applied pressure from the outside.&lt;/p&gt;
-&lt;p align=&quot;left&quot;&gt;The freshly elected government seems to have 
not so fresh ideas about I.T. Its track record in the matter is probably one of 
the worst possible as it is the one who authored and championed the Hadopi law 
(the french three strikes system) and other network censorship legislation. Any 
communication system that is not controlled by the &lt;span 
class=&quot;Apple-style-span&quot;&gt;Hungarian director of police&lt;/span&gt; 
 glory of our nation, the President, is progressively being put under his 
control.  In this context one could believe that the RGI would have lost not 
time being reexamined again. The exact opposite happened, partly because of the 
neo-conservative bias of the new government who seems to believe in the 
omnipotence of markets vs State intervention, partly because of a strange 
proximity with Microsoft (four ministers inaugurated the new Microsoft offices 
in Paris!) and a common hatred of Google. In this context, the people in charge 
of drafting the RGI discovered they were deprived of any political support. 
Moreover, they also realized that the opportunity for a clear policy drafting 
had gone away. They are public servants, after all, and public servants cannot 
do a lot without the support of the politicians in power.&lt;/p&gt;
-&lt;p align=&quot;left&quot;&gt;This is how we come to the present RGI. The 
document by itself has been totally rewritten, choosing to leave aside the 
policy aspect in favor of an exhaustive referencing and classifying of existing 
technology and standards.  This document itself integrates well with the upper 
echelons of European interoperability framework and does not attempt to dictate 
what the public sector stakeholders should do. On the crucial question of the 
office file formats, it is obvious that the authors spent some time carefully 
choosing their words. While the use of xml-based file format is clearly 
recommended, ODF is being put under observation (the reason for this is 
unclear) and so is OOXML, but at least we know the reason for this: OOXML has 
no known implementation (and won&amp;#8217;t have any until a long time, they 
might have added) and therefore cannot be used.&lt;/p&gt;
-&lt;p align=&quot;left&quot;&gt;This is what happens when a government is 
fiddling too much with powerful corporations and forget the interest of its own 
people: honest, competent, public servants have to compose with whatever they 
have in order to keep things going. If I were to judge this document from this 
standpoint only, I would actually give it a big cheer.The problem is that the 
whole concept of the RGI has become somewhat of a loaded gun in France, and it 
is I believe useless to use people of the DGME as scapegoats. With what they 
have, they could not have done better. But what was at stake was an opportunity 
for France to become a champion of open standards and sustainable digital 
future. It&amp;#8217;s sad to see this government never gave it a chance. I 
hope one day we will realize that the ideological bias against any form of 
openness entertained by the present President and Prime Minister is something 
akin to the outrageous denial of global warming by the previous U.S. 
administration.I look forward to the future versions of the RGI, and think they 
will bring more constructive, innovative and positive elements to the 
development of a coherent information infrastructure  for our national public 
sector.&lt;/p&gt;
-&lt;p class=&quot;akst_link&quot;&gt;&lt;a 
href=&quot;http://standardsandfreedom.net/?p=145&amp;akst_action=share-this&quot;
 title=&quot;E-mail this, post to del.icio.us, etc.&quot; 
id=&quot;akst_link_145&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>2009-12-23T12:00:31+00:00</updated>
-               </source>
-       </entry>
-
 </feed>

File [changed]: index.html
Url: 
http://native-lang.openoffice.org/source/browse/native-lang/www/planet/index.html?r1=1.2528&r2=1.2529
Delta lines:  +16 -22
---------------------
--- index.html  2009-12-24 16:40:01+0000        1.2528
+++ index.html  2009-12-24 16:52:33+0000        1.2529
@@ -29,8 +29,23 @@
 <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: December 24, 2009 04:39 
PM CET</em></p>
+<p><em>Bloggings on native language topics by project members - see <a 
href="#disclaimer">disclaimer</a>.<br />Last updated: December 24, 2009 04:52 
PM CET</em></p>
 
+<h2>December 24, 2009</h2>
+<h3>
+<a href="http://sophiegautier.com/blog/index.php/"; title="Sgauti at OOo">
+Sophie Gautier</a>&nbsp;:&nbsp;
+<a 
href="http://sophiegautier.com/blog/index.php/2009/12/24/135-merry-christmas";>
+Merry Christmas!</a>
+</h3>
+<p>
+<p>With or without the magical light of the snow, with or without a Christmas 
tree, may these holidays be the sweetest for all my friends around the 
world!</p></p>
+<p>
+<em><a 
href="http://sophiegautier.com/blog/index.php/2009/12/24/135-merry-christmas";>by
 sophi at December 24, 2009 04:44 PM CET</a></em>
+</p>
+<br />
+<hr />
+<br />
 <h2>December 16, 2009</h2>
 <h3>
 <a href="http://standardsandfreedom.net"; title="Moved by Freedom - Powered by 
Standards » OOo Postings">
@@ -212,27 +227,6 @@
 <br />
 <hr />
 <br />
-<h2>November 19, 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/2009/11/19/politicians-lobbyists-and-scapegoats-when-choosing-not-to-choose-should-make-you-vote-the-next-time/";>
-Politicians, lobbyists and scapegoats: When choosing not to choose should make 
you vote the next time</a>
-</h3>
-<p>
-<p align="left">The famous and much awaited <a 
href="http://www.references.modernisation.gouv.fr/sites/default/files/RGI_Version1%200_0.pdf";>RGI
 (Référentiel Général d&#8217;Interopérabilité)</a> has officially been 
published and enacted. This announcement was met with mixed reactions and as I 
have been following the RGI for quite a few years now, I thought I would write 
some of my thoughts about it.</p>
-<p align="left">The RGI is actually old, not just because it was already 
online as a final draft in May 2009, but because the RGI as a project dates 
back several years. Its story goes like this: Somewhere in 2006 the decision is 
made by the French government to draft a public sector-wide policy on IT 
matters. This policy is to be published in several parts, one on security, 
another on accessibility and the last one on interoperability. The last one, 
called the RGI, is published as a draft on the same year and submitted for 
public comments on a wiki, which was at the time something daring and 
courageous. The feedback that was received was ominously  good. In fact the 
first version of the RGI was mandating the use of Open Standards, and most 
notably ODF throughout the whole administration. At that very moment, Microsoft 
decided it was time to intervene and through a violent strategy of pressure and 
influence, managed to repel the RGI and have the process restarted. The process 
did restart and the same document finally got finalized for official approval 
in 2007. There the RGI progressively fades away, partly because of the 
presidential elections taking place in France at that time, partly because of 
a strongly applied pressure from the outside.</p>
-<p align="left">The freshly elected government seems to have not so fresh 
ideas about I.T. Its track record in the matter is probably one of the worst 
possible as it is the one who authored and championed the Hadopi law (the 
french three strikes system) and other network censorship legislation. Any 
communication system that is not controlled by the <span 
class="Apple-style-span">Hungarian director of police</span>  glory of our 
nation, the President, is progressively being put under his control.  In this 
context one could believe that the RGI would have lost not time being 
reexamined again. The exact opposite happened, partly because of the 
neo-conservative bias of the new government who seems to believe in the 
omnipotence of markets vs State intervention, partly because of a strange 
proximity with Microsoft (four ministers inaugurated the new Microsoft offices 
in Paris!) and a common hatred of Google. In this context, the people in charge 
of drafting the RGI discovered they were deprived of any political support. 
Moreover, they also realized that the opportunity for a clear policy drafting 
had gone away. They are public servants, after all, and public servants cannot 
do a lot without the support of the politicians in power.</p>
-<p align="left">This is how we come to the present RGI. The document by itself 
has been totally rewritten, choosing to leave aside the policy aspect in favor 
of an exhaustive referencing and classifying of existing technology and 
standards.  This document itself integrates well with the upper echelons of 
European interoperability framework and does not attempt to dictate what the 
public sector stakeholders should do. On the crucial question of the office 
file formats, it is obvious that the authors spent some time carefully choosing 
their words. While the use of xml-based file format is clearly recommended, ODF 
is being put under observation (the reason for this is unclear) and so is 
OOXML, but at least we know the reason for this: OOXML has no known 
implementation (and won&#8217;t have any until a long time, they might have 
added) and therefore cannot be used.</p>
-<p align="left">This is what happens when a government is fiddling too much 
with powerful corporations and forget the interest of its own people: honest, 
competent, public servants have to compose with whatever they have in order to 
keep things going. If I were to judge this document from this standpoint only, 
I would actually give it a big cheer.The problem is that the whole concept of 
the RGI has become somewhat of a loaded gun in France, and it is I believe 
useless to use people of the DGME as scapegoats. With what they have, they 
could not have done better. But what was at stake was an opportunity for France 
to become a champion of open standards and sustainable digital future. 
It&#8217;s sad to see this government never gave it a chance. I hope one day we 
will realize that the ideological bias against any form of openness entertained 
by the present President and Prime Minister is something akin to the outrageous 
denial of global warming by the previous U.S. administration.I look forward to 
the future versions of the RGI, and think they will bring more constructive, 
innovative and positive elements to the development of a coherent information 
infrastructure  for our national public sector.</p>
-<p class="akst_link"><a 
href="http://standardsandfreedom.net/?p=145&akst_action=share-this"; 
title="E-mail this, post to del.icio.us, etc." id="akst_link_145" 
class="akst_share_link" rel="nofollow">Share This</a>
-</p></p>
-<p>
-<em><a 
href="http://standardsandfreedom.net/index.php/2009/11/19/politicians-lobbyists-and-scapegoats-when-choosing-not-to-choose-should-make-you-vote-the-next-time/";>by
 Charles at November 19, 2009 11:40 AM CET</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=1.2527&r2=1.2528
Delta lines:  +1 -1
-------------------
--- opml.xml    2009-12-24 16:40:01+0000        1.2527
+++ opml.xml    2009-12-24 16:52:34+0000        1.2528
@@ -2,7 +2,7 @@
 <opml version="1.1">
        <head>
                <title>Native Language Confederation Planet</title>
-               <dateModified>Thu, 24 Dec 2009 16:39:59 +0000</dateModified>
+               <dateModified>Thu, 24 Dec 2009 16:52:31 +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=1.388&r2=1.389
Delta lines:  +8 -13
--------------------
--- rss10.xml   2009-12-16 12:00:40+0000        1.388
+++ rss10.xml   2009-12-24 16:52:34+0000        1.389
@@ -13,6 +13,7 @@
 
        <items>
                <rdf:Seq>
+                       <rdf:li 
rdf:resource="tag:sophiegautier.com,2009-12-24:/blog/135" />
                        <rdf:li 
rdf:resource="http://standardsandfreedom.net/index.php/2009/12/16/links-for-mid-december/";
 />
                        <rdf:li 
rdf:resource="tag:sophiegautier.com,2009-12-15:/blog/134" />
                        <rdf:li 
rdf:resource="tag:sophiegautier.com,2009-12-12:/blog/133" />
@@ -22,11 +23,17 @@
                        <rdf:li 
rdf:resource="tag:sophiegautier.com,2009-12-01:/blog/130" />
                        <rdf:li 
rdf:resource="tag:sophiegautier.com,2009-11-29:/blog/129" />
                        <rdf:li 
rdf:resource="tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5198340507565233169.post-4995831131767438732"
 />
-                       <rdf:li 
rdf:resource="http://standardsandfreedom.net/index.php/2009/11/19/politicians-lobbyists-and-scapegoats-when-choosing-not-to-choose-should-make-you-vote-the-next-time/";
 />
                </rdf:Seq>
        </items>
 </channel>
 
+<item rdf:about="tag:sophiegautier.com,2009-12-24:/blog/135">
+       <title>Sophie Gautier: Merry Christmas!</title>
+       
<link>http://sophiegautier.com/blog/index.php/2009/12/24/135-merry-christmas</link>
+       <content:encoded>&lt;p&gt;With or without the magical light of the 
snow, with or without a Christmas tree, may these holidays be the sweetest for 
all my friends around the world!&lt;/p&gt;</content:encoded>
+       <dc:date>2009-12-24T16:44:41+00:00</dc:date>
+       <dc:creator>sophi</dc:creator>
+</item>
 <item 
rdf:about="http://standardsandfreedom.net/index.php/2009/12/16/links-for-mid-december/";>
        <title>Charles Schulz: Links for mid-December</title>
        
<link>http://standardsandfreedom.net/index.php/2009/12/16/links-for-mid-december/</link>
@@ -135,17 +142,5 @@
        <dc:date>2009-11-25T19:52:32+00:00</dc:date>
        <dc:creator>Leif Lodahl</dc:creator>
 </item>
-<item 
rdf:about="http://standardsandfreedom.net/index.php/2009/11/19/politicians-lobbyists-and-scapegoats-when-choosing-not-to-choose-should-make-you-vote-the-next-time/";>
-       <title>Charles Schulz: Politicians, lobbyists and scapegoats: When 
choosing not to choose should make you vote the next time</title>
-       
<link>http://standardsandfreedom.net/index.php/2009/11/19/politicians-lobbyists-and-scapegoats-when-choosing-not-to-choose-should-make-you-vote-the-next-time/</link>
-       <content:encoded>&lt;p align=&quot;left&quot;&gt;The famous and much 
awaited &lt;a 
href=&quot;http://www.references.modernisation.gouv.fr/sites/default/files/RGI_Version1%200_0.pdf&quot;&gt;RGI
 (Référentiel Général d&amp;#8217;Interopérabilité)&lt;/a&gt; has 
officially been published and enacted. This announcement was met with mixed 
reactions and as I have been following the RGI for quite a few years now, I 
thought I would write some of my thoughts about it.&lt;/p&gt;
-&lt;p align=&quot;left&quot;&gt;The RGI is actually old, not just because it 
was already online as a final draft in May 2009, but because the RGI as a 
project dates back several years. Its story goes like this: Somewhere in 2006 
the decision is made by the French government to draft a public sector-wide 
policy on IT matters. This policy is to be published in several parts, one on 
security, another on accessibility and the last one on interoperability. The 
last one, called the RGI, is published as a draft on the same year and 
submitted for public comments on a wiki, which was at the time something daring 
and courageous. The feedback that was received was ominously  good. In fact 
the first version of the RGI was mandating the use of Open Standards, and most 
notably ODF throughout the whole administration. At that very moment, Microsoft 
decided it was time to intervene and through a violent strategy of pressure and 
influence, managed to repel the RGI and have the process restarted. The process 
did restart and the same document finally got finalized for official approval 
in 2007. There the RGI progressively fades away, partly because of the 
presidential elections taking place in France at that time, partly because of 
a strongly applied pressure from the outside.&lt;/p&gt;
-&lt;p align=&quot;left&quot;&gt;The freshly elected government seems to have 
not so fresh ideas about I.T. Its track record in the matter is probably one of 
the worst possible as it is the one who authored and championed the Hadopi law 
(the french three strikes system) and other network censorship legislation. Any 
communication system that is not controlled by the &lt;span 
class=&quot;Apple-style-span&quot;&gt;Hungarian director of police&lt;/span&gt; 
 glory of our nation, the President, is progressively being put under his 
control.  In this context one could believe that the RGI would have lost not 
time being reexamined again. The exact opposite happened, partly because of the 
neo-conservative bias of the new government who seems to believe in the 
omnipotence of markets vs State intervention, partly because of a strange 
proximity with Microsoft (four ministers inaugurated the new Microsoft offices 
in Paris!) and a common hatred of Google. In this context, the people in charge 
of drafting the RGI discovered they were deprived of any political support. 
Moreover, they also realized that the opportunity for a clear policy drafting 
had gone away. They are public servants, after all, and public servants cannot 
do a lot without the support of the politicians in power.&lt;/p&gt;
-&lt;p align=&quot;left&quot;&gt;This is how we come to the present RGI. The 
document by itself has been totally rewritten, choosing to leave aside the 
policy aspect in favor of an exhaustive referencing and classifying of existing 
technology and standards.  This document itself integrates well with the upper 
echelons of European interoperability framework and does not attempt to dictate 
what the public sector stakeholders should do. On the crucial question of the 
office file formats, it is obvious that the authors spent some time carefully 
choosing their words. While the use of xml-based file format is clearly 
recommended, ODF is being put under observation (the reason for this is 
unclear) and so is OOXML, but at least we know the reason for this: OOXML has 
no known implementation (and won&amp;#8217;t have any until a long time, they 
might have added) and therefore cannot be used.&lt;/p&gt;
-&lt;p align=&quot;left&quot;&gt;This is what happens when a government is 
fiddling too much with powerful corporations and forget the interest of its own 
people: honest, competent, public servants have to compose with whatever they 
have in order to keep things going. If I were to judge this document from this 
standpoint only, I would actually give it a big cheer.The problem is that the 
whole concept of the RGI has become somewhat of a loaded gun in France, and it 
is I believe useless to use people of the DGME as scapegoats. With what they 
have, they could not have done better. But what was at stake was an opportunity 
for France to become a champion of open standards and sustainable digital 
future. It&amp;#8217;s sad to see this government never gave it a chance. I 
hope one day we will realize that the ideological bias against any form of 
openness entertained by the present President and Prime Minister is something 
akin to the outrageous denial of global warming by the previous U.S. 
administration.I look forward to the future versions of the RGI, and think they 
will bring more constructive, innovative and positive elements to the 
development of a coherent information infrastructure  for our national public 
sector.&lt;/p&gt;
-&lt;p class=&quot;akst_link&quot;&gt;&lt;a 
href=&quot;http://standardsandfreedom.net/?p=145&amp;akst_action=share-this&quot;
 title=&quot;E-mail this, post to del.icio.us, etc.&quot; 
id=&quot;akst_link_145&quot; class=&quot;akst_share_link&quot; 
rel=&quot;nofollow&quot;&gt;Share This&lt;/a&gt;
-&lt;/p&gt;</content:encoded>
-       <dc:date>2009-11-19T11:40:02+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=1.389&r2=1.390
Delta lines:  +7 -13
--------------------
--- rss20.xml   2009-12-16 12:00:40+0000        1.389
+++ rss20.xml   2009-12-24 16:52:34+0000        1.390
@@ -8,6 +8,13 @@
        <description>Native Language Confederation Planet - 
http://native-lang.openoffice.org/planet/</description>
 
 <item>
+       <title>Sophie Gautier: Merry Christmas!</title>
+       <guid>tag:sophiegautier.com,2009-12-24:/blog/135</guid>
+       
<link>http://sophiegautier.com/blog/index.php/2009/12/24/135-merry-christmas</link>
+       <description>&lt;p&gt;With or without the magical light of the snow, 
with or without a Christmas tree, may these holidays be the sweetest for all my 
friends around the world!&lt;/p&gt;</description>
+       <pubDate>Thu, 24 Dec 2009 16:44:41 +0000</pubDate>
+</item>
+<item>
        <title>Charles Schulz: Links for mid-December</title>
        
<guid>http://standardsandfreedom.net/index.php/2009/12/16/links-for-mid-december/</guid>
        
<link>http://standardsandfreedom.net/index.php/2009/12/16/links-for-mid-december/</link>
@@ -118,19 +125,6 @@
        <pubDate>Wed, 25 Nov 2009 19:52:32 +0000</pubDate>
        <author>[email protected] (Leif Lodahl)</author>
 </item>
-<item>
-       <title>Charles Schulz: Politicians, lobbyists and scapegoats: When 
choosing not to choose should make you vote the next time</title>
-       
<guid>http://standardsandfreedom.net/index.php/2009/11/19/politicians-lobbyists-and-scapegoats-when-choosing-not-to-choose-should-make-you-vote-the-next-time/</guid>
-       
<link>http://standardsandfreedom.net/index.php/2009/11/19/politicians-lobbyists-and-scapegoats-when-choosing-not-to-choose-should-make-you-vote-the-next-time/</link>
-       <description>&lt;p align=&quot;left&quot;&gt;The famous and much 
awaited &lt;a 
href=&quot;http://www.references.modernisation.gouv.fr/sites/default/files/RGI_Version1%200_0.pdf&quot;&gt;RGI
 (Référentiel Général d&amp;#8217;Interopérabilité)&lt;/a&gt; has 
officially been published and enacted. This announcement was met with mixed 
reactions and as I have been following the RGI for quite a few years now, I 
thought I would write some of my thoughts about it.&lt;/p&gt;
-&lt;p align=&quot;left&quot;&gt;The RGI is actually old, not just because it 
was already online as a final draft in May 2009, but because the RGI as a 
project dates back several years. Its story goes like this: Somewhere in 2006 
the decision is made by the French government to draft a public sector-wide 
policy on IT matters. This policy is to be published in several parts, one on 
security, another on accessibility and the last one on interoperability. The 
last one, called the RGI, is published as a draft on the same year and 
submitted for public comments on a wiki, which was at the time something daring 
and courageous. The feedback that was received was ominously  good. In fact 
the first version of the RGI was mandating the use of Open Standards, and most 
notably ODF throughout the whole administration. At that very moment, Microsoft 
decided it was time to intervene and through a violent strategy of pressure and 
influence, managed to repel the RGI and have the process restarted. The process 
did restart and the same document finally got finalized for official approval 
in 2007. There the RGI progressively fades away, partly because of the 
presidential elections taking place in France at that time, partly because of 
a strongly applied pressure from the outside.&lt;/p&gt;
-&lt;p align=&quot;left&quot;&gt;The freshly elected government seems to have 
not so fresh ideas about I.T. Its track record in the matter is probably one of 
the worst possible as it is the one who authored and championed the Hadopi law 
(the french three strikes system) and other network censorship legislation. Any 
communication system that is not controlled by the &lt;span 
class=&quot;Apple-style-span&quot;&gt;Hungarian director of police&lt;/span&gt; 
 glory of our nation, the President, is progressively being put under his 
control.  In this context one could believe that the RGI would have lost not 
time being reexamined again. The exact opposite happened, partly because of the 
neo-conservative bias of the new government who seems to believe in the 
omnipotence of markets vs State intervention, partly because of a strange 
proximity with Microsoft (four ministers inaugurated the new Microsoft offices 
in Paris!) and a common hatred of Google. In this context, the people in charge 
of drafting the RGI discovered they were deprived of any political support. 
Moreover, they also realized that the opportunity for a clear policy drafting 
had gone away. They are public servants, after all, and public servants cannot 
do a lot without the support of the politicians in power.&lt;/p&gt;
-&lt;p align=&quot;left&quot;&gt;This is how we come to the present RGI. The 
document by itself has been totally rewritten, choosing to leave aside the 
policy aspect in favor of an exhaustive referencing and classifying of existing 
technology and standards.  This document itself integrates well with the upper 
echelons of European interoperability framework and does not attempt to dictate 
what the public sector stakeholders should do. On the crucial question of the 
office file formats, it is obvious that the authors spent some time carefully 
choosing their words. While the use of xml-based file format is clearly 
recommended, ODF is being put under observation (the reason for this is 
unclear) and so is OOXML, but at least we know the reason for this: OOXML has 
no known implementation (and won&amp;#8217;t have any until a long time, they 
might have added) and therefore cannot be used.&lt;/p&gt;
-&lt;p align=&quot;left&quot;&gt;This is what happens when a government is 
fiddling too much with powerful corporations and forget the interest of its own 
people: honest, competent, public servants have to compose with whatever they 
have in order to keep things going. If I were to judge this document from this 
standpoint only, I would actually give it a big cheer.The problem is that the 
whole concept of the RGI has become somewhat of a loaded gun in France, and it 
is I believe useless to use people of the DGME as scapegoats. With what they 
have, they could not have done better. But what was at stake was an opportunity 
for France to become a champion of open standards and sustainable digital 
future. It&amp;#8217;s sad to see this government never gave it a chance. I 
hope one day we will realize that the ideological bias against any form of 
openness entertained by the present President and Prime Minister is something 
akin to the outrageous denial of global warming by the previous U.S. 
administration.I look forward to the future versions of the RGI, and think they 
will bring more constructive, innovative and positive elements to the 
development of a coherent information infrastructure  for our national public 
sector.&lt;/p&gt;
-&lt;p class=&quot;akst_link&quot;&gt;&lt;a 
href=&quot;http://standardsandfreedom.net/?p=145&amp;akst_action=share-this&quot;
 title=&quot;E-mail this, post to del.icio.us, etc.&quot; 
id=&quot;akst_link_145&quot; class=&quot;akst_share_link&quot; 
rel=&quot;nofollow&quot;&gt;Share This&lt;/a&gt;
-&lt;/p&gt;</description>
-       <pubDate>Thu, 19 Nov 2009 11:40:02 +0000</pubDate>
-</item>
 
 </channel>
 </rss>




---------------------------------------------------------------------
To unsubscribe, e-mail: [email protected]
For additional commands, e-mail: [email protected]

Reply via email to