OpenDocument Adoption
John Chambers
jc at trillian.mit.edu
Wed Oct 26 13:07:52 EDT 2005
Ben Jackson wrote:
| On Wed, 26 Oct 2005, Gordon Marx wrote:
|
| > On 26/10/05, dsr-ssma at tao.merseine.nu <dsr-ssma at tao.merseine.nu> wrote:
| > > Better service to the people, at lower costs: are these not the principles by which you stand?
| >
| > Probably not...this is Taxachusetts, after all. :--)
|
| I'm confused. Why is everyone afraid of a cost benefit analysis?
Elementary. They're all afraid that the outcome will go contrary to
what each desires.
Additionally, there's a serious problem with a cost/benefit analysis
here. How will they measure costs and benefits? The usual presumption
is that that phrase implies monetary costs and benefits only. So, for
example, the costs or benefits of accessible versus inaccessible
"public" documents will probably be ignored, as there's no way to get
agreement on a way to measure it in dollars. So in the "analysis",
such costs or benefits will be tacitly assigned the value of $0, as
is usual with things that you don't (or can't) measure).
Also, it seems fairly clear that the opponents of open documents are
assigning a cost of $0 to using MS formats, since they are discussing
only the short-term costs of conversion, and not the long-term costs
of not converting. This is fairly standard false accounting for
conversions in general. Again, it's partly because it can be
difficult to determine the actual cost of something that you haven't
done. This is probably not helped by people using the phrase "free
software", which is easy to attack by misinterpreting "free" as
"no-cost", and showing that the software isn't free (in this sense).
Anyway, we're talking about politics here. What are the chances that
the decisions will be made on any basis other than power? In
politics, cost/benefit analyses are conventionally misused to support
your own political position, to the dismay of actual accountants.
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