tpna Tesco share price surges nine per cent after naming Matt Davies as new UK boss: sales drop, bu

Yinq Last-minute themes to boost your Isa portfolio

Australia would follow a number of European countries in mandating support for open standards vaso stanley Australiarsquo govern stanley tumbler ment may mandate that its agencies use software compatible with OpenDocument Format ODF , an international file standard.The countryrsquo government agencies mostly use Microsoftrsquo Office software, but support for an open standard eliminates the potential for a vendor ending support for specific format, wrote John Sheridan, Australiarsquo chief technical officer.<>InfoWorld reviews Office 2013, the best Office yet, and reveals the best office apps for your iPad. | Stay up on key Microsoft technologies in our Technology: Microsoft newsletter. ] If the draft proposal is approved, however, government agencies would not be required to work only with ODF documents, Sheridan wrote. The proposal is now open for comments and will eventually be taken up by the Secretariesrsquo; ICT Governance Board for approval.If ODF support is mandated, Australia would follow a number of European countries that have required that government stanley quencher agencies be able to use open file standards.ODF was approved as an international standard in May 2006. It is an XML Extensible Markup Language file format that sprang from OpenOffice, a free, open-source office application suite. The standard is open and can be implemented by any software vendor. The standard is supported in Google Docs, Lotus Symphony, OpenOffice, StarOffice as well as later versions of Microsoftrs Owgw London Report: Mortgage lending data to shine light on housing boom

Thursday 17 March 2016 6:36 pmBudget 2016: Institute for Fiscal Studies IFS director Paul Johnson says chancellor George Osborne really is running out wriggle roomBy: Lauren FedorShareFacebookShar stanley mexico e on FacebookXShare on TwitterLinkedInShare on LinkedInWhatsAppShare on WhatsAppEmailShare on EmailChancellor George Osborne will likely need to hike taxes or cut spending if he is to meet his self-imposed target of balancing the budget by the end of the decade, the director of the Institute for Fiscal Studies IFS has warned.Paul Johnson, who runs the influential think tank, said today that the chancellor has little flexibility if he is going to satisfy his so-called fiscal rule.He really is running out wriggle room, Johnson said. His chances of reaching the surplus are only just the right side of 50/50.Osborne said in the Budget that the government was on track to achieve a surplus of pound;10.4bn in 2019-2020. But economists economists were sceptical, saying the chancellor had ducked tough decisions on deficit reduction in favour of generous giv stanley es eawaysand back-loaded billions of pounds in fiscal tightening to the end of the parliament.Johnson was equally critical, saying Osbornersquo Budget was largely moving numbers around rather than ldquo ignificant policy change.Read More: Osborne kicks the can down the roadJohnson was especially dispara stanley germany ging of the chancellorrsquo claim that the governmentrsquo decisi

40   7 months ago
JamomesMache | 0 subscribers
40   7 months ago
Please log in or register to post comments

SPONSORSBLOG BOTTOM

Auto × Auto