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MS Office 12 To Utilize ODF?

J. Random Luser writes "Groklaw is carrying a story about Microsoft quietly engaging a French company to develop Open Document filters for Office 12, due out mid-2006. The SourceForge project claims to be an import filter for MS Office, and that is how the developer describes it. But ZDNet quotes Ray Ozzie as talking about an export filter from MS Office, and this french blog takes Ozzie at his word. Ostensibly the tarball unpacks as OpenOfficePlugin, and SourceForge has the WindowsInstaller.msi listed as 'platform independent'." From the ZDNet article: "Ozzie told me that supporting ODF in Office isn't a matter of principle. Microsoft isn't opposed to supporting other formats. The company just announced support for PDF, and he added that the Open Office XML format has an 'extremely liberal' license."

17 of 196 comments (clear)

  1. Utilize isn't the same as support by Reality+Master+201 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It's one thing to read/write a document format through a filter.

    It's another to utilize the format, i.e., as the underlying default storage format.

    1. Re:Utilize isn't the same as support by Deviate_X · · Score: 4, Interesting

      The OpenOffice formats support only a subset of the funtionality in Word format - therefore there is emphasis on Import. But that does not exclude Export.

      Microsoft has a number other reasons why not to support OpenOffice file formats directly however, here are three:

      * OpenDocument has next to 0% market share (when opendocument has market share comparable to PDF, or HTML or RTF support considerations should be made)

      * OpenDocument Format is a legal mine-field. As stated previously OpenDocument is a subset of MsOffice format, any attempt my MS to Extend the format, or any perceived crippling of output (conversion from ms->opendocument --- downgrade) will leave Microsoft wide open to billion dollar anti-trust, anti-competitive, lawsuits from all the other members of the OpenDocument committee - please remember Ms had to pay Sun Micrososystems 2Billion US (Sun is also OpenDocument committee Member).

      * OpenDocument is a version 1.0 Spec and hence it is a moving target, and will probably go thru several revisions before the next Version of Ms office is released.

      For the above reason it is appropriate to leave the implementation of OpenDocument support in Ms Office versions in the hands of small third-party developers.

    2. Re:Utilize isn't the same as support by smallpaul · · Score: 4, Insightful

      * OpenDocument Format is a legal mine-field. As stated previously OpenDocument is a subset of MsOffice format, any attempt my MS to Extend the format, or any perceived crippling of output (conversion from ms->opendocument --- downgrade) will leave Microsoft wide open to billion dollar anti-trust, anti-competitive, lawsuits from all the other members of the OpenDocument committee - please remember Ms had to pay Sun Micrososystems 2Billion US (Sun is also OpenDocument committee Member).

      That's just silly. Microsoft has hundreds of import/export filters with varying levels of quality. Nobody would ever implement import/export if it were possible to be sued by standards bodies or their member companies. Why hasn't anyone sued them over Word's horrible HTML? Ths Java situation was totally different. Java was not (and is not!) a standard. Microsoft was only allowed to redistribute Java because they entered into a conract with Sun. They violated that contract. Therefore they were sued. Half-assed OpenDocument support is not even remotely comparable. Half-assed OpenDocument support would be simply Microsoft doing business as always.

  2. How to get the State of MA to upgrade by lseltzer · · Score: 5, Insightful

    You know, it's kind of clever: Support it, but only in the new version.

    1. Re:How to get the State of MA to upgrade by ThogScully · · Score: 4, Informative

      This doesn't mean that MA can't switch to OpenOffice if they think it's the better solution for them. This does mean that they can use ODF files and *expect* everyone else to be able to open them. If someone can't because they're running Office, then they can just upgrade. This puts the expense of using Office and upgrading Office on the people who are forcing it down everyone else's throats. I don't use Office, but I do recognize a problem with exchanging documents with those who do. I generally save as Doc files for them and try to verify on another person's machine that it will open correctly. It's good to know that I may be able to just send them ODF files from now on.
      -Neil

      --
      I've nothing to say here...
    2. Re:How to get the State of MA to upgrade by mrchaotica · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Well, the only problem I see with that theory is that, as far as I know, MS still uses proprietary formats whenever they can get away with it. Although it would be nice to think that they're turning over a new leaf, I think the evidence suggests only that they're grudgingly capitulating to Massachusetts' desires.

      Call me when you see a large scale shift to open formats (i.e., when they abandon MS XML entirely, switch to XUL instead of XAML, stop working on that "PDF killer" I've heard stories about, drop Windows Media file formats and codecs for MPEG and H.264, etc.

      --

      "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

  3. Support by TechJones · · Score: 5, Insightful

    MS Office also had support for WordPerfect files. If you want to have the leading Office software you must have support for your competition. OpenOffice has support for Word documents so it comes as no suprise that MS would do the same.

  4. ODF Is Sweeping Through Governments by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Microsoft has no choice. Either they will support the format, in a usable form, or be increasingly left out of government, city/state/country level, contracts.

    I am surprised at how quickly ODF is becoming a must have feature. It makes perfect sense of course, but I think so many people have gotten so use to the "Microsoft is always the winner" mentality that they are having a hard time imagining that anyone would mandate an open format for documents.

    1. Re:ODF Is Sweeping Through Governments by ronanbear · · Score: 4, Insightful

      OpenOffice.org are doing well. They have won this battle. M$ have tried to crush ODF by saying that they won't support it and tried to muscle customers into accepting their format. Now someone has stood up to them and they know that MA will just buy StarOffice they have to move onto phase 2. They don't care (much) about the money of the MA contract. What they don't want is StarOffice to gain important market share and extra development cash. Once that happens other governments will follow. M$ will give MA full OpenDocument support. But don't go thinking that the version of Office 12 you get with your Dell or on the shelf at Best Buy will have it. M$ will try and win the MA contract with Opendocument support but that doesn't mean they are gonna give that feature to everyone. Even making it a feature that you must install additionally from the 2nd CD would be enough to put most people off. M$ haven't given up the war. In fact they still think they will win.

      --
      the more they over-think the plumbing the easier it is to stop up the pipe
  5. Microsoft playing catch-up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    They've heard that Open Office is beating them in bloat, and are scrambling to get back on top.

  6. Looks Like Conversion Is One Way by canfirman · · Score: 4, Informative
    By looking at the SourceForge project description it says, "This project aims at providing a plugin for Microsoft Word 2003 XML to open OpenOffice XML documents." It doesn't say that it converts Word XML format to OpenOffice XML format. So it's really not a true converter, because it won't allow you to save back into OpenOffice format.

    I find it interesting that Microsoft will support other document formats (such as WordPerfect - is anybody using that anymore?) but not OpenDocument.

    --
    It is not our abilities that show what we truly are... it is our choices.
  7. Up to their old tricks? by mrogers · · Score: 4, Insightful
    The problem with an extremely liberal license is that it can be embraced and extended. The best way for Microsoft to kill OpenDocument would be to implement it perfectly, wait a year, then add lots of cryptic, undocumented extensions that are only supported by MS Word. When you receive an OpenDocument email attachment you'll be in the same position you're currently in with .doc attachments - it might work, it might not, and you'll never be sure the document's supposed to look the way it looks on your computer, unless you're running Word.

    OASIS (the consortium behind OpenDocument) is doing its best to avoid licensing issues and legal arguments, which unfortunately seems to mean you can write whatever you want and call it OpenDocument, or at least "OpenDocument-based" or some other form of weasel words.

  8. Not "Open Office XML format" by John+Hasler · · Score: 5, Informative

    It isn't the "Open Office XML format". It's the OASIS Open Document Format. Microsoft is attempting to confuse the issue by deliberately confounding "Open Office" and Open Document".

    --
    Warning: this article may contain humor, sarcasm, parody, and perhaps even irony. Read at your own risk.
  9. Denial by debilo · · Score: 5, Informative

    Apparently, Microsoft has already denied this.
    I got that on OSNews.com yesterday.

  10. Matter of time by smallguy78 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Reading http://www.groklaw.net/article.php?story=200510261 95537674 describes how the body responsible for advising UK schools on IT policies (BECTA) is planning to force schools to

    "...use software that saves files in open formats (see pages 25 and 26).".

    Following from this, it probably won't be long until government bodies follow suit in the UK, and the trend spreads from country to country.

    Microsoft will then definitely be forced to support the OpenDocument standard, or someone will get very rich writing plugin to do so.

    Office vs competition will then be down to features and useability rather than format tie-ins (Microsoft purposely tieing people to their products surely stems from a satanic Sales/Marketing department rather than evil developers).

    If the competition comes down to UI/useability I think Star Office and OpenOffice are a long way behind MS Office, both tending to looki like cheap shareware applications at the moment. Which then leaves the doorway open for a company to take OpenOffice, pretty-fy it and sell it for a vastly reduced amount compared to Office (unless the license restricts this?)

    --
    Nothing costs nothing
  11. Re:Have you opened ODF in a text editor? by shis-ka-bob · · Score: 4, Informative

    Unzip the odf. (rename it filename.zip and doubleclick). Now, look at the XML file named content.xml

    --
    Think global, act loco
  12. Well that's MS's own damn fault by BobPaul · · Score: 4, Informative

    * OpenDocument Format is a legal mine-field. As stated previously OpenDocument is a subset of MsOffice format,

    Microsoft is ALSO an Open Document committee member (and has been for many years). They've had ample opportunity to ensure that the OpenDocument format supports everything that they need it to.

    Since OpenDocument has been painstakenly crafted as Extensionable XML, there should be no problem with Microsoft Extending the standard to add support for anything that is not currently included, provided they do so using Pure XML without any of the binary nuggets they've included in their own XML format. If they extend the format properly through the OpenDocument committee, then their updates can become part of the standard rather than being a fork (which definately would give Microsoft a lot of flak.)

    Licensing on the ODF is actually very liberal and Sun, the only IP owner for anything related to the ODF, has already released an IP claims relating to the use of ODF. This is something they can't sue Microsoft over anymore.

    --
    Bob/Paul