The Anti-ODF Whisper Campaign 213
eldavojohn writes "Groklaw is examining the possibility of an anti-ODF whisper campaign and the effects it has had on the ODF and OOXML Wikipedia articles. In the ODF article, Alex Brown bends the truth to make it seem like no one is supporting ODF, and that it is a flawed and incomplete standard. From the conclusion, 'So what is one to do? You obviously can't trust Wikipedia whatsoever in this area. This is unfortunate, since I am a big fan of Wikipedia. But since the day when Microsoft decided they needed to pay people to "improve" the ODF and OOXML articles, they have been a cesspool of FUD, spin and outright lies, seemingly manufactured for Microsoft's re-use in their whisper campaign. My advice would be to seek out official information on the standards, from the relevant organizations, like OASIS, the chairs of the relevant committees, etc. Ask the questions in public places and seek a public response. That is the ultimate weakness of FUD and lies. They cannot stand the light of public exposure. Sunlight is the best antiseptic.'"
Let's start with the truth (Score:5, Informative)
It might be useful to acknowledge what software DOES actually support ODF--including pretty much all of the more popular office and word processing suites [from Wikipedia]:
That doesn't sound like "no one" to me.
Re:What "whisper campaign"? (Score:3, Informative)
Unless of course the person in question is a *known* paid anti-odf shill from Microsoft. As in this case.
Jeremy.
Re:Let's start with the truth (Score:5, Informative)
Microsoft Office 2007 Service Pack 2 (SP2)
Isn't that one "read only" for some files ? Such as ODS (aka. spreadsheets) and possibly others (But ODS is the only one where I've heard of real problems).
MS has the source code for their implementation of whatever standard they're following at the moment (MOOXML possibly, or whatever), they have the specs for ODF (which, granted are incomplete for spreadsheets for *very good reasons*, look it up), *and* they have the source code. But being *MS* they somehow manage to generate something that's illegible.
Hmmm.
Disclaimer : I don't use MS stuff (or rather haven't for the last 15 yrs, I just use their OS to run games every now and then), I do switch small businesses *away* from Microsoft (successfully too, thanks to *ubuntu most of the time). It doesn't mean I have to know the intricacies of their software. I wish I could care but I don't have the time anymore. I just read the news.
Re:Is ODF cross-application compatible? (Score:5, Informative)
Sun ODF Plugin [sun.com]
Who to consult (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Let's start with the truth (Score:4, Informative)
I compared the ODF article to the OOXML article. The most striking difference is the "Criticism" sections of the ODF article is twice as long, and points out really minor stuff that hardly deserves inclusion in such a summary. On the other hand, the OOXML article fails to mention ANY of the major criticism that has gone across Slashdot in recent years, including Microsoft's paying off countries to support them on the standards committee, or how Microsoft purposely refuses to support the ODF standard in any useful way (I still import/export Word/Excel/PowerPoint, in Open Office - far less broken). There is also no mention that ODF is short, sweet, and nearly complete, while OOXML is Webster Dictionary sized, yet highly incomplete. The low complexity of an ODF implementation relative to OOXML is missing.
In short, we here on slashdot would write very different articles on the two formats. The gist would probably be:
Not that I'm against world domination by US corporations :-)
Re:Is ODF cross-application compatible? (Score:4, Informative)
I heard that ODF documents created in, say, OpenOffice weren't entirely compatible with AbiWord.
Here is a simple study. [robweir.com]
Any spec is going to have some ambiguity about how things should be handled in some cases, so compatibility will always depend, to some degree, on whether or not software authors want to be compatible with other implementations. As ODF matures, more of the details will get nailed down, and there should be less compatibility wiggle-room.
But ODF is a flawed and incomplete standard. (Score:2, Informative)
The latest published standard version of ODF (1.1) is flawed - perhaps the most frequently mentioned flaw is that it does not define a syntax for spreadsheet formulas. An ODF 1.1 compliant spreadsheet application can thus generate ODF 1.1 compliant spreadsheet documents that are incompatible with other ODF 1.1 spreadsheet applications.
When completed, ODF 1.2 will fix this flaw and others. But ODF 1.2 is not yet finished.
Re:How do you define a 'whisper campaign'? (Score:3, Informative)
Whisper Campaign [wikipedia.org]
Of course this post can be taken as insightful or funny given the subject matter.
Re:Just another Slashdot MS troll/flame (Score:1, Informative)
But then again, you're just a fanboi, who seems not to comprehend the topic at hand so I'm not going to benefit you by getting modded down.
Re:What "whisper campaign"? (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Let's start with the truth (Score:4, Informative)
It wasn't that it was too long that people complained. They complained because it enshrined errors that Microsoft had made in their earlier formats (wrong leap years for example). It also ignored existing standards (like how leap years are figured). Further it had things in the form of "Do like Word 95" rather than an actual definition of how.
ISO standards should respect and adhere to prior standards where they overlap rather than recreate it in an incompatible way. The leap year example shows how OOXML ignored existing standards.
Re:Let's start with the truth (Score:5, Informative)
I thought it best that I provide evidence:
http://www.pcworld.com/businesscenter/article/165077/microsoftled_forum_yields_tools_for_ooxml_interoperability.html [pcworld.com]
An update this year adds support for ECMA-376, an earlier version of OOXML standard, to Office 2007, but Microsoft won't support the ISO29500 specification until it releases its forthcoming Office 2010 technology. Office 2007 is the software that set off the controversy over document formats when Microsoft developed OOXML as its own XML-based file format for the suite.
Re:What "whisper campaign"? (Score:2, Informative)
Which makes Rob Weir what, exactly?
http://www.robweir.com/blog/rob.html [robweir.com]
Also interesting is the fact that, as far as I can tell, these "shills" are editing Wikipedia with their real names, or with well-known handles uses elsewhere that identify who they are. As opposed to "WackyButterfly1965" or something - not a particularly hard thing to do on Wikipedia at all.
Facts. Presented out of context (or without enough of it) have been used extensively on Wikipedia and elsewhere to paint Microsoft and everything they do in a negative light. I'd suggest these people either suck it up now, or stop whining about how Wikipedia is being gamed and use their considerable energy and time to work the website's bureaucracy. $Deity knows they're going to need it. I loved this part of that Groklaw article:
For anyone involved with OOXML on the Microsoft side, this is sweet revenge. Hoisted by their own petard and so on. I think it's funny as hell.
Re:But ODF is a flawed and incomplete standard. (Score:5, Informative)
Which conveniently omits that ODF was submitted under PAS - the process for reviewing and approving something that's already a standard and is already in use. ODF officially started the standardization process in OASIS in December of 2002, starting from the StarOffice format.
As for OASIS's track record, I refer you to http://www.oasis-open.org/specs/ [oasis-open.org] that lists the standards they've originated. These include DocBook and a large number of SOAP-related standards. That's hardly "no track record at all". And their heavy concentration in XML-based standards makes them a good place for another XML-based standard.
Re:Let's start with the truth (Score:3, Informative)
Not that I'm against world domination by US corporations :-)
But remember, unless Microsoft keeps the ability to evade US taxes [slashdot.org], it may not be a US corporation for long...