ISO Takes Control Of OOXML 260
mikkl666 writes "Alex Brown, head of the ISO work group responsible for OOXML, has posted a summary of their latest meeting, and he also comments on the resolutions discussed there. The basic message is that ISO now has 'full responsibility for the standard,' and that several workgroups will be established to work on OOXML. An interesting point here is that 'setting up a maintance[sic] procedure for ODF, and then working on cross-standard initiatives' is one of the explicit goals. On a side note, they also reacted to the very emotional discussion on OOXML by posting an open letter: 'We the undersigned participants ... wish to make it clear that we deplore the personal attacks that have been made ... in recent months. We believe standards debate should always be carried out with respect for all parties, even when they strongly disagree.' As Brown correctly points out, 'This content speaks for itself.' We discussed the approval of OOXML earlier this month."
What do they expect? (Score:5, Insightful)
It doesn't Matter Anymore. XAML replaces it all. (Score:4, Insightful)
Under the guise of security, Microsoft has quietly been making Windows applications difficult to deploy within corporations, and have been luring corporate developers towards ASP DotNet. With the release of The latest DotNet development tools and Expression Blend, the strategy is nearing fulfillment.
It has been a master stroke, I must admit. I've long thought that HTML was a poor foundation for what we're trying to do on the web these days. I spent all of yesterday putting the pieces together and am well impressed. And afraid.
Microsoft's strategy appears to be to drive internal corporate developent, then B2B, along with governments (Library of Congress), etc. and by eventually it will surely gain ubiquity. It will raise the bar for internet applications. Anybody switching between Expression Blend and, say, Dreamweaver will quickly see the folly of stretching pixels to make boxes. Vector graphics makes much more sense for the web. Along with a rich set of controls.
Why would you need OOXML, when you've got XPS (a subset of XAML)? It can replace ))XML, PDF and Postscript.
Of course, this is all an open standard right? And Microsoft has released the specs and is working with Mono on Moonlight, right? Well, yes, just when they're launching all of their tools that utilize it.
I imagine that's what will happen with each future version of the standard.
Re:It doesn't Matter Anymore. XAML replaces it all (Score:3, Insightful)
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Re:It doesn't Matter Anymore. XAML replaces it all (Score:5, Insightful)
It matters because Microsoft is not going to control the web...all those technologies you mention are pointless in light of:
Microsoft's track record for cross platform web support just plain sucks. Internet Explorer for the Mac is abandonware! Microsoft quit supporting WM Player for Mac, they now distribute a third-party application. Do you think well ever see IE for Linux or WM Player for Linux? No we won't. Microsoft may be working with Mono on Moonlight, but what will happen when they abandon the project like they did with IE on Mac?
ODF/OOXML is about creating a desktop office suite interchange format to make sharing documents easier...that's all, that's what it's made for...that's not what XPS is made for. XPS is a pointless replacement for something that's not broken...PDF works just fine.
I realize you were probably being sarcastic... :-)
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As long as Microsoft doesn't fully implement those technologies, they don't exist. There's not too many people out there who will make a website that doesn't work with 70% of internet users no matter how much better it may make web development.
Now, Microsoft comes out with XAML, rolls it out with Vista, waits a few years and suddenly 90% of the internet has XAML suppo
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Re:What do they expect? (Score:4, Insightful)
You're attempting to conflate the issue, there is ample evidence of irregularities in the OOXML fast track process without considering the backroom deal. The question why so many NB's did an about face requires further exploration and action, if not a backroom deal then something was responsible and it sure as hell wasn't improvements to the "standard"!
Re:What do they expect? (Score:4, Funny)
Re:What do they expect? (Score:5, Insightful)
ODF is a standard, implementable by any third party and independent of the implementor's software. OOXML's inclusion as a 'standard' now also has the effect of influencing ODF's openness via 'cross-standard initiatives'.
The ISO process was abused, clearly. OOXML does not meet the minimum definition of an open standard and that is enough to show the process was abused.
Re:What do they expect? (Score:5, Insightful)
Have you actually looked at the OOXML spec? It doesn't matter if "backroom dealing" occurred. If that trainwreck is approved as an ISO standard, then the ISO process is broken. Full stop.
Re:What do they expect? (Score:4, Interesting)
Open standards were supposed to save money, but I can't see any software vendor saving money by implementing OOXML.
I will laugh when Microsoft itself can't get software certified to match OOXML's trainwreck standards.
Re:What do they expect? (Score:4, Informative)
Like the Swedish official body?
From http://www.infoworld.com/article/07/08/31/Sweden-OOXML-vote-invalid_1.html [infoworld.com]: SSI more or less admits that MS swayed member companies votes and at the same time claims that was perfectly OK, but there was a technical problem somewhere else (a double vote).
Are the other official bodies you're talking about applying the same "standards" as SSI to their voting procedures? If so, you might be technically correct, but as far as I'm concerned, it still stinks.
Re:get real (Score:5, Funny)
Personal Attacks? (Score:5, Insightful)
This open letter assures me though - the $y$tem works.
Re:Personal Attacks? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Personal Attacks? (Score:4, Insightful)
In matters of logic, it is critical to be clear about what questions are being addressed by which evidence.
The first question is the worthiness of OOXML to be an international standard. The second question is the integrity of the process under which ISO approved OOXML.
Nobody is arguing that OOXML is a bad standard because the process that approved it was corrupted. They are arguing that OOXML is a bad standard AND the process that approved it was corrupted. These questions are not unrelated; one could argue that assuming the badness of the OOXML process is evidence of the corruption of the process. However it isn't strictly necessary for one question to beg the other. There is sufficient independent evidence to consider each question separately.
It is really proponents that are confusing the two issues, and have an interest in doing so.
If the standard is bad, then the process that approved it must be questionable. Therefore, if the process that approved the proposal is above reproach, then the standard cannot be bad. We can't say, however, that because the process was bad, the proposal was bad, although it is not inconsistent to believe this.
Future relevance of ISO given their OOXML debacle (Score:4, Insightful)
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Here we have the company responsible for that 90% (if not more!) wanting to open up their file format and make it an ISO standard, giving the wider global community some sort of say in the process, for the first time ever. There is absolutely no reason to oppose OOXML's adoption as a standard. It already *IS* the standard and any attempts to block it are just idiots
Re:Personal Attacks? (Score:5, Insightful)
Now-- there is another issue... OOXML is not a true open standard-- it is patent encumbered for one thing, and can't be implemented for another.
Openoffice does a better job of opening my older word files than Word does at this point (in fact, at least a couple times a year I use it to FIX MSword documents at work that get corrupted section headers and crash Word). The thing that started this entire mess is that some governments noticed this fact with regard to their documents (i.e. Microsoft making not just the word processor you are using obsolete but making your *data* obsolete-- and in under 10 years) and passed laws saying documents were required to be in an open format so they could be read 50 years from now.
Microsoft word format is a standard-- its just not a very stable standard (changing substantially every few years) and it is not an OPEN standard. If ISO wanted to vote OOXML "the standard way one version of Word stores data" it might have been true. But they didn't-- they voted it an "Open" standard which has legal meaning to all those governments passing laws that their documents must be stored in an open format. It was a huge-- corrupt- scam job where Microsoft essentially got a standards body to label a white flour roll an apple so it would be immune to new laws saying kids had to have fruit instead of rolls with their school lunches.
Re:Personal Attacks? (Score:5, Insightful)
Instead of using a title "Open", they list the characteristics they require.
* Not encumbered by patents in anyway (all involved patents must be released into the public domain immediately)
* Completely specified (nothing defined in terms of how another program works-- specify the desired behavior)
* I'm sure there are a few others but these two alone would kill OOXML from being relabeled an apple.
Re:Personal Attacks? (Score:5, Insightful)
Two or more, complete, independent implementations from different suppliers are available. That should be a requirement if you want good value irrespective of how open the standard is - if your supplier doesn't have to compete, what incentive do they have not to fleece you?
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1. Available for implementation by everyone: Everyone can acquire the standard (an optional fee might be collected by the standards body) and it's unencumbered by patents or similar constructs
2. Completely specified within the standards framework: All behavior has to be defined either within the spec or within a different spec meeting these requirements already published by the same standards body
3. As concise as possible: Unneccessary complexity is to be avoided - OOXML's nume
Re:Personal Attacks? (Score:5, Insightful)
Microsoft did not do this though, Microsoft gave us 6000 pages of an unimplementable spec, which refers to information that is not publicly available. There are serious legal questions as to whether the 'patent promise' holds any water as well, meaning that implementing the spec could cause problems for open source products. On top of it all the flagship OOXML product, Microsoft Office, does not currently appear to be following the OOXML spec properly. This is only going to get worse as ISO working committees refine the spec to fix the implementation problems Microsoft put into it.
The end result of this is that we are left with a ISO spec that has no real world implementation at all. The only thing I can really hope comes out of this is Microsoft gets hit with a fraud charge for claiming office is ISO compliant when is truth it is not.
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Any moves to sue, based on an open standard would prove how useless the "standard" is. And that there is no point trusting one of MS's standards in the future.
They might like to sue, but they've pretty well painted themselves in to a corner.
Re:Personal Attacks? (Score:5, Interesting)
It's not surprising that MS can't follow the spec either. For years, a "word document" was little more than a memory dump From Word. As they developed new versions, they just piled more crap on top and let the stuff at the bottom go to compost. That's why it was possible to find fragments of unrelated documents in a Word document.
Then, the "magic XML" non-solution popped up so they wrapped the whole stinking crap ball up in that. You can frost a dog turd and call it wedding cake....
MS claims OOXML is some sort of specification or standard, but really it's an attempt to finally document the above crap ball. It's such a mess, they can't do it even with the complete source code revision history and the active coders that produced it.
That's also why it takes 6000 pages and still makes references to things that aren't documented. MS may or may not know what they are!
So, honestly it's not a spec at all and certainly isn't a standard, it's failed documentation.
Re:Personal Attacks? (Score:5, Insightful)
What would have been really great is if we had a whole bunch of other standards and incorporated them into a brand new standard! Too bad we didn't think of it before OOXML.
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The former would be how IE 6 rendered Web pages.
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Re:Personal Attacks? (Score:5, Insightful)
ISO needs to go to a family shelter, change their address, get a restraining order, and make sure that Microsoft's visitation rights with the children are supervised for safety.
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ISO don't consider them personal attacks at all. But that's what they'll cry, to anyone who will listen, as part of the spinning process.
Part of the problem is that those who want open, free and workable standards also tend to be nice people. Consequentially, they hold themselves to much higher standards than the bad guys, and refuse to use the underhanded (but winning) tactics of randomly spewing out FUD an
Re:Personal Attacks? (Score:5, Insightful)
ISO is worthless and should be disregarded until they fix what is wrong and repair the damage done in the exploitation of their poorly designed voting process by Microsoft.
As far as MSOOXML and ODF goes, it is over and Microsoft destroyed ODF just as they have done to so many public use standards in the past. Destroyed may be too harsh but they have basically diminished its value by about 90% because of the perceived openness of MSOOXML will trump choices to use ODF. MSOOXML will be viewed as some kind of vague standard and Microsoft will continue using proprietary versions in their MS Office products with mostly poor implementations of the "official" MSOOXML standard. IMO
LoB
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The Question is though, where does it go from here? Will other companies follow lead and attempt to get "ISO approval" by flooding standards organisations, or will this just be a one-off?
It's not exactly as if we can just boycott ISO by ignoring all of the other standards they sell their documentations for. And hurting ISO would probably just make matters worse for interoperability and industrial cooperation.
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The problem is that your accusations of bribery, et al, are so vague, that you're painting everyone that voted YES with the "corruption" brush. I wish you guys would man up and make a specific corruption charge against specific individuals.
For example, the Czech Republic's expert, Jiri Kosek, explained in great detail why the Czech Republic switched from NO to YES:
http://xmlguru.cz/2008/01/ecma-resp [xmlguru.cz]
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Re:Personal Attacks? (Score:4, Interesting)
It uses XML as a base. XML can use any encoding capable of representing the characters !"'? and =. Yet it remains limited to stone age character representations. In a document format.
If that isn't evidence of a corrupt process, it's evidence of clueless incompetence.
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Comment removed (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Personal Attacks? Duh! (Score:2)
Rambus got their patent ridden junk in a standard and then sued everyone. M$ has seen this and now expects to do the same.
It is sad to see this level of corruption happen, knowing what is next.
Sad day for all.
why not open source Windows? (Score:2, Funny)
The EU has the windows source code already. They have the regulatory power to do what is necessary to force compliance with the law, which MS is not willing to do on its own.
Think about it: this would open up the possibility for Windows competitors. MS would no longer be a monopoly, and could not abuse its position to ram non-"standard
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Re:why not open source Windows? (Score:4, Informative)
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Damage control done too late (Score:2)
And hands off from ODF. Get lost.
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As to cross standard efforts, I think ODF should embrace OOXML, then extend it.
Re:Damage control done too late (Score:4, Insightful)
If you really think they care about full compliance, well, they never cared, they never will care.
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I propose we call it POXML (Score:5, Funny)
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The future (Score:4, Insightful)
The real test is the future. If Microsoft works through ISO to improve the standard, and ODF and OOXML are gradually harmonized, then all our complaining is moot. If other companies and projects implement OOXML and have no trouble doing it, and Microsoft doesn't sue them for infringement of some obscure patent, that's fine. We get what we want.
Consider this silver lining: without ODF, under what other circumstances would Microsoft have turned their new document file format over to a standards body? This whole scenario would have been an open source advocate's wet dream in the 1990s. Sure, what happened with the ISO vote was deplorable and calls the standards body's process and impartiality into question, but things are a lot better than they would have been without ODF.
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In two years ODF will have additional stuff to support flowchart apps, and other stuff.
OOXML standardisation is simply NOT WORTH that. It is just Microsoft childish behaviour (they don't have serious strategy for that) that keeps OOXML floating around. And
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They have already made an official commitment to do just that, both for their next Office release, and for the final version of the OOXML SDK.
As you sure well know, the issue with ODF is the lack of support for it in the most widespread Office suite out there. This isn't going to get any better,
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Next Office release? When? According to pause between XP and Vista releases, it is about 3 - 4 years at least. It is VERY long time. Before that, talking about supporting of OOXML (which is not even cleaned up for now) is just laughing stock and no one will base serious business on that.
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Or, for that matter, they haven't even implemented their own draft version of the standard in the latest Office.
Re:The future (Score:5, Insightful)
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Microsofts aim: destroy open standards (Score:2, Insightful)
Instead, MS didn't join OASIS / ODF. It pushed forward a standard that even it doesn't adhere to, why?
Because MS only m
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Of course the open source community will reject that and refuse to add it! Thereby making their non-corrupted form of ODF non-ISO standard and thereby unusable by governments and schools that require a standard! :)
and then...
Meanwhile those schools and governments will adopt the next version of MS Office because it will be the only thing to support "OOXML" which is being pushed upon them by marketing as an ISO standard - even if it isn't since it's just a -version- of it that isn't actually compatible with the real ISO-OOXML.
So, Microsoft will basically do the same thing that the open source community is doing, namely refusing to implement the standard. Yet they will somehow be acceptable? If that's the case, the the ISO is completely pointless. I almost hope it comes to that, as I would like to see them face some serious consequences for this debacle.
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The process spoke for itself (Score:5, Insightful)
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People are here saying the ISO has lost credibility. No, that is not true: it is just a matter of people coming to terms with wha
Microsoft now owns ODF, (Score:5, Informative)
The convenor of the committee is Alex Brown, an advisor to the British Library, which was a co-sponsor of Ecma putting OOXML on the fast track.
They've basically given Microsoft control over ODF's future.
Bye bye interoperability for another couple of decades.
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What exactly has changed here? (Score:5, Insightful)
One has to wonder who they think they're fooling. Microsoft has no obligation to implement any changes the ISO group may advise, but through the ECMA, the ISO would have no real choice.
To add further insult to injury, they're setting up yet another group to work on 'cross standard initiatives' - i.e. let's try to make ODF as useless as OOXML as a standard.
The ISO didn't have control of OOXML from the beginning. If they believe anything they do will give them control, they are sadly mistaken.
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Personal attacks... (Score:5, Insightful)
You missed the real story with the ISO/IEC action (Score:5, Interesting)
Private deal to approve OOXML? More evidence surfaces [universal-...ouncil.org] --- Universal Interoperability Council).
Circumstantial evidence is mounting of one or more private deals having been struck to approve DIS-29500 Office Open XML ("OOXML") as an international standard, a deal that may have played a role in several key national standardization bodies changing their voting position to approve OOXML.
[more]
Re:You missed the real story with the ISO/IEC acti (Score:2, Troll)
Anti-OOXML guy posting your link and making your "private deal" charge on Rick Jelliffe's blog [oreillynet.com]
Rick Jelliffe debunking the "secret deals" charge [oreillynet.com]
Re:You missed the real story with the ISO/IEC acti (Score:4, Informative)
No, it hasn't been debunked.
Rick Jelliffe is one of Microsoft's guys in Australia, and his opinion does not constitute a debunking.
This whole matter reminds me of a startrek episode (Score:2)
the moral point came at the end. To save the evil doctors program and cure, or to delete it because of the immoral way in which he did his research.
The choice was to delete it.
In other words, ooxml could be the best document format there is, but given the evil company who created it (evil proven so in so many ways,
MS OOXML and ISO OXML are now different (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:MS OOXML and ISO OXML are now different (Score:4, Informative)
Here's a rating of various application's ODF support, from one star to five stars (five stars means "perfect"):
http://opendocumentfellowship.com/applications [opendocume...owship.com]
You'll note that NO app achieves 5 stars. There are a number of 4-star apps, but most are three stars and lower. (And I'd bet you a twinkie that nearly all (and possibly ALL) of the 4-star apps aren't independently developed from the spec, but are using rebranded versiond of OO.o's code. (It's known that many ODF apps are simply using OO.o code (the ODF spec is too vague in many places to create code simply based on the spec.)
(There's another web page on an ODF support site somewhere that lists details of problems when using particular apps to load ODF files created by other particlar apps (like using K-Office to load ODF files created by OO.o), but I can't find it at the moment.)
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At least it's possible and legal to do this, though. OO.org as a reference implementation with source code can at least make it possible to get 100% compatibility. That's the main difference here.
About incompetence (Score:5, Informative)
No, the general public is not calling them incompetent. Other technical [alkalay.net] committees [www.scc.ca] are calling them incompetent.
They're just being polite about it.
Waste of time (Score:3)
I'm Sorry, Is Some ISO Maggot Making M$-Noises? (Score:5, Interesting)
two words (Score:2)
ISO embraces
MS Extends
spacelikeword95 (Score:3, Insightful)
The Name (Score:2)
Slashdot disappointment (Score:2)
Call things by its name, it is MSOOXML, ISO has not taken any control of it.
Corrupt or incompetent? Take your pick (Score:4, Insightful)
No personal attacks here (Score:2)
I have no intention of making personal attacks.
Neither Microsoft, which has shown determination to trash anything useful in its quest to make more money, nor its bitch ISO, are persons.
Open Letter to ISO (Score:2, Insightful)
Dear ISO,
We, here at Slashdot, received your letter and felt it necessary to respond in kind.
It is amazing how quickly 'personal attacks' arise. However, what we interpret as the 'personal attacks' you refer to (convenient how that's ambiguous) were not personal attacks at all: they were facts and we have evidence to back it up.
The fact of the matter is, it c
Wait till they actually publish the standard (Score:2)
Wouldn't it be funny if when the OOXML standard finally gets actually published - it looks like ODF with M$ compatibility extensions?
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So, the best thing the ISO can do is formalize each "standard", and get each party used to listening to it and using it as the reference.
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the best thing the ISO can do is formalize each "standard"
I'm sure that would be a satisfactory outcome for Microsoft. It is, after all, true to their well established "embrace and extend" business method. But OOXML is not capable of being an actual standard for document interchange.
Think about it for a second, simply adding xml tags to the beginning and end of a proprietary file/object is like calling a sow's ear "silk, i.e., nothing more than marketing-driven rhetoric. Using terminology that means one thing to market your completely different thing, and doing
Re:Here's a message for ISO and the letter... (Score:4, Insightful)
There are currently enough voting irregularities that which if half of them switch to abstain OOXML is no longer a standard. OOXML is a piece of shit. no one and that's including MSFT can ever implement it as it is so complicated and relies on knowing undocumented features of word 95, 97, and 2000.
MSFT just killed the ISO as they can no longer be taken seriously. With enough bribes you can buy what ever standard you want.
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Microsoft does NOT follow standards and any piece of garbage coming from their employees stating they do is fiction and just a tool to fool the market into thinking they do. Learn your history dude/dudette.
http://www.theregister.co.uk/2002/10/21/reborn_or_stillborn_all_new/ [theregister.co.uk]
And thinking that Microsoft will adopt ISO OOXML is foolish thought too. This whole exercise was created to block ODF
Re:Here's a message for ISO and the letter... (Score:4, Informative)
To hedge their bet on getting their own format standardized, the put out a pet project with little support behind it but a nice public face of attempting to support ODF. But it is half hearted at best.
Don't kid yourself, Microsoft has no intention of supporting the public spec which is now ISO OOXML or ISO ODF.
Also, it was Microsoft which made it a fight about MS Office vs all others. The requirement for ODF did not exclude Microsoft Office but instead, Microsoft refused to support ODF in MS Office. So, if you like MS Office you are stuck with their proprietary format and required licenses to read it.
LoB
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This seems like an assertion bordering on wrecklessness to me. What evidence is there that MS had no intention to support the ISO OOXML?
There may be some cause to doubt their sincerity in certain respects. It is not clear that they have promised to support the ISO OOXML in their products, but they may. They may also turn around and support ISO ODF as their open format instead, so they can have extra checkboxes in their "feature support" I.E. 'MS Word:' The only word processor built on open standards that supports both ISO ODF and OOXML.
If government bodies are mandated to use an open standard, then MS has every reason to support fully open standards versions of the ISO OOXML or ODF, otherwise their products' document types will not be compliant with an open standard, and government bodies as a result can either no longer use Office, or they have to start saving documents as something like HTML/RTF/PDF, instead.
history, the reasons why Embrace, Extend, Extinguish are a longtime Microsoft trait and label, Halloween documents, and how they handled the creation of the "standard".
And from history, Microsoft can easily produce partial compliance and any failures will get fixed a year or two out and at that time, other inconsistencies will be introduced. A year or two later they might get found and the cycle repeats. All the while, slightly twisted versions of the standard are continued to be used and only Microsoft's
Re:Here's a message for ISO and the letter... (Score:4, Informative)
Microsoft has put it plainly: If the Ecma (now ISO) spec doesn't match what Microsoft wants to do with the file format then the file format will deviate from the spec. That pretty much ruins the whole "read files 50 years from now" plan, at least for Office 14 onwards. Combined with the fact that the OOXML spec and the Office file format already don't match up I'd say that the chances of Microsoft sticking to OOXML are rather slim.
As for ODF: That would instantly diminish Office's market value by making interoperability easier (the ODF spec is much easier to implement than the OOXML one, being 1/10th the size). Microsoft lives off the being the only ones who can open their formats. They're not going to let that position go to waste.
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There is nothing legally requiring them to do this. And the Embrace, Extend, Extinguish element here is to the ODF standard. They claimed to embrace XML, they exten
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The Open Document Format (ODF) started as the OpenOffice format (though Sun does not control it).
The Microsoft Office Open XML (OOXML) format is the MS-led one.
Bill? is that you? (Score:2)