Google Pleased With ISO OOXML Decision 119
yogi writes "In a blog post from this Friday past, Google welcomed the ISO decision not to fasttrack OOXML. They also (once again) voiced their public support for the ODF standard. 'Technical standards should be arrived at transparently, openly, and based on technical merit. Google is committed to helping the standards community remain true to this ideal and maintain their independence from any commercial pressure ... Google supports one open document format and calls on industry participants to collaboratively work on ODF. With multiple implementations of one open standard for documents, users, businesses and governments around the world can have both choice and freedom to access their own documents, share with others and pass onto future generations.'"
Me Too (Score:1, Troll)
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Of course. (Score:5, Insightful)
Which is of course what Microsoft must stop at all costs. Also worth remembering is that were the shoe on the other foot, and Google had the business lockin and office suite monopoly Microsoft enjoy, they'd probably protect their proprietary formats at all costs too. So whilst Google's opinion may be aligned with most people here, do remember that they're a company whose sole aim is profit.
This looks like a fortuitous PR stunt to me, I don't doubt that Google like ODF now but we shouldn't forget that Microsoft have been known to be open [tuxdeluxe.org] when they lack market share too [slashdot.org].
Re:Of course. (Score:5, Insightful)
Microsoft could embrace ODF. They could integrate it with Microsoft Office, eliminate
Instead, Microsoft plays these games, giving OpenOffice and others valuable time to play catch up while more and more governments around the world pull back away from the monstrosity Microsoft has created.
As an example of a company with proprietary software doing well with open standards, look at Adobe and the PDF standard. You can download everything about the standard from Adobe's website. There are competing readers (for Windows and other platforms), other PDF tools galore, but people still turn to Adobe products. We still rely on Distiller. We still rely on (now) Live Cycle. When you want crisp viewing of PDFs with good options, you use Adobe Reader (Foxit and others are catching up). Even Microsoft has benefited (Export to PDF in Office 2007 - FINALLY after over a decade without it).
Re:Of course. (Score:4, Insightful)
From past experience MS realize that fair competition isn't good for the ones competing. Google isn't really competing in the same way as the profit off of something independent of what office suit you use. Just as MS previously didn't care which Windows loaded PC you bought. While MS has a vested interest which office suite you use now. So having a open standard gives other companies a way in to crowd into MS's business model.
Re:Of course. (Score:4, Interesting)
That's sufficient reason for Google to back ODF. Of course, the fact that it detracts from one of their competitors helps.
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Microsoft simply cannot produce the best tools in the market. They lack the necessary design skill and development practices (at least within the Office business).
Have you seen what it's intended to
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I love Excel, but Word is a buggy piece of shit.
So much that they gave up on trying to fix the crashes, now they have created some "crash recovery" stuff that will recover the documents you lost with the last crash. If you're lucky, the "recovered" document will not be filled with hieroglyphs.
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Although to be completely honest, I so rarely use any sort of document generating software that I really don't care.
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Re:Of course. (Score:4, Informative)
What do old versions of msoffice do that cannot be represented by odf?
Most of the so called "compatibility" present in ooxml is poorly conceived, and hinges on adding extra complexity to the format when it would be much easier to simply mimick the behaviour in the conversion program and store the results in a standard way.
Re:Of course. (Score:5, Insightful)
One of the strongest reasons for the continued market share of MS Office is the network effects that come from the majority of people using the MS Office. It works like this:
To maintain this virtuous circle (virtuous for MS, others might think of it as vicious), two factors need to be kept in place
To maintain this MS needs to:
I believe we all can find examples of all the above actions.
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Re:Of course. (Score:4, Insightful)
Microsoft charges for the same thing.
Its a completely different business model.
Google doesnt have to screw over customers to make money.
IMHO they wont venture to the dark side of the force.
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Unless those customers are Chinese dissidents.
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Methinks you are a bit too harsh. AFAIK Google has complied with the orders for censorship, but have not done anything that helps track and punish people. IIRC Google declined to offer Google Mail because they knew the Red Chinese government
Re:Of course. (Score:4, Insightful)
Let's say you make the best strawberry jam in the world. In one city, the government is run by assholes, and so everyone has to mix in a bit of mud.
Even with the mud, you've still got the best strawberry jam in the world. It's the best the people of that city can get because of the assholes in government.
If you believe preference utilitarianism, where you want to make the most people happy, then it's obvious which choice is more moral; The people of China are going to be persecuted by unjust laws whether they've got a Chinese version of Google or not. Google is still the best product available, and I'm sure people are made happier through the fact that they can use it.
Now, you could say that Google could be propping up an immoral regime that oppresses it's own people, but it's unlikely that refusing to open Google.cn would suddenly make the communists see the error of their ways.
Simple win. Happy Chinese people vs. shallow meaningless victory
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Its a completely different business model.
Google doesnt have to screw over customers to make money.
--
We are not their customers, the advertising companies are.
We are Google's stock.
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Their Office offerings are Open Standard. Also your perspective tends to be different if you are a hardware manufacturer, or user, than if you are a proprietary software producer. Very different perspectives. But which perspective benefits the consumer more in the end? B
Google vs. Microsoft (Score:5, Insightful)
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Re:Google vs. Microsoft (Score:5, Informative)
Completely off base. Wrong on every count.
First off I think you need to understand what ISO is, ISO does not set standards. All ISO does is to recognize standards that have already been set by other standards bodies. So ISO 3103 is actually the same as BS 6008. ISO 9000 is BS 5750 and so on.
The IETF is actually accredited as an ISO member body and in theory RFCs could become ISO standards. They never have and never will as long as ISO charges money for its standards.
There is a compliance program for ISO 9000 but it isn't run by ISO. ISO 9000 consulting is one of the things that Y2K vampires went on to do after Dec 31 1999.
If you want standards go ISO 3103 is pretty critical yet you would be hard pressed to find any US companies that are in compliance. Still, least they don't use salt water any more.
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Embrace, Extend, Extinguish (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:one flew over the cuckoos nest (Score:5, Insightful)
This is the importance to Microsoft of getting OOXML turned into an ISO standard. That way it can have its cake and eat it too. On the one hand they can declare to Massachusetts or any other government or organization demanding an open file format that they have this keen ISO standard, all the while having a format with so many patent-encumbered and proprietary hooks that no one but Microsoft could ever hope to write a program that could read or write it.
One only has to look at how incredibly important it is to Microsoft to get this enormous, crappy and completely unimplementable standard through ISO by the sheer efforts and willingness to risk public exposure to buy votes. If they can't get this past the ISO post, then the long-term viability of their business model is severely compromised.
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Simply put, a reasonably competent programmer could implement ODF from the documentation. However, to implement OOXML would require both licensing to take care of any patent issues and access to internal Microsoft formats.
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The difference is that OOXML has a quickly hacked together specification for formulae which is flawed in many ways, which only has input from and only satisfied the requirements of one organisation. A ratified flawed standard is a bad thing, because it will remain in that flawed state, that why the ODF people are t
Re:one flew over the cuckoos nest (Score:5, Insightful)
Seriously, consider troff as a case example, a program which Brian Kernighan once called "50000 lines of uncommented unreadable C code written by the late Joe Osana" (I've tried to remember where I first read that, but haven't found it again and it's true enough as a reading of the source reveals).
troff wasn't exactly open source as we now define the term, but the markup language specification was fully documented. As a result, it was reimplemented in a variety of forms including the GPLed groff and it is still possible to make hardcopy of troff documents written decades ago.
Similarly, the TiVoized TeX (you are not allowed to make willy-nilly changes and redistribute them, but it's still open source), will also live forever.
Even more so than open source, an open specification is something that can never ever be taken away from you and it will live in the form of working code that implements it for as long as it is useful.
Contrast this with the OOXML "standard" which includes XML tags such as format this paragraph like Microsoft Word-95 (without explanation as to what that means) or use word spacing like Microsoft Word-97 for the Apple Macintosh (also without explanation as to what that means), etc.
Can anyone name a single proprietary counterexample that has lived at least as long as troff (over 30 years)? Open standards work and we have the track record to prove it.
If you are still confused
Re:one flew over the cuckoos nest (Score:4, Insightful)
If ODF is adopted in a large way, then Microsoft would likely adopt it, then either break it (as they did with Kerberos) or put in lots of vendor-specific extensions to assure that only Microsoft products could deal with it (in short turn ODF in the new DOC). The open question is what would those organizations that are demanding an open standard do. I guess it depends on how savvey they are, on whether Microsoft can continue to throw its weight around, etc. But the fact is that ODF, though still maturing, represents the single biggest threat to Microsoft's business model in a decade, and they are putting a substantial amount of political effort into getting their own unworkable standard in place.
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To whit, any standard's approval should be conditional on an existence proof. Require a clean-room reference implementation that works. Let them compete in the marketplace on cost/performance, not correctness. The world is sick of disfunctional software.
OOXML... what's the point? (Score:5, Interesting)
At this point, my endless nudging about this whole Open Document Format thing is starting to make more sense for him. In fact, he'd be pleased to replace Word. However, he and some other co-workers are power Excel users, and are very reluctant to even consider replacing it.
Can anyone out there make a convincing case that Calc or Gnumeric are just as good as Excel, even for advanced users?
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Re:OOXML... what's the point? (Score:5, Informative)
What part of "he can select an earlier format, but then it saves as read-only" did you not understand? Office 97-2003 compatibility mode has three different meanings in Excel, PowerPoint, and Word, [slideshare.net] and the one in Excel prevents documents with "new features" from being saved to a file that can be edited by a previous version of Excel.
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There are very few new features that can't be exported to older versions of Excel/PPT/Word with the compatability pack, so my original point stands, where is t
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I think the point the GP poster was making that to be truly backward compatible, you would not require users of previous versions of software to download a compatibility pack.
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I really garbled my reply, let me try one more time!
I think the point the GP poster was making is that you can't call something backward compatible if it requires users of older software to download add-ons or compatibility packs.
Office 2007 should be able to read and write older office formats. Microsoft has always warned the user that some functions will be lost when saving to an older version, so why can't they continue with the warnings?
Re:OOXML... what's the point? (Score:5, Interesting)
A couple of weeks ago, I opened a PowerPoint 2003 file in PowerPoint 2007 (this loads PPT's compatibility mode), did some changes to the presentation and saved. Well, I tried to save when PPT complained that the changes that I've made to slides 1-12 weren't compatible with PPT 2003. Did I mention that the presentation only had 12 slides? Yeah, so no save for me. And what were those difficult to save changes? I changed the damn slides' design to one of the new fancy ones. That's all. I find it a bit ridiculous that not even MS can't make PTT 2007 compatible with previous versions.
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Not I, but that doesn't mean you shouldn't install and play with the alternatives. Hell, if you feel so motivated you might even contribute some feedback to the dev community about what would motivate you to switch away from Excel.
Long story short, Excel is one of the few areas that MS actually delivers the goods. There are issues with Excel, but nothing like the issues that plague most o
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Not only that, but a number of services disappeared from the SBS box and MS is apparently charging for a hotfix. I have not looked int
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However, most people use spreadsheets as a quick'n'dirty database anyway. I bet in any given survey of
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s/.ooc/.ods/ above. Must be past my bedtime.
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Can anyone out there make a convincing case that Calc or Gnumeric are just as good as Excel, even for advanced users?
(I haven't worked with Gnumeric much, so this mostly applies to Calc)
I would, except that they're not even close. I run Linux, I use OpenOffice.org, and at work I've done some serious Excel work. There are a couple features I like in Calc, but nothing major. However, there are a lot of things that Excel does better. Graphs are a big one. Circular reference handling and goal seek /
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Can anyone out there make a convincing case that Calc or Gnumeric are just as good as Excel, even for advanced users?
I've tried to do complicated stuff in Calc, but never for too long -- it just gets painful.
You lose. You answered the wrong question. You receive +0 points.
Here's a somewhat trivial thing that I found Calc did right, that Excel fudged up. I could copy from a table online and paste it into Calc in spreadsheet form. In Excel, it refused to go in despite various "Paste Special" attempts. I'm not going to say that this always fails in Excel - but during the specific instance I had last week - I was utterly stunned when (a) Excel didn't get it, then (b) Calc got it on the first try.
For me,
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Oddly enough, that's not something I've had an issue with.
All the data I've needed to analyze usually comes in the form of nice simple CSV text files, or comes from a program that can optionally output as such. So the import is almost irrelevant.
But then actually doing something with that data is where Excel wins out (I won't say it's good -- it's sadly lacking in some respects -- but it beats OOo hands down). I most emphatically don't want online LAMP type applications; nothing I've done has been of
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From a quick look, it supports:
openoffice basic
python
javascript
beanshell (what is this?)
Now, openoffice basic is probably a dead end, it seems stupid to use a language specific to open/star office as it's unlikely to be supported by anything else, and i'm not quite sure what beanshell is but i imagine it's some java based thing....
Python and Javascript tho, are good well known cross platform languages, and there are many many people out there who ar
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Re:OOXML... what's the point? (Score:4, Interesting)
I also use it for scheduling (calendar type functions with conditional statements, conditional formatting, strewn throughout) to automatically generate events if certain criteria are made. I know, I need to find something better than a spreadsheet for that... But yeah, I find it nice and robust.
There were some minor adjustments as far as entering equations, but it's been so long since I transitioned that I don't even remember what syntax differences I had to adjust to.
Calc Cal (Score:1)
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My copy of Office 2007 works just fine. I currently only have 2007 on one machine but its working fine when I transfer files to the other machine.
Only problem I have at the moment is
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One problem that OSS still needs to overcome is backwards compatibility. I have no problems with converting to open source office apps, and help out the movement, so to speak, but I require back compatibility. That means Word and Excel documents that my peers create *must* work competently, and that inter-operability between the two apps must be near total.
The last time I opened a Word 2004 doc in OpenOffice the result was a complicated mess. Stylings were messed up, spacing was messed up, fonts were chan
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Gnumeric goes for correctness...
I use gnumeric, because i require the answers from my spreadsheets to be correct and accurate, and i won't consider using anything less accurate regardless of what features it has....
That said, openoffice should give you the choice between "compatibility with excel" and "accuracy/correctness"
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Well, they lets older versions of Excel edit their documents. That looks like an important feature for your advanced users.
Why don't they test tham and see for themselves if they are suitable for them?
Did I miss something? (Score:5, Informative)
The fast track process does not officially end until after the next ballot resolution meeting (BRM). According to the ISO press release http://www.iso.org/iso/newsandmedia/pressrelease.htm?refid=Ref1070 [iso.org], if Microsoft scrapes together enough support at the BRM, then the OOXML standard will be accepted.
On the other hand, if Microsoft doesn't get the support at the BRM, then OOXML is out of the fast track process and referred back to committee for development.
Re:So why don't they actualy support ODF in search (Score:2, Informative)
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Re:So why don't they actualy support ODF in search (Score:4, Informative)
http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&safe=off&q=filetype%3Aodt+the&btnG=Search [google.com]
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badsummary (Score:5, Informative)
In fairness, of course (Score:2)
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So you mean that Microsoft can lobby No votes to become Yes v
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So you mean that Microsoft can lobby No votes to become Yes votes after meeting the issues raised in their comments?
Indeed they can; in fact, turning "no with comments" votes into "yes" votes is the whole purpose of the BRM--though normally the no's will be "no, because there are a few things that need tweaking", not "no, this is a POS that shouldn't be a standard in the first place".
On the other hand, "yes" votes can turn into "no" votes as well. I imagine the national boards that were fooled by Microsoft's "yes with comments" spiel will not be amused . . .
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That would be rather harder to manage, in OASIS I have seen no votes change to yes but not the other way round.
The point of the ISO standards process is not to pick the one true standard, it is to recognize what standards people use. This type of behavior strikes me as very similar to the factionalism that kept the FORTRAN 8X sta
You know what this means? (Score:1)
Re:Google's "hypocrisy"...? (Score:5, Informative)
2. You have no idea what you're talking about: http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=300601&cid=20646837 [slashdot.org]
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Google Pleased with MS smackdown (Score:2)
A little premature. (Score:4, Informative)
It ain't over yet.
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In fairness, LaTeX is a lot more usable by mere mortals. Personally, I always found TeX to be a little less restrictive when it
Recent ODF experience (Score:2)
But KWord can't export to PDF (it can use KDE's "print to PDF" option, but my printing is kind of broken when I'm not at home). So I saved in OpenDocument format, and imported into Writer. No love - the formatting is totally broken! I tried to load into AbiWord, but it doesn't understand OpenDocument format at all.
In the end, I saved it as Microsoft Word document - which all 3 programs lo
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I tried to load into AbiWord, but it doesn't understand OpenDocument format at all.
AbiWord does support ODF, but it needs a specific plugin. I was confused about it too, but realised Debian doesn't install that plugin by default; it was in abiword-plugins package. And even then, I've had to occasionally plead and beg AbiWord to notice that it has any plugins installed in the first place!
So it's basically just like MSWord, only in smaller scale, a little bit less swearing, and actually understanding quite a bit of ODF formatting once you get it working =) (I didn't try too complex stuf
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In general, OOXML as xml based format is pretty much useless. Many tags are one letter sized and totally unintuitive. Sure, it does it's job well, but you will need a proper editor for that.