Open Source India
Monday, February 25, 2008
  OOXML BRM in Geneva
By now, day 1 of the OOXML BRM in Geneva must have ended. The outcome is still not known, but whatever the outcome, ISO is going to be in for a lot of questions. How does a shoddy, half digested 6000 page long document (I am being *very* polite in my description) be eligible for a fast track review process. Does anyone believe that a complex standard like OOXML can be reviewed in six months? If that is the objective then why even review it in the first place? ISO's credibility has been permanently dented and, as my friends in the FSF points out, we need to make it clear that ISO standards are not open standards.

I have also been talking to a group of young technologists who are alarmed by what is happening in the standards world. We believe that it is time India took a more active (if not activist role) in creating international standards. This realization is spreading to neighboring countries also because policy makers I spoke to in Sri Lanka, Pakistan and other countries are also alarmed at the blatant manner in which OOXML is being pushed through. It may be time for emerging economies to come together and tame the beast of proprietary standards.

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An open source evangelist's opinionated take on the world

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Name: Venkatesh Hariharan
Location: Mumbai, Delhi, India

ALL views expressed here are my PERSONAL views and not those of any of the organizations I am affiliated with. I am an open source activist working for Red Hat. Former journalist and now also an amateur photographer. I have been part of the open source community since 1999 when I started IndLinux.org along with Prakash Advani. IndLinux.org is the pioneer in the localization of Linux to Indian languages when you see a Hindi user interface on Linux, that's work that we had started. I am interested in using techology as a tool to acclelrate socio-economic growth. That's what got me into localization because I believe that wonderful tools like the computer and the Internet should not just be the preserve of the English speaking elite in India.

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