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We're Open enough, Says Microsoft

An anonymous reader writes "Microsoft Australia has come under fire from rival vendors and open-source advocates for keeping its Office document standards proprietary. Greg Stone, Microsoft's national technology officer for Australia and New Zealand, faced criticism during his presentation at the Australian Unix User Group conference in Canberra yesterday. However, he stood firm on the company's policy of making the XML schemas for its Office 2003 document standard publicly available provided interested parties sign an agreement with the software heavyweight. "Why should I have to sign an agreement?" one audience member demanded to know."

660 comments

  1. How right they are by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    Just look at IE.
    Can one piece of software possibly be more open to exploits and viruses?

    1. Re:How right they are by Aractor · · Score: 0, Redundant

      Does M$ Windows itself count? heh

      --
      That is aboslutely idiotic. You totally missed the point. Don't breed....please.
    2. Re:How right they are by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Since when was cheap cotton "firm" ware?

      anyways - he referred to software, not firmware - as in you're penis being software, not firmware, at the sight of his mothers "bagina" (I don't know, or want to know, what a Bagina is. it sounds like moist, lightly haired luggage bags or something... ewwwwwwwww.)

    3. Re:How right they are by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This shit was funny the first six thousand times. Now it's just fucking juvenile.

    4. Re:How right they are by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Just look at IE.
      Can one piece of software possibly be more open to exploits and viruses?"

      yes, its called LINUX

    5. Re:How right they are by 101percent · · Score: 1

      Yeah, well, FOSS browsers would be just as "open" if they were as popular.

    6. Re:How right they are by pandrijeczko · · Score: 2, Interesting
      yes, its called LINUX

      Perhaps I can then be of some assistance to you.

      If you would like to share with me some specifics about the exploits you've suffered from in your usage of Linux, I will be more than happy to provide you with some advice on security techniques and server hardening if you so wish.

      I look forward to you providing me with the name and version of Linux distribution you are currently using that is suffering these problems. Once I have that information, I can then give you some detailed assistance with your issues.

      --
      Gentoo Linux - another day, another USE flag.
    7. Re:How right they are by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Just look at IE.
      Can one piece of software possibly be more open to exploits and viruses?

      Sure... how about Firefox?

  2. So... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

    "Why should I have to sign an agreement?"

    So Microsoft can own your soul, your offsprings' souls, their retroactive grandparents' souls, and the souls of everyone they come in contact with.

    In the form of a nice law suit.

    1. Re:So... by 0x461FAB0BD7D2 · · Score: 5, Funny

      And they say the GPL is viral!

    2. Re:So... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > ...their retroactive grandparents' souls...

      So M$ are now in league with the Mormons?

    3. Re:So... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      helpdesk the funniest parody webcomic of microsoft. EVAR.

    4. Re:So... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And the M$ EULA is therefore genetic ?

  3. eeehmm by MPHellwig · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    So xml, rtf & txt is also closed?
    Of course word-ml is closed thats why they can export to other formats. Sure you lose the markup but if you have not solved that issue you better get a cluestick.

    1. Re:eeehmm by Kremmy · · Score: 2, Informative

      XML is not a Microsoft format, it's a markup language. RTF is closed, and txt is ASCII standard. Sure they can export to other formats, but the point is that the reason you want to use the native format to begin with is the markup and formatting. If you're just going to export to text, why use Word at all?

    2. Re:eeehmm by cuerty · · Score: 2, Interesting

      XML, RTF and TXT are not closed, basically they can be open with most text editor.
      The problem is that many goverment institucions give info or documents in propietary formats, as microsoft word .doc files or excel tables. In that case if you wan't to read that you'll need to sing an agreetment with Microsoft, even if you are gona to export it to another format 5 secs after have opened it.
      BTW: XML itself is not a format :D

      --
      >Linux is not user-friendly.
      It _is_ user-friendly. It is not ignorant-friendly and idiot-friendly.
    3. Re:eeehmm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

      you'll need to sing an agreetment with Microsoft

      Swaaaaannieeee - ohhhhhh how I love ya, how I love ya, Swaaaannnniiiiiieeeeeeeee!

      Oh you meant "sign" an agreement... my bad. please spellcheck in the future,

      plskthx

      AC

    4. Re:eeehmm by R.D.Olivaw · · Score: 1, Offtopic

      Could you please point me to the spellchecker that would correct sing to sign based on the context?

    5. Re:eeehmm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Your brain perhaps? Why rely solely on technology when you proofread something yourself?

    6. Re:eeehmm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      RTF is proprietary, but MS has the specs online and easily available.

      http://support.microsoft.com/default.aspx?scid=kb; en-us;86999

      The .exe they offer you as a download is a self-extracting .zip ... un-zip tools work fine, you don't need to actually execute it if you want.

      Heck, the license info in the document isn't even terrible... it's almost... open.

    7. Re:eeehmm by mrRay720 · · Score: 1, Insightful

      The problem is that many goverment institucions give info or documents in propietary formats, as microsoft word .doc files or excel tables. In that case if you wan't to read that you'll need to sing an agreetment with Microsoft, even if you are gona to export it to another format 5 secs after have opened it.

      What part of that is Microsoft's problem? If your issue is gov's giving out info in MS DOC format the solution is not to punish Microsoft by forcing them to erode away part of their business, but rather to discuss with those gov's a more suitable format.

      Talk about using a hammer to do a screwdriver's job....

    8. Re:eeehmm by Yer+Mom · · Score: 1, Offtopic
      Eyes, brain, and a reasonable command of the English language?

      Spellchecking doesn't have to be done entirely by computer :)

      --
      Never mind Spamassassin. When's Spammerassassin coming out?
    9. Re:eeehmm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Interesting quandary. If a government is requiring you to do business with Microsoft (sign an agreement, or buy a particular licensed software product) they could concevably be violating some law that forbids them from requiring this kind of thing.

      If that were the case, the neat trick would be holding Microsoft to be an accessory to the crime.

    10. Re:eeehmm by ajs318 · · Score: 1

      The issue is that governments are generally clueless about IT. Come to think of it, governments tend to be clueless, full stop.

      The solution is to ban proprietary document formats -- or render them unworkable in practice, perhaps by enshrining in law any interested party's right to carry out reverse-engineering for the purpose of creating interoperable software.

      --
      Je fume. Tu fumes. Nous fûmes!
    11. Re:eeehmm by R.D.Olivaw · · Score: 1

      definition of spellcheck
      Spellcheck actually means using a computerised spellchecker.
      my grandparent's postis flamebait? C'mon!

    12. Re:eeehmm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So, you're admitting you're not a computer program? What kind of a geek are you!

    13. Re:eeehmm by cujo_1111 · · Score: 1

      If that were to be the case, the whole BitKeeper fracas would never of happened...

      --
      If I point out that you are incorrect, making me a foe does not make you any more correct.
    14. Re:eeehmm by m50d · · Score: 1

      Rtf is an open as in freely published standard. It's controlled by MS, but anyone can implement it, like pdf and adobe.

      --
      I am trolling
    15. Re:eeehmm by Yer+Mom · · Score: 1
      That's pretty useful - I didn't know there was an online Chambers. Just what I need when I'm having trouble with the crossword :)

      Thanks!

      --
      Never mind Spamassassin. When's Spammerassassin coming out?
    16. Re:eeehmm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      MS has free readers for office documents. You don't have to buy anything to read them.

    17. Re:eeehmm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "The issue is that governments are generally clueless about IT."

      That's exactly why giving them info on formats won't accomplish anything.

    18. Re:eeehmm by B3ryllium · · Score: 1

      (just to be on topic)

      Microsoft Word!

    19. Re:eeehmm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      why use Word at all?
      yes if you hate word and ms so much why not just use a simple text editor?!?!

    20. Re:eeehmm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "... MS has free readers for office documents. You don't have to buy anything to read them...."

      Great, can you point me to one for, say, OpenBSD?

    21. Re:eeehmm by yo_tuco · · Score: 1

      If all of Microsoft's "free" readers end in a .exe, then I say, no, they are not free. That is, I would have to buy a MS license for the operating system to run that "free" reader. And is the cost of that "free" reader rolled into the cost of that license?

      I donno... just asking.

    22. Re:eeehmm by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      Governments are making it Microsoft's problem.

      THEY ARE THE CUSTOMER.

      In older times, it was customary that the customer was given what the customer asked for. This is at least what's supposed to happen in a non-monopolized marketplace.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    23. Re:eeehmm by SpaceLifeForm · · Score: 1
      Put 'ZZZZ' in a word doc and spellcheck it.

      --
      You are being MICROattacked, from various angles, in a SOFT manner.
    24. Re:eeehmm by Kremmy · · Score: 1

      I was under the impression that the PDF standard is NOT freely published, making it so those who wish to support it in third party applications had to jump through hoops to do so.

    25. Re:eeehmm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As the parent AC, I was referring to what the other people have said - "your brain".

      you don't *have* to use technology to do everything, you know?

    26. Re:eeehmm by m50d · · Score: 1
      http://partners.adobe.com/public/developer/pdf/ind ex_reference.html

      The drm however isn't, or at least wasn't, published, it was necessary to reverse-engineer that, but normal pdfs are fine.

      --
      I am trolling
    27. Re:eeehmm by tokabola · · Score: 1

      How is that easily available to anyone who is not using Windows?

      That self-extracting zip file is of no use to anyone on a Mac, or a sparc based computer, no matter what they do. Do I not deserve to see this open standard because I don't want to spend $300 for a lousy OS?

      If MS had wanted this standard to be open they would have offered it in formats that weren't Windows specific.

      --
      Open Source for Open Minds
  4. Feed me! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Ok can someone explain this to me.

    With Open Office, I can read and export every major Microsoft file in and out of OO.

    How much more open do you want?

    If you want to make applications which use MS file formats, Open Office code is freely available (open source no?) so whats stopping people from developing ?

    -SJ53

    1. Re:Feed me! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      You are able to do so, despite MS best efforts. People had to reverse engineer the doc format to get this accomplished.

      So I don't really see your point. Just because people make great efforts to accomplish something that would be trivial if MS released the specs or adhered to an open standard, doesn't mean that MS is in the right, does it?

    2. Re:Feed me! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

      With Open Office, I can read and export every major Microsoft file in and out of OO.

      How much more open do you want?


      I want to be confident when I read and export Microsoft files from Open Office, when they reach their intended destination they'll actually still look the way they looked when I exported them.

      I want to be confident about this without having to keep a copy of Word around to check to make sure I didn't somehow accidentally trigger some minor incompatibility with the spec that OO committed because they don't have the spec itself.

    3. Re:Feed me! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

      "I can read and export every major Microsoft file in and out of OO"

      For now... wait until the next version of Office comes out... it isn't like formats can be reverse engineered overnight

    4. Re:Feed me! by realityfighter · · Score: 5, Informative

      Actually, OpenOffice's encoding for .doc doesn't work perfectly. And it's a downright bitch if you're trying to pass files between OpenOffice and Word. I was a freelance manual writer for a while, and my copy of Word self-destructed. (It wouldn't take the activation code that was printed ON THE DISK.)

      So I thought, time to switch to an open alternative. Bad idea. I couldn't pass edits to the engineer I was working with because every time I'd get back a file with corrupted layout and images about the size of Jupiter.

      As far as I can tell, this is because they have to build their .doc encoder based on intelligent guesswork. If the standards were open, they could get compatability spot on.

      --
      A strain of paranoid prevention can be worse than the disease, whate'er the intention.
    5. Re:Feed me! by miyako · · Score: 4, Interesting

      The problem is that importing .doc files into OO.org is a bit of a craps shoot, sometimes the document imports perfectly, other times it's usable but ugly, and sometimes it's so garbled as to be nearly useless. Not that I'm discounting the work done by the folks at OO.org or the other F/OSS projects that import .doc files (KWord usually does a pretty good job in my experience, and abiword tends to be all or nothing, though I haven't use abiword in a logn while, so it might be better now).
      Of course, support is always improving, but that's because the .doc format has been pretty stationary for a while, the new format will still require time to reverse engineer (assume the authors won't or can't agree to whatever MS wants them to sign). I suspect that there will be a decent amount of time where the new format is the preferred windows document format, but importing/exporting for Linux applications isn't quite good enough.
      Of course, the real problem, IMO, has little to do with the format itself, but with how often people send .docs for seemingly no reason. It aggravates me to no end how often clients and peopel from school send out emails with the text of the email in an attatched .doc file, when the content of the file is nothing more than plain text that could have simply been put in the email, or at least a plaintext file.
      A bit off topic, but also, why the heck won't MS Office import OO.org .swx files? The merits of each file format aside, I generally save office documents as .swx, and it's a pita when I have to open up the file and export it to a .doc everytime I want to send it to someone. Since OO.org is GPL (IIRC), would allowing Office to import OO.org files mean that it would have to be GPL as well, or is it just microsoft trying to fruther their monopoly?

      --
      Famous Last Words: "hmm...wikipedia says it's edible"
    6. Re:Feed me! by Lonewolf666 · · Score: 1

      Have you tried giving .rtf files to the Word users you were working with?
      While it is not perfect either, .rtf-based document exchange between Word and OpenOffice works better than .doc

      --
      C - the footgun of programming languages
    7. Re:Feed me! by l3v1 · · Score: 1

      With Open Office, I can read and export every major Microsoft file in and out of OO.
      How much more open do you want?


      For example I can't send .odf or .sxw to a certain fella with whom I regularly swap documents to and fro, fro two main reasons: 1). he won't use OO.org (that's a quite unchangeable fact) 2). even if he would, OO.org just can't handle well a lot of things Word does to .docs, for the simple reason that they don't disclose the stuff (just one example is tracked changes).

      One thing I could achieve was that I sent him pdfs and told him to make his notes in the pdf. This is still better than using Word. These days, unless I'm forced to comply, I use only OO.org (win&lin) and latex with kile (lin&cygwin).

      --
      I am putting myself to the fullest possible use, which is all I can think that any conscious entity can ever hope to do.
    8. Re:Feed me! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      They probably won't look the same, except in the most trivial cases. However you don't have that level of confidence if you use one version of Microsoft Office and send the document to a user with a different version of Microsoft Office, so you don't have much to lose by using OO.o instead.

    9. Re:Feed me! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I want to be confident about this without having to keep a copy of Word around to check to make sure I didn't somehow accidentally trigger some minor incompatibility with the spec that OO committed because they don't have the spec itself.

      No matter of standards and specifications will ever take away the need for testing. Deal with it.

    10. Re:Feed me! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No matter of standards and specifications will ever take away the need for testing.

      The need for testing when you've created a word processor file??

      What bizarre universe do you come from?

    11. Re:Feed me! by nmg196 · · Score: 2, Informative

      > With Open Office, I can read and export every major Microsoft file
      > in and out of OO.

      You can. In same kind of way that you can build a car with sellotape and cerial packets. You get something that's vaguely what you were after, but it doesn't look right and it's kind of messy.

      If you've ever tried it on anything other than a very simple letter, you'll know that it doesn't really work AT ALL. The formatting gets completely messed up, things get resized, the layout goes haywire, some text gets lots etc etc... It really doesn't work.

      Why? Because OO don't have access to the file format definition, so they have to guess everything. Unfortunatly, it's quite complicated, so despite lots of hard work, they get it wrong. Often.

    12. Re:Feed me! by ssj_195 · · Score: 3, Insightful
      A bit off topic, but also, why the heck won't MS Office import OO.org .swx files?
      It is not is Microsoft's best interest to be interoperable with an open-source competitor - if it could import and export to .swx flawlessly (pretty easy, since not only is the standard open, there's even a reference implementation!) a lot of headaches in switching to OO.o would disappear. Plus, it would lend OO.o credence.
    13. Re:Feed me! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The latest versions of MS Office read earlier versions perfectly - all part of MS's plan to make everyone upgrade, as if you get a newer document than your word can handle then you're SOL!

    14. Re:Feed me! by mattyrobinson69 · · Score: 1

      I almost always create PDF's if i want them to look the same

    15. Re:Feed me! by fishbowl · · Score: 1

      > (that's a quite unchangeable fact)

      No. Very easy to change this kind of situation.

      YOU become the one with the money, or the valuable information, that HE needs. It's that simple.

      The bottom line is that you choose to accept his document format, and you choose to allow him to reject yours. And you don't have anything that he needs badly enough to change the status quo putting you in the position to decide who does what.

      If you could, say, make it so that his receiving a paycheck was dependent on his using an open document format, it would happen...

      --
      -fb Everything not expressly forbidden is now mandatory.
    16. Re:Feed me! by ajs318 · · Score: 5, Interesting

      If MS Word could import and export .SXW files natively, there would be no need for MS Word in the first place. It's only the fact that Word -- and nothing else -- can read .DOC files properly, that keeps Microsoft selling it. If Word could import and export .SXW files, an organisation could keep just one PC with a copy of Windows and Office {plus OO.o export}, all the rest using OpenOffice.org, and use just this one machine for translating legacy documents.

      Now, MS Word has a macro language -- a bastardised dialect of BASIC -- and a document object model {though not quite like the W3C ECMAscript one} that allows the canny programmer access to every feature of a document. And the code to synthesise and analyse SXW files is open source. It ought to be very possible for some third party to write a Microsoft Word plugin to do absolutely seamless import and export of OO.o .SXW files .....

      If I had a copy of Windows and a copy of Office, I'd be having a go myself. As it is, I got clean three years ago and don't intend to relapse anytime soon. Someone else can have the glory.

      --
      Je fume. Tu fumes. Nous fûmes!
    17. Re:Feed me! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      is it just microsoft trying to fruther their monopoly?

      They're probably waiting for a large paying customer to ask for the feature.

    18. Re:Feed me! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      No doubt the .doc export in OO.o is less than perfect, but I've seen the same problem you describe happen when exchanging .doc files between the same version of Word on different versions of Windows.

    19. Re:Feed me! by Slashcrunch · · Score: 1

      MS Word being able to open and save as OO.org format would truly suck...

      MS would change it just enough so that OO.org couldn't open it correctly, AKA embracing and extending the format :)

    20. Re:Feed me! by m50d · · Score: 1

      Just monopoly preservation. The standard is open and published, they couldn't use OOo code to do it without making word gpl but the spec itself is free and I'd be surprised if there wasn't a bsd or at least lgpl library to use the format

      --
      I am trolling
    21. Re:Feed me! by LnxAddct · · Score: 1

      Two suggestions, switch to a different file format, or give OpenOffice.Org 2.0 a shot when it is officially released. The enw support for MS Office really is damn near perfect or at least thats what my experience with teh beta has shown :)
      Regards,
      Steve

    22. Re:Feed me! by AttilaSz · · Score: 5, Informative

      OOo Writer has an "Export to PDF" menu point in the "File" menu. It is ideal for preservation of the format -- unless the receiving party needs to edit it, that is. But in vast majority of cases, just sending over something for people to read, PDF is sufficient.

      --
      Sig erased via substitution of an identical one.
    23. Re:Feed me! by j.bellone · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I haven't had any problems with the new beta 2.0 OO.org software; it works like a charm and looks even purdier than before. I was really impressed that I was able to transfer Word documents and Powerpoint presentations between OO 2.0, Office 2001, and Office 2003 without a problem.

      --
      I'm f#$king magic!
    24. Re:Feed me! by drsmithy · · Score: 1
      I want to be confident when I read and export Microsoft files from Open Office, when they reach their intended destination they'll actually still look the way they looked when I exported them.

      Then you should be using something like a PDF.

      Word processors are not meant for producing identical output from different environments, anymore than HTML is meant for producing identical output on different displays.

    25. Re:Feed me! by IchBinEinPenguin · · Score: 1

      A bit off topic, but also, why the heck won't MS Office import OO.org .swx files?

      Is it just me, or didn't Word have great import filters once upon a time? You know, back before Word was defacto standard?
      What possible reason would MS have to support another standard now that they have all but eliminated them?

    26. Re:Feed me! by MrMickS · · Score: 1
      I move around different workplaces and have to exchange documents with people from more organisations. I have worked places where some people quite admantly would not supply .doc files, instead sending in an StarOffice format. I would always wait for someone else to produce an RTF or DOC format of the file before being able to handle it.

      I don't understand why being forced to use an OpenOffice/StarOffice file format as opposed to an MS Office one is any better. It still forces me to install software that I don't want on my system in order to handle it.

      --
      You may think me a tired, old, cynic. I'd have to disagree about the tired bit.
    27. Re:Feed me! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't like M$ any more than most here, but to be honest when transferring data to different environments, some tweaking of the data has always been needed. I really don't see the difference. Find the best export/import strategy, and start working. I've even done temp work tweaking archive and current data for people that were either changing software versions or changing to different environments altogether. It's historically been a fact of life that that's what you've got to do, M$ didn't start it. If you want to change, just bite the bullet and DO IT. The sooner you do, the sooner you won't have to bitch about M$'s (non)standards.

    28. Re:Feed me! by 4of12 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Is it just me, or didn't Word have great import filters once upon a time? You know, back before Word was defacto standard?

      Yes, it did, back when Word had to compete tooth and nail with other products that were already established in the marketplace.

      Yes, MS can make good products with compelling features - if they are in a competitive marketplace.

      Once they dominate the market, though, there is no need to create what the user wants, just the need to lock-in users tighter to what they are already using.

      Exactly the same business model is seen with Internet Explorer which accumulated many great features while Netscape was a competitor and which stagnated with some non-W3C-standard, MS-exclusive behavior after Netscape's coffin was nailed.

      It would be better for everybody except current large shareholders of MS if the talent at Microsoft were redirected to what they are quite capable of doing: creating good products in a competitive marketplace. It's a tragedy for consumers and for MS programmers that they have to exist in a monopoly situation where the best business decisions are to build barriers to prevent users from moving to something different.

      --
      "Provided by the management for your protection."
    29. Re:Feed me! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not if it was a 3rd party plugin ;).

    30. Re:Feed me! by masklinn · · Score: 1

      Amen to that

      --
      "The way we can tell it's C# instead of Haskell is because it's nine lines instead of two." -- wadler
    31. Re:Feed me! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's only the fact that Word -- and nothing else -- can read .DOC files properly, that keeps Microsoft selling it.

      Who are you kidding? Even Word munges its own files sometimes.

    32. Re:Feed me! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sadly, thats not true. MS Office is compatable safely with maybe one version back. I'm a teacher with over 15 years of word, excel and powerpoint files from Mac and PC versions of MS's office Apps. Word in particular barfs violently on old files or figures from old files (at least with XP it's no longer BSoD). Curiously, Open Office is much more tolerant of these old files, so in a certain respect OO is more compatible with MS-Office than MS-Office.

    33. Re:Feed me! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So did you file a bug report with OOo? It improved a lot recently and version 2.0 Beta is great, but whoever find problems, should file them, else they won't get fixed.

    34. Re:Feed me! by PJBonoVox · · Score: 1

      I can read and export every major Microsoft file in and out of OO"

      Every single major Microsoft file? Including NTFS.DLL? Crikey, the WINE developers could do with someone with your talent on their side...

    35. Re:Feed me! by Lord+Faust · · Score: 1

      Actually, I use Word because thus far it's the only word processor that hasn't mangled my work. I was a big Lotus user until my family stopped buying IBMs, and I stopped getting their latest edition of Lotus SmartSuite. (I happened to really like WordPro, and it handled every iteration of the MS Word .DOC file I came across.) I'd still be using it now, if installing the Millennium edition didn't fry my system. I tried AbiWord and OO.org before finally opting for the MS Office package. I really, really wanted the open software to work, but when adding a column to a table turns your whole document into unusable mush, sorry guys, you lose.

    36. Re:Feed me! by orasio · · Score: 1

      Use PDF.

    37. Re:Feed me! by civilizedINTENSITY · · Score: 1

      Why not make a tarball of the PDF, and the LaTeX that originated it? That way they can read the PDF, and if they want to add comments they can. :-)

    38. Re:Feed me! by AttilaSz · · Score: 1

      Sure :-) That's exactly what I do when I'm working with someone on a scientific paper. I could hardly pull this off with someone not in academia, though...

      --
      Sig erased via substitution of an identical one.
    39. Re:Feed me! by Aeron65432 · · Score: 1

      Except there are those of us who despise .PDF as Adobe's most bloated proprietary document.

    40. Re:Feed me! by arose · · Score: 1

      Demand Microsoft to support OpenOffice files, you pay them, right?

      --
      Analogies don't equal equalities, they are merely somewhat analogous.
    41. Re:Feed me! by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      Don't be an idiot. PDF is not proprietary: the specs are publicly available, and you can write your own software to read or write the format (which many people have). PDF is every bit as open as PostScript.

    42. Re:Feed me! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      You are able to do so, despite MS best efforts. People had to reverse engineer the doc format to get this accomplished.

      Wow, they actually had work and figure something out? That must have been terribly inconvenient.

      So I don't really see your point. Just because people make great efforts to accomplish something that would be trivial if MS released the specs or adhered to an open standard, doesn't mean that MS is in the right, does it?

      Well, MS spent time and money to develop their product. So, it seems it's their perogative to charge for it. Does Ford give away free cars these days? Does Dell give away free computers? Seems you are living a fool's fantasy.

      Get thee to an economics class!

    43. Re:Feed me! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you want the nice warm comforting protection from the unknown, perhaps you need to see a psychiatrist. I dont think the answer to your problem lies in something a piece of software can provide.

    44. Re:Feed me! by Max_Wells_SH · · Score: 1

      Of course, the real problem, IMO, has little to do with the format itself, but with how often people send .docs for seemingly no reason. It aggravates me to no end how often clients and peopel from school send out emails with the text of the email in an attatched .doc file, when the content of the file is nothing more than plain text that could have simply been put in the email, or at least a plaintext file.

      I don't know the number of Joe & Jane Users who are responsible for the proliferation of .doc files, as in the case above, but I'm guessing if it's not most of them, it's at least many, and still that must count in the millions. So, many average home users want to send a written document to someone: there's a 90+% chance they're using Windows, and in every anecdotal case I could provide, they're using MS Word. Joe User doesn't think if he only needs to write something on the computer as plain-text, rich text, or a proprietary file format--he wants to write something, he clicks the blue [w]. Anyway, everybody else uses Word, right?

      Word is, for these millions, the be-all end-all word processor. Have you seen a default WinXP setup? Of course you have. Whenever I see one I have to, whether with explanation, by force, or just surreptiously, uncheck Hide extensions for known file types--that setting is the bane of my existence. Suddenly, Joe User sees that Letter To Mom is actually Letter To Mom.doc: then you have to explain that the document does not automagically open--it's in a format that can only be reliably opened with one program that not everyone necessarily has or cares to use; and that it could be saved as a different, more accesible or appropriate, format.

      That usually and ultimately doesn't change anything, but I'd like to think maybe they've been set on the right track to thinking about access to information. Otherwise it's conversations forever consisting of:

      "What format is the file you're trying to open?"

      "It says it's a Word file."

      "What's the file extension? The three letters after the dot--I mean, period?"

      "There's no period--it says it's supposed to open in Word..."

      Ad nausea.

      --
      I read Slashdot for the articles.
    45. Re:Feed me! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "...With Open Office, I can read and export every major Microsoft file in and out of OO. How much more open do you want?..."

      Clueless!!!

    46. Re:Feed me! by The+Conductor · · Score: 1
      Cross-version interoperability of Word is worse. I've seen documents become unreadable from being worked on by both Word 6 & Word 97. The solution: buy the latest version for everyone and retype a thousand pages of complex technical documentation from hardcopy. (It was the only way to clean out all vestiges of Word 6.) Those few of us still using Word 6 submitted changes by giving marked-up hardcopy to the techwriters, completely defeating the whole point of a word processor.

      I've avoided Word like the plague ever since.

    47. Re:Feed me! by civilizedINTENSITY · · Score: 1

      Rumors of life outside academia are just that, mere rumors. I only half believe. After BS degrees in Physics and then Computer Science I'm now in an MBA program. My emacs/LaTeX/pdf homework is wowing the business prof.s because it looks so damn good. Would looking damn good be enough in the "real world"? God willing, I may never know.

    48. Re:Feed me! by AttilaSz · · Score: 1
      Rumors of life outside academia are just that, mere rumors. I only half believe.

      I actually belong primarily to the IT industry, and am trying to make my way through a Ph.D. program on the sides. Each world has its own attractive as well as the dark sides. My mental inclination is such that I'm more at home in the industry; probably for not totally unrelated reasons all my scientific efforts happen to fall into the "applied" portion of the computer science arena. There's not necessarily a clear cut line distinguishing the two worlds -- at least from what I see at my local university, there are lots of joint projects with big name companies (Nokia, Siemens, etc.). Looks like though you have found your way in the environment and are feeling good in it -- wishing you good luck with it.

      --
      Sig erased via substitution of an identical one.
  5. A better response to this by Umbral+Blot · · Score: 5, Interesting

    In reality there is no way MS will open up the .doc format. Lock-in for office file formats and the office products are central to MS's revenue scheme. The way to beat them is not to beg for them to open up their standard, but to create a better open standard backed by the community, one that is not layered in junk like the .doc standard is (why would you need to embed a video in a text document?). Then this standard could be supported by as many open source, and maybe even commercial projects as possible. With enough momentum we might be able to pull an adobe and create a format that is able to coexist popularly with the .doc format. It would be wonderful if MS would play nice; they don't have too, but we don't have to play their game either.

    1. Re:A better response to this by Bert64 · · Score: 5, Informative

      There is such a format, OpenDocument, it is supported by the upcoming openoffice 2.0 and the next version of staroffice and is listed on oasis-open.org, now if only other opensource apps would start to use it.. And perhaps commercial vendors like wordperfect and apple.

      --
      http://spamdecoy.net - free throwaway anonymous email - avoid spam!
    2. Re:A better response to this by jazman · · Score: 5, Interesting

      > why would you need to embed a video in a text document?

      Why not? The other way is to distribute a bunch of files and have references in the document like "play video 1 now". If you want to distribute a document that describes a series of video clips, embedding those videos in the document itself is seamless.

      Just because the OSS community doesn't consider it necessary doesn't mean it's a daft idea. Geeks are completely at home with receiving a bunch of files and playing them as prompted within a document, but the average PHB who can't tell one end of a mouse from the other isn't going to want to mess around like that or to spend more than a microsecond trying to figure out why one of the distributed videos won't play on his system. Geeks will spend hours messing with GSpot and downloading codecs, but PHBs aren't going to fanny around with all that geeky crap.

      Plus any boss who fiddles with Linux for a bit isn't going to take long before concluding Linux is retarded because you can't embed video in docs like you can in Word. Sorry, but you have to address "what the users want" and not just "what the geeks want" if Linux is to take over from Microsoft. Windows may be the biggest pile of bugs since a very big pile of bugs but apart from keeling over once in a while it does do what most people want.

    3. Re:A better response to this by Pecisk · · Score: 2, Informative

      Hmmmm, AFAIK OpenOffice Writer documents can contain Video, Adio and all other multimedia stuff.

      --
      user@ubuntubox:~$ stfu This server is going down for shutdown NOW!
    4. Re:A better response to this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      (why would you need to embed a video in a text document?)

      Because - contrary to popular belief - most people are stupid, and want to put everything into one file, rather than expect the people they are emailing a presentation etc to, to have to refer to other files. If you embed everything into the one file, sure, it might put on more weight than Oprah after a sad, lonely weekend with nothing but a freezer full of icecream, but it makes things *simpler* for the end user.

      You might know more about computers than everyone in the world combined (except for sysadmin type people), but remember - there are about 1,000,000,000 x more people who know SWEET FUCK ALL (except for how to start up their email, word, and the browser of their choice) about computers that use them daily and want simplicity/ease of use rather than having to make phonecalls to the bosses boss explaining how to unzip the attachment, read the .doc first, then open the avi to view something, and then view the pps to see what they've been doing for the past 6 weeks.

      get out of your shiny shiny perfect world, and realise people have to work with what they're given, which in 99.5% of cases, is to work with Windows, closed source material, and the IE/WMP/Office behemoth..

    5. Re:A better response to this by _undan · · Score: 1

      The way to beat them is not to beg for them to open up their standard, but to create a better open standard backed by the community

      YEAH! What a great idea!

      While we're at it, let's solve world peace! All we need to do is get all the world leaders to sit down and back an idea on how things could be made better...

    6. Re:A better response to this by Felinoid · · Score: 1

      The way to beat Microsoft is to convence companys to use better standards.
      Part of that requires making products that are backwards compatable and can use the companys exsisting files.
      However thies files ARE in Microsofts file formats.

      When we ask businesses to switch to products that can not read the files they already have we are also asking them to retype everything.

      The solution is to open microsoft file formats ourselfs with reverse engenearing.

      As for the liccensing of Microsoft XML. Asking Microsoft to actually open the format is a bit much to ask for. However hilighting the fact that it isn't open is not at all unreasonable.
      Liccensing the format is a farce. It's a way to fake being open and it's something that needs to be said loud and clear for everyone to hear. At least everyone who might think the file formats are open.

      --
      I don't actually exist.
    7. Re:A better response to this by 1u3hr · · Score: 0, Flamebait
      Plus any boss who fiddles with Linux for a bit isn't going to take long before concluding Linux is retarded because you can't embed video in docs like you can in Word.

      I think someone who embeds video in a Word file is retarded. Make an HTML file. Or Flash. Or whatever presentation format.

      Windows may be the biggest pile of bugs

      Because they keep using duct tape to add on inane features like embedded video (which will inevitably become a vector for spam and exploits). but PHBs aren't going to fanny around with all that geeky crap.

      Let them get a Mac. Thye can play whatever they want.

    8. Re:A better response to this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      I believe KOffice is going to support it, too. I'm not sure about AbiWord, though.

    9. Re:A better response to this by nmb3000 · · Score: 4, Funny

      While we're at it, let's solve world peace! All we need to do is get all the world leaders to sit down and back an idea on how things could be made better...

      Ok. I'll make a few phone calls and see what I can do.

      --
      "What do you despise? By this are you truly known." --Princess Irulan, Manual of Muad'Dib
      /)
    10. Re:A better response to this by nametaken · · Score: 1


      I think you're spot-on with the new, better format. On the other hand, apps like OOo HAVE to have good MS Office support for now. Yeah, .doc may blow, but we ARE playing their game, like it or not. And we're really not going to win people over by removing features, even if they do seem like goofy features.

    11. Re:A better response to this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I believe both AbiWord and KOffice are going to fully support OASIS.

    12. Re:A better response to this by the_unknown_soldier · · Score: 1

      With enough momentum we might be able to pull an adobe

      Thats genius. ADOBE! Why can't they create an editable document format. And make it open. This would mean adobe would be able to control a format without actually having to make an office suite. Adobe is the answer. They could take this over so easily.

    13. Re:A better response to this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I've come to the conclusion that 95% of the people read this thread and responding to it are drunk and most likely suffering from severe mental retardation. It's sort of like walking into an episode of the Twilight Zone, assuming they had done one about a world full of morons.

      The fact that the parent got modded anything but troll just drives that feeling home all the more.

    14. Re:A better response to this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Is a spell checker or typing lessons too much to ask for?

    15. Re:A better response to this by One+Childish+N00b · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I think the gist the grandparent was trying to get across is that it is supposed to be a static text document for printing out, etc - a purpose which makes things like embedded music, video, etc obviously pointless. What the GP failed to take into account, however, was the fact that the Word format, like so many others, MS or otherwise, has been extended to do things far outside the scope for which they were originally created.

      However, as Word is still primarily a letter- and other dead-tree-distribution tool, I do agree that it is a little silly to have embedded video, etc - The only reason we ever do it where I work is to sneak pr0n and music clips through the filters, which drop multimedia formats but let Word docs sail through. I've never seen anyone, geek or not, send me a Word document with an embedded video in for a purpose other than that - our PHB's are far more traditional, and do all their irritating all-singing, all-dancing multimedia eyesploder documents in PowerPoint anyway.

      --
      Dealing with lawyers would be a lot less tedious if they all looked like Casey Novak.
    16. Re:A better response to this by fishbowl · · Score: 2, Insightful

      "Plus any boss who fiddles with Linux for a bit isn't going to take long before concluding Linux is retarded because you can't embed video in docs like you can in Word."

      I don't understand how you get from "Linux", an Operating System, to "Word", an Application, and compare the two as if they are equivalent.

      But it's clear that you haven't even used OpenOffice, and probably have not even used a well-configured Linux system. Like anything else, it's a bitch to configure from scratch (a little easier than Windows XP, with the right distro), but once that's done, there's really very little in the application space that's not covered. Including "embedded media in documents".

      The things that are lacking, tend to be due to legal restrictions (such as certain unsupported media codecs, or DVD playback, or driver support for certain hardware). But plenty of stuff does work, and works well, for those who bother to use it.

      It's not clear to me why the "Average PHB" would be using a personal computer in the first place, much less running Linux (or even Windows, for that matter).

      --
      -fb Everything not expressly forbidden is now mandatory.
    17. Re:A better response to this by molnarcs · · Score: 5, Informative
      That's what is great about the new OpenOffice.org format. (trying to build it right now, fingers crossed). According to oo.o, it is not only supported by the community, but also the European Commission as well:

      Beginning with version 2.0 OpenOffice.org uses the open standard OASIS OpenDocument XML format as the default file format. The OASIS OpenDocument format is a vendor and implementation independent file format, and thus guarantees freedom and independence. In addition to OpenOffice.org itself, the open source office suite KOffice as well as OpenOffice.org derivatives like the StarOffice software support the OASIS OpenDocument file format. The OASIS OpenDocument file format is also one of the file formats recommended by the European Commision. oo.o-2.0 feature-guide

      Fileextensions:

      • OpenDocument Text [.odt]
      • OpenDocument Text [.odt]
      • OpenDocument Text Template [.ott]
      • OpenDocument Master Document [.odm]
      • OpenDocument Spreadsheet [.ods]
      • OpenDocument Spreadsheet Template [.ots]
      • OpenDocument Drawing [.odg]
      • OpenDocument Presentation [.odp]
      • OpenDocument Chart [.odc]
      • OpenDocument Database [.odb]

      I think that this standarization might help in persuading governments to choose this new format. Although not an office suite strictly speaking, I wonder about abiword's default file-format... Does/will it use this new standard as the default as well (seems to be a good idea).
    18. Re:A better response to this by 91degrees · · Score: 1

      I don't understand how you get from "Linux", an Operating System, to "Word", an Application, and compare the two as if they are equivalent.

      I don't understand it either. Nevertheless, I have had a conversation along the lines of, "What Word processor do you use?" "Windows 95".

      And any time the word processor screws up, my dad blames it on Windows. Most people don't grasp the difference between an OS and an application

    19. Re:A better response to this by master_p · · Score: 5, Insightful

      A printed document is a different thing than a Hypertext document. The grandparent post is right: there should be no need to embedd a video in a document that is to be printed, i.e. used as a book, as written documentation.

      On the other hand, you are also correct, but what you are referring to are not paper documents, but hypertext documents. Hypertext documents should be able to have anything in them, because their sole purpose is to pass information around through computers.

      The difference between paper and on-screen documents is what caused your disagreement. Software vendors like Microsoft have either failed to realise this difference, or they deliberately ignored it in order to lock-in their customers.

    20. Re:A better response to this by RoLi · · Score: 4, Informative
      KOffice has been part of the OASIS-group and was actively developing the standard. (and of course they support it)

      AFAIK there are talks about Abiword joining in, too.

      Anyway, KOffice doing OASIS is great because it's much less bloated than OO.

    21. Re:A better response to this by myspys · · Score: 1

      Geeks will spend hours messing with GSpot

      I guess that's the best thing you can play with if you can't play with a girls g-spot

    22. Re:A better response to this by oisteink · · Score: 1

      AFAIK there is no way of getting KOffice running on a windows box.
      That's why I stick to OO :P

    23. Re:A better response to this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Lock-in for office file formats and the office products are central to MS's revenue scheme

      Er ... yes ... that'll be why Office currently exports all its metadata into XML for you, just to make it really hard to figure out their closed formats.

      we don't have to play their game either

      Yes, and they don't have to play yours ...

      why would you need to embed a video in a text document?

      See, this is the sort of closed-minded thinking that ensures Microsoft will always win out. You want to create a rival format to .doc so your first proposal is to remove functionality. The reason you want to remove it is because - and this is classic OSS - you don't see the need for it. It's only dogma that tells you that a "text" format doesn't need support for video. You obviously don't see a hundred million different Word users with a hundred million different uses for Word. Instead you see a chance to push the UNIX philosophy down people's throats. This is classic flawed OSS thinking. You can't replace the .doc format until you understand what people use it for. This isn't Microsoft's game, this is the end-users' game, and you do have to play it, if you want to be taken seriously by end-users.

      Also, if you understand the basic design of Windows and COM, the question becomes not "why would you need to embed a video file in a text document" but "why would any sane developer want to prevent someone from doing that when a component-based architecture makes it so easy?"

    24. Re:A better response to this by m50d · · Score: 1

      Other open apps are using it. Koffice is switching to it as default with 1.4

      --
      I am trolling
    25. Re:A better response to this by Felinoid · · Score: 1

      I'm using Windows at the moment (At work).
      The spell checker is broken and only makes things worse.

      --
      I don't actually exist.
    26. Re:A better response to this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      yeah! you tell them to fall in step... after all people like you and M$ know better right? just remember that someday your kind of logic will be used to lull people and thier children to take the mark (666). why? because people shouldn`t be free to think and do things for themselves. you can`t have choices when your trying to control, (an os or people) besides "666" will be required by law and just think how simple it will be to use.....

    27. Re:A better response to this by Pete · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Not right now, no, but when Trolltech release Qt4 (later this year I think) it will be available under the GPL for Windows too. So we should have KDE4 (including KOffice) for Windows soon afterwards.

      Could be interesting. :)

    28. Re:A better response to this by JohnFluxx · · Score: 2, Informative

      I have also tried to persuade the gnumeric guys to support OASIS. The response was basically 'sure we'll export to it if someone codes it. It's up to the distro which format it will export to by default'.

    29. Re:A better response to this by MichaelSmith · · Score: 1
      why would you need to embed a video in a text document?

      Because managers love shallow, flashy stuff. So if you want to make a pitch, you need to put in something which will get their attention.

      It's not the kind of thing I would do by choice, but WP software is not really aimed at me.

    30. Re:A better response to this by AttilaSz · · Score: 1

      The sad truth is that it'll probably only catch on after Microsoft decides to support it in the next version of the Office.

      --
      Sig erased via substitution of an identical one.
    31. Re:A better response to this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Microsoft Word was originally intended, surprisingly enough, to be a word processor, not a multimedia authoring application.

      Many users actually just want to be able to write letters/reports/CVs/theses. In my experience it's only competent computer users who tend to embed external objects in a DOC file. So perhaps Microsoft should actually address "what the users want", and not merely insist on adding new extraneous features so as to justify the cost of the next edition of office.

    32. Re:A better response to this by DrSkwid · · Score: 1

      I think someone who embeds video in a Word file is retarded. Make an HTML file. Or Flash. Or whatever presentation format.

      Word *is* a presentation format.

      As is anything else that isn't plain text.

      --
      There are places where the networks are not touching,and there are places where they are-Boeing's Lori Gunter
    33. Re:A better response to this by erroneus · · Score: 1

      History teaches you nothing?

      Even if, by some miracle of end-user rennaissance, people gravitate to an open standard for information interchange, what is to stop Microsoft from playing their old "embrace and extend" tactic to, once again, attempt to lock out the world.

      Microsoft is frustrating the web development community by screwing with HTML standards by not correctly handling CSS which means people must write their code improperly to render on MSIE correctly since that's the majority market out there at the moment. Developers still have to play to the majority regardless of any technical, moral or ethical problems in their way.

      Could they spend some money to fix the impossible-to-correct CSS problem? Yes. Will they? No. It's not in their best interests.

    34. Re:A better response to this by MrMickS · · Score: 4, Insightful

      As a user why should I care about the difference? I'm making a document to send to someone, I should use a document editor. I don't care about what sort of document it is, I shouldn't need to know. I just create the document and distribute it in the most appropriate way. If its got video in then I know that it won't print very well but I understand that. Why should I have to create two types of document based on the distribution medium?

      --
      You may think me a tired, old, cynic. I'd have to disagree about the tired bit.
    35. Re:A better response to this by Dan+Ost · · Score: 1

      Microsoft is not required for the industry to form a consensus.

      Once that consensus is reached and broadly implemented, it will start showing
      up on things like procurment checklists used by government and big business.
      After that, MS has almost no choice in the matter. You think MS is happy about
      supporting PDFs?

      --

      *sigh* back to work...
    36. Re:A better response to this by redhog · · Score: 1

      But OpenOffice can't embed them :( Not properly, that is. Try to embed a vector graphics image in an OO doc. Try EPS, SVG or WMF/EMF, whichever you like, and you will fail anyway. Not totally, just enought not to make it usable (if you do it in one way, it will embed a pixmap rendition of the graphics, in another way it will embed the EPS comments as text).

      How come the CLI is so integration-friendly in linux, you can pipe anything through anything, but the GUI isn't (you can't copy-paste between anything and anything, and you can't have Mozilla render a part of your OO-doc and gnumeric another)?

      I'm a programmer. I hack python-code all day long and usually only use emacs, python, bash and tla. However, as soon as I try to do some graphics work (layout, producing some docs, whatever), I feel that this non-integration in Linux sucks. And I'm not a PHP or AD or anything like that!

      --
      --The knowledge that you are an idiot, is what distinguishes you from one.
    37. Re:A better response to this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      1. The sad truth is that it'll probably only catch on after Microsoft decides to support it in the next version of the Office.

      Microsoft WON'T support OpenDocument properly, if at all, because they won't benifit from acknowleding that the Oasis standard is viable. The shareholders would lynch them. MS did not do anything something similar with XML before for much the same reason.

      Yet, OpenDocument's main benifits stem from the fact that it's a standard that is both simple and widely adopted. The practical benifits are now that it's portable, manipulatable with a variety of simple tools and complex tool kits^, and is stable.

      Additionally, archiving documents over the span of decades is practical now -- be they official or personal. None of this is true with either Word or Excel doccuments. That's one reason people use scanned images of older Word documents as legal references, or use PDFs.

      (^. OpenDocument files are zip files containing raw XML. This means that simple OD files can be created or modified with just about any tool or toolkit that currently exists and any new ones developed specifically for OD's XML schema. Binary parts from other non-XML data structures -- example: non-XML image or video data -- can be embedded if absolutely necessary.)

    38. Re:A better response to this by browngb · · Score: 0

      This isn't working out well for HTML or CSS. Microsoft still butchers how it parses it, even though it's facing the best opposition it's had, Firefox. They've got so much in the bank, they're going to feel untouchable until someone topples them.

      --
      Generally, I get bored with my replies and give up on making sense halfway through.
    39. Re:A better response to this by Bastian · · Score: 1

      I think that, for some of us, it would help OO.o's native files weren't such bloat-monsters.

    40. Re:A better response to this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      Here is a book (dead tree with printing inside). Here is a DVD. Can you tell the difference now?

    41. Re:A better response to this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I strongly suggest hiring Competent PHB's.

      Just because american business is used to hiring incompetent boobs for managment, sales and other positions does not mean we need to pander to morons in software.

      how about looking for and hiring people with basic computer skills? It blows my mind the number of people with BS degrees and they can not master a task that most 9 year olds can.

      Tired of you edu-ma-cated morons that can not use a basic tool.

    42. Re:A better response to this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Are you serious? Have you never spoken to an IT illiterate? Unless computer programming is your education, hobby or job people just don't see the difference between a OS and a application.


      My old boss, bless him, was the worse kind of IT illiterate, the kind that thought they knew what they were doing. he didn't use a word processor he used Word. He didn't use a spreedsheet he used Excel. In the same way as he didn't use a vacuum cleaner he used a Hoover (even though it was a Dyson - don't ask, clean freak). Emails were accessed using Outlook in the same way as the internet WAS Internet Explorer.


      So one day we were on a long train trip and he fires up up my mac to try and read his emails. It went something like this:


      Boss: Where's the start button


      Me: There is no start button. This is a mac, just click on Safari, the compass on the bottom of the screen


      Boss: Safari? I want to use the internet. Where is explorer?


      Me: OK, OK, I don't use IE very often but I've got a copy hidden somewhere... OK here you go


      Boss: Hmmm. I think I'll wait till we get there


      So what does this prove? Even the semi-literate, and he was, he made a living using M$ products, are completly oblivious to the brain washing that MS does so well. And why not? They buy Dell becasue its the cheapest, and they've been told throughout the 90's, when they were learning 'computers' at Microsoft certified classes that Macs are rubbish and Linux is a toy. There was no alternative then, so there can't possibly be an alternative now.

      People won't download a reader for an open standard unless it is a distribution mechanism for porn or its already been installed through spyware or came pre-installed.

      People only use Office because it is all they know exists, hell, people freak when I send them a PDF!


    43. Re:A better response to this by AttilaSz · · Score: 1
      Microsoft is not required for the industry to form a consensus.

      True. I'm just sceptical about the wide spread of a new format (not supported by MS) among users as long as the majority of users equal "computer-prepared text document" with a Microsoft Word document.

      You think MS is happy about supporting PDFs?

      Certainly not. PDF is one of reasons living without MS Office is viable today - at least in my case. I myself use Open Office exclusively, and find that in majority of cases exporting to PDF when I need to share a document with someone is more than sufficient - except when I'd expect the receiving party to edit it, which I think happened exactly once since I stopped using MS Office (more than a year now). On that occasion, I did hit some problems with .doc export in Ooo (something to do with exported .doc not restarting numbering in the second numbered list and continuing the numbering of the previous one instead), but .rtf saved the day :-)

      --
      Sig erased via substitution of an identical one.
    44. Re:A better response to this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's very sad because it removes yet another incentive for people to migrate away from the proprietary heap of crap that is Macro$oft Windblows.

    45. Re:A better response to this by hazah · · Score: 1

      Screw your "leaders". I don't want to talk to them.

    46. Re:A better response to this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > why would you need to embed a video in a text document?

      Why not? The other way is to distribute a bunch of files and have references in the document like "play video 1 now". If you want to distribute a document that describes a series of video clips, embedding those videos in the document itself is seamless.


      It is therefore no longer a text document, but now becomes a multimedia file.

      While there may be cases when it is necessary to do this, please don't confuse the two concepts. I'm all for ''a picture (video?) is worth a thousand words'', but these are two different creatures IMHO.

    47. Re:A better response to this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting
      Here's my company's policy on Word docs. No, it's not a legal contract, but no one has sent us Word docs since.
      • The document contains no viruses or other malicious code. We understand that if it does we will be legally liable for damages.
      • The document is compatible with Word 98 (UK English edition) for Macintosh and has been tested as such.
      • The copy of Word(TM) used to create this Word(TM) document is legally liscenced.
      • None of the document data is confidential, including hidden information such as the author and revision history.
      • In the event of Word(TM) being withdrawn from the market for whatever reason, you the sender will convert all Word documents sent to an alternative format at your own expense.
    48. Re:A better response to this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, word is a presentation format. Just not an apropriate one for anything other than static content. I know it supports links and buttons and videos and whatnot, but it's a retarded plan that makes word a bad text editor and a bad layout tool and a bad presentation tool by trying to do too much.

    49. Re:A better response to this by civilizedINTENSITY · · Score: 3, Informative

      Why should I have to create two types of document based on the distribution medium?

      Interestingly enough, that requirement was a good chunck of my Organizational Theory/Behavior class last night. You always have to match the presentation of the message to the medium. A large part of the "barriers in formal communication" section of that lecture was about people with attitudes exactly as what you just expressed. Effective communication can mean just a timely text-based email. Or a 30 minute movie. It depends on who, and why, you are communicating. But awareness of the limitations of various media is always necessary. And sometimes, those limitations actually enhance the message by limiting noise.

    50. Re:A better response to this by Akoma+The+Immortal · · Score: 1

      Better yet. Let President Bush makes a few phone calls and see what happen. :)

      --
      assert(expired(knowldege)); core dump
    51. Re:A better response to this by pandrijeczko · · Score: 2, Interesting
      It's only dogma that tells you that a "text" format doesn't need support for video.

      Actually, it strike me as common sense.

      Firstly, how much of what Microsoft produces do you honestly believe is created because the users have demanded it? I'll tell you the answer, none of it.

      Since around Office 97, Microsoft has simply been adding features & formats to Office purely to create some justification to users to go spend more money on an upgrade - most users are too innocent & trusting to know what they want and probably around 90% of them use about 10% of Office's core features.

      Added to this, why in heck do we need another document format purely to embed video in it? Web developers already do that every day of their lives using HTML and embedding some Marcomedia Flash in it... talk about Microsoft re-inventing the wheel...

      Instead you see a chance to push the UNIX philosophy down people's throats. This is classic flawed OSS thinking.

      Actually, you're thinking is totally flawed. OSS does not equal UNIX; otherwise, please explain how come OpenOffice also runs on Windows?

      You can't replace the .doc format until you understand what people use it for.

      They use it because it's there. They do and use what Microsoft tells them to because they do not have any inkling about the ramifications of using a closed information format means to the distribution of information.

      "why would any sane developer want to prevent someone from doing that when a component-based architecture makes it so easy?"

      Yeah, and an open component-based architecture makes it easy for everyone, not just those who can afford to throw some money in Microsoft's direction.

      --
      Gentoo Linux - another day, another USE flag.
    52. Re:A better response to this by jbolden · · Score: 1

      Word today is a hypertext document format with very good export to print options.

    53. Re:A better response to this by Progman3K · · Score: 1

      >The way to beat them is not to beg for them to open up their standard, but to create a better open standard backed by the community

      Like MP3.
      While it is subject to some restrictions, the format IS open, so we see a lot more people encoding audio in MP3 than in .wma

      --
      I don't know the meaning of the word 'don't' - J
    54. Re:A better response to this by jbolden · · Score: 1

      Microsoft spent a fortune on OLE (object linking and embedding) technology in the early 90's. It was hard work which required innovation on Microsoft's part plus lots of coordination with other software companies. It was one of the drivers for companies to switch their code base from DOS based to Windows based to get the OLE features.

      If you load a Windows 3.1 with apps from that time period you actually had controls for OLE apps which were more direct (i.e. lots of OLE required user intervention) and by seeing an intermediate stage you can get a better idea of how complex this whole transition was.

      I don't see any reason to believe that Linux distributions can pull this sort of thing off, at least not until either:
      a) there is a great deal of desktop penetration and thus the money to pay for the project management required.
      b) Lots of experienced project managers are able to get involved in open source projects and have the ability to actually coordinate work in a meaningful way. (That is OpenSource moves to the Cathedral from the Bazaar)

      As an alternate example Apple has handled the same problem by standardizing formats at very low levels. So "quicktime" and "pdf" are part of the core libraries that all apps use. I can see GTK or QT going this route which gets KDE and GNOME there. But that still leaves a problem for important apps like Firefox and OpenOffice. X.org taking this role on might be possible but people might throw a fit if the X level had these weighty sorts of standards built-in.

    55. Re:A better response to this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The young woman writing the API -- is she single?

    56. Re:A better response to this by pointwood · · Score: 1

      Yes, OpenDocument is the new document format for KOffice, which is great. What good is a standard if only one application is using it?

    57. Re:A better response to this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, it would be silly to emebed a video in an exclusively print environment. However what you need to realize is that .doc is both screen and print media. Many, many people e-mail or groupware or windows shares to view .docs on screen. For this function, embedding video makes perfect sense.

    58. Re:A better response to this by 1u3hr · · Score: 2, Interesting
      >>I think someone who embeds video in a Word file is retarded. Make an HTML file. Or Flash. Or whatever presentation format.

      >Word *is* a presentation format.

      >As is anything else that isn't plain text.


      OK, strictly you're right. By "presentation format" I was thinking of something for making presentations; eg PowerPoint. Word (notice the name "WORD") can be used for lots of things, as you can drive a nail with any heavy object, but I think prinarly for creating printable documents. Movies aren't.


      But working in publishing as I do, I don't think of Word as a presentation format, but an authoring environment. Once the author is done with the text, I export it to marked up plain text and use a real DTP app to get ready for print. And often authors embed illustrations in Word; it's possible to extract them but often they're munged into uselessness and I have to get them separately. Embedding videos in Word strikes me as a stunt, perhaps a subterfuge to send porn, and a stupid way to lock up data in a weird format.

    59. Re:A better response to this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Like it or not, not everything can be simplified to the absolute least common denominator. All I want to do is drive from A to B. Why should I care about the difference between a manual and automatic transmission? Between the left side of the road and the right side? Between the accelerator pedal and the brake pedal?

      Guess what? There are some things you just have to learn in order to do a non-trivial task reasonably well. If you want to produce documents on a computer you may have to know the difference between a mouse and a keyboard, between a printer and a scanner, between a diskette drive and an optical drive, between an error dialog and a successful operation, and between some basic document types. That last requirement has been around since people first started using document formats other than plain text, and it's not going away any time soon. The fact that MS Office blurs the lines by letting you create a word-processing document with embedded video simply makes things more confusing for the users.

    60. Re:A better response to this by dtfinch · · Score: 1

      It goes beyond that.

      I've had this conversation about 5 times:
      "I saved a spreadsheet and I'm having trouble finding it to open on this other computer."
      Well, where did you save it to?
      "I saved it in Excel"
      Did you save it somewhere on the server?
      "I don't know. I saved it in Excel, wherever that goes."

    61. Re:A better response to this by ReelOddeeo · · Score: 1

      In what way are OOo's native documents bloated? My experience is that an equivalent document in OOo is way smaller than MS Office.

      --

      Those who would give up liberty in exchange for security and DRM should switch to Microsoft Palladium!
    62. Re:A better response to this by jtpalinmajere · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I think the problem here is not whether or not the OS community can come up with a 'better' document or a comprehensive office platform to create, edit, and view said documents, but whether the OS community can come up with ONE and ONLY ONE 'better' document.

      One of the recurring principles of the OS community holds them back in mainstream competition of 'universal formats'. The principle? Choice.

      The pattern is already evident in which text editor people consider to be the best for one reason or another, or Linux distro, or network sniffing tool... the list goes on and on. This is not to say that any of these tools are bad tools, but there's not a universal set of 'official' tools to use. The same could be said with the proposition of competing with MS file formats. I guarantee you that if anyone cited a specific file format as being a candidate for competing, there would be at least 5 other people representing significant populations of the OS community saying that their favorite file format would be a better candidate for X or Y reason.

      The bottom line is, who among the OS community is going to have the authority to decide which format will be the competing candidate? The instant such a person / body of people is determined they will have to put themselves in the same position that MS is in. Controlling the file format's capabilities, along with the capabilities of applications using said file format, would be a necessity in order for it to be a standard format and application. Sure it might be 'open-source' and open format, but without ONE tool that does it all on that ONE format... it simply won't compete.

      And lets not kid ourselves here. The vast majority of people who would like to compete with the MS formats would not be satisfied with simply coexisting with it at some level. It would have to be a near complete replacement of the format to be of any use. Why? The same reason that people have so many problems trying to communicate via docs nowadays. If there's two types of documents and person A uses doc X and person B uses doc Y and there's no real conversion between the two...

      No, it would have to be a landslide replacement of the format. Competing on the operating system level is a whole different ballgame than competing on the file format level. With an OpSys you can use it for countless things under countless configurations. With a file format you have but a single purpose... create a document to communicate to others with. There's not really room for 'multiple alternatives' here, especially because of the nature of a document. If the person you're trying to communicate with cannot read it, then the existence of such a document is moot.

      So then how do you go about doing this? Simple. Ignore its existence and create a file format and office suite that doesn't do any doc importing or exporting whatsoever. Then stop using Office altogether and request that employees who send you doc files to use X piece of software instead since you can't read what they gave you. And of course it would have to be a somewhat globally orchestrated effort. They'd all be pissed... and management especially, because these people don't like change being imposed on them even if it costs nothing.

      Which brings me to my final point? Who are we to impose change on everyone else simply because we thing our solution is better... even if it IS better? By doing so we become what we hate by doing what our enemy does, but at the opposite spectrum. And then once we've gained market dominance we begin to impose adherence to our standard just as MS currently does. Even if such software was 'free' we'd be charging people their soul just as MS does now.

      Let's face it. The very principles that define who we are prevent us from succeeding at such an effort. To do so would be paradox.

    63. Re:A better response to this by fishbowl · · Score: 1

      Seems like someone this dumb would have the kind of weakness that you should be able to exploit. You're smarter, right? Then are you smart enough to find a way to make it so this guy is no longer the boss (e.g., you become the boss?)

      I always wonder why people low on the org chart claim to be superior to those above them, yet they never seem to be able to exploit this in any way that translates to career development.

      I really do hear a lot about how someone's boss is an idiot. But I never hear about how the used their superior intelligence to rise above. It's always a complaint of some low level IT or administrative worker, and never a senior vice president or director telling about how their boss was so dumb, but they were so smart, and that's how they got where they are today...

      Why is that?

      --
      -fb Everything not expressly forbidden is now mandatory.
    64. Re:A better response to this by DrSkwid · · Score: 1

      =)

      I didn't say it was a *good* presentation format

      I had clients send me graphics for websites embedded in word documents, sometimes even as WordArt, which isn't fun.

      --
      There are places where the networks are not touching,and there are places where they are-Boeing's Lori Gunter
    65. Re:A better response to this by x_codingmonkey_x · · Score: 0

      Interestingly enough Microsoft sponsors OASIS... could this mean that Office will incorperate these standards as well? Or is it just for PR so they can say, "we also sponsor them but don't really support their format."

    66. Re:A better response to this by Queer+Boy · · Score: 1

      As a designer why should I care about the difference? I'm making a clothing for people to wear, I should use fabric and a sewing machine. I don't care about what sort of fabric it is, I shouldn't need to know. I just create the clothing and distribute it in the most appropriate way. If its got wool in then I know that it won't sell very well in Florida but I understand that. Why should I have to create two types of clothing based on the climate?

      --
      Not since Marie-Antoinette played milkmaid has looking simple and honest been so fake and complicated.
    67. Re:A better response to this by Queer+Boy · · Score: 1

      Um, why are we using dot 3 file extensions?

      --
      Not since Marie-Antoinette played milkmaid has looking simple and honest been so fake and complicated.
    68. Re:A better response to this by Joe+Tie. · · Score: 1

      You're smarter, right? Then are you smart enough to find a way to make it so this guy is no longer the boss (e.g., you become the boss?)

      Wild guess, but they might not want to be the boss. Longer hours, more responsibility, giving up coding for filling out forms and talking on the phone all day. I could see why someone would prefer to not make that kind of leap, especially if they were somewhat anti-social to begin with.

      --
      Everything will be taken away from you.
    69. Re:A better response to this by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      There's no reason a document with video clips in it shouldn't print well; video clips really ought to have a still image associated with them somewhere that is used when a still representation is called for. I favor a frame number, or other offset, to do this job.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    70. Re:A better response to this by _Sprocket_ · · Score: 1
      GREAT reply.

      Here's another angle. Many readers should already be familiar with the CAIB Report. And those readers may even be familiar with the Report's dismay concerning the over-use of Powerpoint at NASA:

      At many points during its investigation, the Board was sur-
      prised to receive similar presentation slides from NASA offi-
      cials in place of technical reports. The Board views the endemic
      use of PowerPoint briefing slides instead of technical papers as
      an illustration of the problematic methods of technical com-
      munication at NASA.

      The point is that not every tool is well suited for every situation. And, in fact, there are times when trying to do this has ultimately dire consequences.
    71. Re:A better response to this by nzkbuk · · Score: 1

      Then this standard could be supported by as many open source, and maybe even commercial projects as possible.
      You mean like HTML, Java etc ?

      It would be wonderful if MS would play nice; they don't have too, but we don't have to play their game either.

      You're joking right ? M$ Playing nice ? You mean how they played nice with HTML or Java ?
      Sorry I can't think of any other examples off the top of my head where they didn't their embrace & extend to forcefully push out competition. With the above two they are argueably more subtle

    72. Re:A better response to this by Bert64 · · Score: 1

      Not atall, migrations come in small steps.. If all the apps people run on windows can also be used on other platforms, then the next time they come to upgrade their machine there is very little incentive for them to buy another copy of windows when they can obtain linux or bsd for free and run the same apps.

      --
      http://spamdecoy.net - free throwaway anonymous email - avoid spam!
  6. Swat Team. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Why should I have to sign an agreement?" one audience member demanded to know."

    Because you made a previous decision that presently has unforseen consequences.

  7. Too True by rathehun · · Score: 4, Insightful
    He said open and proprietary standards could co-exist, arguing Microsoft promoted common development of standards by sitting on all of the representative bodies working on them.


    And opposing every one of them? This is like the US saying that it "protects everybodys interests by sitting on the UN" - and then using its veto for say - The International Criminal Court.


    Just too scary.

    1. Re:Too True by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is like the US saying that it "protects everybodys interests by sitting on the UN" - and then using its veto for say - The International Criminal Court.

      Nonono. The US protects everybody's interests by shitting on the UN.

      For values of "everybody" that are restricted to the US military.

    2. Re:Too True by dcw3 · · Score: 1, Insightful

      This is like the US saying that it "protects everybodys interests by sitting on the UN" - and then using its veto for say - The International Criminal Court.

      At the risk of being off-topic, like you, I'm afraid I'm about to feed a troll, but here goes...

      Would it be agreeable to you to allow citizens of (insert your country here) to be extradited for trial by a court run by the UN? The same organization that brought us the oil for food scandal? The same organization that put Libya on the human rights board? At times when nations are feuding with each other, what do you think your chances would be if you got stuck with a judge from the other side?

      Maybe someday when we all live in your version of Utopia we could have a successful international criminal court...I won't hold my breath.

      --
      Just another day in Paradise
    3. Re:Too True by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Short answer: Yes

    4. Re:Too True by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I want to kill Microsoft. Kill him. And then eat him.

    5. Re:Too True by EdmundSS · · Score: 3, Interesting
      Of course you're feeding a troll, with a further troll (as I am, I guess).

      extradited for trial by a court run by the UN? Yes. If the US is so confident that its citizens' actions are justifiable, then let them be judged by international law. Refusal is just cowardice.

      Oil for Food scandal? ... was the result of inadequately policed sanctions and corruption (allegedly involving US citizens among others). Sure the UN is responsible, in the same way a CEO is. But it is not an "organisation that brought us the ... scandal".

      put Libya on the human rights board? This, alas, was the democratic vote of the countries involved. Democracy doesn't always deliver the result you/I want. Consider (depending on your POV) a) Bill Clinton; and b) George W Bush.

      stuck with a judge from the other side? So you don't believe judges try to be impartial then?

      Edmund.
      (Mark me as troll/off-topic if you must.)

    6. Re:Too True by FooAtWFU · · Score: 0

      And even if it weren't a project of the United Nations, the ICC as it stands is a horribly bad idea, and ultimately unconstitutional: in the US, the Supreme Court is the highest court in the land (this would change it) and the ICC doesn't even begin to have provisions to deal with, say, the Bill of Rights, and the like. It's not too hard to Google for this sort of information. Wikipedia may be a decent starting point.

      --
      The World Wide Web is dying. Soon, we shall have only the Internet.
    7. Re:Too True by geoswan · · Score: 2, Informative
      Would it be agreeable to you to allow citizens of (insert your country here) to be extradited for trial by a court run by the UN? The same organization that brought us the oil for food scandal? The same organization that put Libya on the human rights board? At times when nations are feuding with each other, what do you think your chances would be if you got stuck with a judge from the other side?

      Citizens of various countries were kidnapped, in the middle of the night and shipped to Guantanamo Bay, where they were held, without trial, without being charged, without even being permitted to learn what, if any, evidence there was against them. Let me suggest that this US policy is more antidemocratic, more contrary to the principles of fundamental justice, and more to be feared than your hypothetical UN extradition strawman, where, at least, the prisoners would have charges laid against them, would be free from the fear of torture, and could expect a reasonably fair trial, where they could actually hear the evidence against them.

      Did the UN system allow Saddam, and collaborators in other nations to loot the oil for food funds? Yes. The USA is one of the five permanet members of the UN Security Council. So, why doesn't the USA share some of the responsibility for this scandal?

      The CPA took over the administration of the remaining $20 billion in May of 2003. Was Iraqi money looted during Paul Bremer's stewardship? Yes. Billions went missing. He blew through almost all of the Iraqi money in not much longer than a year, with very poor audit controls. Billions were expended with no sign that the expenditure was actually spent on anything that benefitted Iraqis. On a year by year basis a greater portion of the funds can't be accounted for when it was under Paul Bremer's stewardship than when it was under the UN stewardship.

      Yes, I know this is "off-topic". It is worth losing some karma to challenge the flawed reasoning of the parent post -- which, moderators, is just as off-topic.

    8. Re:Too True by dcw3 · · Score: 1

      As a life long conservative, you might find it hard to believe that I'm in full agreement with you regarding Guantanamo...one of the dumbest ideas ever! That said, it has nothing to do with my point about and ICC being another stupid idea.

      There are many issues to resolve if you really want an ICC. Could any country demand that you be extradited for trial? How do you ensure that you've got impartial judges...example: certainly you wouldn't want a South Korean brought before a North Korean judge. Would there be an international Bill of Rights? When UN troops (read US forces) are used as peacekeepers in a somewhat hostile location, how do you prevent situations where locals bring up false charges against them? Will we all need to be extra careful not to upset someone while overseas on vacation, only to come home and find the UN police knocking down our doors? Will we need yet another layer of blood sucking lawyers for this?

      --
      Just another day in Paradise
  8. big blunder man... by William+Robinson · · Score: 2, Funny

    No use being Anonymous Coward. You used IE, and they know it now.

  9. Open enough meaning by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

    You'll still be completely and totally unable to use Word files in non-Microsoft applications, except in a buggy and incomplete reverse engineered form.

    But that's open enough to suit Microsoft perfectly fine.

    1. Re:Open enough meaning by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So how is that different to the experience on a Win machine?

  10. That's their decision by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful
    'Why should I have to sign an agreement?' one audience member demanded to know.

    Because you want something that they have. They developed the file formats, so they own the intellectual property. If you want them to spell out how they work for you, you'll have to play by their rules. If you don't like that, that's fine too. You don't have to know now their file formats work to use their product, and when it comes down to it you don't even have to use their product.

    This seems to me a lot like the BitKeeper debacle. It's all about contracts: the people who have something of value get to dictate the terms of the contract. No matter how much you complain about it and say "but file formats should be free!", that's not going to change.

    1. Re:That's their decision by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wow! somebody with a reasonable arguement on slashdot. Indeed, it is their format, why should they have to open it up to anybody?

      But the government / my work place releases office files I hear you say? Well, you need to convince them to change their formats, because trying to convince Microsoft to give away their IP for free is NOT going to work.

    2. Re:That's their decision by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Of course it's their decision, nobody is disputing this. However, that doesn't mean that people shouldn't be able to criticize this decision and think that it's wrong, does it?

      "You don't have to know now their file formats work to use their product..."
      The issue is with people not wanting to use their product, so what's your point here?

      "...and when it comes down to it you don't even have to use their product."
      But that's the problem, isn't it. As MS has a quasi monopoly and the MS format is a quasi standard, using an other product that isn't able to handle doc files isn't feasible. See and that's exactly the issue and this is exactly the point where MS behavior might once again get them into legal trouble for abusing their monopoly.

      After all both the EU and the US justice department demanded from MS to open up specs for their products, so it might not be entirely their decision as you claim.

      Finally, MS having the right to do so (untill being force by law enforcement once again to change their ways) doesn't mean that what MS does is the right thing to do.

      Above all, it means that all those people urging governments, companies and their friends not to use MS products have good arguments supporting their stance. However, I somehow get the feeling you would be the first to lable these people zealots, wouldn't you?

    3. Re:That's their decision by mcc · · Score: 5, Insightful

      They developed the file formats, so they own the intellectual property.

      Of course, after they developed the file formats they violated United States antitrust law and were found guilty, and in lieu of sentencing agreed to a settlement which (in spirit, even if it contains many loopholes in letter) stipulated they must open up for use by the public the file formats, APIs, etc, which they own.

      But, y'know, little niggling details.

    4. Re:That's their decision by 1u3hr · · Score: 4, Insightful
      Because you want something that they have. They developed the file formats, so they own the intellectual property. If you want them to spell out how they work for you, you'll have to play by their rules. If you don't like that, that's fine too.

      This is in the context of governments storing data in proprietary formats. The public information would then be available only to those who use MS software or signed such an agrement with them. That's the objection. The "something they have" is the information that you have a right to already, but can't use without MS's permission.

    5. Re:That's their decision by ShieldW0lf · · Score: 1

      Or the government could just, oh, get rid of IP and be done with it?

      --
      -1 Uncomfortable Truth
    6. Re:That's their decision by ShieldW0lf · · Score: 1

      Mod this guy up. That "insightful" coward needs rebutting.

      --
      -1 Uncomfortable Truth
    7. Re:That's their decision by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      It's all about contracts: the people who have something of value get to dictate the terms of the contract

      The question is how far this freedom of contract goes. I know that at least here (in Germany) there are limits to what you can ask for. If some company asked me for example to sign me into servitude (gross exaggeration intended) for using their product, I could sign this contract use their product, and still don't worry about becoming unfree.

      So the question remains: Should companies be allowd to lock away your Data?
      I think they don't.
      It's simply a matter of two conflicting Rights, my right to (freely) access my data, and the company's right to lock away their file format.
      Thats when laws need to dicide which right is more important for "the society".
      In this case most Countries seem to think that free data is more important than free contracts.

    8. Re:That's their decision by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      File format is not 'intellectual property'.

    9. Re:That's their decision by Raphael · · Score: 2, Informative
      If you want them to spell out how they work for you, you'll have to play by their rules. If you don't like that, that's fine too. You don't have to know now their file formats work to use their product, and when it comes down to it you don't even have to use their product.

      I don't think that the problem is really about understanding how these file formats work. The old .doc format has been reverse-engineered successfully (including features that were not documented by Microsoft) and most parts of the new Office XML format are trivial to understand.

      The problem is that XML uses schemas for defining how the data is stored in the document (data types, structure, etc.) and for telling the parsers how the documents can be validated and processed. By not allowing free distribution of this information, Microsoft is making it very difficult for other tools to process the Office XML documents. All Office XML documents contain direct references (URIs) to this information. So regardless of whether the developers of the other tools understand the file formats or not, their tools cannot process the XML documents in the "right" way because the schemas are not available freely.

      --
      -Raphaël
    10. Re:That's their decision by utexaspunk · · Score: 1

      maybe the truth is that MS has no idea how Office works themselves anymore. It started off simple enough, but by the millionth patch, added feature, etc, there are lines in there that nobody knows what they do, and they dare not remove...

      at least, that's how my programs usually work ;)

    11. Re:That's their decision by ryanvm · · Score: 1

      That's an excellent point, but in that case your objection should fall on the government that decided to store everything in MS formats.

    12. Re:That's their decision by clontzman · · Score: 1

      Speaking of niggling details, I don't see anything here that says anything about Office file formats.

    13. Re:That's their decision by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They developed the file formats, so they own the intellectual property.

      Which intellectual property would that be? Copyright? Patent? Trademark?

      Please don't use bullshit, vague terms like "intellectual property".

      You don't have to know now their file formats work to use their product, and when it comes down to it you don't even have to use their product.

      If nobody can understand the format but Microsoft, you need to use Microsoft's software to use documents in that format. There are loads of people that need to use documents in that format, therefore there are loads of people that have no choice but to use Microsoft software, as long as the format remains proprietary.

    14. Re:That's their decision by 1u3hr · · Score: 1
      hat's an excellent point, but in that case your objection should fall on the government that decided to store everything in MS formats.

      Yes; but MS is claiming that its format is "open", which is a false representation that maybe the govt fell for.

    15. Re:That's their decision by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why should the government sign an agreement when they have something MS wants (their money)?

      If the document format is copyrighted, then the document (to which you own copyright) is a derivative work. Obviously, MS do not say "all your doc belong to us".

      So the format isn't copyrighted.

      If there are patents, then where are they? Are they specced to accord with the reason for a patent (i.e. to use the patented tech when patents are exhausted)? Nope.

      So the format isn't patented.

      So it must be a trade secret.

      However, if the trade secret is let out, it has lost its' secret status. If a crime or civil infraction has been committed in doing so, then the one responsible for that breech is possibly in trouble, but anyone can use it.

      So lets see if the trade secret is kept locked up tight. If not, we're in the clear.

    16. Re:That's their decision by Great_Jehovah · · Score: 1

      Because you want something that they have. They developed the file formats, so they own the intellectual property. If you want them to spell out how they work for you, you'll have to play by their rules. If you don't like that, that's fine too. You don't have to know now their file formats work to use their product, and when it comes down to it you don't even have to use their product.

      It's not that simple. The issue here is that they want their product and format to be considered "open enough". If they make you sign a license first, then it is not open enough.

    17. Re:That's their decision by David+Rolfe · · Score: 1
      I agree with the sentiment ... but I guess file formats is what you would consider a 'loophole'. The MSIE remedy includes opening of APIs and protocols for interop, but makes no mention of file formats. We'll have to wait for the MS Office lawsuit for that...

      (as a sibling points out)
      D. Starting at the earlier of the release of Service Pack 1 for Windows XP or 12 months after the submission of this Final Judgment to the Court, Microsoft shall disclose to ISVs, IHVs, IAPs, ICPs, and OEMs, for the sole purpose of interoperating with a Windows Operating System Product, via the Microsoft Developer Network ("MSDN") or similar mechanisms, the APIs and related Documentation that are used by Microsoft Middleware to interoperate with a Windows Operating System Product. In the case of a new major version of Microsoft Middleware, the disclosures required by this Section III.D shall occur no later than the last major beta test release of that Microsoft Middleware. In the case of a new version of a Windows Operating System Product, the obligations imposed by this Section III.D shall occur in a Timely Manner.

      E. Starting nine months after the submission of this proposed Final Judgment to the Court, Microsoft shall make available for use by third parties, for the sole purpose of interoperating with a Windows Operating System Product, on reasonable and non-discriminatory terms (consistent with Section III.I), any Communications Protocol that is, on or after the date this Final Judgment is submitted to the Court, (i) implemented in a Windows Operating System Product installed on a client computer, and (ii) used to interoperate natively (i.e., without the addition of software code to the client operating system product) with a Microsoft server operating system product.
      --
      Read Heinlein's 1953 Revolt in 2100, now more than ever.
  11. Agreement by JanusFury · · Score: 3, Insightful

    However, he stood firm on the company's policy of making the XML schemas for its Office 2003 document standard publicly available provided interested parties sign an agreement with the software heavyweight. "Why should I have to sign an agreement?" one audience member demanded to know.

    Isn't this basically the same as me agreeing to the terms of the GPL when I download GPLed source for a library or app that manipulates some open source document format? The only real difference is the terms of the agreement.

    --
    using namespace slashdot;
    troll::post();
    1. Re:Agreement by mcc · · Score: 2, Informative

      No.

      A legally binding contractual agreement which you must sign in order to read a document and which restricts both your behavior and what you may do with the information contained in the document is in no way similar to a license attached to a document which says "if you wish to make copies of this document and distribute them to others you must satisfy certain conditions, if you cannot meet these conditions then do not redistribute this document".

      Similarly signing an employment contract with the company you work for is not "basically the same" as the "All rights reserved." notice printed on a compact disc you buy.

      Have a nice day.

    2. Re:Agreement by Loonacy · · Score: 1

      No. If someone sends you a file encoded with MS' proprietary XML format, you shouldn't have to agree to anything just to be able to read it.

    3. Re:Agreement by JanusFury · · Score: 1

      If I use code that's licensed under the GPL, I have to agree to the terms of the GPL, yes?

      And if I violate the GPL, I lose the right to use that work under the license, yes?

      --
      using namespace slashdot;
      troll::post();
    4. Re:Agreement by lachlan76 · · Score: 1

      Isn't this basically the same as me agreeing to the terms of the GPL when I download GPLed source for a library or app that manipulates some open source document format?

      No. The schema is more of a form of documentation that a library.

      The scheme says what each tag does...GPL doesn't prevent you from reading the schema and using that to make your own reader. But you can bet that Microsoft's license will.

    5. Re:Agreement by Sircus · · Score: 2, Informative

      Define "use". If you use the code internally in your company, you can do what you want with it, including combining it with proprietary code, making changes that you don't distribute, etc. Only once you distribute the code to someone else do you have to abide by the GPL's provisions that said someone else has a right to get a copy of the source (including your modifications).

      --
      PenguiNet: the (shareware) Windows SSH client
    6. Re:Agreement by mcc · · Score: 5, Insightful
      If I use code that's licensed under the GPL, I have to agree to the terms of the GPL, yes?

      No.

      From the GPL:
      Activities other than copying, distribution and modification are not covered by this License; they are outside its scope.
      If by "use" you mean "redistribute" then things are more complex, but since at the moment you are trying to compare the GPL to a contract which must be signed in order merely to read a certain document, there does not seem to be any reason to focus on redistribution unless you are trying to change the subject and/or create an aimless flamewar.
    7. Re:Agreement by dossen · · Score: 2, Informative

      Well, AFAIK you do not have to agree to the GPL to _download_ and _use_ Free software. The GPL is a copyright license, which provides you with the right to distribute the software. Assume that I sell or give you a GPL'ed program (and that I include the source and the license) - you are now in possesion of a legal licensed copy of the program, which you may install and use on your computer as much as you like (copyright/fair use allows the internal copying needed to use the software). If you choose to accept the GPL, you are granted additional rights, above and beyond what copyright/fair use gives you, to copy, distribute, and modify the program, as long as you distribute under the terms of the GPL. If you don't believe me, check the GPL (http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/gpl.html) yourself. Term 0 spells out what activities are governed by the GPL.

    8. Re:Agreement by strider44 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      In addition, the GPL is only under distribution. You can use the software in whatever way you like, but if you distribute it then you have to agree to the terms under the GPL.

      However the Microsoft agreement is not similar to the GPL in any way since you are just licensing the documentation of the format under the terms that you pay Microsoft money, you don't distribute it and you don't use it in any open source projects. You also have to give Microsoft privelages to your software including auditing, create your own implimentation, and agree to put all the proposed "features" in your software (i.e. DRM and palladium) and add new features if Microsoft decides to impliment them. To even read or use the documentation you have to agree to their license.

    9. Re:Agreement by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "The only real difference is the terms of the agreement."

      Did you give the FSF your name and address and agree to let them destroy your career if you work on a competing product?

    10. Re:Agreement by fishbowl · · Score: 2, Insightful


      >Similarly signing an employment contract with the
      >company you work for is not "basically the same" as
      >the "All rights reserved." notice printed on a
      >compact disc you buy.

      Being rejected by a potential employer because you are too great a risk, having the conflicts of interest that come from signing agreements with competitors, comes to mind as a possible reason to want to avoid signing any NDA or certain kinds of licenses.

      --
      -fb Everything not expressly forbidden is now mandatory.
    11. Re:Agreement by fishbowl · · Score: 1


      "If I use code that's licensed under the GPL, I have to agree to the terms of the GPL, yes?"

      No. And this is probably the most common, and most * *complete* misconception about the GPL. It requires nothing of the sort. An end-user does not need to agree with the GPL at all. Only a distributor, or anyone who distributes a modified copy, needs to even be *aware* of the GPL.

      It is absolutely irrelevant to *use*, which, if you bothered to read the very concise, very clear, plain-English, common-sense GPL, you would know.

      --
      -fb Everything not expressly forbidden is now mandatory.
  12. MS Half truths by Neo-Rio-101 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    While Microsoft is not going to fool a group of ol' beardy UNIX gurus, it can still fool the general public who aren't in key with how MS operates.

    "Open Source" has become a bit of a buzzword these days. I figure that Microsoft reckons that it can ride on the open source wave by twisting the meaning to it's own benefit. Not too unlike their so-called "Open Licensing" or whatever-it-was initiative.

    No MS. You can say it as many times as you like, but until you release Windows under an open source licence you will never be truly open. Charging money to see source code is not "open source".... so no, you can't play in our sandpit.

    --
    READY.
    PRINT ""+-0
    1. Re:MS Half truths by Kremmy · · Score: 1

      That would be the Shared Source Initiative, but just look at the stink they made when that partial leak of the Windows 2000 source got out.

    2. Re:MS Half truths by smallguy78 · · Score: 1

      The argument with Microsoft and open source always returns to Microsoft open sourcing the Windows code. I'd love to hear a strong argument or business case for why they would ever do this. I'm not being cynical, I would be interested..

      When a security scare occurs with OS X, does the community suddenly leap into action, fixing the problem for Apple?

      --
      Nothing costs nothing
    3. Re:MS Half truths by nmb3000 · · Score: 1

      Actually Open Licenses are both nice to have and have a name that makes sense. It also had nothing to do with open source or IP.

      It basically said: You have a single product ID. It's valid for a minimum of 5 licenses for the Product. If you want to add more licenses at any time, in any amount, just pay us and we'll upgrade that same product key. No more managing 25,000 different licenses and product keys.

      Very nice for corporations and whatnot. The Software Assurance part is pretty good too if you get it at the right time.

      --
      "What do you despise? By this are you truly known." --Princess Irulan, Manual of Muad'Dib
      /)
    4. Re:MS Half truths by ShieldW0lf · · Score: 1

      What the hell are you going on about? OSX isn't open source either.

      --
      -1 Uncomfortable Truth
    5. Re:MS Half truths by CliffH · · Score: 1

      Ok, time to burn some karma. This will be redundant, inflammatory, and a general rant. As has been said, it is MS's property. They created it. You know, it would be WONDERFUL if they opened the source to Windows (XP, 2000, 2003). Maybe with even more critical eyes they can clean up some of the code and clean up some of the security (without the marketting beauracracy holding it back). But, you know what? It's NOT GOING TO HAPPEN!!!! Why on EARTH would they open up Windows? Why would they open up Office? Opening CIFS/SMB? That would do worlds of good but again, why would they? Now, opening up IE would be a major coup and would probably win some added seats for them. Not that they are necessarily hurting now, but it would/could open up huge doors for them on alternative operating systems. Opening up DirectX. That would be good as well, although not for them. All I'm trying to say is, they will never, EVER open up anything that is anywhere near a money maker for them, especially their two flagship products.

      --
      sigs are like a box of chocolates, they all suck remove the underscores to email me
    6. Re:MS Half truths by Nichotin · · Score: 1

      Yes. You are right. Shared Source works extremely well on those that think seeing the source == security.

    7. Re:MS Half truths by onosendai · · Score: 1

      What the hell are you going on about. A large proportion of OS X is open source.

      --
      <? include ('signature.inc'); ?>
    8. Re:MS Half truths by Felinoid · · Score: 1

      They don't want to play in our sandpit.
      They just want to take the standpit away from us.

      Microsoft may get the most attention for it but honnestly they aren't the only ones trying.

      Remember Epyx Rogue? Epyx basicly took the Unix Rogue from public domain and made a commertal product compleate with copyrite.

      Remember SCO?

      The Linux trademark scam?

      Bottom line some commertal software entitys fear free software.

      Netscape discontinued Netscape for OS/2 becouse IBM started pacaging a free web browser for OS/2. Netscape basicly admitted they could not compeate with a free web browser.

      Some new users are picking portable office bundles instead of Microsoft office to avoid being locked into Microsofts product line.
      If Microsoft can convince nieve new users they won't be locked in they'll go ahead and use MS Office only to find themselfs locked in.
      It's called bait and switch. It's been done before.

      --
      I don't actually exist.
    9. Re:MS Half truths by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Charging money to see source code is not "open source"....


      Why not? With the gpl, you can still charge for the source as long as anyone who buys binaries also gets it. You just can't tell them not to resell it or give it away.
    10. Re:MS Half truths by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Eejit. Microsoft aren't trying to "fool the general public". That's just OSS paranoia. Microsoft want buyers to appreciate that the .doc format is more open today than it ever has been, to the extent you can get its specs if you want them. They want buyers to continue buying 1000s of copies of Office. They couldn't care less about you, the bearded UNIX gurus or anyone else not involved in decisions to buy Office.

      It's pathetic that OSS zealots think the word "open" is their "sandpit". What are you going to do, fucking trademark it?

    11. Re:MS Half truths by cujo_1111 · · Score: 1

      You go girl!

      --
      If I point out that you are incorrect, making me a foe does not make you any more correct.
    12. Re:MS Half truths by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      When you have to deal with a lawyer - it is not open at all - as they say you are spreading your legs to take it in the...

    13. Re:MS Half truths by sydb · · Score: 1

      Yes, shackles are very nice, compared to thumb screws.

      --
      Yours Sincerely, Michael.
    14. Re:MS Half truths by rtb61 · · Score: 1
      What I want is Microsoft to be open with the truth about their business practices and the true quality of their software. Of course with a company like Microsoft who has built it's whole business enterprise on marketing and treating it products like some crap pop album (who cares about quality as long as it sells), the only way this would happen would be through an extensive discovery process and a major court case.

      As for the public beaing unaware, I think the latest announcement about a major advertising campaign by microsoft for an existing product indicates the opposite (the general public is becoming aware of Microsoft failings which is why M$ is spending the money in an attempt to convince them black is white).

      The reality is windows and Microsoft have reached their use by date and panicky actions like this are just prime indications of it.

      --
      Chaos - everything, everywhere, everywhen
    15. Re:MS Half truths by SComps · · Score: 1

      >Charging money to see source code is not "open source".... so no, you can't play in our sandpit.

      At the risk of starting yet another flame war... If your sandpit means I have to give away stuff I've worked to produce, build or otherwise create (unless I choose to); I'll go find another sandpit--if I choose to give it away, i may find another sandpit just because I don't like the "all or nothing" approach of yours.

      I don't see any reference (by MS) in the article about open source, or even open *anything*. The article said that the information was publically available. Ok, so you have to sign an agreement. Available does not mean it has to be flapping in the breeze like a big flag that anyone can come and walk off with whenever they want, however they want. As near as I can figure that means they're playing in a different sandpit. Big deal. I didn't see much in the article that even indicated that anyone from MS was standing at the border of your sandpit crying with a bucket in their hand.

      They've got their own sandpit. It's a big one and lots of people are signing a piece of paper to have a look at their toys.

      Ok, enough with the playground references.

      MS isn't making the format open; they're making it available. That's not the same thing. It's available... with restrictions and since they made it (defined it?), they can restrict it.

      DISCLAIMER: I'm not a MS lackey. I use 80% *nix systems, however I am an admin and developer in an MS shop so I have to live in both worlds. They both have a place and they both have shining stars shimmering over stinky cesspools.

  13. Re:Thank you, sir. May I have another? by Kremmy · · Score: 1

    Given the current state of this vast intar-web, I'm inclined to think that not having web/html like we have today isn't necessarily a bad thing.

  14. Open source is Evil! by aitio · · Score: 2, Funny

    Ask Linus. Proprietary is the way to go.

    And you all knew this was coming.

    --
    Quidquid latine dictum sit, altum sonatur.
    1. Re:Open source is Evil! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

      He didn't say it was the way to go. In fact, quite teh opposite, he advocated alternative open source software. What he said was that he didn't advocate reverse engineering closed source software. He went on to say that a company has a reason for closing the software down and it's no right to crack it just because we can. But he certainly never said he was in support of closed source software.

    2. Re:Open source is Evil! by killjoe · · Score: 1

      "What he said was that he didn't advocate reverse engineering closed source software"

      You say that as if it was a mitigating factor. It's a despicable statement to make by a prominent (if not the most prominent) open source developer.

      Now every single prorietary software maker will use his words to lobby to make reverse engineering illegal in the US.

      Linus really screwed over the open source with that bit of irresponsible hissy fit he threw.

      "But he certainly never said he was in support of closed source software."

      He only handed them ammunition to kill samba that's all.

      --
      evil is as evil does
    3. Re:Open source is Evil! by AviLazar · · Score: 1

      Uhm no, get of your supposed high perch. If you do not agree with Closed Source that is fine. If you do not want to use Closed Source products feel free. If you do not want to make Closed Source products that is even better, but reverse engineering Close Source code is NOT fine.

      By utilizing someone (anyone's) program you are agreeing to any TOS they might have - and in cases like MS' programs they have clear language about not wanting anyone to reverse engineer. It is completely responsible of anyone in the Open Source industry (or any industry) to say that reverse engineering of closed source products is wrong (unless you have permission to do so).

      Just because you do not agree with closed source does not give you a moral or legal right to try and reverse engineer it - none what-so-ever.

      --

      I mod down so you can mod up. Your welcome.
    4. Re:Open source is Evil! by killjoe · · Score: 1

      "but reverse engineering Close Source code is NOT fine."

      Says who? You? Who the fuck are you to tell people it's not fine anyway. It's legal, closed source companies do it all time. Reverse engineering is a perfectly good tool to implement technologies when you don't have access to the internals.

      Why should linus take away a perfectly good and legal technique?

      "By utilizing someone (anyone's) program you are agreeing to any TOS they might have - and in cases like MS' programs they have clear language about not wanting anyone to reverse engineer."

      Tridge didn't sign anything with anybody, there is no TOS here.

      "It is completely responsible of anyone in the Open Source industry (or any industry) to say that reverse engineering of closed source products is wrong (unless you have permission to do so)."

      Nope. Sorry you are wrong. Reverse engineering is legal right and neither you nor linus can take that right away from anybody. MS can put anything in their EULA they want but like most of it it's pure bullshit. It won't stand up court.

      Only an idiot voluntarity gives up rights guaranteed to them by law.

      --
      evil is as evil does
    5. Re:Open source is Evil! by AviLazar · · Score: 1

      Says who? You? Who the fuck are you to tell people it's not fine anyway. It's legal, closed source companies do it all time. Reverse engineering is a perfectly good tool to implement technologies when you don't have access to the internals.

      You should ask that of yourself. Who the fuck are you to break a lock the authoring company put on their software. It is not me saying you shouldn't break the lock, it is the company who owns the code. How about this, if you believe you should be allowed to break someone's code, do you also agree that the gov't should be able to break into your house to snoop around? Do you believe that a burgler should be allowed to break into your house to copy your hard drive?

      Tridge didn't sign anything with anybody, there is no TOS here.

      A signature is not a requirement of agreements. Clicking "I accept" or "yes" or some other compliance button is just as acceptable. Also, just in case you plan to say it, immediately trying to reverse the code so you never see the EULA is also not acceptable. That is like saying "I didn't see the law about speeding, so breaking the speed limit is ok for me." If you don't but it, read my sig, it was an article posted here on /. a couple months back. Or google it.

      Nope. Sorry you are wrong. Reverse engineering is legal right and neither you nor linus can take that right away from anybody. MS can put anything in their EULA they want but like most of it it's pure bullshit. It won't stand up court.
      Since EULA's have been and are presently accepted in court - reverse engineering of a product that specifically states in its EULA that you may not do so is not allowed and as such could result in a person being sued.

      Again, as for your belief that EULA's won't hold up - you are wrong, they have and do hold up.

      Only an idiot voluntarity gives up rights guaranteed to them by law.

      Where is this guaranteed right of yours that states someone is allowed to reverse engineer closed source without permission from the owners?

      --

      I mod down so you can mod up. Your welcome.
    6. Re:Open source is Evil! by killjoe · · Score: 1

      "Who the fuck are you to break a lock the authoring company put on their software."

      What an odd thing to say. Who broke what lock on what software?

      "How about this, if you believe you should be allowed to break someone's code, "

      Since nobody broke anybodies code this statement is off topic in this discussion.

      "Do you believe that a burgler should be allowed to break into your house to copy your hard drive?"

      Err of course not. Who broke into whose house and stole what hard drive?

      "A signature is not a requirement of agreements. Clicking "I accept" or "yes" or some other compliance button is just as acceptable."

      first of all what did tridge click on to say "I accept" or "yes"

      Secondly you are talking out of your ass. Nobody has ever tested this in court and nobody has ever sued anybody for violating a click through agreement.

      "Also, just in case you plan to say it, immediately trying to reverse the code so you never see the EULA is also not acceptable."

      Who says? You? Are you some sort of a legal scholar? I kind of doubt it because you don't seem to even be able comprehend the issues in this case let alone case law.

      "Since EULA's have been and are presently accepted in court"

      Citation please.

      "reverse engineering of a product that specifically states in its EULA that you may not do so is not allowed and as such could result in a person being sued."

      A EULA can not ask you give up a constitutional right. Secondly Tridge never singed a EULA.

      "Where is this guaranteed right of yours that states someone is allowed to reverse engineer closed source without permission from the owners?"

      this law.

      You really should stop speaking now, it's clear you are absolutely ignorant on this subject. You have no idea what was done by whom and to what end.

      --
      evil is as evil does
    7. Re:Open source is Evil! by AviLazar · · Score: 1

      Yes broke the code - as in reverse engineering. If you do not like "breaking code" because you are trying to avoid the questions - feel free to substitute reverse engineering you obtuse idiot.

      As for my citation - as I said before, read my sig it is a lawyer who apparantly works in the field with regards to EULAs.

      Maybe you should stop speaking as you have offered nothing - except to ignore contentions.

      --

      I mod down so you can mod up. Your welcome.
    8. Re:Open source is Evil! by killjoe · · Score: 1

      "Yes broke the code - as in reverse engineering. If you do not like "breaking code" because you are trying to avoid the questions - feel free to substitute reverse engineering you obtuse idiot."

      Reverse engineering does not break code. I cited you the law showing you where reverse engineering is legal. All I am asking for is a citation where a click through EULA was upheld in court.

      I would urge you get educated. You are extremely confused about this case. You seem to think that.

      a) Tridge broke bitkeeper.
      b) Reverse engineering is illegal.
      c) Tridge is under some sort of a contractual agreement with bitkeeper.

      None of that is true and it's up to you to prove your outrageous statements.

      --
      evil is as evil does
    9. Re:Open source is Evil! by tokabola · · Score: 1
      reverse engineering Close Source code is NOT fine.

      Reverse Engineering is a common, accepted, and fully legal practice used by every industry on earth. Without reverse engineering there would be no General Motors, or Mercedes, or Ferrari. After all, it was Ford that invented mass (assembly line) production, the other companies just reverse engineered the concept. In fact, just about every manufacturing facility in the world uses reverse engineered mass production techniques. The only people who don't think it's fine are the people who own IP they want to get rich from. IP that almost certainly is partially the result of revese enineering itself, since virtually all software today uses techniques that were used before. The next time you add a dialog window with yes and no buttons you are using reverse engineering. In fact the entire concept of "windows" (not the OS, but a box on the screen) on a modern computer is only possible because of reverse engineering.

      Just because you do not agree with closed source does not give you a moral or legal right to try and reverse engineer it

      Correct. However, patent and copyright laws do give me the legal right to reverse engineer software.

      US patent and copyright laws are some of the most over protective in the world. Take, for instance the DMCA, which says it's illegal to bypass copyright protection even if you have no intention of violating any copyright. In other words, it's illegal to be able to commit a crime even if no actual crime will be committed. Yet even here in the US, reverse engineering for the purpose of inter-operability is a protected and legal activity.

      Guess what? You can't get rich by writing one program. You'll have to keep working and innovating. You can't retire a multi-millionaire at 25 because you had one good idea. There is no free lunch (well, Google employees excepted). So quit your whining and be prepared to work for a living just like the rest of us. But then, if you weren't so lazy you would have created an actual web page to go with your domain registration. Doh! Or at least not posted it on slashdot until you actually had something to show.

      Since EULA's have been and are presently accepted in court - reverse engineering of a product that specifically states in its EULA that you may not do so is not allowed and as such could result in a person being sued.

      EULA's have also lost in court several times when they contradict existing law. I could easily put a "you must eat your firstborn child" clause in a EULA, and no court is going to make you do it no matter how many times you clicked the "I agree" button.

      And BTW, Tridge never clicked an "I Agree" button, and therefore cannot be held by the EULA. He also didn't use Bitkeeper at all while revese engineering the protocols, and clean room reverse engineering is a legally protected activity. And while EULA's have held up in a few jurisdictions that only creates precedents, not laws, and precedents can be (and often have been) overturned by other courts. So far the software companies have been carefull to only sue people in court districts they knew would be supportive. EULA's have yet to be tested in a neutral court, or a Supreme Court.

      Tommy
      --
      Open Source for Open Minds
    10. Re:Open source is Evil! by AviLazar · · Score: 1

      The only people who don't think it's fine are the people who own IP they want to get rich from

      I guess I am also the only exception to this rule?

      --

      I mod down so you can mod up. Your welcome.
  15. What a day... by goMac2500 · · Score: 3, Funny

    Earlier I posted on how today Microsoft had declared beta software as ready for production, and how root is apparently completely safe. Microsoft calling themselves open source enough just takes the cake though.

    1. Re:What a day... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Open", not "open source"

    2. Re:What a day... by albanac · · Score: 1

      Which they did not do. They called themselves "open enough"; there is a difference. ~cHris

  16. and... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    our customers are also opened enough....we only have to give them a litle more vaseline to maximize the opening

    1. Re:and... by dabigpaybackski · · Score: 1

      Thus sayeth Goatse Man.

      --
      "OH SHIT, THERE'S A HORSE IN THE HOSPITAL!"
  17. Nope by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The GPL is a software license, he is talking about the spec of a document format, differnt things.

  18. Open enough... by Mjlner · · Score: 2, Interesting

    ...would mean (for me) that the XML schemas would be available publicly over the net. The benefits for all application developers, using MS file formats, would be huge. Say you have a web service and need to receive Office files from whatever clients you have. If the schemas would be directly available through a URL, you could use wichever parser suits you best and check the files for correctness (ie. do they contain the information you need). The possibilities would be enormous.

    --
    Lemon curry???
    1. Re:Open enough... by l3v1 · · Score: 1

      You can already do this if you don't confine yourself with Word/doc. And why would you do this when you have a choice. And you have.

      --
      I am putting myself to the fullest possible use, which is all I can think that any conscious entity can ever hope to do.
    2. Re:Open enough... by Mjlner · · Score: 1
      "You can already do this if you don't confine yourself with Word/doc. And why would you do this when you have a choice. And you have."

      You live in dream world, my friend. Some developers really can't choose the platform and/or file formats they have to work with. I agree that choice is worth fighting for and I was trying to make a point that open standards and file formats are better, but obviously you missed it. If the market leader actually used an open format, it would be better for developers and the consumers.

      --
      Lemon curry???
    3. Re:Open enough... by TapeCutter · · Score: 2, Interesting

      "The benefits for all application developers, using MS file formats, would be huge." - Agreed, but what would be the benifit to MS who after all, (Anti-trust/ethics to one side), developed and own the popular, but non-standard formats. I don't own MS shares but I would be the first to sell them if MS suddenly "saw the light", published all of thier formats and dropped any sort of restrictions on using them. The software services giants would assimilate all the free IP and simply move on.

      In the current environment chasing compatibility with Word formats is not enough. To gain rapid and widespread acceptance you need something that, in the eye of the user, subsumes and significanly improves the capabilities of Word formats. Standard and free are obvious improvements, but you are still left with "subsume", ie: doomed to playing catch-up and fighting FUD.

      I don't know the solution, but whatever scheme someone comes up with the "tricky part" is to get the IP laws changed and in such a way that it avoids massive uphevals in the job-market and also increases the rate of innovation (and thus opportunities) in the industry. In other words any practical solution must be a compromise that allows a company to profit from being "first" but also stimulates the industry as a whole. It would also be kinda nice if the industry stimulation was actually useful and interesting work but this is a secondary requirement since it does not put bread on the table.

      Since humans first started grunting at each other, exclusive knowlage has equated to exclusive power, those who have it tend to want it kept secret lest it loose it's power. As an example, hands up all slashdotters who would freely publish details of something that they had discovered could, against all common-sense, predict lotto numbers with 80% accuracy. Now keep your hand up if you would publish it before collecting a few bucks in prizes.

      --
      And did you exchange a walk on part in the war for a lead role in a cage? - Pink Floyd.
  19. "We are open enough" by should_be_linear · · Score: 2, Funny

    I thought man was talking on malware authoring conference.

    --
    839*929
  20. Why shoud I have to sign... by drgonzo59 · · Score: 5, Interesting
    "Why should I have to sign an agreement?" one audience member demanded to know.

    What would the agreement do? The standard is either open or not (specification is published or withheld). Does it mean that any program that reads the file in this "open" format is bound by this agreement? I can see someone writting "Here, I sent you a powerpoint presentation and I also had to attach the 3 page agreement that you have to sign and send to Microsoft along with your name, date of birth, social security # and all your bank information. Then you can open and use my file. If you don't Bill Gates will come in person and take your firsborn child. Have a nice day, -Your dearest friend Jojo"

    1. Re:Why shoud I have to sign... by Zero+Sum · · Score: 4, Funny

      Well, using GPL fonts in a document means the document has to be open, does it not?

      --

      Zero Sum (don't amount to much). [root@localhost]

    2. Re:Why shoud I have to sign... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      using GPL fonts in a document means the document has to be open, does it not?

      No, it does not.

      Embedding GPL fonts in a document might mean the document has to be open. But I've never met anyone who embeds fonts in documents. Come to that, I've never seen a GPL font, either.

    3. Re:Why shoud I have to sign... by ajs318 · · Score: 5, Informative

      Only if you are going to modify the document, then distribute it outside your organisation; and even then, you might have to modify the actual font. Otherwise, embedding a font into a document -- provided it is done in such a way that the complete font can be recovered for use in other documents -- would be considered "mere aggregation". At any rate, a document is not generally considered to be a derived work of a font.

      --
      Je fume. Tu fumes. Nous fûmes!
    4. Re:Why shoud I have to sign... by Zero+Sum · · Score: 1

      Some people have been claiming otherwise recently. I though I read it on /.

      --

      Zero Sum (don't amount to much). [root@localhost]

    5. Re:Why shoud I have to sign... by BVis · · Score: 2, Funny

      And because you read it on /., it MUST be true >:)

      --
      Never underestimate the power of stupid people in large groups.
    6. Re:Why shoud I have to sign... by Hynee · · Score: 2, Funny

      Indeed. Can I read your email because it's in Thunderbird?

      --
      Damn, I already moderated this topic. Now I'll have to log in with my sock puppet to comment.
    7. Re:Why shoud I have to sign... by bigman2003 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      "Why should I have to sign an agreement?" one audience member demanded to know.

      If I were the guy on stage, I would be very tempted to reply with "Why should we open this up to you anyway?"

      Some people expect a lot- for nothing.

      It is amazing who you meet when you do something 'for the public.' I run a totally-free, totally-unsponsored web app. It is a combination calendaring/weight and exercise tracking/reminder/organizer/bulletin board. Think Weight Watchers on-line for free - with a calendar.

      It is surprising how often people send me things like - "I won't use your system until you do xxx" or more commonly "I DEMAND that you make the following changes or we will stop using your system."

      That is why I went from being an involved host, to being the guy who is seen as a dis-interested developer. The moment you show interest, there will be a bunch of people (about 5% as far as I can tell) who feel that it is their god-given right to demand that everything works exactly the way they want it to. And instead of just going away, they do things like organize a boycott, and post hundreds of messages in the bulletin board complaining about the perceived problems.

      What the complainers don't realize, is that they only make up a small percentage of the users, and the other 95% use the system and are fairly happy. Of course there were other people who were un-happy, and they moved on- possibly to Weight Watchers, where they are paying $200/year- of COURSE it is better, I am sure they have more than one developer.

      So- I am not saying that Microsoft should, or should not open up their system more. I am just saying that there is always at least ONE jackass out there who feels that the world owes them everything, just for the honor of having the jackass use their software.

      --
      No reason to lie.
    8. Re:Why shoud I have to sign... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      If I were the guy on stage, I would be very tempted to reply with "Why should we open this up to you anyway?" Some people expect a lot- for nothing.
      So I could write a competing product to break your monopoly, thus making other people's lifes easier and better?
    9. Re:Why shoud I have to sign... by spectre_240sx · · Score: 1

      You provide a service for people for free and they piss and moan about it. No, that's not very nice and I would probably tell each one of those people exactly where to go. Actually I'd even give them a nice handbasket forr the ride. Microsoft is making money on their products, so they should be expected to cater to their users to a certain degree. Also, because their file formats are closed, they actually gain a certain amount of control over the documents. Do you really think that Microsoft deserves any control at all over your data? I certainly don't and that's why I don't use Office for personal items. Unfortunately, there are so many people that DO use Office, I have to have it on my computer and I have to use it if I want to send files back and forth between my coworkers.

      This isn't about whether Microsoft should do everything that everone asks them to do. It's about the fact that they have way too much control over people.

    10. Re:Why shoud I have to sign... by Random+Bystander · · Score: 1

      100% off-topic, but what is the site that you run? I had a look at http://insidewoodland.com/ but it doesn't seem to be the "combination calendaring/weight and exercise tracking/reminder/organizer/bulletin board" you described. It's something I've been wanting for a while, and I hope I can be part of the 95% that don't complain ;-)

    11. Re:Why shoud I have to sign... by 99BottlesOfBeerInMyF · · Score: 3, Insightful

      So- I am not saying that Microsoft should, or should not open up their system more. I am just saying that there is always at least ONE jackass out there who feels that the world owes them everything, just for the honor of having the jackass use their software.

      You're extrapolating your experiences and applying them to Microsoft. Unfortunately you are failing to account for the fact that Microsoft does not behave the same way you do. First they are a monopoly convicted of abusing that monopoly position to illegally crush competitors and force both behaviors and financial penalties upon their customers. The fact that the government has not mandated open formats from MS is a clear indication of just how corrupt they are.

      Users deserve an alternative to being locked in by a monopoly and if someone feels like yelling that at a representative of these criminals, I'm all for it.

    12. Re:Why shoud I have to sign... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If I were the guy on stage, I would be very tempted to reply with "Why should we open this up to you anyway?"

      And I'd reply "because you broke the law and the EU requires it".

      I run a totally-free, totally-unsponsored web app.

      Those people are being unreasonable. The same attitude to Microsoft is different, because many people simply have no choice but deal with these files. Do people have no choice but to use your web application?

    13. Re:Why shoud I have to sign... by malraid · · Score: 1

      Some people expect a lot- for nothing.

      I'm sure governments are forking a VERY significant amount of money for MS Office. Besides it's THEIR data, I guess that they have the right to know how it's stored.

      --
      please excuse my apathy
    14. Re:Why shoud I have to sign... by opposume · · Score: 1

      what is this app... I'd be interested in looking at it..

      --
      I haven't lost my mind. It's backed up on disk somewhere.
    15. Re:Why shoud I have to sign... by mazarin5 · · Score: 1
      I think it's that way for a lot of free services. A small number of people feel way too entitled and complain about the most trivial things incessantly.

      Well, we'll have more time to discuss this when the dupe is posted... by Roland Piquepalle... in this puke colored IT section.

      --
      Fnord.
    16. Re:Why shoud I have to sign... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "I'm sure governments are forking a VERY significant amount of money for MS Office"

      Most goverments if given all the code and formats would file them away like the Ark at the end Raiders. This is purely political.

    17. Re:Why shoud I have to sign... by GamblerZG · · Score: 1

      I run a totally-free, totally-unsponsored web app. [...] It is surprising how often people send me things like -

      One question. Would you allow these people to make improvements to your site by themselves? Sometimes owners/developers of non-commercial websites/applications serve as inquisitors of innovation. It's one thing to ignore request for thing that would require _your_ time and effort. However, It's another thing to prohibit other people to add something to your product out of sheer stubbornness. (I also support one non-commercial web site, so I have some knowledge about this.)

      What the complainers don't realize, is that they only make up a small percentage of the users, and the other 95% use the system and are fairly happy.

      You see, people do not care (and neither they should) about the size of group they represent. There are always someone with unpopular opinion, yes. But the fact that it's not popular should not make you disregard it completely.

    18. Re:Why shoud I have to sign... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Why should I have to sign an agreement?" one audience member demanded to know.

      If I were the guy on stage, I would be very tempted to reply with "Why should we open this up to you anyway?"

      Some people expect a lot- for nothing.

      If I'd been the guy on the floor, I would have thrown it right back at you with "That's a good question. Why _should_ you open this up to me?"

      Microsoft isn't doing the rest of us any favors by opening their document formats. They're doing it for themselves. Your response to the question would have shown that you'd forgotten that.

    19. Re:Why shoud I have to sign... by yankeessuck · · Score: 1

      Who owns the data created by Microsoft Office? IANAL but I believe the user owns the data. If I was a user I would ask why Microsoft has the right to hold hostage the data that they do not own?

    20. Re:Why shoud I have to sign... by varmittang · · Score: 1

      If I use GCC to create a program, does it have to be open source?

      Hell no! It just means I use and open source tool to make it, but the code is mine to do what I wish.

      --
      -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE-----
      12345
      -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----
    21. Re:Why shoud I have to sign... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      why not just enter everything in hex then

    22. Re:Why shoud I have to sign... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No. If it was in Lookout Distress, though, you would not have to ask .....

    23. Re:Why shoud I have to sign... by drgonzo59 · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Well I see your point. But the problem is not whether Microsoft should be forced to be philantropic and volunteer their format or not. It is obviously up to them. The problem is that if they claim to be so _nice_ and say that the formats will be open but then have you read and sign EULAS that have hundreds of exceptions and restriction then they are not really opening the format and are just baiting other companies and users to use the format, then years later find a way to sue everyone who uses the open format, or demand royalties or something like that.

      It is not the idea that is bad it is the fear that if the idea is comming from a big corporation, especially Microsoft (the least "open" software company) then it probably doesn't mean what it seems to mean on the surface and is PR hype, marketing or just "dust in the eyes" type thing. Remember the Blockbuster "no late fees." it doesn't matter that it sounded ridiculous and unreal and people should have read the fine print, the problem is that the marketing was designed to trick and lie people and I don't think MS is better than that.

    24. Re:Why shoud I have to sign... by 0racle · · Score: 1

      I don't recall Microsoft demanding anything for me to open and edit my documents, when was the last time your data was held hostage?

      --
      "I use a Mac because I'm just better than you are."
    25. Re:Why shoud I have to sign... by Luke-Jr · · Score: 1

      They're not demanding you pay for M$ Office before you can open/edit your documents? News to me... Oh, and you can't claim OO.o compatibility without basically endorsing the open format stuff...

      --
      Luke-Jr
    26. Re:Why shoud I have to sign... by Queer+Boy · · Score: 1
      That is why I went from being an involved host, to being the guy who is seen as a dis-interested developer. The moment you show interest, there will be a bunch of people (about 5% as far as I can tell) who feel that it is their god-given right to demand that everything works exactly the way they want it to. And instead of just going away, they do things like organize a boycott, and post hundreds of messages in the bulletin board complaining about the perceived problems.

      5% organise a boycott of a free product and this bothers you. I fail to believe that your product is "free". Just so you know, television is not free just because you don't have to pay to have it beamed into your home.

      Your "application" didn't live up to however you were hyping it and people decided to boycott so you couldn't get the ad revenue. It was all about the ad revenue, huh? Yeah, that sucks when sponsors pull their ads because you pissed off the audience. If your product truly was "free" it wouldn't make a difference if people boycotted it or not.

      http://dictionary.reference.com/search?q=altruism

      --
      Not since Marie-Antoinette played milkmaid has looking simple and honest been so fake and complicated.
    27. Re:Why shoud I have to sign... by walt-sjc · · Score: 3, Informative

      Yes, yes, all well and good except that MS has been found guilty of using unfair business practices to maintain and extend their monopoly. Lotus Smartsuite and WordPerfect Office are effectivly DEAD due to the bundling issue. IMHO (and I'm not alone) MS should be forced to open the file formats to restore competition in the marketplace. How can wordperfect compete when MS was basically giving away the full office suite for $100 (as a bundle when you buy a PC loaded with Windows)?

      The bottom line is that we (consumers, businesses, government) are all harmed when competition is eliminated in the marketplace. MS no longer charges $100 - it's $400 for the pro bundle now (now that the competition is gone) which is just a little less than non-bundled price. Lotus and WordPerfect could not compete with a $100 office suite. They Could compete with a $400 office suite, *if* the market were still competitive.

    28. Re:Why shoud I have to sign... by 0racle · · Score: 1

      Oh I see, they hold your data hostage before you've even created it.

      --
      "I use a Mac because I'm just better than you are."
    29. Re:Why shoud I have to sign... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      "Why should I have to sign an agreement?" one audience member demanded to know.

      Maybe because it's THEIR code? Just because it's source code doesnt automagically mean everyone in the world has a right to look at it. No matter how much you bitch an whine, every program in the world isnt going to become open source.

      When you talk about 'software homogeny' to attack MS, why dont you talk about programming homogeny to describe what you guys propose? Could it be that your position is based on bullshit, and is self serving and hypocritical?

    30. Re:Why shoud I have to sign... by dswan69 · · Score: 1

      Maybe some people are just complainers. Some might be trying to report legitimate deficiencies, using the wrong tone. I am always surprised when someone puts out a free, open program and then gets hostile or rude if I report problems or bugs.

      Of course this has nothing to do with widely used document formats which should be open. Microsoft has no legitimate reason to keep the format proprietary. Unless of course they have something to hide or are attempting to overcome a poor product by locking you in with a proprietary format.

    31. Re:Why shoud I have to sign... by soulhuntre · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      "Yes, yes, all well and good except that MS has been found guilty of using unfair business practices to maintain and extend their monopoly."

      The classic /. whine. Microsoft must be bad, a court said so. But if when that court upholdes patents, or the DMCA or anything we don;t liek the courts are obviously too stupid to understand technology situations.

      As Linus said (sorta), Hypocrisy (is) the worst of human traits

      --
      --> Fight tyranny and repression.... read /. at -1!
    32. Re:Why shoud I have to sign... by yankeessuck · · Score: 1

      I'm writing a paper on my computer for a group project. The group is meeting at another member's house to work on it. We want to make edits to the paper but he doesn't have that version of Word. What now? Sure, I can save to RTF but it doesn't preserve the formatting properly. Same goes for OpenOffice.

    33. Re:Why shoud I have to sign... by 0racle · · Score: 2, Insightful

      How is this holding your data hostage again? You chose to use Word, your friend didn't. You redily admit that there are ways around it but you don't want to use them. Isn't this your fault for choosing something to to a group project in that not all members of the group have access to?

      I'm working on a database with a group for a school project, I decided to use Oracle. The group meeting is at another member's house to work on it. We want to make edits to the database, but he doen't have a version of Oracle. What now? Sure, I can dump it to one of several cross platform formats but thats a lot of work I don't want to do. When will Oracle open their file format so I don't have to do anything?

      Same whining, different product. Yet Microsoft, and around here often only Microsoft, is expected to open everything up so that people can make a complete replacement.

      --
      "I use a Mac because I'm just better than you are."
    34. Re:Why shoud I have to sign... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      what if your friend has a mac? should apple open up the mac os? what about if you have it on a floppy, surely apple should give up their rights to their hardware patents so some cheap labor in taiwan or china can make mac clones

    35. Re:Why shoud I have to sign... by JeanBaptiste · · Score: 1

      I would also be interested in looking at it...

    36. Re:Why shoud I have to sign... by Zetra · · Score: 1

      I think most ppl would rather that you did not read their mail. Thunderbird or no Thunderbird.
      Please stop reading my mail.

    37. Re:Why shoud I have to sign... by pod · · Score: 1

      They are sending their grief to the wrong place. Their beef should not be with Microsoft for not opening their document format, it should be with their IT department or with software procurement. If you need to know how your data is stored, and don't want to rely on a third party to graciously provide you access to it, then Microsoft software is the wrong way to go. It's not like it was a big surprise.

      --
      "Hot lesbian witches! It's fucking genius!"
    38. Re:Why shoud I have to sign... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, me too... but you damn well better make it open source or I'll organize a slashdotting of your communist site!

    39. Re:Why shoud I have to sign... by nzkbuk · · Score: 1

      You made your comment while wearing an asbestos suit right ?

      We are talking about a convicted monopolist company that has used anti-competitive practises and regularly alters their file formats so they can extract more money from their users.

      If I were the guy on stage, I would be very tempted to reply with "Why should we open this up to you anyway?"

      Maybe because the EU and other governments have stated that if M$ wants to continue selling their products then they have to open standards so that the governments doesn't lose their data in a few years because nothing reads the file format. AND So businesses that have to deal with government offices aren't forced to use the same products.

      What the complainers don't realize, is that they only make up a small percentage of the users, and the other 95% use the system and are fairly happy. Of course there were other people who were un-happy, and they moved on- possibly to Weight Watchers, where they are paying $200/year- of COURSE it is better, I am sure they have more than one developer.

      While this may be true for your app it doesn't directly apply to M$. Granted a large number of customers are happy with the version of office they have. They are NOT happy being forced to upgrade and spend vast sums of money simply to continue operating when OS's are discontinued, and their old office products will no longer function on their new OS, or more likely they are forced to upgrade their OS because to read & write documents in the format that their customers / suppliers use they need the next version of office, which happens to only run on the next version of the OS. (note I avoided saying users because we are talking about a corporate environment here and hence the end user has no direct input)

      You haven't noticed how lately M$ has been writing more and more on a per OS basis. eg office XP for windows XP. Again another example of We'll tie everything to the OS then make the file formats incompatible. That way when one of the companies in the chain need to upgrade this year, they trigger an upgrade cycle for an entire sector.

    40. Re:Why shoud I have to sign... by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      If you can't code a school project in a method standard enough to pass through any SQL92 compliant database, you're whole group should get a big fat F for the project.

      Oracle is built on an open standard. While it certainly has it's proprietary extensions. They certainly should not be relevant for your little toy application. If you want to get data and structure out of an Oracle database (or any other RDBMS for that matter), there are a wide array of standardized methods to accomplish that.

      What open standards to the MS office file formats loosely conform to?

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    41. Re:Why shoud I have to sign... by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      Yours is a classic Lemming retort: ignore the parts of the original post that contain broader principles and instead focus on the particular element you wish to use as a strawman.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    42. Re:Why shoud I have to sign... by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      It's not their CODE.

      It's their data specification. It's what they are doing to OUR data. It's simple application documentation.

      We should not need permission to be told what they are doing to OUR data.

      That should be provided as a matter of course.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    43. Re:Why shoud I have to sign... by 0racle · · Score: 1

      PL/SQL is not portable, nor would it require you to get an F.

      --
      "I use a Mac because I'm just better than you are."
    44. Re:Why shoud I have to sign... by Luke-Jr · · Score: 1

      You're assuming that people write documents solo. I'm pretty sure there are a large number of people who collaberate on docs, tho...

      --
      Luke-Jr
    45. Re:Why shoud I have to sign... by Erris · · Score: 1
      "Why should I have to sign an agreement?" one audience member demanded to know.

      If I were the guy on stage, I would be very tempted to reply with "Why should we open this up to you anyway?"

      That's easy to answer - because free alternatives that work better don't force you to sign anything and don't turn off your computer on a whim. If Microsoft want to take people's money for the ability to stand between me and government documents, they are going to have to prove they are better at document storage than those free alternatives. Lame and arrogant statements about "innovation" do not constitute proof of superiority or worth. Microsoft's position, where they expect people to pay to be owned, is really weird. They can keep their junk to themselves, no one needs it.

      --
      DMCA, Hollings, Palladium. What might have sounded like paranoia is now common sense.
    46. Re:Why shoud I have to sign... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      futile, given where we're reading this,but R.T.F.A.

      This talk was given to the Australian Unix User Group conference in Canberra. Thus, the entire basis of the talk for Microsoft must be "Why you should use out formats" (not that you can [legally] on UNIX, of course..).

      Thus, it is Mr Stone who comes here as a postulant offering his wares, and nobody can fault the prospective client for disdaining an offer because it does not meet his/her requirements.

      Or do you not believe in choice? Damn commie..

    47. Re:Why shoud I have to sign... by Nikker · · Score: 1

      Why not just tell him why he has to sign a contract?

      The problem today is people feel intimidated. No longer do they get burnt on a $20 item and learn a lesson. Now they are legaly bound for terms of years or longer to companies and if they do have problems they hear stories on how they should have read the fine print or the back of page 5 of the brohure.

      If in turn the 'guy on stage' said well you should sign because of ...(list of benifits) that most likely would have shut him up and made him look like the good guy. But since he stood there holding his dick (presuming he had one) it make him look like nothing really comes to mind and we are just trying to fuck you, shut up and take it.

      Now that last way is the best way to piss people off, if that is what your goal is of course ;)

      --
      A loop, by its nature, continues. If that didn't make sense, start reading this sentence again.
    48. Re:Why shoud I have to sign... by Zero+Sum · · Score: 1

      Jeeze... Insightful, overrated? It was humour for God's sake....

      --

      Zero Sum (don't amount to much). [root@localhost]

    49. Re:Why shoud I have to sign... by Trejkaz · · Score: 1

      I guess it depends whether (a) the font is embedded somehow like in PostScript, or (b) the font is referenced externally like in HTML.

      Last I checked there weren't legal issues with referencing fonts externally, if they happened to be present on the recipient's system.

      But if you include the font in the document itself, maybe that's different. If the font were commercial, you would certainly be charged some kind of royalty for using the font. If it were GPL, it probably would be fair to make the document GPL.

      --
      Karma: It's all a bunch of tree-huggin' hippy crap!
    50. Re:Why shoud I have to sign... by walt-sjc · · Score: 1

      The classic /. whine. Microsoft must be bad, a court said so.

      Um, no. We in the industry have been saying for YEARS that MS's business practicies are at the minimum unethical, and probably illegal. A court just backed that up, based on a large amount of evidence - some of which was made public. Feel free to read up on the case to educate yourself.

      But if when that court upholdes patents, or the DMCA or anything we don;t liek the courts are obviously too stupid to understand technology situations.

      Boy, you really don't get it. The MS monopoly case had NOTHING to do with patents, or the DMCA. There is no "hypocrisy" here. Furthermore, it's not the COURT that passed the DMCA or software patent laws. It's Congress. Sometimes Congress passes good laws, more frequently they don't. Being vocal about the bad laws isn't hypocrisy, it's being democratic.

    51. Re:Why shoud I have to sign... by penix1 · · Score: 1

      "They are sending their grief to the wrong place. Their beef should not be with Microsoft for not opening their document format, it should be with their IT department or with software procurement. If you need to know how your data is stored, and don't want to rely on a third party to graciously provide you access to it, then Microsoft software is the wrong way to go. It's not like it was a big surprise."

      And when Massachusetts decided on open standards as well as give open source a consideration, MS et. al. lobbied long and hard and are still fighting it. The grief they are getting in the EU over software patents is a clue Sherlock. MS doesn't want, and will fight, any large org or gov trying to open things up.You can bet your ass that if the US gov decided to go with OO instead MS would file suit for "unfair practices".

      B.

      --
      This is a sig. This is only a sig. Had this been an actual sig you would have been informed where to tune for more sigs.
    52. Re:Why shoud I have to sign... by tokabola · · Score: 1
      If I were the guy on stage, I would be very tempted to reply with "Why should we open this up to you anyway?"

      Because the governments of several countries said "We will only use software that uses an open format to store OUR data", and Microsoft wants to sell software to those governments?

      If I have to sign an agreement to get the standards, then they aren't open. They aren't fully closed, but that's not the same thing. An open standard is one that is accessable to everyone, without restriction. Period.

      This is just an attempt by MS to appear to be open (so they can get sales to the governments) when in fact they are not.

      While I understand the point you make about your website, it's a very different situation. Your website is free, but governments would have to pay MS hundreds of thousands of dollars for all the copies of Office they would need. That kind of cash buys the right to expect things.

      Tommy
      --
      Open Source for Open Minds
    53. Re:Why shoud I have to sign... by FireAndGlass · · Score: 1

      And just how are closed source and communism related?

    54. Re:Why shoud I have to sign... by pod · · Score: 1

      Not to beat a dead horse here, but that is not Microsoft's problem that governments are so spineless. There is nothing anti-competitive in a government of the people for the people by the people to desire to ensure equal and open access now and in the future to information for their citizens. How is it anti-competitive to put out a bid for a word processor that is able to read and save documents in a specific format, that just happens to be public and free? I don't see how Microsoft is disadvantaged here over any other vendor.

      --
      "Hot lesbian witches! It's fucking genius!"
  21. Worked before by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Notice how Microsoft successfully ended all use of the word "innovation" anywhere in the late 90s by their repeated abuse of it.

    "Open" is next.

    They've found that if you don't want to do something, it's totally sufficient to not do it and then repeat to the press over and over that you did it.

    1. Re:Worked before by pnatural · · Score: 2, Interesting

      "Open" is next.

      Methinks "Free" will be impervious for obvious reasons. Not even Microsoft could induce such double think.

      Oh, wait.

    2. Re:Worked before by LaCosaNostradamus · · Score: 2, Funny

      I can see it now, instead of Windows NE (NExt) or something marketdroidy, they will produce Windows Free {tm}. "Microsoft will set you Free!" {tm} Of course, a legal copy of Windows Free {tm} will cost $395.

      --
      [You have a stable society when some nut guns down a schoolyard and the law doesn't change.]
    3. Re:Worked before by utexaspunk · · Score: 1

      They've found that if you don't want to do something, it's totally sufficient to not do it and then repeat to the press over and over that you did it.

      hmm... who does that sound like?

    4. Re:Worked before by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Notice how Microsoft successfully ended all use of the word "innovation" anywhere in the late 90s by their repeated abuse of it.

      Actually, I think it was due to this:

      "Look up "derivative" in the dictionary and see if that reminds you of how MS describes their "innovation"."

      floating around.....

  22. Madness by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting
    It would be madness to sign any such agreement to look at their format. I would need to have some very competent lawyer go over it and figure out what it's saying and what the risks are. If I sign it, do I have the right to talk about what I have learned? Can I build tools based on this format? Are their restrictions on how I can redistribute or use such tools? If I build such tools and sell them, do I have to pay any royalties? Am I committing to patent licensing? Are there trade secrets in the formats, so that if I learn these "secrets" I can no long do any work on other open formats like OASIS? Am I committing myself to some specific dispute resolution protocol if there is a dispute under the agreement? Am I committing to some particular jurisdiction (which may not be advantageous to me)? Am I agreeing that they have injunctive relief if they think I have done something wrong under the agreement? Injunctive relief means that they could get a judge to shut me down while the dispute is being resolved, which could take years and enormous amounts of money. Until I could get some very clear answers to these questions I would stay far away, and I would guess it would a big legal bill to get answers I am comfortable with.

    So before I would sign, I would need to find a lawyer and pay a lot of money to find out what the implications of signing it would be. I would go through enormous hassle and a lot of money, just so I would have the honor and delight to look at MS' file format specification. But wait, I might go through all that hassle and expense and come up with some answers that I don't like, like finding out that the spec does contain trade secrets, or that I am agreeing to give MS injunctive relief, and if I find those thing out, I will have spent all that money and still I won't be able to look at the spec.

    Or I could skip all of this nonsense and ignore whatever they are offering and just use one format which I know is truly open: OASIS. I don't need to sign anything, it doesn't contain any trade secrets, I don't need a lawyer, I don't need to spend any money, I am free to write whatever kind of software I want to based on it, I can do whatever I want with it, I don't have to pay, I don't have to worry about someone getting an injunction to shut me down if he thinks I did something wrong. Wow, when you look at it this way, what's there to even think about in making this decision?

    What we really need is an OASIS plug-in for MS Office so that MS Office users can use the OASIS format without any hassles. That would be cool.

    1. Re:Madness by ssj_195 · · Score: 1

      Indeed - it's "open" in exactly the same way that an unadvertised document in the bottom draw of a filing cabinet in an abandoned toilet in the basement of the local council with a sign attached saying "Beware of the Leopard" is.

    2. Re:Madness by MichaelSmith · · Score: 2, Interesting
      What we really need is an OASIS plug-in for MS Office so that MS Office users can use the OASIS format without any hassles. That would be cool.

      I am not up on the proper windows terminology but I believe you can write software which hooks into MS Word and basically constructs a document.

      So it should be possible to do this with a client for OASIS or Oo and thus import documents into Word. I am not so sure about going the other way, though.

    3. Re:Madness by kfg · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Dude, you obviously missed all the studies showing that the TCO for Windows is lower than that for Linux, if. . .

      you've got a room full of lawyers who'll work for a two litre bottle of Mountain Dew and a bag of Doritos now and then.

      And nothing drives up the TCO like a BSA audit, even if they find you in full compliance. God help you if you unintentionally slipped up somewhere.

      Just ask someone in the city hall of Virginia Beach about this. . .but wear earplugs and this experiment is not suitable for children.

      In a shop with just three people doing your best to insure license compliance can run into the thousands per year, and you'll likely fail anyway (Google on "Three body problem").

      Funny how the studies of TCO never include the concurrent and absolutely necessary legal expenses of contracting with (or even simply clicking on a EULA) Microsoft, nevermind the equally necessary costs of trying to insure compliance with the contract and/or license over time.

      So, does your company have a viable policy for maintaining contract/license compliance? If a a tech does not routinely check your box for unlicensed software the answer is most likely "No."

      Has your company insured itself against/budgeted for a BSA audit? Oh. Dudes. You are soooooooooooo fucked.

      Here, have a copy of a POSIX compliant OS, with included office suite, I downloaded from the internet. Feel free to make as many copies as you like and install them on as many machines as you like, and so long as you don't alter the source code (included) and restribute outside your legal entity you may feel free to treat it as if it were in the public domain.

      Total legal expenses incured so far, and to be incured in the future for compliance, el zippo; and you don't have to sign diddely squat. Now let's total up those TCO figures again.

      If, in future, someone comes up with evidence that you are already not in compliance with the GPL you may get a call from the FSF, but these boys are actually rather nice, if you're not intentionally being a dick, and much nicer than the BSA even if you are.

      If nothing else they have to be, because you have signed diddely squat.

      KFG

    4. Re:Madness by kerrbear · · Score: 1
      Or I could skip all of this nonsense and ignore whatever they are offering and just use one format which I know is truly open: OASIS.

      All very well and good, except who is going to buy your product? How are you going to write software that produces documents that only a small percentage of people can read?

      Like it or not (and I don't) MSWord docs are the standard. I used to not own Word, but I had to get it because I could not communicate with anyone. And don't tell me OO makes Word docs. Do you trust OO to make a resume that others will read in MSWord? I tried it, once.

      We need some way to make documents that everyone can see. Is it possible that OASIS docs could be executable out of the box?

    5. Re:Madness by argStyopa · · Score: 3, Funny

      What we really need is an OASIS plug-in for MS Office so that MS Office users can use the OASIS format without any hassles. That would be cool.

      That sound you just heard was 10,000 Microsoft lawyers, all getting a boner.

      --
      -Styopa
    6. Re:Madness by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why would you give someone your resume in a .doc format? The last time I was interviewing I sent pdf files. Essentially every word processor except MS word has the capability of saving to pdf. My experience is that compatibility between versions of word is bad so there is a good chance that your .doc file is going to be messed up anyway when someone reads it. I also don't want someone else changing a document that is important to my future.

    7. Re:Madness by Ernesto+Alvarez · · Score: 1

      Guess what company I thought about whenever I found references to Sirius Cybernetics Corporation in H2G2.

      SCC is the microsoft of the future.

    8. Re:Madness by daeley · · Score: 1

      That sound you just heard was 10,000 Microsoft lawyers, all getting a boner.

      Somehow, I don't think in that case that 10,000 Microsoft lawyers would make that much of a sound. ;)

      --
      I watched C-beams glitter in the dark near the Tannhauser gate.
  23. OpenOffice by tacocat · · Score: 4, Insightful

    My wife is in College and has a lot of term papers to write and share with other student groups for her projects. She is able to do all of this with Open Office by converting to .doc formats without incidents.

    The only problem she ran into was PDF. She was using it for her last semester and loved it's simplicity of use with OpenOffice. But then she ran into someone in her class who "couldn't open it in notepad". Avoiding my Nike Burns, Computer Guy, impressions I thought it best to just export to .doc format and leave it at that.

    This is the third year that We've been using only OpenOffice on Linux. I've also shown a few others the use of OpenOffice on Windows and they have adopted it as well. As far as I'm concerned, at this point, Microsoft really doesn't have anything useful to add to a word processor. Wait, they might be able to add something, but it's not cost effective.

    1. Re:OpenOffice by grazzy · · Score: 1

      Hoho-ho-ho bull-ho-ho-shit-ho.

      Sorry for the inflammatory flamefest this will start. But you're the first Linux-troll I've seen on this site.

      Try creating a table in word > 2 pages long. Try importing said document in open office.

      Now tell me again open office is not flawed :-)

    2. Re:OpenOffice by ShieldW0lf · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Word is the only application in the office stable that can be easily replaced with any text editor under the sun.

      Who cares about word processors? Excel, Access and Outlook/Exchange are the important bits. Yeah, I suppose PowerPoint too... not that it has any redeeming qualities, but a lot of ppl do use it to put their employees down for their morning nap.

      --
      -1 Uncomfortable Truth
    3. Re:OpenOffice by fishbowl · · Score: 2, Informative

      "My wife is in College and has a lot of term papers to write and share with other student groups for her projects. She is able to do all of this with Open Office by converting to .doc formats without incidents."

      My S.O. is a biochemistry researcher, and despite having made sincere efforts to use OO, it has fallen short of meeting her needs. The word processor is fine, actually, but the problems begin with advanced functionality of the spreadsheet, they escalate with integration difficulties between OO apps, and they stop cold with the presentation program being nowhere near a reasonable substitute for powerpoint.

      Just one experience, and I'm sure the product has improved significantly since 1.1.2, but there it is. A power user, a true geek, someone who was highly motivated to make it work, couldn't.

      OO is a fine word processor, but that's not the whole picture. I've also heard arguments that people don't use many features of the word processor. Well, in a previous career, I was the person who did indeed use pretty much every damn feature of WP5.1, including some quite esoteric things that only legal secretaries probably ever touch. I suspect the claims are made by people who don't know what they are talking about.

      On the other hand, OO is pretty complete. But the experience was pretty bad; large datasets linked to complex graphs embedded in a document and a presentation, tended to go to shit; whereas the same tasks were no problem in MS Office. This observation comes from dyed-in-the-wool microsoft-hating geeks who would *really* have liked the results to be different (and who don't have the time or ability to contribute to the OO project to make it better.)

      --
      -fb Everything not expressly forbidden is now mandatory.
    4. Re:OpenOffice by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As I read it, he seemed to imply that it was "good enough" rather than flawless.

    5. Re:OpenOffice by bogado · · Score: 1

      Well acording to a friend of mine (I don't use word or OO) that works in a printing bureau he have nigthmares about printing .doc. The point is that even a word from another computer is unable to handle and render the contents of a file consistent with what the user wants. He states that he always have to review the content with the user, when he prints a word document.

      --
      []'s Victor Bogado da Silva Lins

      ^[:wq

    6. Re:OpenOffice by grazzy · · Score: 1

      PDF is the way to go. It makes stuff so much simpler, if people want to edit they can then atleast compare the layout to the really intended in the PDF.

    7. Re:OpenOffice by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Happy to oblige...nobless oblige and all that...:-)

      Open Office is not flawed...there, I told you.

      What I forgot to tell you is this:

      M$ Office is flawed. Got it? Repeat as many times as necessary to understand where the problem is.

    8. Re:OpenOffice by shic · · Score: 2, Insightful

      at this point, Microsoft really doesn't have anything useful to add to a word processor.

      If only this were true.

      For all the faults with MS Office (and there are many!) it has at least 3 important benefits over OO 2.0 as it stands today:

      1. MS Word has far superior spell checking to OO.
      2. MS Word has a (crappy) grammar checker - OO has none.
      3. Word has better interactive response - especially on less capable PCs.

      All of these could be rectified... but as it stands today Word _does_ offer some important advantages over OO Writer - I'm sad to say - as, these issues asside, I do prefer OO to MSO.

    9. Re:OpenOffice by strider44 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Try creating a table in word > 2 pages long. Try importing said document into another version of word. Now tell me again word is not flawed :-)

    10. Re:OpenOffice by tacocat · · Score: 1

      I can create a table that large in OpenOffice and it's just fine. So tell me, how is it that Open Office is flawed here?

      Are you saying that because OpenOffice cannot import something from someone who has not cooperative that they are at fault? I'd shoot you in the head but my 9mm bullets don't fit me .45 pistol.

    11. Re:OpenOffice by chialea · · Score: 1

      How is a crappy grammar checker an advantage over not having such a `feature'? I've never seen that thing give me a useful suggestion: everything it's marked wrong was correct, and every grammatical issue in my writing was not marked. Giving people a crutch, such as a spell-checker, has its advantages and disadvantages. (Personally, I spell rather badly, but a spell-checker seems to be helping that a bit.) Giving people a crutch which is largely incorrect simply encourages them to conform to its bizzare standards, which are far from correct usage.

      If you want a good grammar checker, send some money to faculty doing research in language parsing; don't ask for something that's worse than useless, in most situations.

      Lea

    12. Re:OpenOffice by grazzy · · Score: 1

      It's flawed because 99% of the userbase use Word.

    13. Re:OpenOffice by Derling+Whirvish · · Score: 1

      That's because they didn't attach their MSWord "styles" to the document and it imported whatever styles were set up on the local receiving computer. The whole system of styles being defined locally is a source of a lot of misformatting problems with Word on multiple computers since most users aren't even aware of the existence of paragraph styles anyway.

    14. Re:OpenOffice by dsci · · Score: 1

      Just to provide counterpoint, my wife is a medical doctor. Since switching my home office computer to Linux, she has been 'forced' to use OOo exclusively: Writer, and Impress. She's currently working on a presentation on Pediatric Syndromes A-Z, and she does Impress at home, PowerPoint at work.

      No big issues yet. The interface is different. There may be things OOo cannot "do," but they don't seem to be hindering the productivity of two professionals (I'm a physical chemist). We both use files that get switched back and forth repeatedly.

      --
      Computational Chemistry products and services.
    15. Re:OpenOffice by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nope, it's the 99% userbase that is flawed

    16. Re:OpenOffice by bogado · · Score: 1

      I was under the impression that word also get the page definition based in the installed printer, so your page can mysteriously completely re-flow in a computer with a different printer.

      But this problem with the styles is even worst, it is confusing to the user that don't know about them, and for a program that claims to be the easiest thing in the world this should be done as a default.

      --
      []'s Victor Bogado da Silva Lins

      ^[:wq

    17. Re:OpenOffice by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Talk to me when MSO offers native PDF export for all its programs without needing to buy and extra program.

    18. Re:OpenOffice by fishbowl · · Score: 1

      I didn't mean to imply I thought OO was bad. *I* use it to great success. I think the real surprise was learning who was the bigger geek between me and my spouse, and that people really do need a lot of the functionality (of Excel, particularly) that I never think much about.

      Of course, all my papers are done with LaTeX and gnuplot scatters, so I'm in another world anyway.

      --
      -fb Everything not expressly forbidden is now mandatory.
    19. Re:OpenOffice by TERdON · · Score: 1

      Try learning german, or french, or spanish, or any foreign language. Until you're totally fluent, you WILL like that feature when writing in that language, because then you're doing all those crazy small errors that you never do - but the grammar check still is looking for... That's of course asuming you have a version of Office with multilingual spell/grammar checking, though.

      --
      I have a really elegant proof for Fermat's last theorem. If this sig was only a bit longer...
    20. Re:OpenOffice by shic · · Score: 1

      Sorry to be a pedant:
      everything it's marked wrong was correct,

      I cut and paste your grammatically incorrect post into Word (2002 version) and it immediately highlights your incorrect use of "it's". If you had used Word you probably wouldn't have made this mistake.

    21. Re:OpenOffice by shic · · Score: 1

      Not that I want to defend MS... You don't need to "buy" that program:

      http://sector7g.wurzel6.de/pdfcreator/index_en.h tm

    22. Re:OpenOffice by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sorry to be a pedant:
      "everything it's marked wrong was correct,"

      I cut and paste your grammatically incorrect post into Word (2002 version) and it immediately highlights your incorrect use of "it's". If you had used Word you probably wouldn't have made this mistake.


      Too bad the word "it's" as used is correct, since it also stands as a contraction for the phrase "it has." The only issue I see here is possible tense confusion between "it has" and "was," although in certain instances that would be considered correct, if not very graceful.

    23. Re:OpenOffice by AeroIllini · · Score: 1

      Try creating a table in word > 2 pages long. Try importing said document into another version of word. Now tell me again word is not flawed :-)

      Also applies to absolutely any application of automated numbering, be it chapters, figures, equations, etc. (anything but pages). Create a document, populate it with text, autonumbered sections, autonumbered figures and graphs, give it a table of contents, and then open it in another version of Word (even a newer version). Watch all your numbering disintegrate in front of you.

      Styles and automatic numbering schemes are really the only thing separating Word from Notepad. Too bad they don't work.

      OO.o's autonumbering schemes may not be perfect or quite as flexible, but they don't blow up in a different version, and they tend to work. Regularly.

      --
      For security, the MD5 hash of this message and sig is 09f911029d74e35bd84156c5635688c0.
    24. Re:OpenOffice by tacocat · · Score: 1

      Sorry, not a defect of the software, that's an error somewhere between the keyboard and the chair!

    25. Re:OpenOffice by shic · · Score: 1
      "everything it's marked wrong was correct,"

      Too bad the word "it's" as used is correct, since it also stands as a contraction for the phrase "it has." The only issue I see here is possible tense confusion between "it has" and "was," although in certain instances that would be considered correct, if not very graceful.


      Personally I prefer the "heads-up" notification on issues like this - though I am reluctantly willing to admit that the phrase might (in a technical sense) be an example of poor style rather than incorrect grammar.

      • "Everything it marked wrong was correct"
      • "Everything it has marked wrong was correct"


      Which of these two sentences better captures your intended claim? The latter suggests that issues were "marked wrong" because the understanding of what is correct changed over time... but doesn't make that particularly clear.

      English grammar is complex and, in many cases, involves subjective judgements. The Word "Grammar Checker" highlights patterns which correlate with grammatical error... and I find this very useful. Sure, I can find phrases that are technically correct that Word thinks are faulty - and vice-versa... but that is not the point. I find the green squiggle dictates that a sentence would benefit from a careful proof-read... this frequently identifies phrases which, if re-written, make for a slicker document that is easier to read. I consider Word's grammar check feedback as if it were mark-up from an inexperienced proof-reader. I always review the marked sections again - even if I reject the specific recommendations.

      I have no desire for automated correction - but just as I would always use a spelling checker as a verification tool (without ever trusting one to correct my spelling) I find a grammar checker similarly useful. The faults detected by the spelling checker are more frequently typos than poor spelling - and the faults detected by the grammar checker are more frequently caused by an erroneous cut-n-paste than a failure to understand how sentences should be constructed.

      In an ideal world I would like an automated "style" checker which expands scope from sentences to whole documents... or, maybe, even wider (to impose a house-style) - and, that way, identify subtle inconsistencies. Of course, such a tool could be used by someone who doesn't know how to write to produce garbage - but I contend that they would likely produce garbage anyway. I would find a grammar _and_ style checker (coupled with a serious spell-checker) to be the most useful productivity tool since the invention of the word-processor.

  24. Sign what now? by Kaelem · · Score: 1

    Unless I missed it, the article doesn't say what type of agreement it is they would have to sign, or what terms there are.

    I'm guessing some sort of NDA-ish, so you don't go publishing the spec all over the place. Which, in the case of a file format, is exactly what I would consider "open source". A freely avaliable spec.

    Well, I suppose it still might be free(as in no money) even with signing the agreement, just not easily avaliable.

    --
    "That's some catch, that Catch 22." "It's the best there is."
  25. Wish I'd known he was there... by digipres · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Dang. While Mr Microsoft was next door, I was sitting at the OpenOffice miniconf at LCA just 60 metres away. I wonder if he knew that the Forces For Good were gathered so close by.

    I'm glad someone mentioned the NAA and the use of OOo. For the purposes of Digital Preservation, openly documented formats are essential. XML is good, but XML that you have to sign up for? C'mon Mr MS, who are you kidding?

    At the NAA, we're about keeping records for long after we're all dead. Digital records *must* be stored in publicly documented formats. Your grandkids won't be keen to sign an agreement to use those records.

    1. Re:Wish I'd known he was there... by mattpalmer1086 · · Score: 1

      Very true - I'm with the UK National Archives Digital Preservation department, and we're taking essentially the same position for long term preservation.

      Not only that, we clearly can't mandate that members of the public have an expensive office suite installed in order to read public documentation. We may offer it in that format for convenience (to the many who do have Office), but we can't only offer it that way.

  26. Yeah, Open. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Microsoft is as open as the goatse.cx guy.

  27. Re:Thank you, sir. May I have another? by EmptyBuffalo · · Score: 2, Insightful

    without MS you have no web/html like we have today
    what, MS developed today's web/html? I thought Al Gore invented it! The only 2 things that we can credit MS with that we can't credit other people with are (1)a large percentage of the POPULARITY of the web (getting computers into homes) and (2)the freakish amount of broken html on the web. Don't dish out credit for existence to MS.
    xml wouldn't get any attention if it wasn't "interwebby"
    And this is a credit to MS's proprietary standing how?
    this whole XML thing is a passing phase without MS
    Then let it die in honor of better standards.
    $diety forbid they avoid allowing open standards to stifle the innovation of their bazillion programmers with their bazillion dollars budgets.
    (1)How do you figure that open standards would stifle innovation?
    (2)If anyone's got a bazillion programmers it's not MS, it's the collective REST OF THE WORLD! Give them access and watch what all they come up with. It might just be something as cool as, oh, the web? ...something as innovative as, oh, computers? ...something as impressive as, oh, cooperation? None of these things are the result of a limited group of innovaters sealing themselves off. Why would the next wave of awesome innovation come from anywhere other than where it's come from before - openly communicating and sharing groups of people!

    --
    cat life | grep joy >> memory
  28. Nope. OO doesn't help by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    I don't know what kind of documents you've been importing and exporting. Every time I've tried using OO at work, it has proven incapable of importing even the simplest two-column A4-sized manuscript with a couple of figures, equations and captions in it.

    A typical result is a document where the figures are floating over the text (sometimes even on the wrong page) and the equations are mere gibberish.

    1. Re:Nope. OO doesn't help by makomk · · Score: 1

      I don't know what kind of documents you've been importing and exporting. Every time I've tried using OO at work, it has proven incapable of importing even the simplest two-column A4-sized manuscript with a couple of figures, equations and captions in it

      Word figure and equation support is screwed anyway IMO. It's sometimes near-impossible to get the figures where you want them (you drag them onto the next page and they bounce back - this might've been fixed since 2000) and equations are some horrid OLE thing that crashes half the time.

  29. In a sense, they're right by Mr_Silver · · Score: 3, Insightful
    Why should I have to sign an agreement?" one audience member demanded to know.

    Last time I checked, Microsoft are under no obligation to provide anyone with any details about their XML schema.

    Despite the fact that you have to sign an agreement, this is certainly more "open" than a blanket rejection to everyone who requests access.

    I can think of plenty of companies who won't let you get details about a file format they use under any circumstances.

    --
    Avantslash - View Slashdot cleanly on your mobile phone.
    1. Re:In a sense, they're right by LarryWest42 · · Score: 1

      The rules are different for monopolies. At least when they're enforced.

    2. Re:In a sense, they're right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Last time I checked, Microsoft are under no obligation to provide anyone with any details about their XML schema.

      Perhaps not.

      But if they aren't going to provide details about their XML schema, then they shouldn't go running to the press and public saying that they did.

      They should pick one. Either open their file formats or don't use claims of open file formats as a PR tool. Microsoft may not have an "obligation" to refrain from publicly telling baldfaced lies, but... fuck it, they shouldn't tell lies anyway.

    3. Re:In a sense, they're right by ShieldW0lf · · Score: 1, Informative

      Apparently they lost this antitrust case or something, and they're punishment is supposed to be opening these formats up. At least, that's what I heard.

      --
      -1 Uncomfortable Truth
    4. Re:In a sense, they're right by FidelCatsro · · Score: 2, Informative

      Actually last time i checked they were , At-least in the EU and the USA.
      They have two court orders(atleast) demanding that they open up there formats and APIs so we are all free to use them.

      --
      The only things certain in war are Propaganda and Death. You can never be sure which is which though
    5. Re:In a sense, they're right by m50d · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Last time I checked, Microsoft are under no obligation to provide anyone with any details about their XML schema.

      I take it you didn't follow the anti-trust case then?

      --
      I am trolling
    6. Re:In a sense, they're right by Felinoid · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Last time I checked Microsoft has agreed in cort to document it's file formats.
      Basicly Microsoft is requiring a liccens for something they are required to do.

      It would be like if someone made an agreement and then when it came time to make good they start making demands.

      --
      I don't actually exist.
    7. Re:In a sense, they're right by DanMc · · Score: 1
      I can think of plenty of companies who won't let you get details about a file format they use under any circumstances.

      And how often do these companies do so because they are the vast majority market share? A lot of the time, in my experience. Of course I don't REALLY blame most of them. If I was fool enough to buy a product that holds my data hostage, then it's my own fault. The larger issue with Microsoft is that they have been found in courts across the globe to be an unfair monopoly. So when I go to chose a word processor, I am unfairly steered towards MS by factors that should not be part of my decision. For example, all the folks takling about use of DOC for schoolwork. If the spec were open, then there would be absolutely no problem for other word processors (free, commercial, etc) to convert to DOC.

      Why doesn't Microsoft put a "Default save format=XXX" var. MS has bloated Word with every other feature you couldn't want, how come you can't change the default save format? OR allow 3rd party plugin save formats? Actually, I wonder how Adobe did it with PDF? Maybe I'm onto something here, if they didn't have to sign an NDA, maybe open source can do the same? Granted, the PDF save is just an addition to the File menu, so it's not really replacing the save command, but the important part is how it is able to scrape the document from the pane and objectify it. Anyone know?

    8. Re:In a sense, they're right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > this is certainly more "open" than a blanket rejection to everyone who requests access.

      So, if I kill and eat, let's say, 6 fewer people than Jeffery Dahmer, society will be ok with this?

      > I can think of plenty of companies who won't let you get details about a file format they use under any circumstances.

      Certainly. And anyone who put anyting into said formats would be an idiot (with appologies to idiots). Oddly enough, last week I found floppy backups of stuff I worked on over 10 years ago. Since I had enough sense to use a real open formats, I was able to see and use it again. Would I be able to do the same if I had used some proprietary format from a vendor who a) no longer exists, or b) has changed their format(s) so many times it no longer can handle what I did over 10 years ago?

    9. Re:In a sense, they're right by argent · · Score: 1

      Despite the fact that you have to sign an agreement, this is certainly more "open" than a blanket rejection to everyone who requests access.

      A blanket rejection can be more open, since it legitimizes reverse engineering.

      I can think of plenty of companies who won't let you get details about a file format they use under any circumstances.

      I have the option of not doing business with such companies. If I had the option of not doing business with Microsoft (as I have the option of not doing business with Bitkeeper) this would not be an issue, now would it?

  30. Open enough? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well, so are most of the online banks. All is relative eh? :)

  31. Tin foil hat time by smallguy78 · · Score: 0, Troll

    It's that time of the day again - Microsoft bitching hour. Let me start you off:

    Evil M$$ and their monopolistic corporate greed tactics, viva la linux revolution!

    --
    Nothing costs nothing
  32. How to use slashdot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    1. Make references to GPL
    2. Get moderated up

    The only surefire way to get upmods on slashdot is to attack it. In particular, anything which attacks linux or the gpl is certain to get moderated up, because slashdot talks about the gpl so much that it seems it must be relevant to absolutely any subject, no matter what it is. Moderators will not hesitate to wonder whether the post has any relevance whatsoever to the article at hand, or whether it makes any points which would be lucid or important in any context other than slashdot; they will simply moderate up the first thing which speaks of a slashdot sacred cow in an accusatory manner.

  33. not this again... by killtheOSSnazis · · Score: 0

    where is the picture of people beating a dead horse when you need it?

  34. Why not just stick with their binary format? by zonix · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Last time I checked, Microsoft are under no obligation to provide anyone with any details about their XML schema.

    They're not, but then why not just stick with their binary format? Offering an XML-based file format (cabability) without supplying the schemas is not all that useful? You get the data, sure, but you could always export as plaintext for that.

    Furthermore, it's certainly contrary to the basic idea and openess of the XML format, if you're gonna trap people with a patent license, trying to control how they parse the XML?

    This is deceptive if you ask me.

    z
    --
    What would an EWOULDBLOCK block, if an EWOULDBLOCK could block would? -- me
    1. Re:Why not just stick with their binary format? by strider44 · · Score: 1

      Yes they are. The European antitrust commission said they have to allow competitors access to their documentation because they are using their proprietary formats to block out third party competitors, and this most definitely stifles and even halts innovation. Microsoft are just arguing about "at what cost?".

  35. Re:Feed me! So Word can be compatible with itself by LarryWest42 · · Score: 2, Informative

    Not an answer to your question, but a response to the responses:

    I found it a little funny (well, at 1:50am) that the problems others attribute to OO misinterpreting Word docs are problems I've seen recently, using exactly one installation of Word (2003) on the same machine.

    Of course I tried "reveal codes": nothing obvious. I tried exporting to RTF and reimporting (massive file got much much bigger). Ended up cutting and pasting from Word to Notepad (to remove all formatting) and again back to a new Word doc. Problem solved! :-/

    Hardly the first time I've had MS documents just become unusable. So I think having public specs and multiple implementations would actually improve MS Office.

    Hell, just cleaning the specs up enough to publish would probably pay for itself (from MS' perspective: fewer bugs in MS Office).

    Oh, yeah, Word format was gratuitously required.

  36. Makes sense... by zecg · · Score: 5, Funny

    Root is safe, beta is gold, MS is open enough and MN2004 is coming back on a corrected trajectory. All makes sense.

    --
    .i lu doi ringos.star. xu do puku'aroroi dunli dopecaku leni virnu li'u
    1. Re:Makes sense... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Human sacrifice, dogs and cats living together... mass hysteria!

    2. Re:Makes sense... by lars_boegild_thomsen · · Score: 1

      You forgot: Debian Sarge will be released this year

    3. Re:Makes sense... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ROFLMAO! The wit of the comments!! LOL ! I am in tears, almost

    4. Re:Makes sense... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Change of plans: Testing is good enough.

  37. Are you open enough? by FinchWorld · · Score: 2, Interesting
    Seriously, if you ask M$ if there open enough they'll say yes, if you ask them if there software is the best, they'll say yes, if you ask them if Linux is some unrealistic thing done by weird people who live under bridges they'll say yes.


    M$, for some people, will never be open enough, but has this affected integration with M$ and Open source programs, if anything I've noticed Open Office is better at back compatibility with old word documents than Word itself.


    And As for "They'll never be truely be open until they open source windows". Why should they? Sure some people think all software should be free, but some people like to be rewarded in megabucks for there software, and if its worth it sure. This is, of course, ignoring that windows is not worth its current price even if it isn't worthless.

    --
    "I may be full of crap about this game, and I may be wrong, and that's fine." -Jack Thompson
    1. Re:Are you open enough? by ssj_195 · · Score: 1
      but has this affected integration with M$ and Open source programs
      Yes. Massively. I dread to think how many man-hours have gone to waste experimenting with MS's document "formats" (according to some, a straight memory dump of Word while it was running!) in an attempt to figure out how it works - time that could have been spent on adding useful features to OO.o. And import/ export is still problematic at best, and flat-out disastrous at worst.
    2. Re:Are you open enough? by Urger · · Score: 0

      Please, us weird people under the bridge run BSD

  38. Why should I blah blah blah by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    "Why should I have to sign an agreement?" one audience member demanded to know.

    Well that audience member is an idiot. The formats are as open as any other proprietory format, and more open than 99% of them. You can reverse-engineer your own files without a spec - just look at the XML. Or, if you want the complete IP delivered in a nutshell onto your lap, you have to sign an agreement.

    Of course, none of this excuses the millions of idiots who use Word and then bitch that it's a closed format. But given those idiots exist, and given we can shut up people like this "why should I sign a piece of paper" guy, we can pretty much interoperate with Word now.

    Microsoft, they're just so damned evil that even when they do something good, it's evil. Whereas Stallman releases a virus that infects font files and everyone says he's a hero.

    1. Re:Why should I blah blah blah by Lonewolf666 · · Score: 1

      The formats are as open as any other proprietory format, and more open than 99% of them. You can reverse-engineer your own files without a spec - just look at the XML. Or, if you want the complete IP delivered in a nutshell onto your lap, you have to sign an agreement.

      Third possibility:
      Maybe Microsoft will be forced to release the specs by the EU without such an agreement. The penalties in the antitrust case include that Microsoft has to release the specs to competitors. See also
      http://msnbc.msn.com/id/6167721/
      or google for more reports, there are plenty.

      There is still a dispute going on about the conditions for releasing the specs. The EU may or may not accept Microsofts current practice of demanding an additional agreement, which may be considered incompatible with open source development. OpenOffice, at least, does certainly count as competition.

      --
      C - the footgun of programming languages
  39. mkay, high horse again: by l3v1 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    "However, it was the proprietary standards that grew up and allowed those open standards to develop."

    There are probably enough people out there who would heartly defend FOSS against such a statement against MS for a simple reason: FOSS was there about one&half decades before MS started to appear.

    The other thing that bothers: We had to ask the question of whether to include backwards compatibility for that [OpenOffice.org] specification. Is just this simple to brush away odf as sucking too much to even care [at MS], and, funny thing, nobody objects to this ?

    Microsoft promoted common development of standards by sitting on all of the representative bodies working on them

    Just one quick example. MS also was in boards creating h.264. And now they have a closed implementation of something like it in wmv10. MS being in all of those boards in absolutely not about helping anyone: it's about being there where these happen, to know about them, to influence it towards they see it best, etc. Is there anyone who honestly believes MS is there to help ?

    "why should I have my documents from government in a proprietary format and have to ask a third party for permission to open them?".

    Quite true. In the sense, that if e.g. an official body picks a proprietary format to distribute documents, they implicitely force everyone else to use these, which in MS's case means either more pirates or more money.

    I, personally, wouldn't like either of those.

    --
    I am putting myself to the fullest possible use, which is all I can think that any conscious entity can ever hope to do.
    1. Re:mkay, high horse again: by argent · · Score: 1

      Microsoft promoted common development of standards by sitting on all of the representative bodies working on them

      You gotta laugh, I had this image of a huge lard-ass King Kong with a Bill Gates mask crushing a conference table and the committee members beneath his hairy buns.

  40. Re:That's their decision - not entirely by LarryWest42 · · Score: 1

    Except: you are forgetting that Microsoft is clearly a monopoly and has been legally recognized as such.

    For various reasons having to do the meaning of "free market", monopolies are generally required to be more open than random companies like BitMover.

    At least when the anti-trust laws are enforced they are.

  41. Re:Thank you, sir. May I have another? by l3v1 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    without MS you have no web/html like we have today

    And without ignorant guys like you MS wouldn't have so much revenue.

    --
    I am putting myself to the fullest possible use, which is all I can think that any conscious entity can ever hope to do.
  42. yah ... right .... by f3773t · · Score: 3, Funny

    and I also believe all politicians are honest and truthful

  43. Governments must act. by aug24 · · Score: 4, Insightful
    If MS wishes to keep its office format licensed, that is their choice. However, it is then imperative that public documents are not stored in that format. I'd go further and say that there should be an open standard (there prolly already is, if not develop one) and that all governments should adopt it immediately whether or not it is as good as MS's.

    Justin.

    --
    You're only jealous cos the little penguins are talking to me.
    1. Re:Governments must act. by yagu · · Score: 1

      ..., and say that there should be an open standard (there prolly already is, if not develop one) ,...

      There IS already a standard that works pretty well. I started using it in 1984. I had a fairly underpowered, but sufficient word processor called "ed" and created literally hundreds if not thousands of documents for my work. Soon I upgraded to the word processor "sc", a full-screen implementation and then "vi", also a full-screen implementation (oh, okay, vi automatically would only redraw 4 lines if it detected dialup speed connections (they called it baud-rate back then)).

      Today my standard is typically vim, a "vi" on steroids.

      The standard "format" these word processors manipulated? ASCII. (Of course there are relatives and quite compatible ones at that, but that becomes a long discussion.)

    2. Re:Governments must act. by aug24 · · Score: 1
      LOL, yes, fair enough, ascii really is everything you need, but there's no reason not to have tables, titles, etc. Hang on, am I describing XHTML? Yes, I think I am.

      J.

      --
      You're only jealous cos the little penguins are talking to me.
    3. Re:Governments must act. by cpghost · · Score: 1

      tables, titles, ...? How about going back to monospaced fonts, and laying out things neatly without any kind of formatting commands? We could even use ASCII art to render company logos.

      --
      cpghost at Cordula's Web.
    4. Re:Governments must act. by praedor · · Score: 1

      And what about angstrom symbols, greek symbols (you know, math and science stuff), and other special characters? And what about plots, charts, other graphics?


      I'd say go with OOo (or some other open format that ALL can - and must - follow if they want government work). Or, go with PDF. I can read and create PDFs with any free/open wordprocessor in linux or via propriatory wordprocessor...though I cannot imagine a reason to use one of those.

      --
      In Bushworld, they struggle to keep church and state separate in Iraq as they increasingly merge the two in America.
    5. Re:Governments must act. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > And what about angstrom symbols, greek symbols (you know, math and science stuff), and other special characters?

      This is a matter best handled by choice of character set, *not* document format, I say.

  44. Re:Thank you, sir. May I have another? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    quake3 fan, i presume!

  45. They will win in the end by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The have probably already been granted a patent on anything 'open', they will be sending cease and desist letters to all that are 'miss-using' their 'technology' soon. Look out 'open source'

  46. From the makers of by FidelCatsro · · Score: 4, Funny

    Free as in costs money
    Advantage as in same thing later

    We are proud to present
    Open as in closed

    --
    The only things certain in war are Propaganda and Death. You can never be sure which is which though
    1. Re:From the makers of by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If i were on a date with mr gates i would keep a close eye on my drink.

    2. Re:From the makers of by don.g · · Score: 1

      WAR IS PEACE

      FREEDOM IS SLAVERY

      IGNORANCE IS STRENGTH

      and the lameness filter is intelligent. it wants a lot of lowercase letters to balance out the uppercase ones above.

      --
      Pretend that something especially witty is here. Thanks.
  47. the extremists have it all wrong by maxpublic · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If anything the extremists should be encouraging Microsoft to be as closed, proprietary and cumbersome as they can possibly get. They seem to be shooting themselves in the foot here by trying to cajole/convince Microsoft into playing along.

    Seriously, if you're one of those folks who sees all proprietary software as a tool of Satan (says me, writing this in Opera), you don't want Satans reps on Earth to soften their image. You want them to instead impress people over and over again with their Black-Hatness so even the most clueless will eventually wake up and say "what the fuck?"

    You *want* MS to lock people in - and then bend them over and ream them good and hard once the lock-in is established. That creates enormous ill-will, especially to the PHBs who don't like anyone messing with their kingdoms. When the next opportunity comes to jump ship, they'll be that much more inclined to do so (e.g., when the next full-scale upgrade and conversion takes place).

    The harder they squeeze, the more star systems, er, customers, that'll slip through their grasp.

    So fanatics, crusaders, and all you "information wants to be free" loons (who STILL won't send me your credit card numbers, you hypocrits), reevaluate your game plan here. You're doing your cause a disservice. Every time MS screws over a customer pat them on the back and say "good job!"

    Max

    --
    My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
    1. Re:the extremists have it all wrong by RoLi · · Score: 1

      Yeah, but we have to remind the PHBs how they are being screwed over - and that's exactly what the article is about.

    2. Re:the extremists have it all wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't hate Microsoft, I hate the things they do. If they start behaving in a way that suits us then whats the problem. Opening the .doc standard allows for increased competition which is nothing but a significant gain for the consumer.

      Jack

    3. Re:the extremists have it all wrong by FauxPasIII · · Score: 2, Insightful

      > If anything the extremists should be encouraging Microsoft to be as closed,
      > proprietary and cumbersome as they can possibly get

      You're falling into a common trap of assuming that anybody that encourages MS to open their formats and
      code is an "extremist". There are plenty of practical (i.e. non-idealogical) reasons why this is a
      good idea for MS's customers and arguably for MS themselves. Hell, I'm as much a Linux enthusiast as
      you're likely to find, but I don't hate MS nor want them to dry up and blow away. I have to work in
      this economy. =) And, I would much rather the biggest software company in the world, employing some
      of the greatest programmers in the field (and employing them well, or so I'm told) would start to work
      on actually moving the state of the art forward for a change, make a positive impact on the industry
      by opening up and working collectively to build things that haven't been attempted yet.

      --
      25% Funny, 25% Insightful, 25% Informative, 25% Troll
    4. Re:the extremists have it all wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Information Freedom does not mean I have to give you my credit card numbers. It means that if you FIND OUT my credit card numbers, you will not get in trouble for merely knowing them, but rather only if you use them to defraud me or the card company. Information Freedom includes the freedom not to reveal information. It does NOT however, include the power to stop other people passing on information once the "cat is out of the bag".

      Information freedom stands fundamentally opposed to "intellectual property" laws which effectively state that you have the power to stop me passing on information EVEN AFTER you have disclosed it. I"P" is intrinsically a force of tyranny.

    5. Re:the extremists have it all wrong by maxpublic · · Score: 1

      I"P" is intrinsically a force of tyranny.

      And you telling everyone else what to think about the issue is freedom?

      Max

      --
      My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
    6. Re:the extremists have it all wrong by maxpublic · · Score: 1

      You're falling into a common trap of assuming that anybody that encourages MS to open their formats and code is an "extremist".

      Oh heck no. Some of them are whiners.

      Max

      --
      My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
    7. Re:the extremists have it all wrong by KingBahamut · · Score: 1

      This seems likely possible. Ive always maintained that there is a viable place for M$, it just happens to not be in my home, or in front of me as I work. Honestly if M$ developed a stable secure and open product, Id probably use it, might even encourage it. But will this happen?

      Likely not.

      --
      "God of Rock, thank you for this chance to kick ass. "
    8. Re:the extremists have it all wrong by Cyno · · Score: 1

      4644132000670039

    9. Re:the extremists have it all wrong by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      I disagree with this. I actually want MS to dry up and blow away, and for all those thousands of people to be out of work. While it'd be tough for many (but not that tough: the way those people get paid, they won't be sleeping under a bridge unless they were completely reckless with their finances), it'd be better for the economy overall after a while.

      The problem is that MS is not going to substantially change any time soon, in their present form, unless there is some major external factor forcing them. This mostly comes from their management; unless all their executives are forced out all at once, you're simply not going to see a change in attitude at that company, no matter what any courts or governments tell them to do.

      The easiest way to effect change in corrupt organizations like this is to simply wipe out the organization and start over. Everyone will find new jobs (except hopefully all those executives), but they'll be at different companies with different management. More importantly, the large amount of power that was concentrated in Redmond would be dispersed as other companies grow to fill the vacuum; having power concentrated that much is never a good thing.

      As for "working in this economy", MS employs a miniscule fraction of all software developers in this country. There's plenty of places to work, and with MS gone, there'd be more places to work as MS's oppressive effect on the industry would be gone.

  48. Open? by Masq666 · · Score: 2, Funny

    I thought all MS software where open..!?! Guess i'll have to go close windows to prevent bugs flying inn...

    --
    Bits of News Giving you the latest bits.
    1. Re:Open? by lachlan76 · · Score: 1

      Goatse is more open than all the BSDs put together!

  49. Re:Complete Rubbish. by mattyrobinson69 · · Score: 1, Informative

    Because Microsoft are illegally enforcing a monopoly by forcing others out of the market (not allowing other products/projects to play along)

  50. Perhaps we should turn it around? by Delgul · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Wasn't there talk recently about making the OOo format into a ISO standard? Perhaps this is the way to go:
    1) Make a good XML based ISO standard for textprocessors.
    2) Try to convince governments/companies to require their sofware to be compliant with this standard.
    3) And this is very important: Demand a very high and continued compatibility with this format to receive the "ISO approved" label. Or else we have another "IGES" debacle on our hands.

    Managers and administrators just _love_ ISO standards and will at least frown if we can say: "Well M$ is not even ISO compliant, you will be in trouble in the future if you use that! It's not even compatible with the only existing ISO standard!!". This way M$ will have to coorporate to satisfy the very people that decide about buying their software...

    Just a thought. Wouldn't know where to start to make this happen. But perhaps someone else here does :-)

    1. Re:Perhaps we should turn it around? by Jussi+K.+Kojootti · · Score: 2, Informative
    2. Re:Perhaps we should turn it around? by waffleman · · Score: 1
      Nice brain fart. You and the twits who moderated you up have confused the notion of a defacto application standard with an artificial file format standard. Which is to say, M$ doesn't have to be ISO compliant. Simply put, as long as your customers / business associates / other wing your of enterprise or government / grandmother use MSO, and OOo can't cut it for whatever reason, then you use MSO too. Then where's the motivation for M$ to be ISO compliant?

      Look, if OOo works, then no-one's complaining. If it doesn't work, then you complain, but you also end up buying MSO. Now do you really think a bunch of whiney managers and admins, who buy MSO anyway, are going to make M$ change its mind so that they lose market share??? Uh, right. Future-proofing with an ISO standard is all nice and good, kind of like esperanto, but we actually have to communicate today. Standards, in the ISO sense, have nothing to do with it.

  51. the force is strong in this one... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I agree with your strategy!

    But the open source community could also make an effort to make their tools easy to use. Like a push-pull effect.

    (Goddamn it, can anyone tell me how to draw a straight line in GIMP?, seriously)

  52. XML deficiency? by gone_bush · · Score: 2, Interesting
    "Some of the things that we do are not represented easily in XML.

    I'm not an XML expert and I don't know what Microsoft are trying to do that XML will not accommodate, but, does this not point to a deficiency in the current XML standard? If it does, then wouldn't it be to the benefit of everybody to update the XML standard?

    Of course, that does not mean that Microsoft will, or should, use that or any other standard. It is their right to do just what the hell they want. Just like the Open Source people.

    --
    Two roads diverged in a wood, and I - I took the one less travelled by. (Robert Frost, 1916)
    1. Re:XML deficiency? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      ZmRqa2hmZGhqa3NkZmpoa3NkZmpoa2 Rmc2tqY2NneWljZ3VuaW 5ueGVybnhlcnV5YWVjZm5neWlj
      bmd5aW9lcmd5bm94ZXJuZ3 lveHJneW5pb3hlZ3luaXhmZ2VyZ3 luaXhneW5pbmd5aXhlcm5neWll
      cm5neWl4ZXJuZ3lpZ3luaX hybmd5aXhlcgo=
      ====
      </reply>

  53. Good riddance smoking by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Insightful
    Wrong. A pub is a public place and hence smoking can be considered as a public health hazard. Therefore the government may very well.

    I am all for banning smoking at any public place and also in private apartments when it can be demonstrated that it can be smelled in neighbouring apartments.

    1. Re:Good riddance smoking by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Fucking fascist. I'm all for banning YOU. Myself a nonsmoker BTW.

    2. Re:Good riddance smoking by The+Slashdot+Guy · · Score: 1
      Bullshit. A pub is private property that allows the public to enter. If a pub owner would like to allow smoking, the customers have the choice to enter or not. It is not up to the government to dictate these things

      People like you make me sick.

    3. Re:Good riddance smoking by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Perhaps you don't understand that a building can be private property and still be a public place? (In many jurisdictions)

      Perhaps you do understand, but were (dishonestly) deliberately ignoring the difference to make your argument sound better to the brainless.

    4. Re:Good riddance smoking by Zphbeeblbrox · · Score: 1

      Or perhaps he objects to there being such a distinction, legal or otherwise. Personally I would have to agree with him. The government has no place telling me whether or not my private property is a public place or not. As for smoking in "public" restaurants let the market decide. I vote with my wallet. I dislike smelling cig smoke when I eat so I don't patronize places that have it. Simple.

      --
      If you see spelling or grammatical errors don't blame me. I tried to preview but IE here at work borked the CSS
    5. Re:Good riddance smoking by UlfGabe · · Score: 2, Insightful

      "A pub is private property that allows the public to enter. "

      resaurants are public property, not private, unless specifically stated in a sign at the door "members only"

      works out ok, wanna smoke? join a smokers club or something.

      smoking is bad, get with it.

      --
      Check journal for info on Anti-TextBook, an idea by me.
    6. Re:Good riddance smoking by TheStupidOne · · Score: 3, Funny

      Bullshit. A pub is private property that allows the public to enter.
      Microsoft = pub

      If a pub owner would like to allow smoking, the customers have the choice to enter or not.
      Smoking = access to document standards.

      If a pub owner would like to allow smoking, the customers have the choice to enter or not.
      I get it now... so all this fight for open standards is actually a cleverly disguised campaign to remove smoking bans! It all makes sense now!!!

      --
      unable to resolve function slashdot.sig(), aborting...
    7. Re:Good riddance smoking by drxenos · · Score: 1

      As someone who had managed a restaurant for 10 years, I can safely say you do not know what the hell you are taking about. Because a business is classified as in the "service sector" does not have it public property. You can be arrested for trespassing in a restaurant if you are asked to leave and refuse.

      --


      Anonymous Cowards suck.
    8. Re:Good riddance smoking by mikey1134 · · Score: 1

      there's one important thing your forgeting. You're house is for your use. Nobody else is normally effected by what you do. On the other hand a resturant is open to the public. If you're negligence in a resturant causes injury to a patron you can be held accountable. (e.g. if there's a spill on the floor that causes someone to fall and be injured, you are liable.) the same could apply to allowing smoking if it injures a patron through no fault of their own you could be held responsible.

      --
      <gir voice> I love this sig... </gir voice>
    9. Re:Good riddance smoking by The+Slashdot+Guy · · Score: 1

      No, restaurants are private property. They can deny you entry. Dress codes are an example.

    10. Re:Good riddance smoking by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This moronic idiot was given "insightful"??? Do you people even read the comments you moderate?

    11. Re:Good riddance smoking by ioudas · · Score: 1

      ianal but actully the person who owns the bar would be sued. atleast thats what one of my lawyer friends said

      --
      http://www.cushingproductions.com
    12. Re:Good riddance smoking by cHiphead · · Score: 1

      Spend enough time adminning Microsoft boxes and you'll get pretty pissed when someone tries to take away your right to step out to the sidewalk to have a smoke. or two.

      Cheers.

      --

      This is my sig. There are many like it, but this one is mine.
    13. Re:Good riddance smoking by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Or better yet... a friend of mine was arrested and thrown in county jail for six months for whipping his old cunt of a girlfriend with her leather jacket. (It was a soft playful whipping, so she really didn't have to press charges) He did this in a bar. If it was private property, then the police should never have become involved because in your stunted world view, the laws of the land don't apply in a bar. However, I challenge you to break any laws of the land on "private proprety". Kill someone for instance and then say to the judge, "but I thought it was OK because I am on private property"! Let's see how well that defense will protect you. Stupid ass.

    14. Re:Good riddance smoking by mikey1134 · · Score: 1

      that's what i'm referring to. I meant if YOU are the owner of a bar/resturant. YOU could be held liable for injury to a patron

      --
      <gir voice> I love this sig... </gir voice>
  54. Re:Thank you, sir. May I have another? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No you'r not an MS fanboi you'r a Troll.
    The Small difrence is that MS fanbois are idiots by acident and you are a malicious lier by intent

  55. Re:Complete Rubbish. by October_30th · · Score: 0, Redundant

    What do you mean by "not allowing others to play along"? There is the Open Office, Star Office and various other office suites. No one has been forced out of the market here and Microsoft is quite within its rights not to open up the document format. As the GP pointed out, not helping your competition is hardly illegal anti-competetive behavior.

    --
    The owls are not what they seem
  56. They're asking for it... by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I didn't read the license, but I'm sure it includes some sort of 'no reverse engineering' clause. Now here's the question: there are some countries out there where reverse engineering is allowed regardless of what the license says about it. Could someone from such a country possibly get the schema (legally), and then reverse engineer it to make a clean, Open re-implementation of it? And would it be legal to use it in e.g. US?

    1. Re:They're asking for it... by ajs318 · · Score: 1

      No, they couldn't, because yes, it would.

      Microsoft would never knowingly supply the schema to any territory where the NDA part of their licence was legally unenforcible. Once an Open Source document format translator cropped up, it would be impossible to ban it -- and if it were dedicated to the Public Domain, nobody need ever take responsibility for it. But the only way it could ever happen would be for somebody, somewhere to breach a Microsoft NDA -- and then there would be a figure to blame.

      Of course, we could get Ballmer or some other high-up Microsoft bod really, really pissed and hope he might blurt something out .....

      --
      Je fume. Tu fumes. Nous fûmes!
    2. Re:They're asking for it... by fishbowl · · Score: 1

      "But the only way it could ever happen would be for somebody, somewhere to breach a Microsoft NDA -- and then there would be a figure to blame."

      You find sociopaths in every walk of life. All you need is one person with nothing to lose, who just doesn't give a damn.

      --
      -fb Everything not expressly forbidden is now mandatory.
  57. More than enough! by ceeam · · Score: 2, Funny

    I'd say they are _gaping_ open!

  58. why was he there ? by l3v1 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Yup, just occured: Greg Stone, Microsoft's national technology officer for Australia and New Zealand, faced criticism during his presentation at the Australian Unix User Group conference in Canberra yesterday. - was he invited ? wanted to go ? MS wanted someone to be there ? what's the story ?

    --
    I am putting myself to the fullest possible use, which is all I can think that any conscious entity can ever hope to do.
  59. Jeesus by goldcd · · Score: 1

    You lot just love to whinge don't you?
    You've just been given an other option - this is a good thing. Whether you're going to take it or not is entirely up to you, but if you're going to get your knickers in this much of a twist over it, I suggest you pretend none of this ever happened.
    Your ignorance will be my bliss.

    1. Re:Jeesus by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You must love to get screwed over.

      Or you have never experienced it yet..

  60. Re:Complete Rubbish. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Insightful

    "No one has been forced out of the market here and Microsoft is quite within its rights not to open up the document format."

    Huh? What about WordPerfect? Lotus SmartSuite? They have certainly been forced out of the market for all practical purposes.

    Every review I have ever seen of any non-Office office suite considers the ability to read and write Office files an absolute must. Microsoft is a convicted monopolist. The courts did not order them to open up document formats, but they absolutely could have.

    Furthermore, governments are completely within their rights to prohibit use of file formats that are not open, and I hope they do so. MS can make all they noise they want about "open enough", but the AU government should just tell them "fine, have it your way, but we will no longer use any of your products, and will not accept files in proprietary MS formats from government contractors".

  61. The whole microsoft presentation was off topic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    At an 'Open Soure in Government' conference, the only mention of Open Source was to say that it wasn't the same as Open Standards.

    The main thrust of his presentation was to argue that standards (whether open or closed) were more important as long as one could licence the IP on reasonable and non-discriminatory terms.

    Rest of the conference was good.

    1. Re:The whole microsoft presentation was off topic by argent · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The main thrust of his presentation was to argue that standards (whether open or closed) were more important as long as one could licence the IP on reasonable and non-discriminatory terms.

      I would agree with the first part (without the parenthesised inclusion)... open standards can be much more important than source. But the licensing terms for standards... well... the IEEE and ISO have already pushed the limits of what's acceptable there, now and then. If you can't license it on terms that allow completely free redistribution of both conforming and derived works with no royalties or further restrictions, then it's not an open standard. You can't have a "part-way open standard".

  62. Uh by northcat · · Score: 3, Funny

    Running as root is safe, beta is good for production use and MS is open enough. Next thing you know, they'll be saying that Adobe bought Macromedia, one of its enemies.

  63. The audience member's question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    However, he stood firm on the company's policy of making the XML schemas for its Office 2003 document standard publicly available provided interested parties sign an agreement with the software heavyweight. "Why should I have to sign an agreement?" one audience member demanded to know.

    Ooh! In your face, Microsoft!

  64. at least you get to save your data on your own pc by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    google is far more dangerous...

  65. Don't use it by vhogemann · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Of course Microsoft thinks they're open enougth, they still profit!

    When OpenOffice.org stand a real menace, then Microsoft will be pressed to open their format, or to support OO.o own.

    OpenOffice.org 2.0 is comming, with database support and a REAL laguage to extend it, Java. Let's see how it stands against Microsoft Office.

    --
    ---- You know how some doctors have the Messiah complex - they need to save the world? You've got the "Rubik's" complex
    1. Re:Don't use it by argent · · Score: 1

      a REAL laguage to extend it, Java

      Java? Please tell me you mean Javascript. Java is tolerable as "C++ with less evil", but as an extension/scripting language? Dear god.

  66. Re:FUCK!!! Suck a cock by steeviant · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    you bastard.

  67. OpenOffice.org is not GPL by peterstev · · Score: 3, Informative
    Open Office is dual licenced. You can pick which license you want to use.

    "The libraries and component functionality of the OpenOffice.org source code" are LGPL, which allows them to be linked in to proprietary works.

    It is also possible to license OO.org under the Sun Industry Standards Source License (SISSL). This allows you to make proprietary, binary only distributions, if you maintain compatibility with with the APIs and XML formats. Microsoft could download the entire source, add an MS-Office GUI and a their own Word importer and make "MS-Office Released" out of it. As long as they don't break any interfaces, that's OK under the SISSL. Why doesn't MS import OO files? Because they don't want to. Perhaps they need some convincing...

    1. Re:OpenOffice.org is not GPL by gellenburg · · Score: 1

      The only way you'll see support added for OOo Writer is if the Federal Government (and other Governments!) demand it.

      Even then, you'll only see it in a special "Government Version" of Office. It will NEVER be added to it's consumer and prosumer version of their apps.

      It's too great of a risk for Microsoft to do that.

      Why would anyone need to buy Office any more at that point?

      Especially considering that the bulk of Microsoft's profits come from their Office Suite and NOT from operating systems.

  68. Re:Complete Rubbish. by steeviant · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Why on earth should MS have to make it easy for someone else to rip off their work?

    Why should Microsoft have the right to lock up my documents and not tell me how to get my document complete with formatting from their program?

    What gives them the right to treat my work in that way after I have already paid them?

    I believe that companies should be allowed to take whatever measures they deem neccessary to prevent piracy and reverse-engineering of their software as long as it doesn't hurt customers.

    I'm happy to pay for, and use proprietary software, but that does not mean that I want some company to tell me with what software I can open my own data.

  69. Re:Complete Rubbish. by Felinoid · · Score: 1

    Microsoft agreed to it in cort.

    Nobody else has any issues with publishing the file formats they create.
    For most people portability is important.
    Costummers don't wish to be locked into a product line if they can avoid it.

    They have the ability to bundle Microsoft office and Windows together. More and more PCs are being shipped with Office preinstalled as part of a pacage deal.

    You mentioned rabid supporters. Intresting but every give a thought why Linux has so many supporters and Windows dosen't?
    Or why Macintosh has so many rabid supporters?

    Oh heck I mean the Amiga has more supporters that Microsoft Windows.

    Why would a long dead platform have more supporters than the most widely used?

    If your product is good you get fanatics. If your product sucks you complain about other peoples fanatics.

    --
    I don't actually exist.
  70. Free clue by Moraelin · · Score: 3, Insightful

    It's not about embedding music and videos, it's about embedding _anything_ whatsoever. Some of which _are_ valid things to have in a document.

    E.g., surprise, I might want to embed a CAD drawing as an illustration in a document. E.g., I might have a map generated out of sattellite data, by a specialized program. E.g., I might have a scientiffic/simulation program which can present its data or results in its own format, and I might want to embed that in a document. Etc.

    "Text document" no longer means 80 column, 7 bit ASCII, you know. If an illustration or diagram actually belongs in that text, I'd very much like it to be actually included there, and not just referenced as "oh, and you also need to look at asdfgh666.jpg in the attached pics.zip file." Stopping to do that not only is a waste of my time, it also pointlessly disrupts the reading process.

    Yes, one could do the stone-age thing and do a piss-poor export to some graphics format first, and then embed that. And pray to the dark gods that you don't end with some piss-poor conversion and/or scaling artefacts when printing. Just like in the bad old days.

    Or you could have a modern design which can spare you that waste of money, brains and time. Microsoft obviously took this route. Kudos to them.

    So, no offense, the "why would you need to embed a video in a text document?" is just a straw man, and not even a good one.

    Again: The point is to have an architecture which can embed anything whatsoever, from any program. Incidentally something that generic is also usable to embed videos. But it's also able to embed stuff that _is_ perfectly normal and logical to have in a text document. Which is the real point.

    --
    A polar bear is a cartesian bear after a coordinate transform.
    1. Re:Free clue by NtroP · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Yes, one could do the stone-age thing and do a piss-poor export to some graphics format first, and then embed that. And pray to the dark gods that you don't end with some piss-poor conversion and/or scaling artefacts when printing. Just like in the bad old days.

      This is the part that really pisses me off about idiots who use computers and just assume that Microsoft == Computer. What if I CAN open your document, maybe I even have a copy of MS Office running in CrossOver, but what if I don't have your particular CAD software or proprietary mapping software or stupid fucking MS DRM CODEC for that video clip? Now I have a document with a bunch of stupid broken data in it!

      My mother-in-law is famous for this. She downloads Neto-Keen PhotoGallery Maker (tm), sets up a photo album and sends it to everyone in the family. Everyone goes WTF is a .nkpg document?! She just assumes everyone can read it because she can. She also loves to send out .doc files. Why? 'Cause Pimply Face, the local guru, installed MS Stolen Office on her computer, furrthering the myth that "everyone uses Word"!

      Where I work we are required by law to archive most of our official documents for a minimum of 80 years! WTF! I've already got archived documents in Works, ClarisWorks, WordPerfect, MS Word (all flavors), etc. I've tried to stress to management that we MUST choose an open standard (at least for archival copies) or we'll be in deep shit when, 30 years from now, we can't read any of the old formats. I've also stated that we pretty much have to have all of our archive ON LINE. Why? What format should we archive to that will be readable in 80 years (besides microfiche or paper?). We have a whole rack in a storage room of, what, those old 9660 reel-to-reel tapes? Hmmm... I don't have a reader for that. I don't even have a reader for 5.25 or 8-inch floppys any more! At least with all data online we can migrate it to the new drive arrays and have a chance at reading it with some archaic piece of software running in VMWare or something.

      The "Information Age" only really kicked in about 10 years ago. We are still really new at all this 'Letrconic Data stuff. Already we are seeing valuable information lost because it's published to the web and then removed to make room for more content. Effectively (except for the way-back machine) it's lost forever. Do you think the person or company that posted that will give it to the local library or make their backup tapes available upon request? Of course not.

      Back when people carved their data in stone or baked-clay tables, it lasted damn near forever. Then they moved to papyrus and it rotted easier, but still could be rolled and stored for thousands of years. We moved to paper and celluloid which maybe last a couple hundred years it properly stored. The future will be digital. I've got data at home on ZIP and Jazz discs I know I'll never be able to get off because my reader died and I'm not about to go buy another one just to get it off. Is that data critical? No. If that data was on paper, would I have kept it? Probably not for much longer, but if I had waned to, I could at least be able to save it and read it without having to hunt down a data archeologist with and archaic set of hardware and software to decode it.

      DRM will cause even more problems in the future. Even if you were to archive everything on line in a format that is still supported, if it is DRM'd will you be able to read it? Will all future software be 100% backward compatible with all the previous DRM models? We should be thinking about this BEFORE we choose a file format.

      I believe, in the long run, we will be doing more harm to the human race in the form of lost history and information by choosing closed standards as the way to store data now, than the burning of the Library in Alexandria ever did. We are turning information in to the tower of babel.

      To get back on topi

      --
      "terrorism" and "pedophilia" are the root passwords to the Constitution
    2. Re:Free clue by Moraelin · · Score: 2, Insightful

      "What if I CAN open your document, maybe I even have a copy of MS Office running in CrossOver, but what if I don't have your particular CAD software or proprietary mapping software or stupid fucking MS DRM CODEC for that video clip? Now I have a document with a bunch of stupid broken data in it!"

      What if you're not even supposed to read that particular document? If that document is intended for internal use, at a workplace where I _know_ that everyone got that CAD package pre-installed, I'd very much like to embed it.

      Or how about embedding other Office formats? E.g., if I have Office on that computer, I already have both Word _and_ Power Point installed. And embedding means I can use them as such, not as lame "see the powerpoint foil in the other file" notes, nor as some read-only export/renderer. I can not only just have a state diagram generated in PowerPoint inside a Word document, I can also double click it and edit it there and then. Then I can drop a bloody Excel table _and_ a chart in it, and again, they stay editable.

      You propose... what? That I separately open Excel, edit the data, export the chart as GIF and then import it in word? Yeah, that's productive. Not.

      And how about if I need to edit it later? Yeah, let's remember which separate Excel file was used to create and export that chart, so I can do it again with the changed data. No, thanks. I'll take embedding instead.

      "To get back on topic, we should do the stone-age thing and convert ALL media meant for final distribution (or public consumption) into a standard, open format for interchange."

      See above. Some things were never meant for public distribution to start with.

      "Back when people carved their data in stone or baked-clay tables, it lasted damn near forever. Then they moved to papyrus and it rotted easier, but still could be rolled and stored for thousands of years."

      Yes, and technical progress also hapened roughly once per thousand years. I'm not sure how that's better.

      Yes, formats change. We now can do better, and can do it with more data.

      E.g., at one point, RLE was the best we could do to compress an image. Nowadays your mom can run around with a cheap digital camera and a cheap flash card because we moved to a better format.

      Better yet she can (and at least mine does) shoot whole bursts of photos, and pick the one that looks the best. Try doing that with raw uncompressed bitmaps, and you'd need a 1-2GB flash card as a bare minimum.

      E.g., concatenating a bunch of bitmaps was the best movie compression available. But then also the longest movie you'd hope to see on a desktop was measured in seconds. Or it was a slide show. And even that at such resolutions as 320x200.

      If we stuck to that, you _still_ wouldn't be able to get a movie on a DVD. Because it takes a lot more compression to get a movie to fit in 5 GB. We'd probably still be waiting for those new holographic discs to be able to store a movie on them.

      And now we have better codecs than even that. E.g., if I put up some home video or a short video capture from a game, I'll encode it as DivX. Because, you know, I'd rather that those people get it as a 100 MB download than a 1 GB download. Not everyone is on broadband yet, even in the USA.

      Etc.

      So, yes, formats change. Thank god for that.

      Were mom's photos or my short video capture of my GT2 mad skillz some historical document, that will plunge the Earth back into the dark ages if lost? Well, no.

      --
      A polar bear is a cartesian bear after a coordinate transform.
  71. Re:Complete Rubbish. by October_30th · · Score: 1
    What about WordPerfect? Lotus SmartSuite?

    So your idea of free and fair competition is that every product should float no matter if another product completely outperforms/outmarkets them? I still don't see how were they illegaly forced out of the markets.

    --
    The owls are not what they seem
  72. OOo plugin for Word by HogynCymraeg · · Score: 1

    The solution I see is the reverse of what most people think: Create an OOo import/export plugin for word! Then you can push the OOo fileformat and not necessarily the program.

  73. Re:Complete Rubbish. by drsmithy · · Score: 1
    Because Microsoft are illegally enforcing a monopoly by forcing others out of the market [...]

    I would have thought that the "market" would be more accurately defined as "word processors" or "office suites", not "Microsft Word files" or "Microsoft Excel files"...

  74. Re:Complete Rubbish. by drsmithy · · Score: 2, Insightful
    Why should Microsoft have the right to lock up my documents and not tell me how to get my document complete with formatting from their program?

    1. You use their software voluntarily for storing *your* data.

    2. Your data is - and remains - perfectly accessible via the software they provide, that you voluntarily purchased to use

    I'm happy to pay for, and use proprietary software, but that does not mean that I want some company to tell me with what software I can open my own data.

    They don't.

  75. It's also unfair by jesterzog · · Score: 1

    If you want them to spell out how they work for you, you'll have to play by their rules. If you don't like that, that's fine too. You don't have to know now their file formats work to use their product, and when it comes down to it you don't even have to use their product.

    The problem that I have with this is that these required agreements are, more often than not, absolutely one-sided and presented as non-negotiable.

    Even if the proposed agreements are legally dubious when considering the requirements they place upon the reader, it's unrealistic for most potential readers to challenge Microsoft and expect to get anywhere, let along negotiate.

  76. Microsoft is NOT viral. by Black+Copter+Control · · Score: 1
    Demonic, maybe, but never viral.

    'You use our software, we own your data. It's that easy -- deal with it.'

    --
    OS Software is like love: The best way to make it grow is to give it away.
    1. Re:Microsoft is NOT viral. by hazah · · Score: 1

      So it isn't an infection we're seeing? It's a phase maybe?

    2. Re:Microsoft is NOT viral. by xMilkmanDanx · · Score: 0

      Quite right about it not being viral. Viruses are small, well written pieces of code that do what they're designed to do. Microsoft... well, you get the point.

    3. Re:Microsoft is NOT viral. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Windows infects 90+% desktops as soon as they leave the factory. It consumes an ungodly amount of the system resources and the users do not know what is being done to their system. It periodically reboots your system (previously, it displayed some blue screen) and it reports back to Microsoft.

      The only argument that Windows is not a virus is that virus is well designed.

    4. Re:Microsoft is NOT viral. by Black+Copter+Control · · Score: 1
      Phase, infestation, posession... Different people call it different things, depending on what they believe.
      Some think it gives them great power, but they do not understand the long term costs.

      I've exorcised a few machines. Once people understand what's available on the other side, they rarely want to go back to their old state.

      --
      OS Software is like love: The best way to make it grow is to give it away.
  77. What ever you are Microsoft... by Qbertino · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    ... your Software and your Operating Systems suck.
    Get out of my air. Thank you.

    --
    We suffer more in our imagination than in reality. - Seneca
  78. Oh Puhleeze by phayes · · Score: 2, Insightful

    If you're going to use stupid analogies to push an off-topic political point, try telling the truth:
    - Strawman A: The USA "protects everybodys interests by sitting on the UN". Where has the USA said this exactly? Do you have a clear citation of this phrase in an official document or are you just blowing smoke?
    - Strawman B: "and then using it's veto". Which veto would that be? The U.N. security council veto? More smoke: The USA has never used it's veto on the world court. It has terminated it's consent to surrender it's sovereignty to the world court.

    When countries like Libya can become chairman of the U.N.'s Human rights committee the USA recognizes that the international burocracies are being perverted from their initial aims. Why should the world court be any different?

    --
    Democracy is a sheep and two wolves deciding what to have for lunch. Freedom is a well armed sheep contesting the issue
  79. Re:Thank you, sir. May I have another? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    >> without MS you have no web/html like we have today

    Isn't there some way to filter out idiots? Can we add that to an open XML standard? The clown who wrote this needs to at least google for something like "web history" or something.

    Saying that M$ has something to do with the web/html is like saying that Al Gore invented the internet...oh, wait...;-)

  80. Re:Complete Rubbish. by PurpleXanathar · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Nothing illegal in keepin file formats proprietary. On the contrary there could be at least something illegal in reverse engineering them - whether do you like it or not. M$ has some very illegal things to destroy competition, this is not one of them. If this is a problem it's only because people are using the wrong format to share documents - doc files are not written on that purpose.

  81. Re:Complete Rubbish. by the_Bionic_lemming · · Score: 1

    Because Microsoft are illegally enforcing a monopoly by forcing others out of the market (not allowing other products/projects to play along)

    Yet when Apple sues online web sites over other people violating NDA's (you know - Signed agreements) It's good business practice. /. Let's pick a stance and not change it based on what company the stance is applied to.

    Sheesh.

    --
    _ _ _ Go for the eyes Boo! GO FOR THE EYES!
  82. Re:Complete Rubbish. by PurpleXanathar · · Score: 1

    >> . Intresting but every give a thought why Linux has so many supporters and Windows dosen't?

    May I hazard the hypothesis that Windows fans simply don't read/post on slashdot all day long ?

    And may I suggest that 99% of users could care less of the OS they are using ?

  83. Excuse me, what are you talking about? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They developed the file formats, so they own the intellectual property.

    Hmm, how much "Intellectual Property" is in a file format? Anyone can make a file format. It's no rocket science, nothing added to our society.

    What ADDS value is open standards, protocols and file formats ANYONE can develop and use. That's the foundation of the Internet. MS tried to make their own proprietary net, but as usual they just didn't get it. Freedom always wins in the end.

    What we are currently paying the price for is the ignorance of managers not willing to support more open solutions.

    What "Intellectual Property" are you spouting about anyways?

    Copyright? No
    Patents? No
    Trademark? No

    What then? Just throwing some "IP" in the air just to sound smart? To a smart person, that reveals bottomless ignorance.

    Crap arguments from a corporate apologist.

  84. Re:Complete Rubbish. by steeviant · · Score: 1

    It's true that I can access my data in the short term, but in the future I may wish to change to a different office suite or hardware platform or OS for a very good reason.

    At that point I will no longer be able to access my data with all it's formatting, because Microsoft are keeping the standard secret, why should I have to worry about that? It benefits nobody except Microsoft to have the standards kept secret.

    If you were talking about releasing Microsoft's source code, I could understand your viewpoint with regard to them doing all the work for someone else to reap all the benefits, but we're simply talking about Microsoft releasing information about whatever obfuscated format they're storing their customer's data in.

    Is that really too much to ask?

  85. And... by lbmouse · · Score: 1

    ...my wife is sort of pregnant.

  86. Re:Microsoft is too big to be ignored by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It is not always the best format that wins.

    Using OOo on its own is great, but still only a fraction uses it.
    One way or another you will always face a MS Office distribution.

    The best way of facing off MS is to not upgrade. If You upgrade you get the new binary prorietary XML format and then OOo developers need to reverse engineer again.

    But lets face it is there any need to upgrade from MS Office2001.
    The new features in Office XP are not what ordinary users need anyway.

  87. Re:Complete Rubbish. by mattyrobinson69 · · Score: 1

    you dont know my opinion of apple suing people over violating NDA's (not that its at all relevant).

    Apple aren't a monopoly, different rules apply.

  88. Re:QUICK MOD UP A MICROSOFT BASHER INFORMATIVE by IchBinEinPenguin · · Score: 1

    I think I'm gonna not come here for a few months.

    Good. I never liked that Anonymous Coward guy anyway......

  89. Re:Complete Rubbish. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Costummers don't wish to be locked into a product line if they can avoid it.

    I don't think you know anything about the average 'Microsoft Office' user. If you did, you'd eat those words. If you think the majority care, you'd be wrong. This site does not represent the majority by a long way.

    ...or was that mongolian spelling mistake actually meant to read 'costumers'?

    For most people portability is important.

    Again, see above.

    They have the ability to bundle Microsoft office and Windows together. More and more PCs are being shipped with Office preinstalled as part of a pacage deal.

    How come you can spell 'preinstalled', but not 'package'? Anyway-- This is utter toss. You're not forced to include MSOffice with any PC, OEM or otherwise.

    Funny-- I'm fairly sure Linspire would include OpenOffice with the the preinstalled machines and that wouldn't be an issue. The fact that OpenOffice is a bag of crap is besides the point.

    You mentioned rabid supporters. Intresting but every give a thought why Linux has so many supporters and Windows dosen't? Or why Macintosh has so many rabid supporters?

    Since your grammar has descended to a truly miserable low, I'll be brief. The answer to your question is : No.

    Linux has so many supporters because they have to come out and defend themselves. Windows users are happy with their choice and don't feel the need. I don't know about Mac users, so I won't comment.

    Oh heck I mean the Amiga has more supporters that Microsoft Windows.

    Vapourware often does. Not in this case though.

    Why would a long dead platform have more supporters than the most widely used?

    And here we are! It's been a long road, but here's the point where you finally begin to believe that what you're saying is true. Congratulations!

    Is this a joke? Where's the punchline? Come on, I'm in suspenders...

    If your product is good you get fanatics. If your product sucks you complain about other peoples fanatics.

    Close, but let me correct you :

    If your product sucks, you get fanatics who come online to try and 'smokescreen' other people into thinking otherwise. If your product is good, you actually spend some time using it.

    It's been real. No, really.

  90. Embedding stuff in a ducument by cbr2702 · · Score: 1
    Yes, one could do the stone-age thing and do a piss-poor export to some graphics format first, and then embed that. And pray to the dark gods that you don't end with some piss-poor conversion and/or scaling artefacts when printing. Just like in the bad old days.

    The word processor could quite well embed the image at printing quality for you.

    --


    This post written under Gentoo-linux with an SCO IP license.
  91. Bullsh*t by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You'll STILL have the version of MS Office you voluntarily chose to use, which will STILL be able to open the documents.

    You can save those documents in any number of formats other than Office's native file formats. RTF and HTML come to mind right off. You don't HAVE to save Word Documents as .doc files.

    It's your own choices that are locking the documents into a certain format.

    1. Re:Bullsh*t by makomk · · Score: 1

      You'll STILL have the version of MS Office you voluntarily chose to use, which will STILL be able to open the documents.

      Assuming it's not Office XP after they've switched off the registration servers, of course...

    2. Re:Bullsh*t by steeviant · · Score: 1

      I don't think you're quite 'getting it', I'd like to be able to retrieve my documents as I saved them, without losing formatting, and especially without losing the tables and illustrations.

      Which format can you suggest that stores all of the formatting that word is capable of?

      All the export formats are poor relations, and the original formatting is inaccessible due to Microsoft's restrictive practices.

      Regardless of whether I'm using Microsoft's product voluntarily or not should not give them the right to restrict information that I have stored using their software.

      I'm sure plenty of people have started using Microsoft's products without being aware that they are essentially chaining themselves to MS Office forever more, why should this be something that paying customers even have to consider?

    3. Re:Bullsh*t by mrRay720 · · Score: 0

      What, you expect Microsoft to solve all of your problems for you? YOU saved it with YOUR copy of Office, it was YOUR choice to use .DOC format... I see no sane reason why Microsoft gets the blame for your choices.

      It's not as if there aren't dozens of ways out, either, so you're not locked in by any stretch of the imagination.
      1 - Open with word processor of choice. There are many, with varying degrees of usefulness. EASY!
      2 - Export to A N Other file format in Word. EASY!
      3 - Create add-in for Word to export to whatever file format you either choose or create. EASY!
      4 - Copy/paste. Magic how that works, eh. EASY!
      5 - Remake the file. If the contents are that important, you'll do it. EASY!
      6 - Stick with Word. Well it was good enough for you last year, why notr this year? EASY!
      7 Write your own app that accesses the document through MS's documented API to pull out what you need from the file and save as required. EASY!

      What is it with you lot that makes you whine and cry so much that MS won't do your work for them??

    4. Re:Bullsh*t by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wow. It's been a long time since I've seen such a level of cluelessness. Did you even READ what you responded to?

      * He wants to SAVE FORMATTING (perhaps tables... images...), so 4 and 5 are out.
      * The point is that the formats have to be reverse-engineered, so 1 and 7 are out.
      * What if the user does not have Word but is sent a document by another person or it was created before the user switched over to [OS of choice]? 2, 6 and 7 are out.
      * I'm not sure what part of 3 and 7 fall under your definition of 'easy'. My mom is using Word on Win '98 to store her recipes. I hardly think if we buy her a Mac or choose to not get a new version of Word when she goes to XP next year that she'll be tapping into 'documented API's' or creating add-ins.

      In case you haven't noticed, MS owns a significant portion of the world market, and only a handful of the populace can even do most of what you're suggesting. And the point of the story, and thread, is that they are doing what they can to stop everything you've talked about.

    5. Re:Bullsh*t by wasabii · · Score: 1

      It sounds to me like you should choose to use .sxw files. After all, it is your choice.

      If you're going to give me some bullshit about society forcing you to make a choice, well that's bullshit. Peer presure was never an excuse. You are a human being with the ability to freely decide weither to use Office or not. Decide against it. Take the penality and hardships that come with deciding against it, or shut the fuck up, Donny.

    6. Re:Bullsh*t by wheelbarrow · · Score: 1

      You made a free and voluntary choice to use word with your eyes wide open. You still have options: use some other software. You have free choice and total control in today's world.

    7. Re:Bullsh*t by steeviant · · Score: 1

      I made a choice to use MS Office as you say, because I wanted to be able to correspond with other people running MS Office.

      I would have had other choices if I'd been able to rely on them to be able to produce legible documents when opened in MS Office.

      As I live in the real world, a lot of people use Office, so I really had little choice, This wouldn't have been the case if Microsoft would just release what documentation they have on their formats. Not much to ask of the world's richest corporation, who I've already paid copious amounts of money to, surely?

    8. Re:Bullsh*t by mrRay720 · · Score: 1

      He wants to save formatting, so copy/paste is out? Not so, the clipboard is quite capable of storing more than plain text.
      He wants to save formatting so remaking the file is out? Well if your new chosen software can't make it from scratch, a file conversion won't help, either!

      If the user doesn't have word but was sent it? How is this any different to me recieving any file I can't open, eg an AutoCAD or Photoshop file if I don't have either?

      The file was created before they switched to Linux? Plan ahead, next time, or install OO.o which does an OK job with word docs.

      Considering that most OSS advocates are under the bizarre assumption that everyone can code, the macro/API solution is perfectly valid. You only need one person to do it and release it, anyway. You're saying there's not a single person out there both capable and willing to do this?

      And as for MS actively stopping people from doing any of the above? Re-read the message title - bullsh*t! The Word/Excel APIs wouldn't be well documented and accessible with a pre-provided scripting language if MS were serious about hiding this stuff. Plus as has been stated, the details are available if you want to agree to their terms. If you don't, then it's your damn fault, not theirs.

    9. Re:Bullsh*t by lowe0 · · Score: 1

      So, if 3 is too hard for you, just pay someone else to do it. Adobe Acrobat will do exactly what's being described here.

    10. Re:Bullsh*t by steeviant · · Score: 1

      If the user doesn't have word but was sent it? How is this any different to me recieving any file I can't open, eg an AutoCAD or Photoshop file if I don't have either?

      The difference is that both the Autocad and Photoshop formats are well documented, which makes it easy to create programs that can interoperate with both of these programs.

      The file was created before they switched to Linux? Plan ahead, next time, or install OO.o which does an OK job with word docs.

      OO does an OK job of importing word files, it does a crap job of exporting word files, insofar as some files from OO can cause crashes in Word, granted sometimes it seems like sneezing can cause that, making your customer's computer crash every time they try to open a document is not a way to endear them to you.

      Considering that most OSS advocates are under the bizarre assumption that everyone can code, the macro/API solution is perfectly valid. You only need one person to do it and release it, anyway. You're saying there's not a single person out there both capable and willing to do this?

      That's exactly what I'm saying. It's impossible -no doubt about it to create a perfectly compatible word processor, because Microsoft won't release the specifications to their file format.

      Because of Microsoft's EULA it would be illegal for any other software to support an import filter based on information from reverse engineering Word, so the people making software are limited to trying to guess Word's obfuscated format.

    11. Re:Bullsh*t by steeviant · · Score: 1

      Except then everyone I know has to buy adobe acrobat or they won't be able to edit the documents I send them.

      You're also assuming that everyone has Adobe Reader installed, or has the permissions to install it.

    12. Re:Bullsh*t by xMilkmanDanx · · Score: 0

      Or that your Office suite works on the new hardware/OS after having to upgrade (say after a crash).

    13. Re:Bullsh*t by ColMustard · · Score: 1

      In the end of the day, Microsoft has no obligation to make it easy for you to switch to another office suite. They have no obligation to support any other product. It is up to the other product to make the transition as easy as possible since they are the ones trying to win your business. "Open" documents would certainly be nice and many people (governments) simply choose products with open formats to begin with, but that doesn't mean Microsoft has any legal obligation to open their formats and it's a bit silly for anyone to "demand" it of them.

      --
      Moof.
    14. Re:Bullsh*t by steeviant · · Score: 1

      but that doesn't mean Microsoft has any legal obligation to open their formats and it's a bit silly for anyone to "demand" it of them.

      I'm not demanding anything of them, but I don't think it's valid to say that I shouldn't complain about the fact that they go out of their way to thwart interoperability, and I shouldn't ask for better treatment from a company of which I'm a customer.

      I'm trying to spark a bit of debate about openness, because it interests me to find out what viewpoints people on the other side of the fence have. So far all people have been able to say is "it's a free market d000d!" or "shut up and stop whining", no one has been able to provide a good reason why Microsoft should be able to keep the format they store my data in a secret.

      If the "free market" was allowed to exist completely unchecked, Multinationals would have all it's employees working for a cup of rice a week and chained to their desks if they thought it increased their profits,

      I'd be happy if Microsoft would release their documentation about their file formats, I don't want them to write new export filters, or save in a different format. As it is, no one can make a reliable import filter for Word documents for any other office suite, and I find that annoying.

    15. Re:Bullsh*t by ColMustard · · Score: 1

      I didn't mean to suggest that you yourself are being demanding, but the general feeling of posts suggest that most people feel Microsoft owes them open formats.

      There are plenty of instances in which you can point your finger at Microsoft and show that they abuse their position in the free market, but in this instance they don't owe their competitors the specs and they don't owe you the specs. It is your data, but it is still their specification. If you are concerned about accessing your data, then that is one more reason to choose an open solution to begin with.

      That's why I personally don't use Microsoft products. I very much prefer open formats and standards-compliant software. I still don't think the world owes me those things.

      --
      Moof.
    16. Re:Bullsh*t by tokabola · · Score: 1
      In the end of the day, Microsoft has no obligation to make it easy for you to switch to another office suite.

      Had they not illegally squashed competion that would be true. However, MS should be penalized for illegally establishing a monoply by being forced to release the standards by which their software saves files. Courts in several countries agree.

      Had MS competed fairly all along none of this would be an issue, and they wouldn't be forced to "give up" their standards.

      --
      Open Source for Open Minds
  92. .DOC is NOT a standard by Chordonblue · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It's a fallacy to assume that Word can open .DOC files perfectly. It doesn't. Do you have any idea how many .DOC formats have been created over the years? There are rules governing what versions will open which version .DOC and when you're given a random floppy to open with a random version of Word - cross your fingers. Then there's the international incompatibilities... And don't get me started on Works!

    I wish a mainstream reporter would investigate this so that businesses can understand that .DOC isn't 'all that'. OASIS is a MUCH more open and stable format, and will be for years to come.

    --
    "...Well, there's egg and bacon; egg sausage and bacon; egg and spam; egg bacon and spam; egg bacon sausage and spam..."
    1. Re:.DOC is NOT a standard by ajs318 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Of course not. If .DOC was really a standard, then Office XP would be able to open Office 97 and earlier documents ..... even Word for DOS documents. But that would mean that some people would be able to get away with not upgrading often enough for Microsoft! What I mean is, that Word XP .DOC is a standard, Word 2000 .DOC is another standard, Word 97 is a different standard, and so forth.

      It's all about locking customers into a never-ending upgrade cycle. When one of your contacts upgrades to Word XP {perhaps because their whole computer was replaced ..... with one that happened to come with all new software}, then you, as a Word 97 user, have no choice but to upgrade ..... even if you don't need any of the new features in Word XP ..... there is one feature you do need, and that's the ability to open a Word XP document.

      --
      Je fume. Tu fumes. Nous fûmes!
    2. Re:.DOC is NOT a standard by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Is the OASIS format supported by any office apps?
      (couldn't find any...)

    3. Re:.DOC is NOT a standard by Chordonblue · · Score: 1

      The upcoming OOo 2.0/StarOffice 8 and KOffice so far...

      --
      "...Well, there's egg and bacon; egg sausage and bacon; egg and spam; egg bacon and spam; egg bacon sausage and spam..."
  93. Re:Complete Rubbish. by PJBonoVox · · Score: 1

    May I hazard the hypothesis that Windows fans simply don't read/post on slashdot all day long ?

    Yes you may, and I'd also agree.

    And may I suggest that 99% of users could care less of the OS they are using ?

    Once again, yes you may. I'd agree here too, but I'd say more like 90% or so.

  94. Re:Complete Rubbish. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I agree like my SQL 2000 database here. I want to switch to MySQL but it does not open or use my SQL 2000 database.

    Is that really too much to ask?

    You know. If you are moving to a new system you plan for the move by making sure your data can fit into the new system. What is it with documents that is different from other applications?

    Like, my computer should be able to read all my game console games because like i am going to be moving to that platform and like wow. i will not have those consoles anymore... like i know there are hacks and stuff that do this. like open office does word but the game companies should like open up their suff and like all motherboard vendors should support everything....

  95. Monopoly "competition" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    "I still don't see how were they illegaly forced out of the markets."

    The marketplace success of MS Office had little to do with the performance of the product. It had everything to do with:

    1. Withholding the Win32 programming interface from competitors as long as possible prior to the launch of Windows 95 (i.e until Office95 was nearly completed) so that they could advertise that only Office had 32-bit apps. This is a classic example of using a monopoly in one field (Windows) to obtain a monopoly in another field (office productivity software). This is unequivocally illegal under U.S. antitrust law.

    2. Bundling agreements to get as many PCs as possible pre-loaded with Office, particularly for business use. These agreements contained strong financial incentives (in the form of discounts on Windows licensing) for offering consumers only Microsoft products and not any competing software (believe me, I know, sayeth the AC ;). This was also illegal.

    3. Obfuscated and changing file formats that ensured that competing products would not be able to read the latest versions of Office files. Once MS killed off all of the competition, this tactic lost momentum, because MS was largely competing against older versions of their own software, and people became worried that upgrading to newer versions would make their older PCs (running Office 97, for example) unable to interchange files with newer computers. This tactic is not inherently illegal, as far as I know, but it could have been legitimately prohibited as part of a remedy after Microsoft's antitrust conviction, and (to get back on topic) is clearly something that could legitimately be prohibited in government specifications for acceptable software.

    So, yes, my idea of "free and fair competition" allows one company to attempt to "outperform/outmarket" another, but only if they obey the law. Microsoft did not obey the law.

    1. Re:Monopoly "competition" by PurpleXanathar · · Score: 2, Informative

      Were all Lotus formats (Smartsuites files, Notes files and protocols, etc) all open ? Just out of curiosity..

    2. Re:Monopoly "competition" by ad0gg · · Score: 1
      2 Bundling agreements to get as many PCs as possible pre-loaded with Office, particularly for business use. These agreements contained strong financial incentives (in the form of discounts on Windows licensing) for offering consumers only Microsoft products and not any competing software (believe me, I know, sayeth the AC ;). This was also illegal.

      Thats not illegal. Intel does it with Dell, sells to dell. Lots of companies do that.

      As for #1. I would believe that, if there wasn't a plethora of 32bit applications at the launch of win95. They were handing out the SDK kit well over a year before launch for free at all the MS conferences.

      --

      Have you ever been to a turkish prison?

    3. Re:Monopoly "competition" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This, btw., is complete uninformed bullshit. You are assuming that competitors saw Win32 as the platform of the future.

      MS had the hardest time*) convincing people of that. In the end, Office started out as the only worthwhile Win32 Office application package because competitors had decided that they had no reason to go with this newfangled OS.

      Huge big gamble, and it worked out for them.

      ___
      *) Meaning they kept pushing prerelease versions and documentation to developers with people being very reluctant to adopt.

    4. Re:Monopoly "competition" by xMilkmanDanx · · Score: 0

      Have you not heard the news that Japan at least (that bastion of free market practices/sarcasm) has ruled Intel's practices illegal.

    5. Re:Monopoly "competition" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It IS illegal, dell/intel get away with it because there's no solid evidence of their agreement. You'll see Dell occasionally review the viability of using AMD processors, but because of this under-the-table deal with intel, it's not viable.

      Along similar lines, mircrosoft still refuses to sell to vendors at all if they "bundle" any other operating system. No dual boots from the manufacturers. This is patently illegal as you could get jailed even for refusing to sell your cookies to one individual at a bake sale.

    6. Re:Monopoly "competition" by Politburo · · Score: 1

      1. Withholding the Win32 programming interface from competitors as long as possible prior to the launch of Windows 95 (i.e until Office95 was nearly completed) so that they could advertise that only Office had 32-bit apps. This is a classic example of using a monopoly in one field (Windows) to obtain a monopoly in another field (office productivity software). This is unequivocally illegal under U.S. antitrust law.

      Odd. I seem to recall having to install something called Win32s to run 32-bit programs on Win 3.1. These programs were not MS Office.

    7. Re:Monopoly "competition" by MasterOfCeremonies · · Score: 1
      Withholding the Win32 programming interface from competitors as long as possible prior to the launch of Windows 95

      Perhaps because they didn't want to release an unfinished version that was still liable to change.

    8. Re:Monopoly "competition" by NutscrapeSucks · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Withholding the Win32 programming interface from competitors as long as possible prior to the launch of Windows 95

      One could write Win32 programs for Windows NT for 2 years before Win95 shipped, and many third parties did. And their programs ran on Win95 with only minor tweaking.

      Office 95 was a very small refresh of the previously released Office 4.2 for NT. I think it contained a net total of 2 new features. Furthermore, WordPerfect had a 32 bit product on the market within a few months. In conclusion, it seems like you made this one up.

      --
      Whenever I hear the word 'Innovation', I reach for my pistol.
    9. Re:Monopoly "competition" by bushidocoder · · Score: 1

      IANAL, but its my understanding that the "jailed for refusal to sell your cookies to one individual at a bake sale" doctrine is rooted in the civil rights act, NOT the interstate commerce clause like many other issues in the 60s tended to be, and as a result applied only to consumers, not to companies. This is trying to remember a freshman law class in college ten years ago, so it may be wrong, but I think that something similar to this issue was brought up as an example in the class at one point, and this was the answer.

    10. Re:Monopoly "competition" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      1. Withholding the Win32 programming interface from competitors as long as possible prior to the launch of Windows 95 (i.e until Office95 was nearly completed) so that they could advertise that only Office had 32-bit apps. This is a classic example of using a monopoly in one field (Windows) to obtain a monopoly in another field (office productivity software). This is unequivocally illegal under U.S. antitrust law.

      No, the problem was Word Perfect felt the world OWED them a market share, and failed to release a 32-bit version of WP until a year or two after Win95's release. And even then, it ended up being a limp and buggy conversion of their DOS application, because they didnt see the value in having developers who knew how to do 32-bit Windows programming. It had more to do with lazyness and mismanagement than with any supposed monopoly exploitation.

      It's kind of strange, isnt it, that so many non-MS companies released 32 bit programs, but somehow MS was able to 'hide' how to do this from WP? Cough... {bullshit}... cough...

      2. Bundling agreements to get as many PCs as possible pre-loaded with Office, particularly for business use. These agreements contained strong financial incentives (in the form of discounts on Windows licensing) for offering consumers only Microsoft products and not any competing software (believe me, I know, sayeth the AC ;). This was also illegal.

      This was illegal, but it was also unnecessary. IE and Office would have pwned WP and Netscape even without these practices, just because they were clearly superior. In the case of IE, it was both free and superior.

      Only someone on Slashdot could cry and whine about somebody giving away free software.

      3. Obfuscated and changing file formats that ensured that competing products would not be able to read the latest versions of Office files. Once MS killed off all of the competition, this tactic lost momentum, because MS was largely competing against older versions of their own software, and people became worried that upgrading to newer versions would make their older PCs (running Office 97, for example) unable to interchange files with newer computers. This tactic is not inherently illegal, as far as I know, but it could have been legitimately prohibited as part of a remedy after Microsoft's antitrust conviction, and (to get back on topic) is clearly something that could legitimately be prohibited in government specifications for acceptable software.

      It's their application, and their file format, and they are free to make whatever changes they view as necessary. If you dont like it, feel free to use something else- they dont OWE it to you to give you a free alternative (although they DO provide a free viewer, much like Adobe does for Acrobat).

      Boo hoo hoo, Im playing the world's smallest violin for all the MS haters.

    11. Re:Monopoly "competition" by Dr.+Evil · · Score: 1

      It's debatable as to whether or not MS broke the law.

      It was unethical, but it just barely may have been legal.

    12. Re:Monopoly "competition" by mormop · · Score: 1

      It's debatable as to whether or not MS broke the law.

      That's not what what the judges said in the US and the EU.

      --
      Hmmmmmm..... Deep fried and look like Squirrel.
    13. Re:Monopoly "competition" by Dr.+Evil · · Score: 1

      For their tactics regarding MS Office?

    14. Re:Monopoly "competition" by mormop · · Score: 1

      I must admit that this is one of those occasions where I wished I hadn't hit the submit button so fast.

      I still can't understand why Office has evaded the anti-trust sights for so long as it is the one thing has stopped people I've tried flogging Linux to from taking the plunge.
      On the whole, Media Player, IE and the rest have had zero effect on people's choice of OS in every office I've been into and while they were the subject of the cases so far I can't see anything changing until Office is addressed.

      Anyhow, I cocked up on this one and stand corrected

      --
      Hmmmmmm..... Deep fried and look like Squirrel.
    15. Re:Monopoly "competition" by tokabola · · Score: 1
      IE and Office would have pwned WP and Netscape even without these practices, just because they were clearly superior.

      Funny, most secretaries and authors preferred Word Perfect. And Netscape was clearly a more popular browser.

      Do you think MS would have had to give away, or heavily discount, their software if was truly better than the competition? Are you even old enough to know what you are talking about? It's easy to compare a 9 year old version of WP against the MS Word you use now and prefer Word. But in the mid 90's those of us who had to use word processing professionally found Word Perfect and Lotus 123 far superior to MS's Office line.

      Face it, MS broke the law and competed unfairly because they coudn't win fairly because they offered an inferior product.

      Tommy
      --
      Open Source for Open Minds
  96. Re:Complete Rubbish. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Microsoft has that right because you gave it to them. You use(d) their product even though you knew that to be the case. The fact that (perhaps) all of your documents for the last ten years are in Word format and it would be a lot cheaper for you if they let OOo more easily and correctly render your documents is no concern of theirs. "Free Market", guy. (queue diatribes with poor understandings of real monopolies)

  97. there are extremists on both sides by toby · · Score: 1

    But I like the ones on our side better. Maybe because they're looking after the public good rather than their own pockets. Besides, we have the better technology.

    It's spelled "hypocrite", by the way.

    --
    you had me at #!
    1. Re:there are extremists on both sides by maxpublic · · Score: 1

      It's spelled "hypocrite", by the way.

      And it'd be spelled that way in my post too, if there was an edit function in slashdot.

      Max

      --
      My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
    2. Re:there are extremists on both sides by toby · · Score: 1
      if there was an edit function in slashdot.

      Point taken :-))

      --
      you had me at #!
  98. "Why should I have to sign an agreement?" by gatkinso · · Score: 1

    A: You don't have to.

    --
    I am very small, utmostly microscopic.
  99. Re:Complete Rubbish. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Like, ya know, like if you want to play console games your gonna like, have to use like, an emu kinda thing. Like, it's not like, that hard dude.

  100. OpenDocument may render MS Office irrelevant by SgtChaireBourne · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Being on a committee and helping is very different than being on a committee and doing a) nothing b) being passively obstructive or c) being actively obstructive. So far MS is on the record as the only OASIS member taking a "wait and see" strategy to the OpenDocument DTD. Whether it's participation is in role a, b or c, who knows? except other committee members. At some point MS is going to be left behind.

    OpenDocument is being supported and encouraged within the EU. It will also be supported in OpenOffice 2.0, which is due out soon. The beta for OOo 2 is out already for testing.

    --
    Beta is broken and the link to classic doesn't work. Stop wasting our time or there won't be anybody left here.
  101. WTF? by xactuary · · Score: 1

    I don't RTFA. I use RTF.

    --
    Say hello to my little sig.
  102. Re:Complete Rubbish. by M1FCJ · · Score: 1

    What do you mean it isn't a monopoly. Can I get a powermac clone which is fully compatible with Apple's powermac? No. Apple is a completely closed monopoly, in many ways even worse than Microsoft.

  103. Re:Complete Rubbish. by QMO · · Score: 1

    I will freely admit that MS outmarkets almost anyone (beer and soda market even better, but that's pretty much it).

    WordPerfect 8 still outperforms all versions of MS Word, including current ones. (Though I have no idea if current versions of WP are any good.)

    I also can't deny that mis-management at WP helped MS squish them, but MS wasn't entirely honest in their dealings with WP either.

    --
    Exam 4/C again. Maybe I'll do better this time.
  104. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 3, Funny

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  105. We need more guys like... by kajen · · Score: 2, Insightful
    We need more guys like the unnamed Indian Novell customer!
    "Kangro quoted an unnamed Indian customer of Novell's as saying "why should I have my documents from government in a proprietary format and have to ask a third party for permission to open them?"".
  106. Open? by flibble-san · · Score: 1

    Goatse is more open than Microsoft

    --
    My other sig is crap too
  107. PDF would be great... by Scorchio · · Score: 1

    ...until you run into all these people who insist on MS Word format documents.

    I ran into this problem last year when sending out copies of my resume. It was all nicely formatted in OO.o, and it exported perfectly to PDF. "Great!", I think, and start submitting it to various companies and web sites. It was then I discovered that many places won't accept anything that's not a Word document, so I was forced to re-export the OO.o doc in Word format. I then checked the output in Word to check everything was OK. What a complete mess! It was mostly readable, but it didn't exactly give the first impression I was hoping for. I think I tried fixing up the output in MS Word, as well as a few PDF->Word convertors, but I think the best results were when I took the plain text from OO.o and reformatted it by hand in Word. Groovy.

    The problem's not really with OO.o, of course, it's the monkeys running the HR depts and recruitment sites (*cough*monster*cough*) who insist on having Word docs. I tried reasoning with a few that PDF wasn't a bad alternative, although mostly this was met with the email equivalent of blank stares and "Yeah, we need MS Word format".

    While this situation persists it would be nice if the MS Word format was opened to allow OO.o to export reliably. Which would then prolong the insistance on using Word format documents in the first place, which is probably bad... oh god, it's depressing...

    Besides, I thought that most word processors this side of the 1980's were supposed to be WYSIWYG, OO.o and MS Word included? Not "What You See Is Something Almost, But Not Entirely, Unlike The Thing You're Going To Export" - WYSISABNEUTTYGTE??

    1. Re:PDF would be great... by drsmithy · · Score: 1
      Besides, I thought that most word processors this side of the 1980's were supposed to be WYSIWYG, OO.o and MS Word included?

      They are. But WYSIWG means that what's on the screen looks like what comes out of the printer *on that same machine*. Not what's on the screen on machine A an inkjet printer using US Legal size paper will print out the same as it will on machine B with a laser printer loaded with A4 paper. Margins, unprintable areas, etc, all vary with environment.

      If you want something that comes out of the printer looking the same as it does on screen, you want a WYSIWYG word processor. If you want something that looks the same everywhere, you want a PDF (or similar).

    2. Re:PDF would be great... by PJBonoVox · · Score: 1

      But WYSIWG means that what's on the screen looks like what comes out of the printer *on that same machine*.

      No, WYSIWG means 'what you see is what get' which actually means naff all.

  108. Re:Complete Rubbish. by Aeiri · · Score: 1

    What do you mean it isn't a monopoly. Can I get a powermac clone which is fully compatible with Apple's powermac? No. Apple is a completely closed monopoly, in many ways even worse than Microsoft.

    I don't think you understand the definition of "monopoly". A monopoly controls an industry, the industry MS controls being operating systems. PowerMacs aren't an industry, they are a brand of computer.

  109. Re:Complete Rubbish. by guet · · Score: 1

    Why should Microsoft have the right to lock up my documents and not tell me how to get my document complete with formatting from their program?

    Why the hell are you still using MS software and formats?

    Switch.

  110. Re:Complete Rubbish. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why should Microsoft have the right to lock up my documents and not tell me how to get my document complete with formatting from their program?

    Just a little thing called the EULA you probably did not even break stride when agreeing to.

    You use their software and therefore you agree to their end-user license agreement. This agreement is what gives them the "right".

  111. Re:QUICK MOD UP A MICROSOFT BASHER INFORMATIVE by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Fuck you too.

  112. Re:FUCK!!! Suck a cock by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Nice try, dickhead. Too bad for you I don't use IE.

    -----

    Mozilla: Morteine for (would-be) page-widening trolls. :P

  113. Why do you spread it ? by Mr+Europe · · Score: 3, Informative

    That is the infamous "Actually he didn't - we just made that quote up." - story. The true low-point of The-Register

    You should not spread it more. Most of us don't RTFA. Some will get the wrong idea.

    1. Re:Why do you spread it ? by jcuffe · · Score: 1

      A news story with a fabricated quote used as a "joke" and which references slashdot posters in the story text. If a news site has stooped to pulling information from the general /. public, that's pretty damn sad.

    2. Re:Why do you spread it ? by some_random_person · · Score: 1

      They'd have to at least glance at the article, since the post didn't have any other text to it. And then the Funny moderation should be something of a clue.

    3. Re:Why do you spread it ? by shotfeel · · Score: 2, Funny

      Sad, but still one step up from their usual "unnamed" sources IMO. Now at least they're quoting that Anonymous Coward guy on /. He must be an expert given how often he posts.

    4. Re:Why do you spread it ? by Lisandro · · Score: 2, Informative

      Actually, atleast they cared to remark several times that the quote was a fabrication - the journalistic value of such a thing can be debated, but /. was the one that posted it on the main page as news, even though the first line in the article said the quote wasn't true.

  114. Be fair to Word by Anonymous+Brave+Guy · · Score: 1
    If MS Word could import and export .SXW files natively, there would be no need for MS Word in the first place. It's only the fact that Word -- and nothing else -- can read .DOC files properly, that keeps Microsoft selling it.

    I was going to mod you down for trolling, but I'd rather set the record straight.

    There is clearly more to new versions of Word than being able to open previous versions' documents. If there weren't, then far more businesses would have given up upgrading by now. The average home user may not use all (or perhaps even any) of the new features, particularly in the most recent incarnations where they've been heavily focussed on interoperability with other Office apps, but many business users do.

    Even without the new features, Word remains a far more powerful tool than OpenOffice.org Writer (and I say this as someone who works with both apps regularly, on a wide range of document types). OO.o has enormous potential, and I'm grateful to the dev team for giving me such a useful product that I can install for free at home, but let's keep some perspective. I can't think of any significant area where Writer actually beats Word yet. In contrast, Writer lags behind Word enormously in usability, in robustness and, for some features, in power as well.

    In other words, what keeps Microsoft selling Word is the fact that Word remains by far the best word processing software available for Windows. (Mac users might like to try Apple's Pages.) In time, the competition may catch up, but if users do migrate, it won't be just because someone worked out how to convert reliably between .doc and .sxw files.

    --
    If you disagree, post your argument. (-1, Overrated) isn't your personal censorship tool for views you don't like.
    1. Re:Be fair to Word by ajs318 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I've heard this argument ..... that Word is so powerful ..... but every time I come close to believing it, I find evidence of a document with about fifteen different fonts in it, formatted using spaces, and a manually-entered table of contents.

      I just think some people can't handle anything more complicated than a fountain pen .....

      {and I write perl scripts to interface with mySQL databases for mail merging, because I can do that.}

      --
      Je fume. Tu fumes. Nous fûmes!
    2. Re:Be fair to Word by Anonymous+Brave+Guy · · Score: 1
      I've heard this argument ..... that Word is so powerful ..... but every time I come close to believing it, I find evidence of a document with about fifteen different fonts in it, formatted using spaces, and a manually-entered table of contents.

      Sure. Random, untrained users often fail to take advantage of even the basic features of their software. As the saying goes, if you think training is expensive, try ignorance.

      However, those who produce documents for a living and take an hour or two to learn the basics of word processing at some point in their lives will gain better results faster by using stylesheets, automatic mail merge, automatic cross-references and the like. Actually, those are three of Word's weaker features, but even then it remains some way ahead of OpenOfficer Writer, at least for now.

      --
      If you disagree, post your argument. (-1, Overrated) isn't your personal censorship tool for views you don't like.
  115. Re:Complete Rubbish. by mlg98 · · Score: 1

    Why should Microsoft have the right to lock up my documents and not tell me how to get my document complete with formatting from their program? They don't "lock up" your data. You're perfectly free to open it and modify it using the application you purchased. I can't believe someone can be this naive. But in case you are, they provide a "Save As" feature where you can save it in an open format if you want.

    --
    Code to live, live to code.
  116. Re:Complete Rubbish. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Some of us have jobs. Better (and usually necessary) to use what everyone else uses.

  117. Re:Complete Rubbish. by orasio · · Score: 1

    I do that all the time, moving data from MSSQL server to mysql.
    I use JDBC, an open standard, but I could use a SQL dump, another standard, to get the data out.

    Games are different. It's not _my_ data. Maybe it would be nice to be able to dump/backup PS2 memory cards for statistics, but then it would be even easier to cheat, and games would be more boring.

  118. Re:Complete Rubbish. by Zphbeeblbrox · · Score: 1

    MS doesn't control an industry. They just have more customers. Nothing prevents those customers from switching. In fact they are "switching" even as we speak. Linux, Apple, *BSD's. All of them exist and have no enormous barriers to entry. Just let the Market do it's work. It works slower perhaps than legislation but it also works in a more stable fashion with less headaches. Legislating this kind of thing is like using a sledgehammer to to nail a board. You'll probably break the board instead.

    --
    If you see spelling or grammatical errors don't blame me. I tried to preview but IE here at work borked the CSS
  119. Re:Complete Rubbish. by Marthisdil · · Score: 1

    Why should Microsoft have the right to lock up my documents and not tell me how to get my document complete with formatting from their program?

    Because they can?
    What gives them the right to treat my work in that way after I have already paid them?

    They aren't doing anything with your work.

    I believe that companies should be allowed to take whatever measures they deem neccessary to prevent piracy and reverse-engineering of their software as long as it doesn't hurt customers.

    How is this hurting you? If you were that concerned about it, you'd not have bought their software. You'd be writing PostScript code in VI...or text in EDLIN...or something.


    I'm happy to pay for, and use proprietary software, but that does not mean that I want some company to tell me with what software I can open my own data.

    Then write your data in text form. Or save as RTF. Or write in PostScript...or whatever. If you create something in AutoCad, you expect to be able to open it in AutoCad - anything else that opens is is just a nicety. If you don't like it, too bad.

    You're happy to pay for proprietary software that will do the things you want it to do. If Office doesn't do that for you, then get something else. You're not being forced to use it. If you have to use it at work as part of your job, well, that's your company's issue - you get to deal.

  120. Re:Complete Rubbish. by mattyrobinson69 · · Score: 1

    apple is only a monopoly if you fiddle the stats like a salesman. apple is a member of the pc industry, of which it has (iirc) much less than 5% market share.

    By your logic, sony are a monopoly because you cant buy a games console thats 100% compatible with the playstation 2.

    Microsoft is a monopoly and (with good reason) monopolies have to play by different rules.

  121. Re:Complete Rubbish. by hey! · · Score: 1

    It's true that I can access my data in the short term, but in the future I may wish to change to a different office suite or hardware platform or OS for a very good reason.

    Microsoft is free to change its upgrade policy and prices. It is free to stop supporting older operating systems.

    All of which is as it should be. As a consumer, I have no right to demand that Microsoft suit me, beyond taking my business elsewhere.

    However, I think it is a bit much to say that I have to choose between a critical security patch and being able to read all my documents.

    --
    Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure.
  122. Re:Complete Rubbish. by mattyrobinson69 · · Score: 1

    troll? no.
    mod's on crack? yes.

    i was merely stating the facts which the parent (to this comments parent) could not grasp/did not know.

  123. Re:Thank you, sir. May I have another? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You are an ignorant retard. Really.

  124. Re:Complete Rubbish. by steeviant · · Score: 1

    As mentioned above it's easy to export from one SQL database to another, so it's a bad example.

    You seem to think I want microsoft to write a converter for me. I don't. I just want some microserf to release the documentation about the format.

    Maybe the clerk would have to run it by legal first.

    It's not going to cost a fortune, they just have to put the file up on their website somewhere, and then people will be able to read their file formats and export to them

    No other word processor is going to use their format natively, why would they use Microsoft's closed, obfuscated file format when they could use a standard format like the one proposed by the OASIS consortium?

  125. It's not just about spoiled OSS users by koko775 · · Score: 1

    I get the feeling you haven't Read The Fine Article -- having closed formats is a big issue for governments that don't want to -- in Paul Kangro's words -- "ask a third party for permission to open them [the documents]".

    Why have closed formats when open formats would give you better business?

    1. Re:It's not just about spoiled OSS users by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      open formats wouldn't give them better business. someone would create a free ap that would be compatible with their shit and then they would lose business. instead of focusing on microsofts formats the would-be creators of free programs should make up their own fucking standards

    2. Re:It's not just about spoiled OSS users by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You mean that Microsoft would actually have to compete on the merits of their product rather than taking advantage of vendor-lockin?! Say it isn't so!

      The rest of your post just high-lights your gross ignorance. Open source programmers have made up their own open standards, but don't you think it is a good idea for programs to interoperate with on another? Jackass.

    3. Re:It's not just about spoiled OSS users by tokabola · · Score: 1

      You mean like Open Office already does?

      --
      Open Source for Open Minds
  126. Software CLOSED, data format OPEN by KayakFun · · Score: 1
    No-one disputes any company to make an honest buck. The point here is that MS obscures and changes the data format that has become the de-facto standard, thereby monopolizing the office format, and shutting out competition.

    The way out of this is to Open-source the data format, and let the software developers (MS, Corel, Sun, Abi, you and me) write software that produces and respects this data format. This may be closed (MSO) or open (OO.o) I don't care.

    It works with the W3C HTML/XHTML/XML formats, and the multitude of editors/browsers. It can also work for office formats. All you need to do is download a OpenDocument-compliant editor, and work with it, complain about it, or even improve it. Make it industry-hardened like the Firefox bug hunt. Let the best, or most stable, or most feature-rich editor, or lowest price version become your personal editor.

    MS may even (have to) join, to keep selling MSO to European/Brazilian governmental agencies and schools. If they then play their 'extend and deviate' strategy that worked so well for FrontPage/IE5 you can vote with your boot. That is, if you have not already voted with your wallet: OO.o is about E 500 cheaper than MSO, and if they share the same data format and feature-set, well, why bother with MSO?

    Tonight I'll be installing OO.o 2.0 beta which is on the SuSE 9.3 DVD.

  127. Re:Complete Rubbish. by steeviant · · Score: 1

    Microsoft is free to change its upgrade policy and prices. It is free to stop supporting older operating systems.

    They certainly are, I'm not sure what relevance this has to what I was talking about, but I wholeheartedly agree.

    If anything, there is too much backward compatibility in some Microsoft products to the point that the security and performance are affected, but that's a different story.

    All of which is as it should be. As a consumer, I have no right to demand that Microsoft suit me, beyond taking my business elsewhere.

    I am contending that Microsoft should release the documentation describing how they save my data, I realise that I have little hope of impacting them by myself, but I started out by debating with someone who claimed that people who want Microsoft to make their internal documentation about their file formats public. I felt compelled to put forth my point of view.

    However, I think it is a bit much to say that I have to choose between a critical security patch and being able to read all my documents.

    I'd agree, and it wouldn't be an issue if Microsoft would simply release the documentation about their file formats.

  128. Re:Complete Rubbish. by steeviant · · Score: 1

    It's not a free market when I'm compelled to use Word because the people I communicate with are using Word, and competing products can't correctly operate with Word because the file formats are closed.

    I'm not going to complain about monopolies, it wouldn't matter if nobody else in the world except the people I need to communicate with used Word, the reality is that I need to be able to rely on my documents being able to be opened and read by a reciever using MS Word, and ONLY MS Word is capable of that.

    The thing I find incomprehensible is that Microsoft have so little confidence in their product that they feel they have to behave in this way. Microsoft would probably have me as an Office customer even if they didn't play silly games like this. As it is, it undermines my confidence in their products.

  129. Re:Complete Rubbish. by lowe0 · · Score: 1

    Nobody else has any issues documenting the file formats they use? Nobody? You're telling me that MS Office uses the only proprietary formats in existence?

    Let's see some links to the 3ds max and Maya file formats. Since nobody else has issues documenting their file formats, I'm sure you'll have no trouble providing these.

  130. Re:Complete Rubbish. by steeviant · · Score: 1

    Just a little thing called the EULA you probably did not even break stride when agreeing to.

    I don't recall reading in their license the part where they told me their formats were secret and that their product would not interoperate properly with other software or future versions of Office.

    If you could kindly point out that clause I'd be very grateful.

  131. Re:Complete Rubbish. by hanshotfirst · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Is it just me, or is this argument kindof like asking Ford to ensure I can stick a Chevy starter in the engine and have it still work.

    --
    Why, oh why, didn't I take the Blue Pill?
  132. Re:wow by DavidTC · · Score: 1
    He didn't say restaurants shouldn't be allowed to have smoking sections, and only idiots would read it like that.

    He said it was akin to having a 'peeing section' in a pool. That's all he said.

    A lot of people read something into 'public', but a public pool, like a public restaurant, is simply one that is open to the public.

    --
    If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
  133. Re:Complete Rubbish. by steeviant · · Score: 1

    But in case you are, they provide a "Save As" feature where you can save it in an open format if you want.

    Which open format? RTF? Word only suppports a pathetic subset of the RTF specification, which is itself a very weak format. All tables and even font specifications are stripped out of files saved in RTF format by word.

    Word does not correctly interoperate with any other word processing software. It's a fact, and I challenge you to find me another word processor than can fully interoperate with Word. It's simply not possible because Microsoft won't release the specifications for their file format.

  134. Re:Complete Rubbish. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why the hell are you still using MS software and formats?

    Switch


    What a dork...hahaha.

  135. Re:Complete Rubbish. by Headcase88 · · Score: 1

    The problem is that 99% of people don't care what OS they're using becuase they haven't used a better one. It's the same reason one wouldn't care about what Internet browser they're using. If you only use IE, you think IE is decent.

    Now, I've heard elsewhere that Linux can be fairly user-friendly, so that's not the problem AFAIK. The point is people know "Windows" and it gets bundled with their computers, so they take it.

    Then if Joe Sixpack tries Linux and likes it more, and it spreads, then more apps and games will support it, which will get even more people to use it etc, etc. Of course, that hasn't happened.

    --
    "When the atomic bomb goes off there's devastation...but when the atomic bong goes off there's celebraaaaation!"
  136. We're Open enough, Says Microsoft by chrisnewbie · · Score: 1

    Open enough = "we have business hours and our front door is open between 8h30 and 4h00 " closed on weekends

  137. Re:Complete Rubbish. by steeviant · · Score: 1

    How is this hurting you? If you were that concerned about it, you'd not have bought their software. You'd be writing PostScript code in VI...or text in EDLIN...or something.

    How the fuck am I supposed to expect anyone to be able to open and edit postscript documents?

    I communicate with people in the real world, those people use Microsoft Word, not fucking post script readers. Maybe when you grow up and have to communicate with other people you'll understand.

    Then write your data in text form. Or save as RTF. Or write in PostScript...or whatever. If you create something in AutoCad, you expect to be able to open it in AutoCad - anything else that opens is is just a nicety. If you don't like it, too bad.

    The thing is, you see that autocad have published their file format because they realise that it's better for their customers that way.

    You're happy to pay for proprietary software that will do the things you want it to do. If Office doesn't do that for you, then get something else. You're not being forced to use it. If you have to use it at work as part of your job, well, that's your company's issue - you get to deal.

    That's right, and MS Office does all that I need it to and more, the only thing I have an issue with is that my data is locked up in a proprietary format that it's not possible to export verbatim, which wouldn't be a problem if MS made like autodesk and released the specifications to their file format.

  138. Re:Complete Rubbish. by steeviant · · Score: 1

    No, it's like asking Ford to publish complete specifications to their engines, which they already do.

  139. Re:Complete Rubbish. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Why should Microsoft have the right to lock up my documents and not tell me how to get my document complete with formatting from their program?

    What gives them the right to treat my work in that way after I have already paid them?


    Because you agreed to all that when you installed the software.

    This is nothing new. You knew what you were getting into.

    To me, this is where the "but it's my data" argument fails.
  140. Re:Complete Rubbish. by steeviant · · Score: 1

    As I said to the last person who said this, show me where in the EULA it said that my data would be stored in a secret file format that can't be opened in other software...

  141. Re:Complete Rubbish. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If your product is good, you don't need to lock-in/lock-out your customer/competition with a proprietary file format. If everyone can read a file with the software of thier choice, the world is a better place for the consumer. And for Governments to offer proprietary files to the citizens is corporate welfare. That is, they are sponsoring a paticular private company over other companies because people have buy from one source. OO doesn't may open MS documents but not always correctly.

  142. "OFFTOPIC" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Typical Slashdot bias. The parent should be modded "OFFTOPIC"

  143. Forgetting... by 101percent · · Score: 1

    I think what we're all forgetting is that Openoffice.org was developed in a corporate model. I don't think the open source model could have developed such a beast as Openoffice.org. It's kind of ironic that to get rid of our corporate overlord Microsoft, we have to turn to the corporate development model, and not open source.

  144. Fucking Idiot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think that's the dumbest thing I've read all damn day. Congratulations, it's before Noon!

  145. What's the answer? by RoadkillBunny · · Score: 1

    "Why should I have to sign an agreement?" one audience member demanded to know.

    I would like to know what they guy answered.

    --
    Cheers,
    RoadkillBunny
    1. Re:What's the answer? by cpghost · · Score: 1

      I would like to know what they guy answered.

      You didn't sign an NDA to know the answer!

      --
      cpghost at Cordula's Web.
  146. GPL vs Agreement by dallaylaen · · Score: 1

    The only real difference is the terms of the agreement.

    GPL does not apply to data formats or processing algorithms. At least it was not intended to.

    You can look at the source and write your own (or better), and license it whatever you like. "Doing like the other guy" is not copyright infringement, and GPL is based on copyright.

    NDA (and perhaps the MS agreement I didn't see anyway), on the other side, limits usage of *the knowledge you can get viewing the formats description*. No it's not the same.

    --
    WYSIWIG, but what you see might not be what you need
  147. Will The Licensed MS Office User Please Stand Up! by pandrijeczko · · Score: 3, Insightful
    The defenders of MS Office always make me smile...

    Invariably 90% of them have never paid for their copy of it believing themselves to be under the Microsoft "I use it at work so I can install it on 12 PCs at home" Licence or the Microsoft "My mate gets the MSDN CDs and he's allowed to let anyone else use them" License.

    I wonder how many of the same people would be so vocal if they had to shell out £200 for a copy?

    Me? I use OpenOffice and can save my pennies for 100 pints of fine English real ale while sleeping soundly and night knowing I'm not contributing to Bill and Melinda's sorrow at being unable to afford a new extension this year due to all those "naughty little Office pirates".

    --
    Gentoo Linux - another day, another USE flag.
  148. Re:Complete Rubbish. by B3ryllium · · Score: 1

    It's not a free market when I'm compelled to use Word because the people I communicate with are using Word, and competing products can't correctly operate with Word because the file formats are closed.

    Yes, actually, it is - in the capitalist sense.

  149. Microsoft Word viewer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Um, you know you don't have to keep a copy of word around to check your files.

    You can easily use Microsoft's free little MS Word viewer to accomplish the same thing at no cost.

  150. Re:Complete Rubbish. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So don't use it.. simple enough.

    They aren't holding a gun to your head.

    If people really cared that much then the all mighty dollar would make Microsoft do it..

  151. Re:Complete Rubbish. by B3ryllium · · Score: 1

    In a capitalist society, interoperability is not a concern. Microsoft was born from true capitalism, and there's no reason for them to change.

    It's like asking Mazda to fit the engine from the RX-8 into your home-(re)built VW Beetle.

  152. Apples and Oranges by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    MS is requiring a contract to be signed, the GPL is a license. Basically, the difference between a licens and a contract is that a license lets you do something you otherwise would not be allowed to do, removing restrictions. A contract removes rights you ordinarily have in return for "consideration". A license doesn't have to be agreed to as long as you don't take advantage of what extra rights you have been granted. A contract must be agreed by both parties otherwise there is no reason to restrict yourself from the banned activities.

  153. Re:Complete Rubbish. by B3ryllium · · Score: 1

    I agree. You can save it as HTML. *queue laugh track* :)

    In all seriousness, I don't understand why people - Americans, even - are griping about this situation. Their country was founded on these principles. Yes, it's somewhat unfair that their principles are being forced on other countries that are more liberal/socialist in this sense. But that's the global economy for you.

    Just wait a few years and see what fun happens with the Chinese software industry - or, for that matter, all of their industries. I mean, in a communist/socialist country, it is not beyond the power of the government to legislate a software product into existence - and to mandate its usage throughout the government.

  154. Re:Complete Rubbish. by MerlinTheWizard · · Score: 1

    Hey man. You make a point here. But is it really a valid one? The fact is that if the company providing the software ever dies, you'll be left with nothing. All of your data lost forever (we can imagine that scenario). This poses a serious question concerning document formats. The question, ultimately, is very simple: should we ever use software that manipulates closed document formats? Seems like a real threat to me.

    Almost all of our data is becoming purely digital nowadays and this is not ever going to change back. Open data formats are essential if we care about our data. Period.

  155. Why proprietary is less valuable. by jimbro2k · · Score: 1
    Because fully open standards are more easily accessable (forever?), they hold their value longer. Why choose encumbered software if the unencumbered is just as good? This is true even if the cost for each is the same.

    Why even spend time reading the agreement if there is an alternative that doesn't require spending that time, or consulting legal?

    Proprietary's only advantage would be if it offset all of this by being MUCH less expensive.

    --
    There is not nearly enough love in the world, but there is far too much trust.
  156. we're open enough... by harvey+the+nerd · · Score: 1

    This is why I always advise people (strangers) looking at/for MS office about OpenOffice.org anywhere I see them (library, store, where ever). "I actually own my data - how about you?" Often they are interested in a program for more secure, compact (document files) & PDFs for the "cost" of a 65mb download (our local cable sells 5gb & 10gb/mo plans).

    1. Re:we're open enough... by fishbowl · · Score: 1

      "I actually own my data - how about you?"

      Well, here is a test:

      My legal documents are created in Word.

      They are subpoenaed by a court.

      Can Microsoft be made a party to this subpoena on the basis of their ownership of the data?

      To me, this is really the test of who "owns" the data. If a court must go to the proper owner to discover my documents, and that owner is not myself, then the answer to your question is "no."

      --
      -fb Everything not expressly forbidden is now mandatory.
    2. Re:we're open enough... by ShoobieRat · · Score: 1

      The legal document, as an article of text, is yours. Any documents (or other publications/resources) created from the use of Microsoft products, are yours.

      The only thing Microsoft owns is the software itself (including the program software, standard templates, standard macros and add-ins, standard-etc.).

      If you create a novel, legal agreement, work of art, etc, the content is yours. Microsoft does not have any legal right to this data.

      Read the EULA.

  157. Try it in OO 2.0 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And you'll find that your example imports properly into Openoffice

    No bullshit at all. :)

  158. Re:Complete Rubbish. by penix1 · · Score: 1

    "So your idea of free and fair competition is that every product should float no matter if another product completely outperforms/outmarkets them? I still don't see how were they illegaly forced out of the markets."

    They neither "outperformed" or "outmarketed" them. MS used their OS monopoly with manufacturers to leverage their Office suite when WordPerfect was the standard. MS "bundled" Word et. al. and offered "reduced" rates to orginizations that "upgraded" from there seriously undercutting WP and Lotus. MS was convicted of this type behavior but the watered down settlement (if you want to call it that) hasn't done a thing to correct it. They are now using their monopoly in the Office market to try to keep out Open Source with a cheesy license that is targeted directly at FOSS.

    B.

    --
    This is a sig. This is only a sig. Had this been an actual sig you would have been informed where to tune for more sigs.
  159. Re:FUCK!!! Suck a cock by HerbertLipschitz · · Score: 1

    Some people get so upset when their article posts are rejected... Glad I use Firefox!

  160. Re:Thank you, sir. May I have another? by GrouchoMarx · · Score: 4, Informative

    without MS you have no web/html like we have today

    You mean with developers not able to support a 7 year old standard, even though it would make the web a much better place, because IE still won't support all of CSS 1 much less CSS 2?

    xml wouldn't get any attention if it wasn't "interwebby"

    You mean if the W3C team (who were not MS employees) who developed XML hadn't thought ahead to its potential Internet use?

    Or do you mean how IE is the only web browser that doesn't support XHTML, so that web developers still have to write tag-soup HTML 4 or break the standard and send XHTML as HTML in order to reach anyone using IE?

    this whole XML thing is a passing phase without MS

    You mean like the EU standardizing on an XML file format (OpenDocument), O'Riley and Associates publishing using an XML format (DocBook), the W3C moving EVERYTHING to XML including image formats (SVG) (yes MS is a W3C member, but they are far from the only)...

    About the only thing I'll give MS credit for is breaking XSLT off from XSLFO, since the latter was taking way too long to standardize, so that now XSLT can be used independently of XSLFO, both in spec and tools. That's a good thing, I won't deny that. But given everything else they've done to hold back and stiffle the development of the "Interwebby", I'd definitely say that MS has been a net-negative on the XML-based-Internet world.

    --

    --GrouchoMarx
    Card-carrying member of the EFF, FSF, and ACLU. Are you?

  161. Re: Derivative works by rnturn · · Score: 4, Insightful

    ``At any rate, a document is not generally considered to be a derived work of a font.''

    Just how would anyone think they could make this claim is beyond me. That would be like, say, Grumbacher claiming that someone's painting is a derived work because they used their paints and/or brushes.

    Stop the insanity!

    --
    CUR ALLOC 20195.....5804M
  162. Re:Complete Rubbish. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I thought Word WAS the RTF specification :)

    As the other poster said, you can save your document as "HTML" and ALL the Word formatting information will be included as plaintext in the document.

  163. Re:Complete Rubbish. by seriesrover · · Score: 1
    The fact is that if the company providing the software ever dies, you'll be left with nothing.

    Thats hogwash. If you've got the software to create, read and export your documents now what difference does it make whether the company who originally made that software goes bust or not?

  164. Re:wow by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Having a smoking section in a public restaurant is like having a peeing section in a public swimming pool.
    BR> With a MCDonalds Style restaurant, where smoking and non were in the same room I would agree with you. In the restaurant I use to work, smoking was in a separate room with its own ventilation system. Non-smokers were not subjected to the smoke in any way. So, why should the government be able to dictate that we could not allow smokers?

  165. "Why should I have to sign an agreement?" one audi by ShoobieRat · · Score: 1

    " "Why should I have to sign an agreement?" one audience member demanded to know. "
    So that when you pirate it and put it up on the web, they can nail yer wanker butt to the wall.

  166. Re:Complete Rubbish. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Why should Microsoft have the right to lock up my documents and not tell me how to get my document complete with formatting from their program?

    Feel free to use Notepad. Or, you can get the free Word, Excel, or PowerPoint reader.

    What gives them the right to treat my work in that way after I have already paid them?

    I didnt realized your paying money for something entitled you to so many rights. I demand to have full access to the source code and structure of the save game files for Doom 3!!!

    I'm happy to pay for, and use proprietary software, but that does not mean that I want some company to tell me with what software I can open my own data.

    Is there a MS rep over there, FORCING you to save in their file format? Last I checked, you could save in a ton of alternate file formats, including HTML. And last I checked, HTML didnt require MS Office to view.

    Stop being a typical whiney Slashdot bitch.

  167. Re:Complete Rubbish. by 99BottlesOfBeerInMyF · · Score: 1

    1. You use their software voluntarily for storing *your* data.

    Except that MS is a monopoly in the field and illegally abused that monopoly to make it very hard for anyone to use anything else via several illegal acts including illegal OEM bundling contracts and illegally withholding Win95 32-bit APIs.

    2. Your data is - and remains - perfectly accessible via the software they provide, that you voluntarily purchased to use

    Except it is impossible to buy a new copy of that software and in some cases illegal to transfer that software to a new computer when your current one dies. Also much of the information we are talking about here belongs to "THE PEOPLE OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA" whose politicians unwisely and after being given large donations decided to put documents owned by the people into that format. I'd say it is decidedly in the public interest to either force those formats to be public so the information is preserved and available or convert all those documents now and pass laws prohibiting storing documents owned by the people in a format that is owned by a private entity. Other governments have and are in the process of doing that very thing.

  168. Re:Complete Rubbish. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Then if Joe Sixpack tries Linux and likes it more...

    Exactly! Spot on!

    Only slight flaw-- Linux really is a bag of shit.

    I'd rather have to deal with 99% of ignorant users than even 10% of the average Linux types...

  169. Re:Complete Rubbish. by MerlinTheWizard · · Score: 1

    Get real. That's true about pure text documents, but any complex document never gets fully exported by most software (especially MS software), so you lose a lot in the process. And since the format is a closed one, you'll never get the extra info - that which doesn't get exported at all, or at least partially or in a wrong way. But even if you didn't (which is very rare actually), you'd have to dedicate huge amounts of time exporting all of your data. I don't think you get it. A dozen personal letters don't count here. Then, there may be a time when your old software won't run on any current computer - now what? Go to the museum to get the job done? Find an emulator and pray it works? Last but not least, that's not even counting with the new trend: software activation. What if the company goes out of business and you're left with some software that you can't activate? (Or the license of which actually doesn't allow you to run the software if the company doesn't exist anymore, yes it can happen my friend, since it's actually in the essence of a lot of closed-source software licenses...)

    So hogwash? Yeah right. The long-term usability of documents *is* clearly threatened by closed formats; not to mention that open, standard formats are most often much better designed, with clear intentions and general purpose in mind - another guarantee that it's a solid framework for your data. Just my 2 cents.

  170. Re:Will The Licensed MS Office User Please Stand U by ShoobieRat · · Score: 1

    1. I legally buy ALL of my Microsoft products. I don't mind spending $150-200 on Windows, seeing as since it's the bloody OS, it's the single most important peice of software on the whole box, and I'll have it for 2-3 years at least, so it's a worthwhile investment.
    2. If I get Microsoft software from work, and it's installed on one of my home machines, that falls under the corporate EULA and my company's policy, because I use it for work-related tasks when at home.
    3. Most people who complain about Windows dysfunctions are morons who haven't even read the manuals, tons of help documentation, or EULA. They're also mostly people who just flip out straight off the bat instead of trying to figure out what the problem was in the first place.
    4. If you're an idiot, that's not Microsoft's fault.
    5. You can keep yer damn English ale! Give me a Bock, a Pils, or a Harp!

  171. Vocal users can be helpful (even if annoying) by sjbe · · Score: 1

    What the complainers don't realize, is that they only make up a small percentage of the users, and the other 95% use the system and are fairly happy.

    How do you know? I don't ask to be trite. I've worked tech support and having been in your position myself I do really sympathize with having to deal with that annoying 5%. But there is a huge difference between offering a free service (like you do - and bravo for it) and a for-profit company like Microsoft. A free service doesn't have to care about that 5%. Use it or don't. It doesn't matter. But if you genuinely are interested in providing a service your users find valuable (and Microsoft is), how do you know what they want?

    This isn't an idle or easy question. The entire field of marketing is the art/science of finding out what it is people want. (As opposed to sales which is figuring out how to convince them you have what they want - and yes, they overlap) While there are a lot of people who have a severely outsized sense of entitlement (more that a few are here at /.) companies need to listen very carefully to their customers, especially those who are actually speaking up. Most customers don't tell you they are unhappy, they simply stop using your product and never say a word. Sure you run into the occasional jack-ass who thinks you are his personal butler. But it's still worth listening to such people because sometimes they tell you something worthwhile. Apple has done a remarkably good job of this lately with online music whereas the RIAA companies have done a really poor job.

    I've worked as a Malcolm Baldrige examiner and one of the things we ask companies is how they know what their customers want. WAY too many firms basically take the approach of "well, no one has complained so we must be doing something right". That approach is usually a swift route to poor performance if not bankruptcy. The firms that do well go WAY out of their way to figure out what customers want, even before the customers are conciously aware of it.

    Of course in the case of Microsoft the motives are a bit more sinister. They're almost certainly more interested in customer lock via proprietary formats than anything else. We know it and MS knows we know it. So people are giving them a hard time about it. After all, it really isn't in my best interest as an end user to use a proprietary Microsoft format if there are any alternatives. So it shouldn't be at all surprising that people are complaining. It's in their (and likely your) interest to do so.

  172. Re:Complete Rubbish. by hanshotfirst · · Score: 1

    OK, that makes more sense as an analogy.

    --
    Why, oh why, didn't I take the Blue Pill?
  173. Goatse by phorm · · Score: 0, Troll

    Indeed... IE and many other products are open in a much very similar to the goatse dude.

  174. This is all that need be said by hacker · · Score: 2, Informative
    "Microsoft properly asserts that OpenOffice.org is not 100% compatible with their product. Microsoft, however, has apparently decided not to support the OpenOffice.org formats either, for which they have no excuse: the standards for OpenOffice.org documents are publicly available, whereas Microsoft makes it a habit to sue people for reverse engineering their own formats."

    I need not say anything more.

  175. What about DMCA? by msoftsucks · · Score: 2, Informative

    Using proprietary formats just begs for trouble. Just think about this. Since parts of the Office XML files are encrypted, any reverse engineering to read them brings the DMCA into play. Its only a matter of time before M$ brings this gun out. That's why M$ refuses to fully document their Office formats. If open source software impinges on the Office revenue, M$ kills it off through the use of DMCA threats. The answer to this problem is simple. Don't use MS Office.

    --
    Quit playing Monopoly with Bill.
    Linux - of the people, by the people, and for the people.
    1. Re:What about DMCA? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Since parts of the Office XML files are encrypted, [...]

      Undocumented != encrypted

      Seriously, learn what encryption is before making yourself look even more like a moron.

  176. Or innovation by Lifewish · · Score: 1

    If the proprietary {software;standard} can do something that the open version can't, then there's an argument for using it. I'm a firm believer in the "rising water level" model of open source, whereby proprietary companies are perfectly able to survive *as long as they keep climbing*.

    --
    For the love of God, please learn to spell "ridiculous"!!!
  177. Long-Term Storage Of Your Data by yo_tuco · · Score: 1

    Proprietary file formats are bad for long-term storage of your data. Can you get to your data 30, 40 years from now? Is the company still in business. Can the hardware of the future run the old stuff that read your data?

    Are you locking up your IP in someone else's IP? You may find that you have to spend a lot of effort or money to get at your data in the future (if at all).

    Open standards reduce that risk by a long shot because you can convert the data to new systems.

  178. Re:Complete Rubbish. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This has been, by far, one of the best repiles to the usual stream of drivel one comes to expect from a rabid linsux zealot. Thank you, AC, for making my day.

  179. Re:"Why should I have to sign an agreement?" one a by argent · · Score: 1

    So that when you pirate it and put it up on the web, they can nail yer wanker butt to the wall.

    For a DOCUMENT FORMAT?

  180. Re:Complete Rubbish. by The+Conductor · · Score: 1
    Only if you accept the notion that "intellectual property" is, in fact, property. If you consider copyrights to be a form of regulation (a more reasonable view, IMO) then, in a free market, free of copyright regulation, we would all be able to make copies of Word at negligible cost. Nobody would care if Word were required and nobody would have designed Word with all those monopoly-protecting obfuscatory features.

    I'm first in line to defend the merits of capitalism, but the scope of monopoly rights granted by copyright has nothing to do with capitalism.

  181. Re:Complete Rubbish. by jedidiah · · Score: 1

    No, his idea of free and fair competition implies that MORE THAN ONE option can continue to exist and thrive in the marketplace. If that isn't happening then the market is broken and needs to be fixed.

    --
    A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
  182. Re:Complete Rubbish. by jedidiah · · Score: 1

    It's not a free market in the capitalist sense.

    Replacability of product is being interfered with by some external factor. Some artificial constraint is acting to alter your future buying decisions.

    --
    A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
  183. Re:Complete Rubbish. by jedidiah · · Score: 1

    "These principles" were deemed unacceptable over 100 years ago and dealt with as a matter of law. Some elements of economic anarchy are simply unacceptable. This is the hardly the only example.

    The FTC and SEC are other clear examples.

    --
    A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
  184. (you) have it all wrong by Scudsucker · · Score: 1

    In the first place, calling people who want Microsoft to open their formats extremists is stupid, because Microsoft is a monopoly. In fact, most of the reasoning behind this has nothing whatsoever to do with OSS idealogy, but leveling the playing field in the office suite marketplace.

    You want them to instead impress people over and over again with their Black-Hatness so even the most clueless will eventually wake up and say "what the fuck?"

    Except this idea does not work and has been proven to be nothing more than a fantasy. Just look at Ralph Nader; he said that even if Bush got elected, it would be okay because the country would swing away from the right. Now things are probably much worse (from Nader's POV at least) than he ever imagined, and his Green Party revolution is dead and burried.

  185. Word is teh sucks. by Doctor+O · · Score: 1

    I work in an advertising agency. I used to be a creative, but moved to the IT department because I couldn't stand the stupidity of those 'professionals'. You wouldn't believe what bullshit seemingly completely intelligent and nice people will send to you. "Word images" are routine (you say "please send me that image you have used in your image brochure" and they send you a .doc with the embedded image. Anyone who knows a better way than printing the .doc to Distiller with Print settings and opening that in Photoshop, please come up with it.)

    Hell, I've been sent a completely designed and layouted 32 page manual for a complex online media application including images and videos, in EXCEL. I guess to a businesswoman with a hammer, everything looks like a nail.

    (That file is still being passed around as a curiosity between people in the field.)

    I won't get into clients sending images in 72dpi and 70x140 pixels to be used as a background on an 18/1 (the standard billboard format here in Germany). I like it best that they *all* act like it's your fault that it simply is not usable for being printed at that size. Actually, that helps me to practice my kindness, like some strange Buddhist excercise. Not being drawn down by stupidity is a valuable gift that needs lots of training.

    "Sir, there is a hidden message in that text you've read to me for the third time now."

    Call it a Zen Fight Club. ;)

    --
    Who is General Failure and why is he reading my hard disk?
    1. Re:Word is teh sucks. by 1u3hr · · Score: 2, Informative
      and they send you a .doc with the embedded image. Anyone who knows a better way than printing the .doc to Distiller with Print settings and opening that in Photoshop

      If you have an embedded bitmap, save the doc to HTML and you'll get a HTML file and jpegs. In older versions of Word, 97 I think, this seemed to be at the original resolution. Later ones downsampled and made it fairly useless for print. If you don't have 97, or the file won;t open in it, for Word 2000 I found this method: this method that requiues some scripting:

      Extracting Images from Microsoft Word Documents
      by Ka-Ping Yee

      You may have noticed while using Word that on many occasions, it loves to take control of your document away from you. It will rearrange your figures randomly, alter your formatting when you aren't looking, insert blank pages that hold the rest of your document hostage -- even fight with you over the text you are typing in. Just another way in which it loves to screw you over is to take ownership of any image you insert. The programmers responsible for image copy/paste and export deserve a good smack upside the head for this arrogance.

      The Problem

      Once you insert an image into a Word document, it's gone for good. Or so it seems. You can never recover the original image: as soon as the image arrives, it's automatically scaled to a different size. You'll find that if you try to copy the image and paste it outside of Word, it arrives scaled based on its size in the Word document. There's no way to fix it to 100% size again, so the image always comes out fuzzy. It also comes out horribly posterized for no particular reason; Word seems to apply a filter on export for the sole purpose of degrading your image.

      But all of the image data is clearly present in the document. Word can scale it to any size. If you zoom in, all the detail is there. All of the colours appear crisp and perfect -- but in Word, and in Word only. How can you free your pixels from the tyranny?

      The Secret

      One of the many ways you can export your document, in Word 2000, is to "Compact HTML". This generates one HTML file with the text of your document and separate image files containing your figures. Alas, the images are JPEG files -- full of awful compression artifacts -- and of course they are randomly scaled to some size that depends on the size in your document and the phase of the moon.

      However... if you watch very closely, you will see that PNG files exist in the output directory for just an instant before the JPEG files are written! The PNG files appear briefly, proving that Word has the pixels you want. Then, after it has mangled your artwork by converting it to JPEG, it blows away the PNG files (why would you want them anyway?).

      The Solution

      When you export your document to foo.html, the images appear in a directory called foo_files. Write a script to repeatedly copy away all the *.png files in this directory (your script will have to blindly copy away in an endless loop, not failing even while the directory doesn't exist). If you export to your home directory, which is cross-mounted from Unix to the Windows network on \\coeus, you can write this as a Unix shell script. For example:

      mkdir saved
      while true; do
      /bin/cp -f ~/document_files/*.png saved
      done
      Start running the script, and let it spew error messages.

      Then do File -> Export To... -> Compact HTML, and save to \\coeus\userid\document.htm .

      After the dust settles, you should find your images lying in the saved directory, with names like img00001.png, pristine and perfect as when they were first inserted -- rescued at last from Word's evil, megalomanaical clutches.

  186. Asking the tough questions by incripshin · · Score: 1

    "Why should I have to sign an agreement?"

    I see they're really asking the tough questions. I find it funny that somebody would ask such a simple-minded question. I find it yet funnier that the article commented on it. Still, it gets worse when the slashdotter's summary includes it again. I think it's very widely known that Microsoft does weird decisons like make people sign agreements. Why is it that people feel the need to point this out anymore? Can't it just be left unsaid that it doesn't make any sense? Why must people be so explicit? It's like when people ask questions in class (I'm a college student) that they know the answer to, and only so people will know what a deep thinker they are. Let's all take a moment to pat ourselves on the back. There, there. Patting yourself on the back gets you nowhere. It's like we're trying to convince ourselves, when it's everybody else that must be convinced. This one-sided-ness gets discriminated against in the news world (think Fox News), but here, everybody loves it.

    One one hand, I don't care that much anymore and don't give a damn about my /. rating. I can almost see the guy reading this with his moderator points thinking, "Hey, I'm the sort of people he's talking about! -1 for him." On the other hand, I'm also too damn tired to care. So you can see my little dillema on posting this :)

  187. Re:Will The Licensed MS Office User Please Stand U by Erris · · Score: 0
    The defenders of MS Office always make me smile... Invariably 90% of them have never paid for their copy ... I wonder how many of the same people would be so vocal if they had to shell out £200 for a copy?

    I'd smile too, but those morons continue to advocate use of those expensive, flawed and restricted formats for government archives. It's one thing for them to not know how to do things right. It's another for them to demand that I be stupid just to make their life easier. Who wants to beg Bill Gates just to be able to read government archives, laws and instructions? There are alternatives to M$ formats that anyone can use and many programs are freely available - even on Winblows. There's nothing M$ can do that the alternatives can't, so advocacy of M$ formats is ignorant belligerence. It's easy to forgive the ignorant but fanboys are a tiresome pain that make me smile.

    --
    DMCA, Hollings, Palladium. What might have sounded like paranoia is now common sense.
  188. Re:Thank you, sir. May I have another? by Maow · · Score: 0
    without MS you have no web/html like we have today

    ps - i'm not an ms fanboy. seriously.

    Seriously? Who needs fanboys with serious users like yourself?

  189. Re:Complete Rubbish. by steeviant · · Score: 1

    It's like asking Mazda to fit the engine from the RX-8 into your home-(re)built VW Beetle.

    No it's not, it's like asking Mazda and VolksWagon to publish specifications for their cars so that someone can figure out if an RX 8 engine can be fitted. Car manufacturers do publish specifications of their engines and chassis.

    I'm not saying that Microsoft should do anything except publish the format that they store my data in like most other professional companies.

  190. Re: Derivative works by shaitand · · Score: 1

    Or claiming that a program is a derivative work because it links to a GPL'd library. All are examples that could only be considered even vaguely entertainable by the extremely anal.

    If I run a GPL'd application on my computer it is likely that everything else running will be powered by derivative electrons. After all the compile and runtime counts right?

  191. Re:Complete Rubbish. by steeviant · · Score: 1

    Feel free to use Notepad. Or, you can get the free Word, Excel, or PowerPoint reader.

    Uh huh. Let me guess, you live at home and are still at school right?

    I have to be able to create, and modify Word documents and have a reasonably high chance that the recipient will be able to open any documents I create in Microsoft Office, complete with formatting, pagination, etc. I can't send people documents that accidentally overflow a buffer in MS Word because the author of the export filter didn't understand the format properly because he was making educated guesses at how Word stores data.

    My office suite needs to be made by someone with access to Microsoft's documentation, currently that means Office for Windows or Office for Mac. I'd like my choice of computing platform not to be limited by my choice of office suite.

    What gives them the right to treat my work in that way after I have already paid them?

    I didnt realized your paying money for something entitled you to so many rights. I demand to have full access to the source code and structure of the save game files for Doom 3!!!


    What the fuck are you talking about?

    I'm not asking for access to their source code, I'm asking for them to document the structure for data that is saved by their product. You're making stuff up.

    Is there a MS rep over there, FORCING you to save in their file format? Last I checked, you could save in a ton of alternate file formats, including HTML. And last I checked, HTML didnt require MS Office to view.

    Have you ever tried saving a document in Microsoft's HTML format and then looking at it in any browser except IE? Not to mention the fact that the HTML, like all Word export filters strips out a lot of formatting even when viewed in IE.

    Stop being a typical whiney Slashdot bitch.

    Stop being a typical AC Slashdot troll.

  192. Re:Thank you, sir. May I have another? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    without MS you have no web/html like we have today

    You're confusing MS with Al Gore, dummy!

  193. Re:Open source is Good! by bit01 · · Score: 1

    but reverse engineering Close Source code is NOT fine.

    No, reverse engineering to allow interorroperability is extremely important. Unfortunately, the lawmakers don't yet realise how important.

    Making reverse engineering illegal is fundamentally incompatible with a free market.

    Do you really want to live in a world where your leased version of M$Windows will only work with your M$ licensed PC, which will only talk to your M$ licensed mobile phone, which will only talk to your M$ licensed display, which can only send video to your M$ licensed TV, M$ licensed stereo, M$ licensed clock radio, M$ refigerator (internet ordering), M$ internet enabled car (GPS etc.), M$ internet enabled house, M$ licensed web sites and M$ licensed voting machine? Oh, and by-the-way, all communications are encrypted so no chance of sniffing them even without reverse engineering the code.

    That's the world we're headed for if reverse engineering and thus interroperability is made illegal.

    Making reverse engineering illegal allows an established monopoly/oligopoly player to leverage into other areas, and eventually, all areas. Prefer a Sony device? Tough, it doesn't talk to your M$ devices and so is useless. Want to read your own documents? Sure, but make sure your M$ Windows lease is up-to-date. Oh, and by the way there is a mandatory "upgrade" coming that will cost you $x and we don't like potential competitor y so we're silently blocking your access to their products and causing furfies. All hidden and encrypted of course.

    Want to create a product to compete with an existing M$ product? Sure, but your market entry costs will be insane because you'll have to duplicate the entire M$ interconnection before you can compete with comparable value, let alone better value. And you'll have to deal with a monopoly player with sufficient cash reserves to run at a loss for years. Alternatively, you can pay for the M$ licenses but because they are a monopoly that will cost you about 0.1% less than your gross profit, meaning your net profit will be zero.

    You need to think long and hard about what you like about the free market. Interroperability matters. In niche segments no big deal but when a substantial proportion of a big market gets locked in it has democracy compromising effects.

    In addition the economic network effect is important and has profound implications for any "IP" market. When one player can write a piece of software (e.g. M$) and get a thousand times the profit compared to another player who writes identically functional software for the same cost (e.g. Sun), and can use that excess profit to "compete" and can also block interroperability, then the free market is dead.

    ---

    It's wrong that an intellectual property creator should not be rewarded for their work.
    It's equally wrong that an IP creator should be rewarded too many times for the one piece of work, for exactly the same reasons.
    Reform IP law and stop the M$/RIAA abuse.

  194. Re:wow by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well, no. Not here at least. The only public pool that I know of is on city property, which is public property, unlike a restaurant.

  195. Re:Complete Rubbish. by bit01 · · Score: 1

    Nothing prevents those customers from switching.

    Nonsense. Read up on economic network effect/externalities. If you have an office with 9 PC's and 1 Mac, guess what usually happens to the Mac, even if the Mac is technically superior? A form of market failure.

    ---

    It's wrong that an intellectual property creator should not be rewarded for their work.
    It's equally wrong that an IP creator should be rewarded too many times for the one piece of work, for exactly the same reasons.
    Reform IP law and stop the M$/RIAA abuse.

  196. I'm a jackass, then... by SanityInAnarchy · · Score: 1

    I don't think that the world owes me everything. I do think that Microsoft owes me some competition. There's no question that they have the resources to compete, should they ever be forced to, but instead, they stomp competition into the ground. Ultimately, this translates into stomping the users into the ground.

    The real question is, why do I want to be trampled, when there's perfectly good alternatives out there? I'm going to go use them, and if the world goes Word-only, I'll go back to fucking paper. At least my paperclip won't talk to me.

    --
    Don't thank God, thank a doctor!
  197. A file format as a product? by SanityInAnarchy · · Score: 1

    Did you ever write a single line of code yourself?

    Do you know what XML is, besides what it stands for?

    Are you an anonymous coward because you are astroturf?

    Get this through your head: Open formats are easy. They take about five minutes, using XML. You want to charge for that? Ok, you get $.02, because that's how much it would cost me to write that format by myself.

    It takes even less time to publish such a format on the Internet, especially if you already have to have a DTD for it. Just upload the DTD somewhere and be done with it. Just this small guesture of good will -- less effort than farting -- would have saved people days and weeks trying to reverse-engineer a broken format.

    Or are you implying that somehow by opening the format, they are giving away their word processor? Such a stupid statement rarely comes anywhere but from the horse's mouth. Hello, Mr. Ballmer!

    --
    Don't thank God, thank a doctor!
  198. 'Open source' is a buzzword by The+Angry+Artist · · Score: 1
    The only source that is "open enough" is open source, not open-but-still-closed-enough-so-we-can-take-all-yo ur-money source.

    "However, it was the proprietary standards that grew up and allowed those open standards to develop."

    Yeah, that's because people were so ticked off at the proprietary standards that they created open alternatives.

    --
    If you're reading this, stop it.
  199. Re:Will The Licensed MS Office User Please Stand U by pandrijeczko · · Score: 1
    My responses:

    1. Then you are an exception rather than the rule. I know of no-one in my circle of friends & work colleagues who has ever bought a boxed MS operating system or product. Sure, a few of them have bought complete PCs with Windows on, but most build their own and just use copies of MS CDs.

    2. I know (or care) nothing about MS EULAs but I wasn't aware that they covered home use. Sure, if you have a company laptop that you take home, that's okay but if it's your own PC then it does not fall under what your company purchased as bulk licenses from MS.

    3. Agreed, but then the morons have fallen for the marketing hype about PCs being easy to use and maintain. MS and PC vendors are to blame for this so if they have complaining morons as customers, they can blame their marketing people.

    4. As in point 3, it is if MS have played you for an idiot and got you to part with your money in the first place.

    5. If I keep my English ale then that's fine because it means there's more of it for me! :-)

    --
    Gentoo Linux - another day, another USE flag.
  200. Re:Open source is Good! by AviLazar · · Score: 1

    While all your points are valid in their own respect - it still does not answer the fundamental notion that who are we to crack someone elses code? What gives us the right to go into an MS product and trying to figure out the code? Unfortunately, if you want your product to be 100% (with a grain of salt) compatable with MS you gotta pay them a license fee to get some insight - but that is their choice. Your choice as a consumer is to not buy MS. Use Open Office where it is Open Source. We do not have a fundamental right to crack the code of someone elses product without their explicit permission no matter what we would like to justify.

    As I have always said, if the system is broken - then fix it within the system - not by circumventing it which (as in our case) is illegal and can get you in a load of legal battles that you won't win.

    --

    I mod down so you can mod up. Your welcome.
  201. Re:Open source is Good! by tokabola · · Score: 1

    How many times do we have to point out that reverse engineering is NOT the same as "cracking code". You obviously haven't a clue about computer programming and the issues at hand.

    As for my citation - as I said before, read my sig it is a lawyer who apparantly works in the field with regards to EULAs.

    Apparently? You're quoting this guy and you don't even know for sure? Had you done any research at all, you would have found he was talking about a specific case - Blizzard's EULA prohibits third party selling of in game items and characters. While EULA's may, in some cases, constitute a legal contract, a contract is only valid where it doesn't contradict existing laws. In Don's own words "So, if you call a lawyer right now and say, are EULAs enforceable, he will likely get into the above and his final answer would be "it depends, but in some cases the only way to tell is to go to court." Since the law specifically states that reverse engineering IS legal, any portion of a EULA that denies you that right is unenforcable.

    Unfortunately, if you want your product to be 100% (with a grain of salt) compatable with MS you gotta pay them a license fee to get some insight - but that is their choice. Your choice as a consumer is to not buy MS. Use Open Office where it is Open Source.

    Um, you do realize that Open Office had to reverse engineer the Microsoft Office formats? You are contradicting yourself here.

    --
    Open Source for Open Minds
  202. Re:Complete Rubbish. by tokabola · · Score: 1

    DOS ain't done 'till Lotus won't Run used to be an internal motto at MS. They even had posters on the walls. It was discovered that MS had deliberately introduced bugs into MSDOS 2 that prevented Lotus from running correctly. This was illegal, and not the only time MS broke the law to establish their monopoly. Windows 3.2 would check which version of DOS you had, and refuse to run under any other than MSDOS. Microsoft claimed other versions of DOS, like DRDOS (a superior product) weren't capable of running windows, when actually they were. By the time anyone was able to prove that MS had deliberately prevented other DOS's from running windows (love that hidden source) it was too late for most of the other DOS's to compete.

    Why do you think MS lost the anti-trust case? Do you think they would have lost if they hadn't broken the laws and illegally forced other companies out of buisiness? Which part of the word Guilty didn't you understand?

    Tommy
    --
    Open Source for Open Minds
  203. So you agree then? by ssstraub · · Score: 1

    I'm glad you agree that we need to freely exchange a standard document "architecture" that's readable by all.

    If you understand that, then you should also see why it's obvious that either Microsoft should open their Office formats to public use or NO ONE should use them for public use...(Internal use is fine.)

    There is certainly no reason that a world-wide standard document architecture should be owned by a single company. They very thought is ludicrous, but look at where we are today. 20 years from now THESE will be the bad days!

  204. Re:Complete Rubbish. by seriesrover · · Score: 1
    ok, so a little late but nevermind. So let me expand my point - *if* the software does everything you want it to do then it doesn't matter if the company dies or not.

    So if doesn't export what you want then this is a failure of the implementation, not of longevity (the point of the post). As a consequence you then shouldn't have bought it in the first place. Open source is a good thing because it offers a choice to the closed proprietry offerings, but it doesn't mean everything has to follow the open source model. But this is a different topic.

    On activation - this is really your only valid point that counters my original. In most circumstances activation is only on install - assuming consumer software (not counting dongles and all that). But then if the software breaks then it doesn't meet my previously stated requirements.

    Above all propietry formats exist for reason and have their place. All the doomsdayers have always predicted the end of the world because of closed source\formats and its yet to manifest itself.

  205. Re:Open source is Good! by bit01 · · Score: 1

    who are we to crack someone elses code?

    Companies do not have rights, citizens have rights. I hate the loaded word "rights". There are many conflicting rights here with shareholders, employees, customers, third parties, the patent/copyight offices, the courts and even the police all having rights and responsibilities in regard to commercial transactions.

    In any case property rights have never been universal. e.g. An amazing variety of people can legally enter your house, house owners can't open businesses, the government can forceably buy a house for a highway, patents expire, copyrights expire (in theory anyway), gun owners have restrictions, farmers can't stop mineral prospectors in some jurisdictions etc.

    The fact is the property owner's right to restrict code access conflicts directly with the consumers right to do what they like with a product they've purchased. One of the ways that copyright law is currently broken is the way vendors try to "lease" software, breaking first sale doctrine and engage in all sorts of anti-competitive behaviour (see my previous posr!). I expect the law will eventually catch up but until then a bit of thumbing-your-nose is entirely appropriate. New law frequently codifies existing practice and I for one do not want the practice of no-consumer-rights to be codified.

    ---

    It's wrong that an intellectual property creator should not be rewarded for their work.
    It's equally wrong that an IP creator should be rewarded too many times for the one piece of work, for exactly the same reasons.
    Reform IP law and stop the M$/RIAA abuse.

  206. Re:Open source is Good! by AviLazar · · Score: 1

    Business entities do have rules and regulations that govern them. They have certain rights they can claim to. "Right" is a loose word to say the leat - it is any rule that grants you the ability to do certain actions. Also, lets not alianate corps all together...a corporation is run by people and people definitly have rights.

    The problem with your last paragraph and the right of the consumer to do whatever they want with the product (not entirely true either, there are many products that consumers can buy which they are not allowed to do anything they want with....i.e. guns, dynamyte, air conditioners that use CFC's, etc.)...but in our case - the difference between me buying a car and modding it up, and me buying a program - is that I can easily and with nil cost reproduce that game and give it to people for free. I cannot reproduce that car and just give it away for free (or sell it) without heavy infrastructure. THere is your difference. And in all honesty - you and I both know that people copy programs and give it to people.

    --

    I mod down so you can mod up. Your welcome.