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U.S. Justice Dept. Chooses Corel over Microsoft 390

peg0cjs writes "The Justice Department, which challenged Microsoft Corp. in courtrooms for nearly a decade over antitrust violations, will pay more than $2 million each year to buy business software from Corel Corp, according to this article from CANOE. 'The Justice Department will make WordPerfect software available to more than 20 organizations inside the agency, but not the FBI or Drug Enforcement Administration, which use Microsoft's Office business software exclusively, said Mary Aileen O'Donovan, a program manager in the Justice Management Division.' According to the article, the deal is worth up to $13.2 million over five years for Ontario-based Corel. Has sanity finally set in, or is this just a blip in Microsoft's dominance in controlling government software decisions?"
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U.S. Justice Dept. Chooses Corel over Microsoft

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  • Alt-F3 Tells All (Score:5, Interesting)

    by ackthpt ( 218170 ) * on Monday March 07, 2005 @07:14PM (#11871233) Homepage Journal
    Obviously the Department of Justice (not the Justice Department, which sounds like some government agency in charge of people flying around in their underwear) wants to get to the root of problems more quickly and with Alt-F3 they can find the clues much faster!

    A blip? I dunno, seems when the Roman Empire began to crumble it started somewhere, in some little way. Don't discount Corel too quickly and don't underestimate the power of saving a few dollars by a goverment sorely in need of cost cutting. If these tools work well, the next round may embrace FBI and DEA. you have the right to alternative sources of software

  • Hrm. (Score:3, Interesting)

    by Geekenstein ( 199041 ) on Monday March 07, 2005 @07:14PM (#11871236)
    Even though I'm not the biggest Microsoft fan, I find something slightly disturbing about my government sending my tax dollars out of country with a software contract award. Why not Open Office?
  • So (Score:2, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Crowhead ( 577505 ) on Monday March 07, 2005 @07:15PM (#11871248)
    Does this mean they'll spend 0.1% less on Microsoft software each year?
  • No Noose (Score:5, Interesting)

    by matt-larose ( 308335 ) on Monday March 07, 2005 @07:17PM (#11871276) Homepage
    As a former corel employee !2001 they had posters all over HQ talking about how the DOJ and Microsofts Own lawyers in the antitrust thing used WPO, as WP docs are pretty much the standard de jure ;)
  • by and by ( 598383 ) on Monday March 07, 2005 @07:17PM (#11871283)
    Until recently (the last 3 or so years), the legal profession had widely used only WordPerfect, making it a standard within the community. Even now, there's a significantly larger percentage of legal professionals who use WordPerfect than there is in other professions / industries.

    If one department of the federal government were to drop Word for WordPerfect, it would be the Justice Department.
  • I can't resist pointing this out, yet again: No, reveal codes is NOT a good thing. It's a complete kludge. If you need a Reveal Codes feature, then that shows that the word processor is badly designed.

    I was firmly in the reveal codes camp until I actually learned how to use Word, and then I realized what an atrocity Reveal Codes really was. The concept of Styles is far, far better.

  • Re:Hrm. (Score:1, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Coward on Monday March 07, 2005 @07:21PM (#11871335)
    But, encouraging that they are saving $5,000,000 over using Microsoft Office. What disturbs me is: "Justice also is urging employees to switch to Microsoft's Internet Explorer Web browser".
  • Re:Damn Lawyers (Score:5, Interesting)

    by mlmitton ( 610008 ) on Monday March 07, 2005 @07:23PM (#11871358)
    This is exactly what I was going to say. IANAL, but I work with them, and we regularly get WP files from our lawyer clients.

    One interesting story. I work for an economic consulting firm, and we were working for Microsoft (don't kill me--I didn't have a choice!) on one of their class-action lawsuits that came about in the wake of the antitrust conviction. We were of course forced to use Word, and as we all know, one thing MS has *never* gotten right is their footnotes. Our deadline was less than 6 hours away for a major report, and all of the footnotes were FUBARed. The head lawyer called the guy at MS who was in charge of Office (I forget his name) and yelled, "Why can't you guys fix the fucking footnotes! Word Perfect has like three developers and they can get it right!" The MS guy hemmed and hawed, said they were working on it. That was 3-4 years ago, and MS still hasn't gotten the footnotes right.

  • by claussenvenable ( 820336 ) on Monday March 07, 2005 @07:24PM (#11871377)
    the standard in legal documents for many years.

    I've worked in legal forums on a few occasions (remember Marylin Hall Patel of the Napster ruling?), and the judges/lawyers I've met are insistent on all documents being created/filed in WordPerfect.
  • But, but... (Score:1, Interesting)

    by kd7cqn ( 684514 ) on Monday March 07, 2005 @07:32PM (#11871463)
    doesn't Microsoft own about half of Corel? I thought I saw something a year or two ago that MS had purchased controlling interest in Corel. So really, the Feds didn't change who they pay their money to. They just changed to a better software.
  • Lawyers prefer it... (Score:2, Interesting)

    by exp(pi*sqrt(163)) ( 613870 ) on Monday March 07, 2005 @07:39PM (#11871537) Journal
    ...because they believe it to be less likely to contain traces of (liability causing) deleted text. Word, on the other hand, has been known to leave deleted text still in the binary .doc file.
  • 100 years from now? (Score:3, Interesting)

    by tacokill ( 531275 ) on Monday March 07, 2005 @07:58PM (#11871709)
    So what happens 100 years from now when my grandchildren want to review some of these documents?

  • Re:Alt-F3 Tells All (Score:3, Interesting)

    by Darth Hubris ( 26923 ) on Monday March 07, 2005 @08:13PM (#11871879)
    StarOffice 7.0 anyone? Same as OpenOffice.org last time I checked. They can spend their money, or spend half of it on cheap liquor and expensive whores, and the rest on free downloaed of OOo.

  • I am a DOJ Attorney (Score:4, Interesting)

    by Tax Boy ( 75507 ) on Monday March 07, 2005 @08:13PM (#11871880)
    This is news??

    DOJ has been using Corel Wordperfect Office exclusively for a decade, and good ol' dos wordperfect 5.1 since there was a wordperfect. I personally have loaded 1980's era wordperfect documents off the network to cut'n'paste into a brief.

    Nothing new here.

  • Re:Damn Lawyers (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Penguinshit ( 591885 ) on Monday March 07, 2005 @08:21PM (#11871959) Homepage Journal

    I was working for attorneys when they were making the switch from WordStar to WordPerfect, and then to WordPerfect 5. WordPerfect was (for the time) an absolute pleasure to use, although you really needed that little template sheet placed over the top of your function keys.

    WordPerfect was so cool that I used its macro functionality to build a bill-production application for one bankruptcy attorney for whom I once worked. The bills submitted to the judge at the end of the bankruptcy proceeding were forced to conform to a certain style; I created this little "app" so that the secretaries could just do data-entry from the attorneys' hand-written billing notes and automagically out of the HP LaserJet II and III would pop a court-approved billing form. This was part of a whole suite of apps I started doing this way to produce ready-made pleadings and whatnot; great way to save on letterhead for some of the smaller attorneys I knew in the San Jose area.

    5 years later I checked back in with that bankruptcy attorney and his office was still using the app!
  • by Snommis ( 861843 ) on Monday March 07, 2005 @09:23PM (#11872499) Homepage
    I find this interesting, because I work for the US Navy as a tech rep. I was developing some test equipment, and needed an app to grab RS-232 data. After much research, I chose software made by a small Canadian company, and requested money to buy a copy.

    My request for a whopping $35 was denied, and I was told to find a US company that made the same thing. I wrote a full page report detailing my research and why this was the best answer, only to be denied again.

    Eventually, I broke out Python wrote an app myself. I think it cost about 10x what a site license would've cost.

  • Re:Alt-F3 Tells All (Score:3, Interesting)

    by bsharitt ( 580506 ) * <bridget@sharitt . c om> on Monday March 07, 2005 @11:00PM (#11873128) Journal
    OpenOffice probably wasn't considered as a real option, but StarOffice may have been.
  • Re:Alt-F3 Tells All (Score:2, Interesting)

    by mdwstmusik ( 853733 ) on Monday March 07, 2005 @11:28PM (#11873395) Homepage
    Ever heard of a not-so-little thing called the GAO?

    Ever heard of a not-so-little thing called reality?
    I recently got hired as a Systems Admin for a state government office. Despite the fact that the state is deeply in debt, the biggest objection that I've received when suggesting OSS has been "If we reduce our licensing costs, they'll cut our budget for next year!?"
  • Attitude (Score:4, Interesting)

    by bezuwork's friend ( 589226 ) on Tuesday March 08, 2005 @12:21AM (#11873849)
    the biggest objection that I've received when suggesting OSS has been "If we reduce our licensing costs, they'll cut our budget for next year!?"

    Obvious, but ... So $ is saved by installing OSS and thus avoiding licenses. Then, the next year the budget is cut that amount. But again, with no licenses to pay, the cut $ isn't missed.

    The only obvious downside is if the office wants to backpedal and repurchase licenses for non-OSS. Seems in such an outcome, the higher ups / accounting types would approve the reincrease of the budget as it is better to have a working department than one that can't due to inappropriate software. But if money can be saved, it seems worth the try.

    Seems to me it is likely a rut mentality. Funny, I was listening to a radio program today. NPR maybe. A guy bought a farm, in NY I think, in an area where farmers have been having time staying solvent. He planted lots of crops and let chickens roam them eating the bugs, thus saving on the pesticide bills. The local farmers all watched this closely and saw his success. After the year, he gave (yes gave) the farm back to the original owner. His complaint was that none of the farmers implemented his program. He argued it was because while you can show a person a better way, you can't force their mind open.

HELP!!!! I'm being held prisoner in /usr/games/lib!

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