Openization

Roadmapping Denmark

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Friday’s open standards conference in the Danish Parliament was a big success, we all agreed. A full house of participants, a range of good presentations, and good deliberations and debates. Throughout the day, open standards were promoted, by policy makers, vendors and, well, everyone. As Morten Kjærsgaard from OSL concluded in closing the conference, it is not a question of open standards or not, but rather about how and when.

In his opening talk, Morten Helveg Petersen MP announced a consultation draft of a motion in Parliament about the use of open standards in Danish government. By blogging the draft text, and opening up for comments, Helveg has openized the policy making process in a web 2.0 way. In this spirit, it seems appropriate to label his initiative B64 2.0, but actually it’s an appropriate name because it basically is a reintroduction of his own motion B64 from last session of Parliament. The motion’s draft text in my draft translation goes like this:

Parliament imposes on the government a duty to ensure that the public sector’s use of IT, including use of software, is based on open standards.

The state should adopt and maintain a set of open standards by 1 January 2008 which can serve as an inspiration for the rest of the public sector. Open standards should be part of public IT and software procurement with the object of promoting competition.

The state should ensure that all digital information and data that the public sector exchanges with citizens, companies and institutions, are available in open standards based formats.

I encourage all bloggers, and everybody else, to post comments to Morten’s blog on this important issue. If you post a copy of your comments here, I’ll provide an XML-feed of comments, as an inspiration to Morten, and a convenient way to keep track of comments.

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Meet Jeff and Susan

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Jeff Kaplan is in Copenhagen this week, as one of the international keynote speakers at our open standards conference on Friday. We’ve had to close for registrations due to seat restrictions in Parliament, so I hope you have already registred if you wanted to join us.

If you want to meet Jeff and also Susan Struble from Sun Microsystems, we’ll have an informal meeting here Thursday from 17-19. Just come to the IT-University, aud 2.

Roadmap Launch in Denmark

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We have announced a Danish Conference on Open Standards to be held at Christianborg, the Danish Parliament, on 13 January 2006.

We’ll have two international keynotes: Jeff Kaplan will present the roadmap, and Susy Struble from Sun will talk about current standardization issues in an international perspective, including ODF.

There is good political interest in the conference, and all parties in Parliament will participate in a roadtable debate at the end of what promises to become a very interesting day.

Carpe apertio

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In Roadmap for Open ICT Ecosystems, we wrote: We welcome your ideas, best practices and case studies, which will keep this roadmap a vital, living tool. I have created a wikified version of the roadmap for OeG members and others to continue working on the roadmap to make it a vital, living tool. By extending it, elaborating on it, commenting on it, and whatnot. The wiki also contains updates info about translations and roadshows, and is already quite active.

OeG Founder Jeff Kaplan has also started a blog. Subscribed. I like the tag line: Carpe apertio (Seize openness).

I introduced the roadmap in Danish in PÃ¥ vej mod Ã¥bne it-økosystemer – eller: Openization!, in the November issue of Prosit, a newsletter to students, published by Prosa, the Danish Association of Computer Professionals.

I have another article (in Danish), Kommunalreformens it-udfordringer (PDF-version) in Prosabladet, a monthly journal published by Prosa. That article is about the IT challenges in the municipal reform, and the need for architectural work.

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