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Two Open Document Standards Better Than One?

tsa writes "Microsoft says that the consumers should have the choice between multiple open standards for documents." From the article: "Microsoft's Yates said that OpenDocument and Open XML come from very different design points. 'In the future at some point there will be convergence,' he said. In the near term, the transition period from proprietary document formats to Open XML-based ones will be 'messy and complex,' he added. 'Competition between standards we believe is a very good thing.'"

308 comments

  1. Divide and conquer by timeOday · · Score: 5, Insightful

    We might not be able to beat one good format, but we can easily defeat two.

    1. Re:Divide and conquer by bluelip · · Score: 0, Troll

      Ha! I never thought I'd hear from Microlimp that competition is good.

      I guess that when they're behind, they don't mind the taste of crow.

      --

      Yep, I never spell check.
      More incorrect spellings can be found he
    2. Re:Divide and conquer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Does anybody have a good handle on whether or not it will be easy to convert between the two formats?

    3. Re:Divide and conquer by grasshoppa · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Ha! I never thought I'd hear from Microlimp that competition is good.

      That's not precisely what they are saying. They are saying that competition on standards is good, which is a far cry from saying competition based on implementation is good.

      Honestly, we should not have to deal with competition with standards. What's their to compete on if everyone agrees this is a standard? This is only a concept that is big because MS likes to fuck with standards ( embrace and extend ).

      What they are trying to do is create an enviroment where PHB feel they have to go with the safe option. And no one ever got fired for going with MS.

      --
      Mod me down with all of your hatred and your journey towards the dark side will be complete!
    4. Re:Divide and conquer by grasshoppa · · Score: 0

      *there.

      Jesus I need my coffee this morning.

      --
      Mod me down with all of your hatred and your journey towards the dark side will be complete!
    5. Re:Divide and conquer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you're just interested in the actual content of the document, and not all sorts of other stuff ("what zoom level was the user last using to look at this document?"), then my understanding is that it's not really that hard, as these things go.

    6. Re:Divide and conquer by timeOday · · Score: 5, Insightful
      Does anybody have a good handle on whether or not it will be easy to convert between the two formats?
      Sure, just like you can convert back and forth between C code and assembler automatically. Just try editing that C code after one round trip though!

      Complex document format conversion is lossy. Imagine converting a MS Word document to a TIFF image. OK, you'd lose some things (like page breaks) but you could do it. Now imagine trying to convert back to .doc from TIFF. You could sort of do it with OCR, maybe you could automatically recognize noncharacter regions and convert them back to images, but there's no way it would reclaim the structure of the document not to mention change tracking, comments, self-updating cross references, links to embedded spreadsheets, document-specific word lists for the spellchecker...

      Two word processor formats will be much more similar than .doc and TIFF, but the same problem exists to a lesser degree. Document formats are not supersets of each other! At some level there are basic incompatibilities.

    7. Re:Divide and conquer by ThePhilips · · Score: 4, Informative

      One was giving short insight into ODF v. M$' DOCX. (*)

      ODF is flow based a-la HTML.
      DOCX is record based a-la files generated by Write (.wri) & WinWord' text changes stream.

      Application of styles is very different. Even if conversion of text can be made, conversion of styles is almost impossible. In DOCX styles are more or less inlined - ODF was redesigned by OASIS with styles to be more like HTML+CSS.

      Basicly, M$'s concept boils down to "anything can occur anywhere in document". ODF hence standard is more strict.

      Additionally M$ has special support for ActiveX: embedded objects will be stored as binary dump in middle of XML documents. (E.g. all pictures and files inserted from outside in M$ universe are ActiveX objects.) I'm not sure who ODF pares with embedded content, I can only hope OASIS - unlike M$ - have put XML to good use. After all, unlike M$, ODF includes vector and raster graphics too.

      (*) http://www.groklaw.net/article.php?story=200511251 44611543

      --
      All hope abandon ye who enter here.
    8. Re:Divide and conquer by carguy84 · · Score: 1

      That's not working out too well on the Linux desktop front. How well would it really work out here?

    9. Re:Divide and conquer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      Get it yourself.

      -Jesus

    10. Re:Divide and conquer by theCoder · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Actually, this is pretty standard for Microsoft. They always say that choice is good when it allows someone to choose Microsoft (i.e., if there was no choice they wouldn't get business) and that choice is bad when it allows someone to choose someone other than Microsoft (i.e., Linux, OpenOffice where ODF isn't a big push). Microsoft is all about choice in the areas that it doesn't have a monopoly.

      And while it's somewhat hypocrical, it does make sense from the "we want all the money" point of view.

      --
      "Save the whales, feed the hungry, free the mallocs" -- author unknown
    11. Re:Divide and conquer by ThosLives · · Score: 1, Interesting
      I just had an interesting thought that your comment about HTML+CSS prompted. There seems to be an interesting idea surrounding the concept of "separation of content and presentation". The interesting idea is this: What if the presentation is the content? For instance, a screenplay of a book - take Lord of the Rings. The story is more or less the same between the two, but there is no amount of "common" format that will allow you to describe the same story in the book form or the movie form simply by "changing the presentation." (Okay, perhaps not the best example, but hopefully it will get the thought process going).

      Incidentally, I think the only time "content+presentation" paradigms work well is when you have lots of similar data to present in a standard manner. For instance, records in a forum. Here, the content and presentation are only loosely related. This is vastly different than, say, certain documents where the arrangement of the elements on the page actually uniquely defines the content. Consider as an example the Periodic Table of Elements - here the arrangement is content.

      --
      "There are a dozen opinions on a matter until you know the truth. Then there is only one." - CS Lewis (paraprhase)
    12. Re:Divide and conquer by CastrTroy · · Score: 1

      This is where I think MS went wrong with ASP.Net. They are trying to get you to remove the presentation from the code. In the end, the code creates the presentation. All the good projects already had the non-presentation code separated from the prestation code. Now they are trying to remove the presentation code from the presentation. This was a little bit too much removed, and now we can't write HTML in loops, but we have to put all our HTML into constant strings, with no code highlighting.

      --

      Anthropic principle: We see the universe the way it is because if it were different we would not be here to see it.
    13. Re:Divide and conquer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I got fired for going with MS... but I was later told that office relationships were against company policy.

    14. Re:Divide and conquer by Canthros · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      'M$' is an asinine and derogatory term for the company, whatever your feelings. Using it automatically lowers the level of the conversation, and makes the person using it look foolish and unprofessional. It persuades no one, describes nothing not already known to all involved, and mostly just makes you look like a twit: "From my parents' basement in" and etc, etc.

      --
      Canthros
    15. Re:Divide and conquer by electroniceric · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Multiple open standards are good as long as they're really open. That way, the market can sort out which one is really best, and it will end up as the reference standard. But Microsoft isn't really looking like they're making OpenXML truly open. And that's the worst of all worlds.

      Hopefully one of the things that comes out of this is that large IT-consumers, like the State of Massachusetts, will learn how the process of developing and open standard really works, and what's open and what's not open. Hopefully this will obligate many or most vendors to support open standards.

    16. Re:Divide and conquer by Canthros · · Score: 1

      The content of a screenplay is the screenplay. A screenplay contains much information that is not in a book, even obliquely. That is why books are adapted to the screen.

      --
      Canthros
    17. Re:Divide and conquer by Hognoxious · · Score: 1

      Yebbut Microsoft is long, and MS could be confused with multiple sclerosis.

      --
      Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
    18. Re:Divide and conquer by Hognoxious · · Score: 1
      All the good projects already had the non-presentation code separated from the prestation code.
      I always thought prestation was a town in Wales.
      --
      Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
    19. Re:Divide and conquer by QunaLop · · Score: 0

      i am confused, what was removed? you can still progam the "inline" asp/php/etc way...

      this is way off topic and incorrect, why was it moded up?

    20. Re:Divide and conquer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      It sounds like they're pushing some FUD here (surprised???) in response to the criticism put forth so far over their proposed standard. They're basically saying, you don't like it? Come up with something better, and we'll let the market decide...

      Don't forget, though, that there are many MS-proprietary blobs of binary data in office documents. Any competing document standard will not have that someone tries to implement to compete with MS's implementation will most likely lack support for all these things, and the end result will be shoddy for the user.

    21. Re:Divide and conquer by Nacnude · · Score: 1

      We have two great open standards: TXT & HTML! Leave it at that.....

    22. Re:Divide and conquer by capnchicken · · Score: 2, Funny
      --
      A libertarian shat on my carpet once. Claimed the free market would sort it out. -Ford Prefect(8777)
    23. Re:Divide and conquer by NickFortune · · Score: 4, Insightful
      You act as if Microsoft is so anti competition but then you have all heard of macs and linux so apparently they aren't perfect because most the world now at least knows there is an alternative...

      So you're suggesting that we should infer goodwill from Microsoft's imperfections? That they could have destroyed Linux and Apple any time they liked, but they withheld their hand becuase they're nice people?

      I have to say that doesn't sound like the Microsoft I've come to know and loathe. Should we also infer that they put all those bugs in on purpose so other OSes won't feel bad abut themselves?

      Seriously if people continue to just bash microsoft hear then it shows they are no better then the funded surveys that microsoft does to prove they are better except you guys

      So like, if I criticise Microsoft, I'm just as bad as they are, yeah? So if I say, Microsoft are untrustworthy hypocritical greedy grasping anti-competitive and morally bankrupt, that means that I am also untrustworthy hypocritical greedy grasping anti-competitive and morally bankrupt, made so purely by the act of saying so. Is that right?

      Wow.

      So, presumably, if I say the Pope is a catholic, that would make me a catholic too.

      Maybe I should stop using the toiletary habits of bears for emphatic confirmation. I mean, it's not as if there's a decent sized wood anywhere near where I live. Talk about getting caught short...

      --
      Don't let THEM immanentize the Eschaton!
    24. Re:Divide and conquer by Just+Some+Guy · · Score: 1
      Sure, just like you can convert back and forth between C code and assembler automatically. Just try editing that C code after one round trip though!

      I thought you were the guy in the next cube. What's up, Jeff? Did you ever figure out why all the functions in that library all had two-letter names?

      --
      Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
    25. Re:Divide and conquer by civilizedINTENSITY · · Score: 1

      Well you are half right. "M$" is an accurate and derogatory term for the company. It has less to do with feelings than historical fact. It is descriptive. You seem to be taking offense to its use, but I'd suggest that says more about you than the poster.

    26. Re:Divide and conquer by Da_Weasel · · Score: 1

      "Governments should be open to both [Open XML and OpenDocument] and whatever else is rolling down the street. Choosing both is really wise."

      Yea and smoking crack is wise too!

      So if the government chooses both then how do they implement that?
      Do they create each and every document in both formats, and the when a new one come "rolling down the street" produce everything in three different formats and four, five, and so on?

      Or maybe they could put some documents in one format, and others in another format.

      What a fucking idiot!

      *sings* "Hold ya head up high and blow your brains out!" *sings*

      --
      If you must!
    27. Re:Divide and conquer by Sathias · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Different standards are nothing new though... VHS vs Betamax? HD-DVD vs Blu-ray?

      --
      Blessed are the 1337, for they shall pwn the earth.
    28. Re:Divide and conquer by jambarama · · Score: 1

      The funny thing is, if theirs was the only standard being considered, you wouldn't hear them looking for competition. They only want competition when they are on the outs. Which is fine, but lets call this what it is. M$ lost in an area, and they are trying to win it back.

    29. Re:Divide and conquer by denmarkw00t · · Score: 2, Insightful

      ...the market can sort out which one is really best, and it will end up as the reference standard


      That seems good but what happens when two companies develope two pieces of software with identical functionality but one supports OpenStandardA and the other OpenStandardB? To the user, it appears to work and function the same, but then when said user moves from ProductA to ProductB or, lets say, sends a co-worker who uses ProductB an OpenStandardA document, what happens?

      You hit a brick wall.

      Instead of the two companies working together to develope a standard for their formats, they've put up a nasty roadblock for their users. Yes, competition in creating the standard is good, but the community should pick one and then everyone should drop the other, even its own creators in favor of whats best for the users.

    30. Re:Divide and conquer by StikyPad · · Score: 1

      It's not the market's job to sort out standards, it's the developers/engineers. Markets do a horrible job at picking standards when they're forced to (because they're subject to marketing) and unnessecary choices just steer people away from the technology entirely.

    31. Re:Divide and conquer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      So, presumably, if I say the "Pope is a catholic", that would make me a catholic too.

      The Pope is Catholic, not the Pope is a Catholic. Geez, for a Catholic, you sure don't know much.

    32. Re:Divide and conquer by MacJedi · · Score: 1

      Sure, but if OpenStandardA and OpenStandardB are both truly open standards, then both products could support both standards and naught is lost.

      --
      2^5
    33. Re:Divide and conquer by Bun · · Score: 1

      Sure, just like you can convert back and forth between C code and assembler automatically. Just try editing that C code after one round trip though!

      Well, the word processor formats in discussion here are all markup languages, so it would be more like the sort of thing that goes on in latex2html. I'm sure the document translation can be worked out pretty well.

      --
      "Anyone that has ever gotten an idea based on any of my work and done something better with it-good for you."--J.Carmack
    34. Re:Divide and conquer by WilliamSChips · · Score: 1

      It's the same thing in Latin, so it doesn't matter. (Latin doesn't have articles)

      --
      Please, for the good of Humanity, vote Obama.
    35. Re:Divide and conquer by rtb61 · · Score: 1
      Multiple standards make no sence at all, t is jus marketing. Microsoft is trying to create a new marketing illusion, of competiting standards. A standard is a uniform publicly available method that everyone can access. Your have one standard for every one to follow if they choose, allowing for every one to gain knowledge of that standard and to be able to apply it, if the standard proves issufiecient more is added to it.

      If they start spouting nonsence about two standards for the same function, why stop lets have a hundred standards, even more competition and with a hundred different standards surely only the best one will survive, bullshit, when you have more than one standard you have no standard at all.

      This is yet another attempt by microsoft to flood an important development in the future use of computers with lies and misdirections to maintain their preffered status quo where they have majority control of the market. There is no excuse for any government to not use what is already a freely available open document standard.

      Everybody must surely realise by now the inherent futility of involving microsoft in any discussion of standards as they will only ever focus on their on greed and lies and will never work in the general interests of the greater community. Do the oppostie of what the microsofties say to do and you are bound to succeed, follow their reccomendations and don't be suprised when you lose and they profit.

      --
      Chaos - everything, everywhere, everywhen
    36. Re:Divide and conquer by Lord+Flipper · · Score: 1
      Consider as an example the Periodic Table of Elements - here the arrangement is content.

      So, in SGML/XML one declares an element, 'table', with attributes like, 'column', etc, which includes an element, 'row', which includes, 'entry', etc, etc. Each entry can have its own elements [no pun intended], like 'name', 'symbol' [cross-reffed to a "declared" png, for example]...So what's the issue with XML and a Table of Elements? Color of the various element groups? Just another non-printed 'tag' to be referenced by the XHTML, or CSS, or pdf style sheet, whatever, etc.

      That keeps your table searchable, and allows it to be printed, streamed, pdf'd, whatever.

      I've seen 'verbatim' tags in well thoughtout DTDs that allow for multiple white spaces and all sorts of stuff that might seem 'formatted' to the eye [normally a no-no in good SGML].

      Apple and Microsoft, and anyone else that fucks around with popping binary crap into otherwise pure XML is doing it for one reason only, and it is NOT to speed up XML code going through CPUs...they are simply fucking with it to make the format proprietary. Utter bullshit, a pox on all their houses.

    37. Re:Divide and conquer by jbolden · · Score: 1

      I think the issue is whether the differences in the standards provide advantages that outweigh conversion hassles. For example the WordPerfect data standard offered things that were better than WordStar and thus it was worth introducing incompatability. OLE offered things to Word 95 that didn't exist in Word 6. Both changes of standards were worthwhile. OTOH TeX always offered things that Word didn't and vice versa.

      End users do understand that not all data formats are the same. Just like the understand that people who speak Chinese don't necc. speak Spanish and vice versa. This isn't over their heads in some way.

    38. Re:Divide and conquer by ThePhilips · · Score: 1

      """I just had an interesting thought that your comment about HTML+CSS prompted."""
      """What if the presentation is the content?"""

      Well this is why XML's style sheets are XML - XSL.
      And even more. Transformation of XML styles described in XML too. And they are standartized too - XSLT.

      So you can transform style. And you can transform transformation. XML has enough rope for everyone.

      --
      All hope abandon ye who enter here.
  2. the old saying goes.. by jspectre · · Score: 4, Funny

    "standards are great, everyone should have one."

    --

    abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz

    1. Re:the old saying goes.. by mysqlrocks · · Score: 4, Funny

      "standards are great, everyone should have one."

      Or the other variation of that, "standards are great, there are so many to choose from."

    2. Re:the old saying goes.. by cciRRus · · Score: 1

      As the old saying goes, "Two heads are better than one"

      <head>...</head>
      <head>...</head>

      --
      w00t
    3. Re:the old saying goes.. by grahamlee · · Score: 1

      No, two heads are more numerous than one, but that's all.

    4. Re:the old saying goes.. by CrazedWalrus · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Heh -- I've heard that one too, but my 26 years of 'wisdom' have shown me that two heads generally just re-enforce each other's harebrained ideas (e.g. the wacky old couple down the street who have the wild ideas about the neighbors), or simply confuse each other more (typically in professional settings, or Slashdot). It even happens with smart people who have slightly different views of reality.

      In my several years of professional IT, I've been shocked (and, at times, guilty as well) by how many times smart people will argue, over something that is easily investigable, but whom both are too lazy or full of themselves to actually do said investigation.

      Surely, one thing is true: Two heads are better at talking out of their asses.

    5. Re:the old saying goes.. by eno2001 · · Score: 1

      As the even older saying goes... the man who has socks in the morning is the one who left the door closed in the winter time.

      --
      -"...bad old ideas look confusingly fresh when they are packaged as technology" - Jaron Lanier (Digital Maoism on Edge.o
    6. Re:the old saying goes.. by almercobb · · Score: 2, Funny
      "standards are great, everyone should have one."
      Or the other variation of that, "standards are great, there are so many to choose from."
      So, wait ... are you saying there are competing standards for that old saying?
    7. Re:the old saying goes.. by Luuvitonen · · Score: 1

      Or the other variation of that, "standards are great, there are so many to bastardize."

      Fixd!

    8. Re:the old saying goes.. by ozmanjusri · · Score: 1

      In my several years of professional IT, I've been shocked (and, at times, guilty as well) by how many times smart people will argue, over something that is easily investigable, but whom both are too lazy or full of themselves to actually do said investigation.

      Got any evidence for that?

      --
      "I've got more toys than Teruhisa Kitahara."
    9. Re:the old saying goes.. by CrazedWalrus · · Score: 1

      Do I need any?

  3. I'm confused by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    If there are two standards, how can they be called standards?

    Isn't that like having competing monopolies?

    Regardless, competetion in standards is only good for a short period of time, after that there is a waste of man hours on one project to the detriment of whatever the standard is for.

    1. Re:I'm confused by RogL · · Score: 2, Insightful
      If there are two standards, how can they be called standards?


      That's right - who could possibly need more than one standard?

      Just as there's only one graphics-file format... GIF! I mean bitmap... or was that JPEG? Oh, PNG - that's the one! Except for the nuts using TIFF or RAW...
    2. Re:I'm confused by Pudusplat · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Nope.

      Multiple ideas can be thought of as a "standard", they just aren't necessarily compatible. PAL vs NTSC, 120 volts vs 220 volts, AC/DC, DVD-R vs DVD+R, Letter size vs Legal vs Postcard. They're all standards, all used for various purposes, and sometimes (DVD-R vs DVD+R) interchangable. As long as a lot of people conform to using it (not necessarily ALL people), it can be deemed a standard. Multiple standards can be a good thing. Of course, multiple standards can also be a bad thing, as it leads to unneccessary incompatabilities.

      --
      "If you put butter and salt on it, it tastes like salty butter." -Terry Pratchet, on Popcorn.
    3. Re:I'm confused by Skowronek · · Score: 1

      I am very sorry to have to enlighten you. As it happens, the "nutty" TIFF format you mentioned is actually the One Format to Rule Them All. You can have TIFF/JPEG (instead of JFIF, which is the real name for what you messily call JPEG), TIFF/LZW (instead of GIF), TIFF/CCITT (for two-color images), TIFF/RAW... You can pack pretty much any kind of compression into TIFF.

    4. Re:I'm confused by porneL · · Score: 1

      and then if you want to make "simple image viewer" you have to support all these formats and their variants, implement lots of algorithms, link with bunch of libs... or have partial/broken implementation.

    5. Re:I'm confused by Skowronek · · Score: 1

      As far as analogies to document formats go, it's a pretty good one, isn't it?

    6. Re:I'm confused by CrazedWalrus · · Score: 1

      Then maybe the missing word is "documented". Otherwise, the MS Word "standard" isn't.

    7. Re:I'm confused by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      competing monopolies
       
      You seem to have failed to grasp the meaning of the term 'monopoly'.

  4. Of course! by Just+Some+Guy · · Score: 4, Insightful
    As soon as Microsoft releases a fully documented, non-patented format, or at least creates a perpetual license for F/OSS projects to use a patented format, I'll welcome them with open arms.

    Since they haven't done that yet, the rest is just speculation. It looks like legal issues will be keeping the Free world on OpenDocument for the foreseeable future.

    --
    Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
    1. Re:Of course! by cduffy · · Score: 4, Informative
      As soon as Microsoft releases a fully documented, non-patented format, or at least creates a perpetual license for F/OSS projects to use a patented format, I'll welcome them with open arms.
      Will you do that even without considering the merits of their patented-yet-standardized format?

      They've promised to create exactly that perpetual license, and there's pretty much no question at this point that they will indeed do so. The problem is this: Their proposed format sucks, and ECMA probably won't do anything about it.

      Compared to ODF, the format Microsoft is proposing is vastly less suitable for XMLT transforms. It fails to leverage preexisting standards, so other implementations can't take advantage of existing code to render and manipulate SVG, MathML and the like.

      Please see the OpenDocument Fellowship's introduction to the technical merits of Microsoft's proposed format to better understand the extralegal objections to the same.

    2. Re:Of course! by telegraph_road · · Score: 1

      O Agree with Just Some Guy, but I think that if the competion between standards is a good thing, Microsoft must implement both of them in the next Office for guarantee a correct competition. Microsoft is the de-facto leader of office suite, so if it uses only a standard, that will became the leading standard!

    3. Re:Of course! by Just+Some+Guy · · Score: 3, Insightful
      Will you do that even without considering the merits of their patented-yet-standardized format?

      Will I what? Welcome them to the competition? Sure! That's not the same as blindly adopting their proposal.

      --
      Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
    4. Re:Of course! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So why not submit OpenDoc to the ECMA as well and have them approve both? Should help in the 'my standard is ratified better than your standard' debate too.
      ~Gildas

    5. Re:Of course! by cduffy · · Score: 1

      I think it'll be interesting to see what ISO has to say -- they're not nearly the pushovers ECMA are reputed to be when it comes to being influenced by vendors rather than technical merits.

  5. Someone should copyright the word "open" by obarthelemy · · Score: 0

    Or at least give it lots of band aids, it has been terribly abused recently.

    GNU/Open anyone ?

    --
    The Cloud - because you don't care if your apps and data are up in the air.
  6. I've upped my standards... by SunPin · · Score: 5, Funny

    so up yours.

    --
    Laws are for people with no friends.
  7. It's about money by fair_n_hite_451 · · Score: 1

    Of course it's a good thing while there is still a chance to make money on the "standard". If it was all settled and everyone agreed, that eliminates some opportunities for making money (such as selling converters and translators).

    This isn't an "evil" comment from MicroSoft, but an expected one.

    --
    Reason why there is hope for the future generation #364:
    "I wish my grass was emo so it could cut itself."
  8. Now that is funny!! by gasmonso · · Score: 2, Insightful
    "Competition between standards we believe is a very good thing.

    If Microsoft had to actually compete, they would cease to exist.

    http://religiousfreaks.com/
    1. Re:Now that is funny!! by lbrandy · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Competition between standards we believe is a very good thing.

      More importantly, isn't that the entire reason for a "standard"? So you don't have competing formats? Hence the use of the word "standard". Maybe he needs to look up the definition of standard (and, while he's at it, oxymoron).

    2. Re:Now that is funny!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nonsense. They competed with Word Perfect and won. They competed with Lotus and won. They competed with Apple and won.

      You're probably bitter because you backed a loser...

    3. Re:Now that is funny!! by BlewScreen · · Score: 1

      Right. Because if there's a "standard" way of doing something and you think of something better, you should bite your tongue, suck it up and continue using something you believe isn't as good as it could be.

      I'm not saying that's what's happening here, but I'm quite surprised that everyone here seems to think that competition is evil, just because MS is the competition.

      Take USB 1.0 vs. Firewire for example. Would we have seen USB 2.0 as soon as we did if Firewire didn't offer "faster competition" to USB 1.0?

      I'm sure there are standards that saw competition and then ceased to exist because the competing standard was better.

      -bs

      --
      That that is is not that that is not. That that is not is not that that is.
    4. Re:Now that is funny!! by VitaminB52 · · Score: 1
      If Microsoft had to actually compete, they would cease to exist.

      Microsoft does compete - every time they release a new Windows/Office version they have to compete against the installed base of older Windows/Office versions.

    5. Re:Now that is funny!! by NanoGator · · Score: 1

      "If Microsoft had to actually compete, they would cease to exist."

      I'd find this more insightful if Microsoft's monopolies weren't de-facto.

      --
      "Derp de derp."
    6. Re:Now that is funny!! by Austerity+Empowers · · Score: 1

      To shut them up, we demand they support all the standards.

    7. Re:Now that is funny!! by lymond01 · · Score: 1

      Exactly. But do we need both? I'll just keep using the faster one.

    8. Re:Now that is funny!! by 'nother+poster · · Score: 1

      No. Competing standards is not a problem. There are a dozen ways to encode and compress images. GIF, TIFF, JPEG, bitmap, and many more. Having several standards that do the same thing isn't a problem, the problem is when players in the game decide to extend the standard without making those extensions part of the standard, and available to the other players, or just not follow the standards while claiming that they do.

    9. Re:Now that is funny!! by shaitand · · Score: 2, Interesting

      The reason microsoft is evil competition in this case is because of motive. Microsoft's goal is to undermine the open process and any "open" proposals it puts forth will have been designed to ultimately allow microsoft to do so.

      Perhaps they will leverage their monopoly to cause an inferior open format to win. It goes like this.

      1. Government and some industry requires open format support in word processing application.
      2. Microsoft proposes terrible open format that is vastly inferior to word doc.
      3. Microsoft does not implement competiting formats, only its own inferior open format.
      4. Government offices relicense office because it now complies with regulation.
      5. Offices using inferior open format can not get all their work done using crippled format.
      6. Ultimately regulations at offices are changed to allow them to use word docs again.

      At no point here did the offices use anything but Microsoft's product and are right back to a proprietary format. Microsoft wins.

      Microsoft does this crap consistantly, again and again. Never once have they claimed to participate in an open process with honorable intentions and ended up with an honorable open result. Why is it that every time Microsoft proposes something like this there is someone piping up and suggesting that Microsoft could have a legitimate involvement in ANY open process, format, or standard?

    10. Re:Now that is funny!! by friedmud · · Score: 1

      "There are a dozen ways to encode and compress images. GIF, TIFF, JPEG..."

      This is the second time I have seen this argument in this discussion... and it simply doesn't work... because those image formats are all for different purposes..

      GIF: Lossless, useful for small images with limited number of colors
      TIFF (well, what most people think of as tiff): Lossless, useful for large full color images that need to maintain pefect quality.
      JPEG: Loss(full?), Useful for large full color images that can lose some quality without damaging the intended message.

      Each one of these formats fills a particular niche... unlike ODF vs DocX (which is what is being discussed here).

      There are plenty of other examples out there that _are_ examples of "competing standars" (DVD+R and DVD-R are the first to come to my mind).... where the things competing _do the exact same thing_.

      Friedmud

    11. Re:Now that is funny!! by ozmanjusri · · Score: 1

      Microsoft does compete - every time they release a new Windows/Office version they have to compete against the installed base of older Windows/Office versions.

      That's why they introduced Product Activation. So a product which never wears out becomes unusable at the same rate as the hardware it is installed on. It is their way of avoiding competition with older installed products.

      --
      "I've got more toys than Teruhisa Kitahara."
    12. Re:Now that is funny!! by 'nother+poster · · Score: 1

      Well, the image paradigm is closer than the DVD burner examples since the DVD examples have to work with another standard, the DVD standard. It doesn't matter how they go about the encoding and burning, when it's all over it has to read in a bog standard DVD player. The image encoding is better example. When it is all said and done, neither standard will be able to be read by a reader for the other standard. They will all be read by some programs because those apps will have readers for all of the standards. Both standards will do what the authors and readers want, and they don't care what happens under the hood to get to that point. Whether it is a .sxw or a microsoft derived open standard won't matter one bit to them.

      As long as the standards are open to all to use, it doesn't matter if there are one or one hundred, anyone can make it so their application can handle them.

  9. Good idea? by ceeam · · Score: 5, Funny

    <html>

    <head>
    <meta http-equiv=Content-Type content="text/html; charset=windows-1252">
    <meta name=Generator content="Microsoft Word 11 (filtered)">
    <style>
    <!--
    /* Style Definitions */
    p.MsoNormal, li.MsoNormal, div.MsoNormal
        {margin:0cm;
        margin-bottom:.0001pt;
        font-size:12.0pt;
        font-family:"Times New Roman";}
    @page Section1
        {size:595.3pt 841.9pt;
        margin:2.0cm 42.5pt 2.0cm 3.0cm;}
    div.Section1
        {page:Section1;}
    -->
    </style>

    </head>

    <bod y lang=EN>

    <div class=Section1>

    <p class=MsoNormal><span lang=EN-US>Idiot</span></p>

    </div>

    </body>

    </html>

    1. Re:Good idea? by BushCheney08 · · Score: 5, Funny

      xmlns:w="urn:schemas-microsoft-com:office:word"
      xmlns="http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-html40">

      <head>
      <meta http-equiv=Content-Type content="text/html; charset=windows-1252">
      <meta name=ProgId content=Word.Document>
      <meta name=Generator content="Microsoft Word 9">
      <meta name=Originator content="Microsoft Word 9">
      <link rel=File-List href="./Hehehe_files/filelist.xml">
      <title>Hehehe</title>
      <!--[if gte mso 9]><xml>
        <o:DocumentProperties>
          <o:Author>Goatse</o:Author>
          <o:LastAuthor>Goatse</o:LastAuthor>
          <o:Revision>1</o:Revision>
          <o:TotalTime>0</o:TotalTime>
          <o:Created>2005-12-15T15:59:00Z</o:Created>
          <o:LastSaved>2005-12-15T15:59:00Z</o:LastSaved>
          <o:Pages>1</o:Pages>
          <o:Company>ProbeCo</o:Company>
          <o:Lines>1</o:Lines>
          <o:Paragraphs>1</o:Paragraphs>
          <o:Version>9.6926</o:Version>
        </o:DocumentProperties>
      </xml><![endif]--><!--[if gte mso 9]><xml>
        <w:WordDocument>
          <w:DrawingGridHorizontalSpacing>6 pt</w:DrawingGridHorizontalSpacing>
          <w:DisplayHorizontalDrawingGridEvery>2</w:DisplayH orizontalDrawingGridEvery>
          <w:DisplayVerticalDrawingGridEvery>2</w:DisplayVer ticalDrawingGridEvery>
        </w:WordDocument>
      </xml><![endif]-->
      <style>
      <!-- /* Style Definitions */
      p.MsoNormal, li.MsoNormal, div.MsoNormal
              {mso-style-parent:"";
              margin:0in;
              margin-bottom:.0001pt;
              mso-pagination:widow-orphan;
              font-size:12.0pt;
              font-family:"Times New Roman";
              mso-fareast-font-family:"Times New Roman";}
      @page Section1
              {size:8.5in 11.0in;
              margin:1.0in 1.0in 1.0in 1.0in;
              mso-header-margin:.5in;
              mso-footer-margin:.5in;
              mso-paper-source:259;}
      div.Section1
              {page:Section1;}
      -->
      </style>
      </head>

      <body lang=EN-US style='tab-interval:.5in'>

      <div class=Section1>

      <p class=MsoNormal>Hehehe. Good One.</p>

      </div>

      </body>

      </html>

      --
      Be a real patriot: Question authority. Think for yourself. Formulate your own conclusions.
    2. Re:Good idea? by Div3B0mbr · · Score: 1

      omg my eyes, my eyes!!

    3. Re:Good idea? by pembo13 · · Score: 1

      Funny isn't it

      --
      "Thanks for all the money you paid to us. We've used it to buy off ISO among other things" -Microsoft
    4. Re:Good idea? by jannic · · Score: 1


      <office:document-content xmlns:office="urn:oasis:names:tc:opendocument:xmln s:office:1.0" xmlns:style="urn:oasis:names:tc:opendocument:xmlns :style:1.0" xmlns:text="urn:oasis:names:tc:opendocument:xmlns: text:1.0" xmlns:table="urn:oasis:names:tc:opendocument:xmlns :table:1.0" xmlns:draw="urn:oasis:names:tc:opendocument:xmlns: drawing:1.0" xmlns:fo="urn:oasis:names:tc:opendocument:xmlns:xs l-fo-compatible:1.0" xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/" xmlns:meta="urn:oasis:names:tc:opendocument:xmlns: meta:1.0" xmlns:number="urn:oasis:names:tc:opendocument:xmln s:datastyle:1.0" xmlns:svg="urn:oasis:names:tc:opendocument:xmlns:s vg-compatible:1.0" xmlns:chart="urn:oasis:names:tc:opendocument:xmlns :chart:1.0" xmlns:dr3d="urn:oasis:names:tc:opendocument:xmlns: dr3d:1.0" xmlns:math="http://www.w3.org/1998/Math/MathML" xmlns:form="urn:oasis:names:tc:opendocument:xmlns: form:1.0" xmlns:script="urn:oasis:names:tc:opendocument:xmln s:script:1.0" xmlns:ooo="http://openoffice.org/2004/office" xmlns:ooow="http://openoffice.org/2004/writer" xmlns:oooc="http://openoffice.org/2004/calc" xmlns:dom="http://www.w3.org/2001/xml-events" xmlns:xforms="http://www.w3.org/2002/xforms" xmlns:xsd="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instan ce" office:version="1.0"><office:scripts/><office:font -face-decls><style:font-face style:name="Lucidasans1" svg:font-family="Lucidasans"/><style:font-face style:name="Arial" svg:font-family="Arial" style:font-pitch="variable"/><style:font-face style:name="Lucidasans" svg:font-family="Lucidasans" style:font-pitch="variable"/><style:font-face style:name="Times New Roman" svg:font-family="&apos;Times New Roman&apos;" style:font-family-generic="roman" style:font-pitch="variable"/></office:font-face-de cls><office:automatic-styles/><office:body><office :text><office:forms form:automatic-focus="false" form:apply-design-mode="false"/><text:sequence-dec ls><text:sequence-decl text:display-outline-level="0" text:name="Illustration"/><text:sequence-decl text:display-outline-level="0" text:name="Table"/><text:sequence-decl text:display-outline-level="0" text:name="Text"/><text:sequence-decl text:display-outline-level="0" text:name="Drawing"/></text:sequence-decls><text:p text:style-name="Standard">Indeed...</text:p></off ice:text></office:body></office:document-content>

    5. Re:Good idea? by animaal · · Score: 2, Informative

      I was going to post the reply "I agree", as a document in MSWord 2003 format. However, the .doc file was 19.5KB, and I'm not sure the Slashdot filters would accept a hex dump of it...

    6. Re:Good idea? by sarguin · · Score: 1

      New Microsoft Word format:

      <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
      <word-doc>
      <![CDATA[
      !@#$WED FWE$%@#$FSDFWE$%EFFWER#$QWFWEFWEF#$R@#$FDF
      @#$%#% %EGGWERGFWEFT$%$FERFWERF$%#$%^@#$%@#$%$%#$%
      ]]>
      </word-doc>

    7. Re:Good idea? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      After so many bloated lines you still forgot the most important thing, the doctype!

      Shame on you, Shame on Microsoft Office Word 11.

  10. MS strategy by JoeCommodore · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Let's just forget the embrace thing, we'll just muddy the market by extending.

    --
    "Enjoy what you're doing! If it becomes drudgery, you're doing it wrong!" - Jim Butterfield
  11. Disingenous statement by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Please, the transistion will only be "messy" because Microsoft wants it to be.

  12. Just excellent by KlomDark · · Score: 1, Funny

    Ah yes, the 'Tower of Babel' defense - Completely screw up the ability to communicate clearly by introducing another competing way.

    Also known as "StirStick of Muddy Water +5"

    So much for historians trying to figure out the years 2006 to 2012... How very non-altruistic of Microsoft. How very against the basic tenets of Information Systems.

    1. Re:Just excellent by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually since Office is pretty the much standard worldwide, wouldn't OpenDoc be the one muddying the waters? Your argument, while persuasive, doesn't actually come out the way you want.

  13. Competition by QuaintRealist · · Score: 4, Insightful

    "Competition between two standards we believe is a very good thing"

    From past experience, Microsoft only believes this when the leading standard is someone elses. Once Microsoft's standard holds the most mindshare/marketshare, then they don't like competition anymore.

    Just what I've observed

    --
    Using plain ol' text since 1968
    1. Re:Competition by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Very good point. I quite agree.

    2. Re:Competition by DogDude · · Score: 1

      How unusual... a business not liking having competition.... hmmm... did you go to business school at the Velvet Jones School of Bidness, by any chance? Any company that says that they do love their competition is in collusion with their competitors (Coke and Pepsi), so there isn't any real competition, anyway.

      --
      I don't respond to AC's.
    3. Re:Competition by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But... But... Microsoft said they thought competition is good! What are you talking about? /end sarcasm

    4. Re:Competition by Eil · · Score: 4, Insightful

      MS realizes at this point, that it's going to be quite hard or impossible to beat out OpenDocument. So what do they do? Well, they simply suggest that there will be two standards, and that they will at some time converge into one. But taking these statements apart and considering Microsoft's prior attitudes and actions toward difficult competition, we arrive at some very strong assertions from a Microsoftian point of view:

      1) We will sooner curl up, die, and/or join the open source movement before letting a non-MS Office document standard become any sort of official or de facto standard.

      2) There will be two incompatible standards in popular use. Yes, that does defeat the entire purpose of standards in the first place, but you have to realize that we're Microsoft and that we will never stop pushing our own solutions, even if they're inferior, evil, or expensive. Even if everyone on the planet rejects them, it will not hinder us. But we will succeed eventually.

      3) Our standard will converge with the competition's in response to market forces. And if the market doesn't force it, we will, and we'll just make it sound like we didn't.

      4) We plan to be in charge of this convergence. And by "converge," we mean "effectively replace that one with ours." We'll be in full control of the result.

    5. Re:Competition by DogDude · · Score: 1

      :) Yeah, I can't imagine MS, with their "monopoly" issues saying otherwise... hell, or any large corporation, *especially* a consumer-oriented one for that matter.

      Ford Motors: "We disklike all competition. We'd rather be the only car manufacturer on the planet."

      That'd go over like a lead balloon with the public.

      --
      I don't respond to AC's.
    6. Re:Competition by Paul+Bristow · · Score: 1

      That is exactly what I was about to say: well said!

      --
      - Paul
  14. What Competition? by ZiakII · · Score: 1

    Competition between standards we believe is a very good thing

    Sure you can say that when the most used application uses your format and doesn't support the other format, which can be extremlly bad for the user and forcing the user to buy Office products.

    Now I have to give M$ credit though there Office Suite is probably the best out there I have yet to see one that even comes close to how well their program works, and how well one migrates into the other program, with ease.

    1. Re:What Competition? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You've apparently not used the WordPerfect Office Suite lately.

  15. The good thing about standards... by patcito · · Score: 0, Redundant

    ...is that tere are so many to pick from!

  16. Last time I checked... by mmaddox · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Last time I checked, TWO ain't a standard. It's a competition.

    --

    What'dya mean there's no BLINK tag!?

  17. For who? by grasshoppa · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Competition between standards we believe is a very good thing

    Yeah, for microsoft.

    You can expect this kind of horse shit from MS because they are on the weak end of the document format wars. Allow me to explain:

    Competition between programs is a very good thing. No arguments. Standards are just that, standards. There has already been a shake down period, and people have agreed this is an agreed set of rules. Hence, "standard". By instigating a whole new standards "war", they hope to create confusion and chaos. And those of you who work with PHB already know the next bit: They panic and go with the safe option.

    Fuck 'em. I hope against logic that they get eaten alive on this one.

    --
    Mod me down with all of your hatred and your journey towards the dark side will be complete!
    1. Re:For who? by grasshoppa · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I have yet to even meet in person ANYONE who uses open office

      Then you don't work in IT. I would further say you don't work with computers much on a day to day basis.

      No one cares about OS except linux zealots and and a few governments looking to save a few pennies by using an inferior product

      Try not to drool to much on yourself, it really undermines your credibility.

      Let me paint you a picture. You are the IT head of a state ( lets say California ). You see Mass moving to open-office due to concerns about document formats. A year goes by, and they report an enormous budget savings due to no MS tax on their office suite.

      Now, do you a) Stay with MS, and have to deal with corporation crap regarding their document formats and pay for the privledge? Or do you b) investigate costs associated with moving to open office?

      Try not to drool on yourself while you think about this.

      --
      Mod me down with all of your hatred and your journey towards the dark side will be complete!
    2. Re:For who? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I have yet to even meet in person ANYONE who uses open office

      Then you don't work in IT. I would further say you don't work with computers much on a day to day basis.

      I've never seen Open Office, nor have I ever met anybody who uses it either. Would you like to see my resume, smartass? If anything, I'd say that you don't work in IT. A real IT person doesn't use such juvenile phrases like "MS Tax".

    3. Re:For who? by grasshoppa · · Score: 1

      I've never seen Open Office, nor have I ever met anybody who uses it either.

      Would you like to see my resume, smartass?

      Why yes. Yes I would.

      If anything, I'd say that you don't work in IT. A real IT person doesn't use such juvenile phrases like "MS Tax".

      Oh? I would argue that you haven't met many people in the field then. MS tax is a perfectly valid description of a forced update model. Sure, PHB may use different words ( longer and more meaningless, generally ), but the essence is the same.

      So yes. Please post your resume.

      --
      Mod me down with all of your hatred and your journey towards the dark side will be complete!
    4. Re:For who? by picaro · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Competition between standards we believe is a very good thing.

      Competition between the English and the metric systems, for example, has provided an endless stream of benefits over the years.

      And while we're at it, the different standards for power plugs and telephone adapters are really great, too, stimulating the ingenuity of international travelers everywhere, and doubtless provide jobs and livelihoods for tens of thousands of adapter manufactures around the world.

    5. Re:For who? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Computer Science

                      * Programming : Micro Soft Visuals: Basics, C, C+, C#, C++, Java, Internet.
                      * Databases: Average programming knowledge in Oracle 8.0,Visual Basic, Mysql.
                      * Networking: Average knowledge in network administration and setup.
                      * O.S.: Average knowledge in Windows and Linux: Redhat 7.0,Mandrake 8.0.
                      * Web Design: Average programming knowledge, http://some-ugly-as-hell-web-site-made-with-an-onl ine-page-builder/
                      * Servers: Basic knowledge about web server administration (Apache), proxy server administration.
                      * Computer assembly and repair: Advanced knowledge as a technician, effective use of the Internet.
                      * Office suites: Word, Access, Excel, Power Point,Outlook.
                      * Others: Paint Shop Pro 7, PhotoShop, Emule, Kazza, Paint, WordPad, Acrobat Reader, Winzip, WinRar.

    6. Re:For who? by grasshoppa · · Score: 1

      You're kidding, right?

      Programming : Micro Soft Visuals: Basics, C, C+, C#, C++, Java, Internet.

      Internet programming? I wasn't aware "The Internet" was a programing language.

      Computer assembly and repair: Advanced knowledge as a technician, effective use of the Internet.

      Effective use of the internet? You actually put on your resume that you know how to find porn? You've got balls man, I'll give you that.

      And no, I would not like fries with that.

      --
      Mod me down with all of your hatred and your journey towards the dark side will be complete!
    7. Re:For who? by tehshen · · Score: 2, Informative

      YHBD. It was taken from The Daily WTF.

      --
      Guy asked me for a quarter for a cup of coffee. So I bit him.
    8. Re:For who? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Quoth the turd: "...I have yet to even meet in person ANYONE who uses open office..."

      Okay, I'll bite - even though I'm A/C and the OP is probably furiously choking his chicken to pr0n he got with his "internet programming" skills.

      OpenDocument is NOT OpenOffice.org. There are a number of office suites that can or will soon be using this format: StarOffice, OpenOffice.org, KOffice, Abiword, just off the top of my head. MS can implement it too which should be easy given that it is a genuinely open standard (ie, all the details are available to examine and implement without restriction on licenses etc). That's good for lots of folks.

      Lots of folks use these, myself included. I even turned down OfficeXP and installed OOo by choice. I'm that impressed with it. StarOffice (from Sun) is being used in many places (eg, Bristol City Council recently converted en mass among many others).

      Quoth again the turd: "...No one cares about OS..."

      TCP/IP is an open standard as one example. It means you can use the Internet without having to pay some get-rich-quick company a pile of dosh just to be connected (which, incidentally, would not be MS). Some of us like paying less and consider this kind of thing to be an innovation-driver by providing a common environment for new ideas to bloom. It's cheap, it's good for the economy, and it's (reasonably) ethical. Wow! Sounds like a winner for me! And guess what - history has shown me to be correct because very few people use the other proprietary protocols that were considered way back in ancient days.

      This may surprise you, but lots of folks care about paying less for a basic service and having a vibrant economy. Open standards help generate these by allowing anyone to compete; consumers benefit from genuine competition; business benefit by having to be competitive (remember the old patriarchal corporations? Once we removed them, the economy boomed).

    9. Re:For who? by bob+frost · · Score: 1

      On the government side (and arguably on the private as well), M$ products are a veritable black box, and for security purposes, that stinks. When the source code is open, programmers working for the gov't can comb through the code to understand how secure it is. That, as much as cost considerations, is why a number of countries (and now Mass) are moving away from closed code. It's simply irresponsible for a CIO to adopt products that prevent security analysis.

      That the US' new Ministry of Homeland Security opted for end-to-end M$ products indicates to me that that agency is more concerned with nurturing the connections of the bushies to M$. The latter not only dumped big bucks into Shrub's last campaign, Bill's dad is a principle of the lobbying firm for which the notorious Jack Abramoff worked when all of the above happened. Conclusion: gov'ts who *don't* go open-source might often have agendas that have little to do with "good govenment."

  18. Too funny to be true. by Swordfish · · Score: 1

    This is one of the funniest stories I've heard for a long time.
    Are microsoft sending themselves up?

    This reminds me of the old joke about the advantages of standards, that there are so many to choose from.

    That old joke was supposed to be in the Tanenbaum book, but I couldn't find it in the 3rd edition. Was it removed? Or can someone give me a reference for this?

    "The nice thing about standards is that there are so many to choose from. And if you really don't like all the standards you just have to wait another year until the one arises you are looking for."

  19. Open XML? by john82 · · Score: 4, Funny
    Seriously, is that what Microsoft calls their format now? I can hear the PR guys.

    "We've got to come up with a name that at least sounds like we're the good guys. You know, open to new ideas. I've got it! We'll use Open XML!"


    It's just marketing BS. Bleh!
    1. Re:Open XML? by morgan_greywolf · · Score: 1

      No. Open XML is a real open standardfor Kylix and Delphi. I can't see what that has to do with Office, though. Is there a conflicting name here?

  20. Open Standard? by Fallen+Kell · · Score: 2, Insightful
    I still do not know how they can call their "Open XML" open to begin with. It was basically MS dictating what the "standard" would be with no comments accepted from anyone in the community (asside from MS's internal community).

    The process was, this is the standard.

    --
    We were all warned a long time ago that MS products sucked, remember the Magic 8 Ball said, "Outlook not so good"
  21. Microsoft's bastardization of the word 'OPEN' by OwlWhacker · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Open doesn't mean what it should anymore.

    Like in this article for example.

    QUOTE:

    Thanks to Microsoft, users will face the "unsavory prospect of two supposed standards. The truth is that only one of them is free of intellectual property encumbrances. Only one reflects multivendor support, and only one reflects openness. That standard is OpenDocument Format,"

    1. Re:Microsoft's bastardization of the word 'OPEN' by N6546R · · Score: 2, Informative

      I was at the meeting mentioned in the article. What struck me most was that there was significant confusion in the minds of most, including some of the panelists, between an open standard and open source. Several times during the 2+ hours the discussion came back to procurement costs, and it was clear that many in the room see this issue as: "Should the Commonwealth buy Microsoft's office software, or someone elses?" Linda Hamel did a great job of trying to get the room to focus on the standard. Quinn's analogy of differently colored Legos was not bad but he didn't follow through to use it to explain why an open standard is important. Bob Sproull of SUN had the best analogy, which was that he could design a telephone with any sized buttons he wanted, but because there are telcom standards he could always plug it into the wall and it would work. And, unfortunately, the discussion was thrown completely off track by the inclusion of Judy Brewer from the W3C whose just kept repeating that whatever it was we were talking about had to be "accessible". Apart from wasting valuable time it also served to furher muddy the minds of the participants as to whether we were talking about software or a standard format. Quinn and his department are for some reason under a lot of pressure from the Secretary of State's office to back down, and I give him and Linda and the rest of his staff a lot of credit for trying to do the right thing. Personally I think that this meeting was a step backward.

    2. Re:Microsoft's bastardization of the word 'OPEN' by Tom · · Score: 1

      See other comment.

      M$ is quite successfully employing their "embrace, extend, extinguish" strategy to words now. "Open" is merely the first victim. If this works, you can be guaranteed that nothing is safe.

      --
      Assorted stuff I do sometimes: Lemuria.org
    3. Re:Microsoft's bastardization of the word 'OPEN' by bit01 · · Score: 1

      True. M$ marketing has been very good at embracing generic words/phrases with general meanings like "word", "excel", "access" and "SQL server" and attaching them to their products, thus making it impossible for people to talk about a word processor with mentioning M$' word, to talk about accessing their data without mentioning M$ access and so on.

      Compare this to other, more responsible, companies which choose specific, distinctive names that won't come up in normal conversation. e.g. WordPerfect, CorelDraw, Apache etc.

      M$' approach is legal and good marketting but has the ethics of alley cats.

      ---

      Marketing talk is not just cheap, it has negative value. Free speech can be compromised just as much by too much noise as too little signal.

  22. Not again... by Taevin · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Let's see, embrace, extend, extinguish.

    Embrace: Do a complete reversal; say that open standards are a great idea, far better than our own proprietary asshattery.

    Extend: So yeah, we're all about open standards now and look we've got our own version OpenXML. It's obviously better (or at least that's what people will believe thanks to our unstoppable marketing department) so we'll add extra tags and change the format of existing ones. Oh by the way, this means that only Microsoft products will create this and only Microsoft products will understand this but that's not our fault, honestly.

    Extinguish: Well everyone seems to be using our version of the open document format since 90% of all computer users use our software so only masochists use that 'other' standard. We'll repeatedly change the standard by making each version of our software understand only a new version of it. After everyone is frustrated by the lack of stability in a so called standard, we'll do another 180 and point out how much better and stable closed source/standards are and move everyone back to safe, trustworthy Microsoft standards that Just Works(tm).

    Thanks for playing!

  23. Been here before by Nom+du+Keyboard · · Score: 1
    Microsoft says that the consumers should have the choice between multiple open standards for documents.

    It's Beta vs. VHS all over again.

    Or HD-DVD vs. BluRay for those of you with short memories.

    --
    "It's the height of ridiculousness to say for those 9 lines you get hundreds of millions."
    1. Re:Been here before by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      HD-DVD vs. what again?

    2. Re:Been here before by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      More like IE vs. NS.

      It's like the last 11 years of web developer anguish never happened.

  24. I already have my two by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Notepad & Wordpad

  25. Missing the point? by Jugalator · · Score: 1

    Isn't it missing the point a bit saying that there should be many open source formats for the same thing, when the point of open formats is to make it easy for everyone to implement them?

    How about Microsoft instead making it easier for everyone and joining forces with IBM, Adobe, Corel, and Sun among others behind OpenDocument, and trying suggest improvements to it to do whatever they so badly need to make their own format for?

    --
    Beware: In C++, your friends can see your privates!
    1. Re:Missing the point? by Trepalium · · Score: 2, Insightful

      It's obvious, isn't it? Microsoft has exclusive control over the ECMA standard. Only Microsoft can release another OpenXML standard and the "standard" states that clearly. On the other hand, anyone from the ODF group could update the Open Document format, and release a new standard through the normal OASIS procedures. If Sun became disinterested in maintaining the standard, the remaining members could. If Microsoft becomes disinterested in maintaining OpenXML (say, for example, they successfully killed the ODF threat), that would simply be the end of OpenXML. We're exchanging one de facto standard for another de facto standard, and calling it open to keep lawmakers happy. It's all about control.

      --
      I used up all my sick days, so I'm calling in dead.
  26. Ignore the man behind the green curtain!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Just let Microsoft muddy the waters long enough for them to backfill all of the standards committees with bureacracy, establish their own standards committees, or bog the whole process down in the legal system. Heck, why not do all three!!!

    Just WIN baby!

  27. MS craftier than you think by spycker · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I got a new laptop and it had MS works installed. I used Word until the trial period expired then when I could no longer open documents I downloaded OpenOffice. Lo and behold when I try to open an MS document now it does open using Word except it does ask me to license the product.

    I get the impression that Word looks for OpenOffice and if it finds it decides to go ahead and open the document!!!!

    1. Re:MS craftier than you think by WindBourne · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Is anybody else seeing this? I wonder if that was due to OO being seen in the registry via MSOffice, or if it occured by information being sent to MS AND then back again?

      --
      I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
    2. Re:MS craftier than you think by Zaiff+Urgulbunger · · Score: 1

      Very interesting! May I ask which versions of MS Works, Windows and OOo you were using?

    3. Re:MS craftier than you think by darkfire5252 · · Score: 1

      I don't know about Word, but I have OO installed, and .ppt files are associated with OO. In Explorer, they view as OO presentations and all that, but if I double click, they are opened by PowerPoint viewer. The only way to get OO to open it is explicitly choosing "Open with"

    4. Re:MS craftier than you think by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Okay, now the test is De-Install OpenOffice. Then try to open the documents again and see if Word refuses.

      If so, then they ARE changing behaviour depending upon the existence of OpenOffice. Which shows a certain element of fear, does it not?

  28. Just another blatant ploy from the boys at Redmond by mmell · · Score: 2, Interesting
    Consider: if the Open Document standard is widely adopted, that means the end of proprietary document formats - who wants to go through their professional career knowing that M$ has the software equivalent of a gun to their heads?

    IF, however, M$ can create a second "open" standard (one which presumably is not compatible with the existing open standard), end-users will be frustrated by what they perceive as a failure of the open document standard. I can see some poor cubicle inhabitant trying to open a M$ fnord OpenXML document in OpenOffice and not understanding why it doesn't work. At some point, the PHB's will conclude that "open" document formats aren't interoperable or don't work, making them more receptive to accepting the "lock-in" of proprietary formats because they "just work".

    This is just another example of MacroHard trying to pollute the open-source stream. Nothing new under the sun here. Move along, people - move along.

  29. Microsoft loses first battle, goes for #2 by digitaldc · · Score: 1

    "Additional standards give you more choice over a period of time," Alan Yates, general manager, business strategy with Microsoft's information worker group, said Wednesday. "Governments should be open to both [Open XML and OpenDocument] and whatever else is rolling down the street. Choosing both is really wise."

    Translation: We at Microsoft were really disappointed when we heard the State of Massachusetts was not 'agile' and were not going to 'realize their full potential' by going to the Open Document Format. We thought it over, and found that when you can't beat 'em join 'em. Just look at us trying to catch up with google. If we can create our own version of the same thing, it might just keep us in the game.

    Another article from MS on their Open XML: http://www.microsoft.com/presspass/press/2005/nov0 5/11-21EcmaPR.mspx

    --
    He who knows best knows how little he knows. - Thomas Jefferson
  30. For Some Definition of "Open" by 99BottlesOfBeerInMyF · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Multiple, competing open standards are fine, and being open it is usually not too difficult to translate between them. Unfortunately MS's "Open XML" standard is not open, so they are not really giving us the choice they are claiming. Open XML is format that is patented and that is licensed with a variety of important restrictions. For example, only the current version is covered by the license, it expires immediately should a new version come out. According to the letter of the license this means the benefits of backwards compatibility and even the ability to distribute a program from one day to the next are subject to MS's whim. Should MS release a new version that is intentionally broken, they could legally restrict competitors from continuing to sell or even give away a word processor.

    Redistribution is completely forbidden by the licensing, leading many to believe that it was specifically designed to exclude GNU licensed applications, like Open Office, their primary competitor. How can anyone call "Open XML" and open format when the license under which that format is offered means it can't be implemented by OpenOffice?

    All of this is MS marketing FUD. Closed is open. Bad is good. Ha ha we made it really hard for you to explain shit to your managers by naming our product the opposite of what it is. This is like GM calling the next iteration of their traditional cargo van "Hybrid Luxury Mobile" despite it not having a hybrid engine or any luxury features. Don't fall for their crap.

    1. Re:For Some Definition of "Open" by man_of_mr_e · · Score: 1

      I find it interesting that you are so meticulous about interpreting Microsoft's license, yet you seem to ignore entirely Sun's license and patent covenent which contains very similar "loopholes". For instance, Sun's patent covenent promises not to sue anyone *SO LONG A SUN IS PARTICIPATING* in that version of OpenDocument.

      So, for example, if Sun decided they didn't like the direction of OpenDocument 1.1, they could stop participating and then sue anyone for "suddenly discovered" patents.

      Additionally, the "openness" of something has nothing to do with whether or not it's GPL compatible. There are many open source (and even Free, according the Free Software Foundation) licenses that are not GPL compatible. The Mozilla Public License, for instance.

      I'm also skeptical that Sun's license is GPL compatible either, since they impose the additional requirement of granting Sun reciprocal patent rights (explictly Sun, not necessarily others), which violates the "no additional restrictions" clause of the GPL.

    2. Re:For Some Definition of "Open" by 99BottlesOfBeerInMyF · · Score: 4, Informative

      find it interesting that you are so meticulous about interpreting Microsoft's license, yet you seem to ignore entirely Sun's license and patent covenent which contains very similar "loopholes". For instance, Sun's patent covenent promises not to sue anyone *SO LONG A SUN IS PARTICIPATING* in that version of OpenDocument.

      First, MS has applied for and been granted patents on the format itself in multiple jurisdictions. Sun has not patented the Open Office format. The license you are referring to discusses technologies that may be utilized by the format, not the format itself. Second, Sun has promised not to sue anyone for using any of their patents that might cover technology in the Open Office spec, because that is what OASIS requires. It does not imply that any such technologies exist. Third, regarding the participation clause, no company in their right mind would cede all their patent rights for all technology arbitrarily. The participation clause allows Sun to decline the option to participate in a new version of the standard, thus preventing someone from arbitrarily inserting random patented technology in a new version of the spec, and thus gaining access to any of Suns patents, license free.

      There is a big difference between an agreement that says if any patents conflict with a format they won't be enforced and a patented format, licensed with restrictions. There is a huge difference between the ability to not release a new version of a format from patent protection and the ability to arbitrarily rescind a license to a format. If Sun decided not to participate in a future version of Open Office any company that has implemented old versions are still free to do so and new programs are free to implement them for backwards compatibility. If MS releases a new version of the "Open XML" spec no one is free to keep distributing old word processors or implement new word processors that can use that format for backwards compatibility, save at MS's whim. If you don't see the practical difference then you're either dense or being paid not to see it.

      So, for example, if Sun decided they didn't like the direction of OpenDocument 1.1, they could stop participating and then sue anyone for "suddenly discovered" patents.

      Sun can only sue if they have patents covered by a new version of the spec that they are not implementing (none are known) and if other companies then go ahead and implement that spec. The reason for this restriction on their patent protection license was already explained above.

      Additionally, the "openness" of something has nothing to do with whether or not it's GPL compatible. There are many open source (and even Free, according the Free Software Foundation) licenses that are not GPL compatible. The Mozilla Public License, for instance.

      You're confusing "open" and "open source." Open source means you can view the code. Open means the format is unencumbered and freely implementable by all. An open standard is one that can be implemented by anyone. A closed standard is one that must be licensed and is subject to restrictions. The Open Document standard is open. No license is needed to implement it, and the various companies that submitted the standard have pledged that if any of their patents cover items within it, they won't enforce them (to prevent submarine patenting). MS, on the other hand, admits to having patented the "Open XML" spec, and further has placed restriction on how that spec can be used (singling out certain software licenses for specific exclusion).

      I'm also skeptical that Sun's license is GPL compatible either, since they impose the additional requirement of granting Sun reciprocal patent rights (explictly Sun, not necessarily others), which violates the "no additional restrictions" clause of the GPL.

      A document format cannot be (by definition) GPL compatible. The GPL covers source code and redistribution of binaries. That is copyright law, not patent law. Nothing prevents GPL programs from implemen

    3. Re:For Some Definition of "Open" by man_of_mr_e · · Score: 1

      There is a big difference between an agreement that says if any patents conflict with a format they won't be enforced and a patented format, licensed with restrictions.

      No, there's not a big difference. The only difference is one of chance. If Sun discovers they have patents on technology covered by ODF, it's the same situation. The question becomes, do you want to gamble on whether sun will discover such patents or not.

      You're confusing "open" and "open source."

      No i'm not. The "open" in "open source" and "open standard" means the same thing, it's just whether or not it applies to a standard or source. Being GPL compatible doesn't determine whether something is open or not.

      A document format cannot be (by definition) GPL compatible.

      That's incorrect. The GPL explictly defines the conditions upon which patented work is compatible with the GPL. That condition is that the patent rights must be reciprocal to everyone that gets a copy of GPL'd source code that implements the format. In the case of Sun's patent covenent, they only require that Sun be granted reciprocal rights, not everyone who might use GPL'd implementations.

    4. Re:For Some Definition of "Open" by 99BottlesOfBeerInMyF · · Score: 1

      No, there's not a big difference. The only difference is one of chance. If Sun discovers they have patents on technology covered by ODF, it's the same situation. The question becomes, do you want to gamble on whether sun will discover such patents or not.

      You don't see a difference between, "Sun might find patents that apply and might not decide to let them be used in a future version the spec (inconveniencing themselves in the process)" and "MS has patents that specifically apply which they are already using to restrict people and which they can use to close the spec at any time?"

      The "open" in "open source" and "open standard" means the same thing, it's just whether or not it applies to a standard or source. Being GPL compatible doesn't determine whether something is open or not.

      No, but not being GPL compatible is pretty good indication that a format is not open to use. But all of that is semantics. What we are interested in is not having a word, we are interested in the benefits a truly open standard can bring, including competition among vendors, no lock-in, and guaranteed backwards compatibility and legal data access in the future. The Open Document spec guarantees all of these things, while the Open XML spec and accompanying licensing seems designed to prevent them.

      If MS complies with government requirements to implement an approved open spec by implementing the Open Document spec what will happen? Well, Word will have to compete on its merits against Open Office and other applications. In ten years I can be certain I'll be able to read documents created in that specification. And if I ever want to I know I can switch applications without much pain.

      If MS convinces the world that its Open XML spec is "good enough" what will happen. Word will not have to compete on a level field against Open Office, KOffice, and and most open source word processors, since those programs will not be able to implement the Open XML format legally. MS will have the option of legally closing the spec in the future and banning distribution of existing implementations, thus offering me no guarantee that I will be able to open a document in the future. I might be able to switch to a different application, but I have no guarantees of that.

      Call it what you like, but it has none of the important benefits that have motivated various governments and companies to demand an open specification.

      The GPL explictly defines the conditions upon which patented work is compatible with the GPL.

      I'll say this again, slowly. The GPL is a license to redistribute a copyrighted work. It applies only to copyrighted works. Neither Open Document or Open XML is copyrighted. The GPL limits whether or not someone may redistribute GPL code after adding more code that runs afoul of a patent. It does not limit any new works, only modifications of the old works. Hence if a format can only be implemented by using a patent that is not licensed, the GPL cannot stop you from writing a new application using any license you want, including the GPL, to implement that format.

      Open office is distributed under the LGPL, and thus Sun has agreed to whatever terms are necessary to redistribute their and other people's work under it, including any patent issues. The document linked to earlier was the patent agreement Sun signed to satisfy OASIS and get the format approved as a standard. Sun is bound by both.

      Look lawyers from numerous companies have looked at the legal issues for the Open Document format, and then it was implemented by a half a dozen different companies and groups. Many of those same lawyers have looked at the Open XML licensing and said, "we can't implement this legally." Are you telling me they are all wrong and you know better?

      Just admit it, The MS license is not "open enough" to bring the main benefits people want. MS is just trying to confuse others with their naming, that may not understand what the benefits trying to be achieved are.

  31. Interesting Business Plan by ||Plazm|| · · Score: 1

    'Competition between standards we believe is a very good thing.'

    Translation: Let our competition show us what we're doing wrong then buy, hire, or whatever we need to do to incorporate their technology into ours.

  32. "Competition between standards we believe..." by blackcoot · · Score: 1

    "... is a very good thing."

    apparently he never owned a betamax.

    1. Re:"Competition between standards we believe..." by digitaldc · · Score: 1

      "... is a very good thing."
      apparently he never owned a betamax.

      or had an 'Apprentice' TV show that was recently cancelled.

      --
      He who knows best knows how little he knows. - Thomas Jefferson
  33. Choice huh? by Hobberdome · · Score: 1

    That's a funny statement coming from Microsoft. Just like in choice of OS's or choice in Web Browser's. Yeah ... I noticed how you liked those choices. When it's not a Microsoft thing, the answer is always "more choices is better". While you embrace and extend, then kill it, so the only choice is a Microsoft choice.

    --
    gotta a light for my Sig?
  34. Am I the only one... by squoozer · · Score: 1, Insightful

    ...that thinks two competing document standards isn't a good thing? Yes, I know all the arguments about the competition spawning features and a better product and quite frankly I don't really believe them. As far as I am concerned it will just lead to a situation where I am always playing off the benifits and draw backs of the two formats and trying to guess which one a potential client will want. At least at the moment it's a no brainer. Send it in the latest .doc format or .pdf depending on whether you want the recipient to be ablet o edit the document.

    If MSO and OOo have perfect reading and writting capabilities for both formats and both formats are able to produce quality documents (I think that's a given) that it's not a big issue but how would you choose between the two formats. You can't because they would be the same so you might as well roll them into one.

    My worst fear is that the two formats will be fundamentally incompatible. That would be like having two incompatible versions of HTML and having to choose your browser based on site.

    --
    I used to have a better sig but it broke.
    1. Re:Am I the only one... by tigre · · Score: 1

      That would be like having two incompatible versions of HTML and having to choose your browser based on site.

      Oh, you mean like it has been in the past, and sometimes is even now?

      I use Firefox for most standards-based HTML sites, and IE for those sites which demand it

    2. Re:Am I the only one... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I use Firefox for most standards-based HTML sites, and IE for those sites which demand it.


      I use Firefox for standards-based sites, and for those sites that demand IE, I use their competitors' sites.

  35. Differences in standards. by headkase · · Score: 1

    I think the difference between open and closed standards is simply the ability to easily migrate your data to a new standard with open standards. That's what Microsoft does not want.
    Narf.

    --
    Shh.
  36. Re:Blah blah from MS by Kookus · · Score: 2

    We do...
    Have you ever saved a word document as an html document in Microsoft Word?
    I call that output mshtml!!!

  37. ROFLMAO by Spy+der+Mann · · Score: 1

    Before: "Open standards harm competition"
    After: "Two open standards are better than one".

    C'mon, Steve, you can do better than that.

    1. Re:ROFLMAO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I thought choice was a good thing?

    2. Re:ROFLMAO by Spy+der+Mann · · Score: 1

      Choosing between PRODUCTS is good.

      Choosing between STANDARDS is not.

  38. Microsoft 'believes'?? by erroneus · · Score: 1

    I'm sorry, but where did they get that conclusion? If it was something stated by an official at Microsoft, can we somehow sue them for lying or something?

    What is being said and what is being demonstrated are two completely different things. Do I need to go into detail able how ferociously they fight and undermine the use and deployment of non-proprietary software and data solutions? (Even to the point of having laws created and changed and having decision-making power shifted from experts to politicians?)

    It is clear that they see competition in a very different way than most people. When most people think "competition" they think of people, products or services that do pretty much the same thing or having similar purpose where it is judged by popularity, functionality, capability or whatever the directly relevant quality of the competing objects are. Microsoft somehow sees competition as something much larger. They show through their behavior that they think competing involves undermining, undercutting, casting "fear, uncertainty and doubt" and changing the playing field to their advantage. If it can be considered competition, it's at the least unfair competition.

    Microsoft's methods do not leave room for a surviving competitor. Their behavior most always seems to be targetted at the elimination of the "competition" in whatever means possible. I can think of no better opposing notion than someone suggesting that "Microsoft 'believes' two competing standards is a good thing." If this is an official statement by Microsoft, then it's nothing short of a LIE.

  39. Nonsense is right. by WindBourne · · Score: 3, Interesting

    The only competition was dos vs. Dr.Dos. And they had to cheat to win that.

    It was PC vs. Apple, which means that Apple competed against all the PC manufacuers. As to the office stuff, MS gave away office forever until they had. It was all subsidized by MS's owning the DOS/Windows monopoly.

    So, no, MS is not a competitive company.

    --
    I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
  40. Look what it's done for Linux... by ninja_assault_kitten · · Score: 1

    With 2340987239424 Linux distributions and no clearly defined direction. The 'good', 'innovative' developers are all scattered around working on their own thing. Imagine where Linux would be if they all came together an focused their attention on the same goals.

    1. Re:Look what it's done for Linux... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ahh, but that's its very advantage. Evolution tends to reward diversity. When a certain situation or challenge arises, the odds of meeting it are better the more different distributions there are. Thus Linux, with so many different yet mostly compatible visions, has a reactive advantage Microsoft will never have.

  41. Obligitory Animal Farm quote. by AltGrendel · · Score: 1

    Some animals are more equal than others.

    --
    The simple truth is that interstellar distances will not fit into the human imagination

    - Douglas Adams

  42. Grind, grind, grind by FishandChips · · Score: 5, Informative

    If you are Microsoft, what you have at stake are billions of dollars and your monopoly. Therefore Microsoft will do absolutely anything to protect both. They are a monopoly and this is what monopolies do.

    I guess all the rest of us can do is plot our course - in this case OpenDocument - and stick to it through thick and thin.

    Microsoft will contine to wriggle and bluster around this for months and months. It's part of the game. There's no point wasting any more energy on the subject. Microsoft would like nothing more than to exhaust people they will always regard as competition.

    --
    Las qué passoun
    tournoun pas maï
    1. Re:Grind, grind, grind by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, that's not necessarily what monopolies do - it's what anticompetitive entities do. ISTR that ARM has a monopoly on phone chips - but they do because they don't gouge their customers, so there isn't a margin to undercut them to steal market share, so the necessary startup fees to enter the market aren't worth it. Admittedly, ARM's monopoly is thus not worth the billions of dollars that Microsoft's is - c'est la vie.
      Monopolies aren't illegal, it's just that using your monopoly in one market to destroy competition in another market is.

  43. Re:Blah blah from MS by PyroPunk · · Score: 1

    While I admit the save as HTML option in Word produces some scary HTML, if you view it in a browser it looks just like the document you saved, with all the proper formatting and everything. Now, do the same thing in OpenOffice. The last time I tested it, I had a line of text that was left justified, a line of text that was centered, then a line of text that was right justified. I saved as HTML, viewied it in a browser, and everything was left justified. Didn't look anything like the document I saved.

  44. offtopic? Surely you jest by porkThreeWays · · Score: 3, Insightful

    offtopic? I guess some people need things spelled out for them. The above was a reference to Microsoft's blatent disregard of html standards. In effect, when we've got more than one standard out there, the above is the result.

    --
    If an officer ever threatens to taze you, say you have a pacemaker.
  45. I remember they tried this with HTML by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Wasn't it called "microsoft blackbird" or something? Flopped, whichever. Good riddance.

  46. You know the old saying... by Crash+Culligan · · Score: 1

    "Never attribute to malice what can be adequately explained by incompetence?"

    Lemme put it this way: this cannot be adequately explained by incompetence.

    They're not simply missing the point, they're brushing it aside as they forge ahead with their own plans to convolute the "OpenDoc" information space. Then, when everyone's confused, they try to make theirs look as good and reliable as possible compared to that other, "lesser" standard to snatch what market share they can.

    They get their all-important lock-in, government gets sold a bill of goods, and outsiders are screwed. Everybody (read: Microsoft) wins!

    --
    You cannot truly appreciate Dilbert until you read it in the original Klingon.
  47. Let there be as many formats as you want... by AnXa · · Score: 1

    We are Microsoft. Resistance Is Futile. You Will Be Assimilated. (...after people have been forced to start using our format.)

    --
    -Seeing the problem is ½ of solution-
  48. MS is competing... and winning... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Interesting

    MS is competing. You're just upset because they're winning. Yes, they're software is garbage, but in our current marketplace, they are competing. You can scream "monopolist" from the tallest rooftop all you want, it doesn't matter. People have chosen to use MS software and they have chosen to give MS a majority market share. It could be argued that they chose wrong, but they still made the choice.

    The question is why. The answers are pretty obvious to anyone who doesn't have their head buried in the collective sand of the open source software evangelization movement. But until the OSS zealots ask that question in a serious and honest manner, they're still going to be the scrappy upstarts and MS is still going to be the dominant force in the industry.

    Stop scapegoating and start doing something useful, or else we'll never be rid of MS's garbage.

    1. Re:MS is competing... and winning... by VitaminB52 · · Score: 4, Interesting
      You're just upset because they're winning.

      Most MS critics are not upset because MS is winning, but because MS is using unfair and illegal means in order to win.

      People have chosen to use MS software and they have chosen to give MS a majority market share.

      You mean: PC manufacturers have chosen to bundle Windows and Office on every system they sell, not giving a rebate to consumers who want a new PC without Windows+Office. Having Windows+Office preinstalled on every new system gave MS a majority market share.
      Joe Average will reason that, having already paid for the pre-installed software, he is going to use that software instead of buying and installing alternative software - after all, the only software Joe Average installs on his PC is the software that get's automatically installed when you surf to the wrong websites with IE as your browser.

      Please stop parroting the MS marketing speak; MS Office isn't running on most PC's because the consumers chose to use it, but because the PC manufactures preinstalled it.

    2. Re:MS is competing... and winning... by RetroGeek · · Score: 1

      Replying to a troll yet....

      People have chosen to use MS software and they have chosen to give MS a majority market share. It could be argued that they chose wrong, but they still made the choice.

      This is so wrong. People did NOT make a choice. The "choice" was foisted on them by MicroSoft's restrictive licencing rules, which basically said: "You sell a computer, you owe us a licencing fee". So if you bought a computer with OS/2 on it, MS got a Windows licencing fee (and a separate OS/2 imbedded Windows licencing fee, but that is another story). Buy a computer with NO operating system, and MS still got a fee. So hardware sellers did not want to put any other OS on the machine, as it cost them anyway.

      This was evetually ruled illegal. But by then the damage had been done.

      Then, for a while, MS included Word as a free option. So every new computer had MS Word installed. Hard to compete with "free and already installed". Which is why the European Union wanted a version of Windows without Windows Media player so that other competing formats would have a chance.

      Ideally (hah!), you would order a computer much like you order a car. Start with the basic model (engine, wheels, etc), then add the air-conditioner, radio, seat warmers, power windows, each of which is an added cost.

      So order a computer, then add your choice of the OS, and apps.

      P.S. Yes, I know the car analogy breaks down, but hey, that is why it is an analogy....

      --

      - - - - - - - - - - -
      I am a programmer. I am paid to produce syntax not grammar. Deal with it.
    3. Re:MS is competing... and winning... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      Most machines come with Works, not Office - you usually have to get office yourself.

    4. Re:MS is competing... and winning... by DrinkDr.Pepper · · Score: 1

      Dell sells systems with WordPerfect.

      --
      0xfeedface
    5. Re:MS is competing... and winning... by bjk002 · · Score: 1

      I'm no big fan of M$.

      However, I think in the argument of M$ Office vs. Open Office (I've used both), M$ Office is clearly the superior product. Easier to use, let system resources, etc...

      --
      Opinion:=TMyOpinion.Create(Me);
    6. Re:MS is competing... and winning... by ZSO · · Score: 1

      Please stop parroting the MS marketing speak; MS Office isn't running on most PC's because the consumers chose to use it, but because the PC manufactures preinstalled it.

      This still leaves open the question of why PC makers preinstall their software and none others. Clue: it's not because the MS Mafia forced them to.

      --
      "God deliver us from our friends, we can handle the enemy." -Patton
    7. Re:MS is competing... and winning... by Lifewish · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Yes it is. They all have agreements with Microsoft which means they lose discounts if they sell systems without Windows on.

      You would not believe how hard it is these days to get a laptop without an operating system preinstalled. There are precisely two companies doing this in the whole of the UK, compared to several hundred (rough estimate) laptop+windows vendors/resellers.

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      For the love of God, please learn to spell "ridiculous"!!!
    8. Re:MS is competing... and winning... by mikefe · · Score: 1

      MS Office isn't running on most PC's because the consumers chose to use it, but because the PC manufactures preinstalled it.

      Bullshit.

      Every time I do an install at an office, they want word and excel. When alternatives are suggested, they flat out refuse them.

      OOo needs to use less memory, and processor to get its job done. That and some marketing (which they're working on) might do it. The problem now is mindshare. MS has it, and OOo doesn't at the moment.

      Let's fix that.

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      Please make sure your english compiles.
    9. Re:MS is competing... and winning... by ZSO · · Score: 1

      This is in response to tepples too, since he also argues about the discounts.

      Sir, offering discounts to manufacturers who install Windows exclusively is emphatically not mafia-like activity. I'm sure you also believe Walmart's enticingly low prices "forces" people to go there instead of their mom-n-pop stores.

      I am apalled that anti-Microsoft sentiment has led people to these extremes. This is normal business activity, and it happens everywhere. Manufacturers can turn down the discount deal if they want - the fact that they don't simply means they *gasp* want to make money.

      --
      "God deliver us from our friends, we can handle the enemy." -Patton
    10. Re:MS is competing... and winning... by civilizedINTENSITY · · Score: 1

      Is this what they call "begging the question"? One person says that MS didn't win fairly because they never played fairly (legally) and so have never been competitive. You suggest that since they won, the market chose them (implying they won via fair competition), then use the assumed win at a fair competition to prove that they are competitive. The fact is that they won, yes. Another fact is they were convicted for their actions. You can scream that "people chose MS" all you want to, those of us who've been tracking the industry since before there was a MS no better.

    11. Re:MS is competing... and winning... by ichin4 · · Score: 1

      For manufacturers and users, there are real advantages to dealing with fewer suppliers. Because of that, if you want your office suite to be adopted, it can't be just marginally better than Microsoft's. It has to be phenomenally better. While that might feel "unfair" to you, it derives from the real, practical needs of manufacturers and users, and it certainly isn't "illegal".

    12. Re:MS is competing... and winning... by swillden · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Sir, offering discounts to manufacturers who install Windows exclusively is emphatically not mafia-like activity.

      Nope, it's a normal business practice.

      However, monopolists are barred from many normal business practices, for good reason. This is one that Microsoft should not be allowed.

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    13. Re:MS is competing... and winning... by ZSO · · Score: 1

      What ever happened to equality under the law? You're suggesting that once a company becomes too big (i.e., too successful), they must have special restrictions placed on them. In other words, equality of results. Not exactly a successful (or particularly moral) idea when implemented, as history should indicate.

      --
      "God deliver us from our friends, we can handle the enemy." -Patton
    14. Re:MS is competing... and winning... by swillden · · Score: 1

      You're suggesting that once a company becomes too big (i.e., too successful), they must have special restrictions placed on them.

      You bet. To do otherwise undermines the competition that is essential to a healthy marketplace.

      Not exactly a successful (or particularly moral) idea when implemented, as history should indicate.

      Right. Standard Oil was great, wasn't it? You need to study the history of anti-trust law, and the abuses that made clear its necessity.

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    15. Re:MS is competing... and winning... by lachlan76 · · Score: 1

      I'm sure you also believe Walmart's enticingly low prices "forces" people to go there instead of their mom-n-pop stores.

      What if going to the mom-n-pop stores automatically doubled the price of things you bought at Walmart?

    16. Re:MS is competing... and winning... by ZSO · · Score: 1

      You bet. To do otherwise undermines the competition that is essential to a healthy marketplace.

      How do you define a healthy marketplace? One where success is punished? That seems quite the opposite of healthy.

      Right. Standard Oil was great, wasn't it?

      Yes, it was. Rockefeller lowered the price of oil dramatically - nobody disputes this.

      --
      "God deliver us from our friends, we can handle the enemy." -Patton
    17. Re:MS is competing... and winning... by ZSO · · Score: 1

      I have no idea what you are talking about or what your point is.

      --
      "God deliver us from our friends, we can handle the enemy." -Patton
    18. Re:MS is competing... and winning... by swillden · · Score: 1

      How do you define a healthy marketplace?

      One where competition exists and no single player can unilaterally dictate prices.

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    19. Re:MS is competing... and winning... by ZSO · · Score: 1

      One where competition exists and no single player can unilaterally dictate prices.

      The idea that a company with large market share can "dictate" prices is a myth. As already noted, Standard Oil lowered prices, not raised. Even with 100% marketshare, companies still haven't escaped free market forces. If Microsoft raises its prices artificially - say, to $100 million per license - new competitors will rise to take advantage of the situation.

      Microsoft, for the most part, isn't competing against existing competitors, but against the possibility of competition.

      --
      "God deliver us from our friends, we can handle the enemy." -Patton
    20. Re:MS is competing... and winning... by swillden · · Score: 1

      The idea that a company with large market share can "dictate" prices is a myth. As already noted, Standard Oil lowered prices, not raised.

      Standard Oil lowered prices in the effort to build the monopoly, forcing competitors out of business. Even before they were officially broken up, public concern caused them to avoid raising prices (to avoid being broken up, which happened anyway), but if it weren't for that possibility, there's no telling what they may have raised prices to, particularly as demand was set to skyrocket in a few years when the internal combustion engine became popular. As it was, although they didn't raise consumer prices, Standard Oil did dictate prices on both the supplier side and the consumer side. They *chose* to squeeze their profits out of the suppliers, in order to minimize public backlash, but had they not feared government intervention, there's no reason they couldn't have squeezed it out of consumers as well.

      If Microsoft raises its prices artificially - say, to $100 million per license - new competitors will rise to take advantage of the situation.

      Microsoft's prices are already artificially high. Microsoft Office costs $400. Given that all R&D expenses on the product were recouped long ago, a healthy market would have pushed prices to a fraction of that. StarOffice pricing is more in line with where office suite prices should be.

      Microsoft, for the most part, isn't competing against existing competitors, but against the possibility of competition.

      Precisely the problem. They have such a thorough control of the market that they not only don't have competitors, they can act to ensure that competition is not even possible.

      You really consider that a good situation?

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    21. Re:MS is competing... and winning... by ZSO · · Score: 1

      Standard Oil lowered prices in the effort to build the monopoly, forcing competitors out of business. Even before they were officially broken up, public concern caused them to avoid raising prices (to avoid being broken up, which happened anyway), but if it weren't for that possibility, there's no telling what they may have raised prices to, particularly as demand was set to skyrocket in a few years when the internal combustion engine became popular.

      Where's your evidence for this? The facts only suggest that they lowered prices. All this talk about motivations is compelete conjecture.

      Microsoft's prices are already artificially high. Microsoft Office costs $400. Given that all R&D expenses on the product were recouped long ago, a healthy market would have pushed prices to a fraction of that. StarOffice pricing is more in line with where office suite prices should be.

      Wouldn't you find it arrogant if other people told you how to run your business? How much money to charge? I don't have the insider knowledge about what total costs MS has, nor do I pretend to.

      You really consider that a good situation?

      The possibility of competition is what keeps them going. Otherwise, they would have done exactly what the slippery slope of your theory suggests they would do - they would charge $100 million per license. Why not? After all, monopolies can "dictate" whatever price they want.

      --
      "God deliver us from our friends, we can handle the enemy." -Patton
    22. Re:MS is competing... and winning... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      1) You have a microsoft only store and pay 15% of the license costs to distribute Windows/Office/Works with PCs.
      2) You decide to sell Mac and Linux PCs due to demand
      3) Microsoft say right, you have to pay 50% of the license costs now as that discount is for Microsoft only resellers.
      4) Your Windows/Office PCs cost significantly more
      5) You go back to being a microsoft only store or go out of business

    23. Re:MS is competing... and winning... by Lifewish · · Score: 1

      Equality under the law (as applied to companies, at least) is a means to an end. That end is a healthy marketplace - in the majority of cases, discrimination does no-one any good in the long term. By contrast, in the case of de jure or de facto monopolies (since its investment in patents began, MS is both), discrimination is absolutely necessary to give other companies even the slightest chance.

      This goes double since the computer industry, like many others, is naturally inclined to monopoly. There would be no such worry in, say, the vacuum cleaner market, but traps such as proprietary file formats and protocols make entry into the market inordinately difficult for newcomers. In this case, Microsoft is leveraging that natural blockage - it makes it absolutely essential to computer vendors that they be able to install Windows on computers, and Microsoft can use that to deny them the ability to also install other operating systems. This does no-one other than Microsoft any good, and in fact massively harms the IT industry by allowing Microsoft to systematically obliterate their competition.

      History shows quite strongly that market breakdown must be compensated for by government. This is a textbook example of that situation.

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      For the love of God, please learn to spell "ridiculous"!!!
    24. Re:MS is competing... and winning... by swillden · · Score: 1

      Where's your evidence for this? The facts only suggest that they lowered prices. All this talk about motivations is compelete conjecture.

      You need to look at more than just a high-level summary of the history, including the actions Standard Oil took long before being broken up. Arguably, their fear of being broken up by the government was sufficient that they really didn't need to be broken up in fact.

      Wouldn't you find it arrogant if other people told you how to run your business? How much money to charge?

      The government tells all businesses how to run their business. Monopolies just get a little more oversight.

      I don't have the insider knowledge about what total costs MS has, nor do I pretend to.

      Who needs insider knowledge? Microsoft is a public company; you can read the SEC reports. Do you consider the federal government's requirement that public companies publish such detailed reports another arrogant interference?

      The possibility of competition is what keeps them going. Otherwise, they would have done exactly what the slippery slope of your theory suggests they would do - they would charge $100 million per license. Why not? After all, monopolies can "dictate" whatever price they want.

      I ignored this bit of ludicrousness previously, but since you repeat it, I'll address it. Even monopolies can't push past the limits of consumer price elasticity, so silliness like "$100 million per license" is just useless hyperbole. In case you've never studied economics, a rough definition of elasticity is the maximum price that consumers will pay for a given good. At $100M per seat, businesses would never buy Office, even if no alternatives existed or could be created -- they'd go back to typewriters and hand-written ledgers first.

      In a healthy, competitive market, on the other hand, prices tend to drop to an equilibrium point with minimal profit margins... basically, everyone charges as little as possible such that they're still making an acceptable profit. Such an outcome is ideal for the economy as a whole, because it frees up capital to spend on other goods and services.

      Looking at Microsoft in particular, MS is currently netting profit margins in excess of 30% while operating primarily in what should be commodity markets. And that 30% profit margin would actually be much, much higher if MS weren't a fairly wasteful, inefficient company. In a healthy market, MS would be forced to trim the corporate fat and drop prices across the board by 40-50%. MS Office pricing would probably have to drop by 80+%.

      Obviously, Microsoft is deathly afraid of a healthy, competitive market. They have managed to shake off the governmental rules that should have reigned them in, so now we just have to hope that the peculiar dynamics of the software market can do the job. Luckily, software is unusual in that the marginal cost of production is zero, and in that development can be decentralized so that there's no single target for Microsoft to strongarm, or buy out. Even still, MS has such a stranglehold on the market that it's going to take a great deal of outrage and discipline on the part of large purchasers of IT (like governments) to force MS to adopt an open standard. Once that happens, competition will be reintroduced in the office suite space, which hopefully will enable competition in the desktop operating system space, which will highlight Microsoft's stranglehold on the OS distribution channels.

      At that point, Microsoft will probably have to back down on the OEM license agreements. The DoJ suit already forced them to clean up their act to some extent, and if it becomes obvious that MS monopoly power is the only thing keeping Windows on 95% of the desktops, Microsoft will have to back down to avoid being slapped down. Much like Standard Oil, in that case the monopoly's fear of being broken up will do the job, even without the breakup.

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    25. Re:MS is competing... and winning... by Lifewish · · Score: 1
      Wouldn't you find it arrogant if other people told you how to run your business?
      That's what government does all day, every day. That's the point of government. They told Enron how to run its business (or, rather, how not to run its business). In the UK, they're telling the telcos (classic monopoly here) how to run their business vis-a-vis local loop unbundling. They keep telling me that the running of my business should include giving them tax. I don't really see any conceptual problem with them telling Microsoft that, since they're top dog, they're no longer allowed to play silly buggers.
      The possibility of competition is what keeps them going. Otherwise, they would have done exactly what the slippery slope of your theory suggests they would do - they would charge $100 million per license. Why not? After all, monopolies can "dictate" whatever price they want.
      If Microsoft controls the formats that the majority of electronic data is stored in, there is no possibility of competition - the loss of access to their own documents would destroy businesses if they tried to switch. This reduces the elasticity of demand (if I recall correctly from my GCSE Economics class), which allows them to bump up prices and/or provide less quality*. It doesn't allow them to go to the $100 million per license mark because the market won't bear that (and it's frankly a rather silly suggestion), but it does allow them to go many times above the "natural price" of the product, and to invest less in the quality of the product, with minimal repercussions. This does no-one but Microsoft any good.

      * For example, IE 7 is finally coming out, and has cool new (to Microsoft anyway) features, now that they have Firefox to compete with.
      --
      For the love of God, please learn to spell "ridiculous"!!!
    26. Re:MS is competing... and winning... by ZSO · · Score: 1
      You need to look at more than just a high-level summary of the history, including the actions Standard Oil took long before being broken up.

      You missed my point: "there's no telling what they may have raised prices to" is complete speculation. No responsible historical summary can provide evidence for this.

      Who needs insider knowledge? Microsoft is a public company; you can read the SEC reports.

      I meant that I don't pretend to have the expertise to know fully how MS gets from making a product to putting a price tag on it.

      In case you've never studied economics, a rough definition of elasticity is the maximum price that consumers will pay for a given good.

      Which consumers? I'm sure MS could find a few (very few) rich consumers who would pay $1000 for a license. The point is that they are not maximizing their sales. As you mentioned, the ideal price point is at the equilibrium point when the supply curve crosses the demand curve. Putting the price anywhere else either hurts your sales because you're not making enough per sale, or hurts your sales because you're not getting enough customers.

      ...and if it becomes obvious that MS monopoly power is the only thing keeping Windows on 95% of the desktops,

      Well, there's also that pesky fact that no other operating system company provides anything close to the developer support of Microsoft. Show me anything comparable to MSDN, please. I would actually agree that Windows is ugly, poor performing, and not fun to work with, but that's not what matters in the market - courting developers is what matters. Apple doesn't do it, Linux certainly doesn't do it.

      --
      "God deliver us from our friends, we can handle the enemy." -Patton
    27. Re:MS is competing... and winning... by ZSO · · Score: 1
      That's what government does all day, every day. That's the point of government.

      The point of government is to run businesses? Not to kill terrorists or jail murderers and pedophiles? Times are a changin'.

      It doesn't allow them to go to the $100 million per license mark because the market won't bear that (and it's frankly a rather silly suggestion), but it does allow them to go many times above the "natural price" of the product, and to invest less in the quality of the product, with minimal repercussions.

      Of course it's silly, but it was suggested that monopolies can "dictate" prices. Not very good word usage.

      * For example, IE 7 is finally coming out, and has cool new (to Microsoft anyway) features, now that they have Firefox to compete with.

      IE does suck. I'm using Firefox right now.

      --
      "God deliver us from our friends, we can handle the enemy." -Patton
    28. Re:MS is competing... and winning... by ZSO · · Score: 1

      Equality under the law (as applied to companies, at least) is a means to an end. That end is a healthy marketplace - in the majority of cases, discrimination does no-one any good in the long term.

      This is a very awkward view. Are you saying the fight for civil rights wasn't about moral principle, but economic expediency? The idea that equality under the law is a "means to an end" is the exact opposite of the view of our Founding Fathers that rights are inalienable (i.e., they're not convenient ways to ensure a healthy marketplace, they are held by all peaceful people under all circumstances as a matter of principle).

      --
      "God deliver us from our friends, we can handle the enemy." -Patton
    29. Re:MS is competing... and winning... by ZSO · · Score: 1

      So the standard here is: If you make an offer to a company that they cannot refuse else they go out of business, the offer is coercive. Can you imagine how many business deals today are coercive by this definition?

      --
      "God deliver us from our friends, we can handle the enemy." -Patton
    30. Re:MS is competing... and winning... by swillden · · Score: 1

      Your lack of understanding of this entire space is so complete that I can't discuss it without educating you first, and I don't have the time. I have code to write. As such, I'll allow you the last word. Feel free to tell me I'm copping out.

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    31. Re:MS is competing... and winning... by Lifewish · · Score: 1

      Are you saying that companies should be treated as people when it comes to morality? The whole point of treating corporations as people in the first place was (iirc) economic - I'd say the same applies to our means of legal control over them.

      Anyway, a similar principle applies with human beings. If someone has power, we try to ensure that it's balanced. Police and other public servants have oversight committees. Presidents can be impeached. Abusive parents get their kids taken away. None of this applies to people who aren't police, presidents or parents but, once they put themselves into a position where the balance of power is heavily weighted towards them, a counterweight is essential.

      The situation is exactly the same with Microsoft. It has exceptional power over the industry, so it's perfectly reasonable to impose exceptional limits on its behaviour to ensure that it can't abuse that power. If it can't maintain its dominant position subject to those controls then competition will flourish and we won't have to apply those controls any more. Everyone wins but Microsoft. If it can maintain its dominant position then we'll know it really deserves to be there - it must be innovative, efficient and all that good stuff. Everyone wins, including Microsoft.

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      For the love of God, please learn to spell "ridiculous"!!!
    32. Re:MS is competing... and winning... by Lifewish · · Score: 1
      The point of government is to run businesses? Not to kill terrorists or jail murderers and pedophiles? Times are a changin'.
      Well, more generally (and depending on which philosopher you speak to), the point of government is to supply goods with high positive externalities (justice, defence, streetlights, all that jazz). It's generally accepted, I believe, that this incorporates a degree of control over businesses acting within its jurisdiction
      Of course it's silly, but it was suggested that monopolies can "dictate" prices. Not very good word usage.
      You're quite right. Does appending "to a far greater extent than usual" to the end of it improve matters?
      IE does suck. I'm using Firefox right now.
      How would you react if Microsoft pulled a DR-DOS - "broke" their software specifically so that Firefox wouldn't work? Would you consider it their right as a corporation to do so? I don't believe that there's any necessity for a company to allow others to interoperate with their products. Unless, that is, the company is a monopoly - but I believe you've just been arguing against laws that treat monopolies any more harshly than other companies. Goodbye Firefox...
      --
      For the love of God, please learn to spell "ridiculous"!!!
  49. Two Standards? by theJML · · Score: 2, Interesting

    The last time I remember two standards really working out well was VHS and BetaMax... Oh wait, that didn't work out well did it.. We all ended up tossing our superior BetaMax decks for big, lower quality, VHS ones. Just think my pile of VHS tapes could have been so much smaller if Beta won... But I digress. Honestly, in the VHS vs BetaMax, they're both still in use (well, maybe not as wide spread as they were a few years ago), just some on the professional side of the fence and some on the home side. So is that going to happen for these two standards? I suppose time will tell.

    --
    -=JML=-
  50. Re:Blah blah from MS by afd8856 · · Score: 1

    Yes, and content structure is more important then presentation.
    Do not mix the presentation into the content.
    Next time when you'll try integrating Word html into an existing website, "congratulate" Microsoft on making this task an easy one.

    --
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  51. My theory on what MS is trying to do by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think they are going to try to make the formats similar enough so that Microsoft patents are involved in ODF. Remember, MS only claimed to no sue for Microsoft files, not ODF's. Not that they'll ever sue, but they can sling more FUD.

  52. Read Groklaw's example of "recipe with marzipan" by NoSuchGuy · · Score: 1

    Here is this story.

    It goes like this.
    MS has a recipe with marzipan as an ingredient.
    MS allows us to use this recipe for free.
    But MS does not tell us what kind of marzipan is used for this specific recipe.

    ==> We are allowed to use this recipe but can not use this recipe because we don't have all the details about all ingredients.

    --
    Grundgesetz * 23. Mai 1949 - 30. November 2007 - http://www.vorratsdatenspeicherung.de/
  53. OMG ... by webmistressrachel · · Score: 1

    ... this looks a good case of "divide and conquer" to me!

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  54. Sounds good.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    (Why do I get that uncomfortable feeling).....

  55. Competition between standards is a very good thing by mwvdlee · · Score: 1

    Competition between standards we believe is a very good thing.
    So is learning to admit defeat when beaten by a superior standard.
    The race is already over and Microsoft is begging for a restart.

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  56. Pair of standards by djupedal · · Score: 1

    MS didn't mean 'two' standards, they meant 'double' standard.

    You know, like when she forgets to do the laundry, it's ok, but when YOU forget, it's hell to pay.

    That 'pair' of standards...same as they've done all along.

  57. There Are Two Standards by John+Hasler · · Score: 1

    "Microsoft says that the consumers should have the choice between multiple open standards for documents."

    There are two standards already. ODF and PDF.

    --
    Warning: this article may contain humor, sarcasm, parody, and perhaps even irony. Read at your own risk.
    1. Re:There Are Two Standards by DogDude · · Score: 1

      There are two standards already. ODF and PDF.

      +5 Funny. Seriously, I've never seen an ODF document, Open Office, nor do any of my customers or vendors use them. I'd say that you're wrong abuot ODF being a standard.

      And as far as PDF goes, we don't allow PDF's in our business, yet we get along just fine. How do you explain that, exactly?

      That standard for Office documents is MS Office. Saying otherwise doesn't make it true.

      --
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    2. Re:There Are Two Standards by arkanes · · Score: 1

      I'd say that you're incompetent with a barely adequate command of the English language? That you're totally unfamliar with the concept of technical definitions and that you enjoy making provocative comments just so you can get a cheap thrill out of people pointing out how stupid you are? Maybe that your pissant pet store is not the sole defining authority on the office workflow and document formats?

    3. Re:There Are Two Standards by DogDude · · Score: 1

      I don't have to justify myself to you, and I'm not about to get into some sort of dick measuring contest. Suffice to say that your cluelessness is absolutely overwhelming.

      --
      I don't respond to AC's.
  58. Re:Blah blah from MS by PyroPunk · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    In a lot of organizations the Legal or HR department will type up documents in Word that will be placed out on the company website. For them both content and presentation is important. You don't spend hours typing up a document and making it look nice to choose as Save as HTML feature and have it just spit out a long string of text with no formatting. If OpenOffice spit out an HTML page and a corresponding CSS file to style it up, that would be fine, but it doesn't. All those messy spans in the Word save as HTML feature help make it look the same as when you typed it up, something I'm sure most people expect.

  59. divide and expand by towsonu2003 · · Score: 1
    We might not be able to beat one good format, but we can easily defeat two
    They still manage to embrace extend and extinguish at the same time...
  60. Can't believe noone has made this pun yet... by ziggamon2.0 · · Score: 1

    ... so I just have to do it...

    Of course Microsoft wants two standards, after all - double standards has always been their thing!

    Thank you... thank you... I'll be here all week....

  61. Re:Read Groklaw's example of "recipe with marzipan by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    For any flavor of Marzipan, just use a comparable amount of sand. Should taste about the same.

  62. Liars by planetfinder · · Score: 0, Troll

    Microsoft was initially completely opposed to an open document standard.
    When they realized that the market would turn against them they
    decided that they would put forward their own open document standart.
    If they win this battle for establishing the standard then, after
    it gains wide acceptance, they can start to close it back up with
    proprietary "enhancements".
    Anyone that trusts Microsoft to establish an open standard of any
    sort needs a checkup from the neckup. While its too much to expect,
    Microsoft, and anyone beholden to
    Microsoft, should not even be allowed to participate on open standards committees.

  63. Codebase is the real problem by 0xABADC0DA · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I have seen lots of posts saying it is some scheme for dividing and conquering, or creating more work for open source people, etc, but the real story is that the Office codebase is so convoluted and fragile that they need a document format that favorable to how Office works... friendly to its data structures and whatnot.

    Basically the only innovation to Office in the last 4+ years has been in the UI, and I don't think that is an accident. An interface just issues commands to the document engine, so it's fairly simple to rework. But loading a new document format is much more closely tied to the actual engine. For example, if the structures are not defined the same way it may be necessary to create caches (hashtables say) of elements during loading. And also their code is designed around a format where a document is not written out completely, but is document with a set of changes (so that saves and timed backups are immediate without having to regen the whole doc).

    So I think it is very likely that the real reason Microsoft is so adamant against the open formats is that they've talked to their engineers who have said it will take 5 years to fully support the new format (for ex, make backup saves happen in background so user isn't annoyed). Or they've got developers that have just said "f'that I'll f'ing leave before touching that crap".

    1. Re:Codebase is the real problem by I'm+Don+Giovanni · · Score: 1

      I have seen lots of posts saying it is some scheme for dividing and conquering, or creating more work for open source people, etc, but the real story is that the Office codebase is so convoluted and fragile that they need a document format that favorable to how Office works... friendly to its data structures and whatnot.

      Have you seen the Office code base? No? Then stop talking out of your ass. There's no reason to believe that Microsoft's code base is any more "convoluted" than OO.o's (which is derived from the years-old closed code of the old StarOffice).

      Secondly, ODF is based on OO.o's previous format which is "friendly" to StarOffice's code structure. There's nothing *special* about OO.o other than the fact that a committee of self-appointed members declared it as a standard approved by OAISIS, a group nobody gives a damn about. ECMA and ISO haven't recognized ODF as a "standard" of any kind (I read somewhere that ODF was submitted to ECMA in October 2005, but has a long way to go before being ratified).

      ODF is "friendly" to OO.o's code, and MS formats are friendly to MS code. There's nothing to say that one is superiour to the other. Anyone making a word processor not based on either of these code bases (WordPerfect, for example) would have to alter their code to adpot either format more than OO.o would alter its code for ODF (basically, minimal alteration since ODF is essentially OO.o's previous format) and mroe than MS would alter its code for MS formats.

      BTW, MS formats provide for more functionality than ODF.
      Also, ODF is geared towards the features in OO.o that OO.o cares about.
      For example, MS formats allolw embedded OLE objects themselves to be represented as the XML format of their respective apps, while ODF represents OLE objects as binary blobs. Why? Because OO.o's OLE support sucks badly, so they didn't care too much about proper OLE support. There are many features in MS OFfice that OO.o doesn't support or does a half-ass job; these features are those not supported in ODF (or not supported well, at least).

      --
      -- "I never gave these stories much credence." - HAL 9000
    2. Re:Codebase is the real problem by 0xABADC0DA · · Score: 1

      Have you seen the Office code base? No? Then stop talking out of your ass. There's no reason to believe that Microsoft's code base is any more "convoluted" than OO.o's (which is derived from the years-old closed code of the old StarOffice).

      Anatomy of a Software Bug:
              http://blogs.msdn.com/rick_schaut/archive/2004/05/ 19/135315.aspx

      In short, two lines of code caused an error in Mac Word that preventing saving data entirely in some cases. It took them years to fix this bug even though not being able to save your data should be a pretty high priority fix.

      The reason was "the overall complexity ofthe software". The author was talking about the number of features Word has, but he works for Microsoft (like he's actually going to say the code is a mess and risk getting fired?). In any case if you read on you'll see the description of their document format, and how there could be plenty of problems loading another format.

    3. Re:Codebase is the real problem by Cutterman · · Score: 1

      Yes, I suspect that one reason why MS wants to keep it's own semi-open, semi-proprietary format is for backwards compatibility with it's own old documents. Okay, that's understandable and maybe not a bad idea though I appreciate that there may be other nastier reasons.

      BUT I'm not asking to see MS's code, I'm not asking Ms to open it's durn format, I'm not asking MS to do anything much EXCEPT allow me to open, edit and save documents in ODF - that's all. And it would NOT be difficult for MS to add this ability.

      I don't mind if trying to save a document previously created in a MS format in ODF generates a message saying "All of the features of this document may not be preserved if you save it in this format blah blah blah" (so long as I can turn off the warning).

      I do wish MS would at least get THIS message

    4. Re:Codebase is the real problem by himagain · · Score: 1

      Wow! That blog explains so much of the grief that Word has caused me over the years - e.g. numbered list have never worked from day 1, pasting from one doc to another frequently trashes the formatting (often irreparably), page numbering is often screwed and updating contents pages should only be done with plenty of Valium at hand.

      It also explains why my colleagues can't edit a shared document if I've copied text from it, and why my filesystem is full of temporary files.

      The problem is, as I've suspected for a long time, the fundamental "design". Complexity is built into the codebase - not, as the article suggests, because of the large number of functions available (like most users, I only use a tiny subset), but by the underlying data format virtually guaranteeing undesired interactions.

      This brings us back to the headline topic. Get the document data structure right, and the code almost writes itself. Get it wrong, and you end up with kludge upon kludge.

      From what I've seen (not much I must confess), the MS proposed alternative standard shows little respect for the writers' notion of the document structure, but virtually ensures your document will end up in pieces, stuck together into a structured file. In contrast, the OOo format inherently expresses the writers' structure.

      Summary: this is a wheel invented by Microsoft. It's a square with the corners rounded off and curved bits added onto each edge to smooth out the bumps. It'll fall apart as soon as it's placed under stress. They'll fix it by adding more and more bracing so that it'll eventually work, but it'll never be pretty.

  64. Groklaw article by Jason69 · · Score: 2, Informative

    Groklaw has a good article http://www.groklaw.net/article.php?story=200512150 14700305 on this story including the transcript of Alan Yates.

  65. not everyone can have standards by matt+me · · Score: 1

    i don't think slashdotters can have standards if they hope to get laid :p

  66. Hate to say it-- but it's basically true! by razorx100 · · Score: 1

    Although I am always happy to bash Micro$oft, the posisition of multiple open standards is a good concept in theory, but in practice it would end up as the status quo if not managed by disinterested third-parties. If no one other than M$ has maintained the source, and then things change significantly at M$ -- open standard or not people risk a serious lack of access. Personally, I have switched to OpenOffice because my business needs to be able to access document created today, 20+ years down the road. But what's to say there isn't a better standard WITHOUT a little competition??

  67. Microsoft In Decline by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    FOSS and open standards are the way of the future, and no amount of churning out extra "standards" is going to make a bit of difference in the end. Microsoft is finally entering that long slow decline in market share.

    Microsoft: "Wait for us! We're the leader!"

    Mike
    www.QuickTrivia.com

  68. Re:Blah blah from MS by arkanes · · Score: 2, Insightful

    That is because in a lot of organizations the Legal and HR departmets are idiots who don't know anything about technology and won't listen to the people who do. You cannot guaranteee proper formatting with HTML, even with mshtml. If proper formatting is actually important to you you won't use HTML for that - you'll publish your documents as PDFs or similiar instead. People who write documents in Word, save them as HTML, and consider that "saving the formatting" because it looks right in IE don't actually care about saving formatting - they use it as an excuse for not doing things the right way.

  69. I've been waiting for the other shoe to drop... by RiotNrrd · · Score: 1

    ...and this seems to be it.

    I remember being cautiously optomistic when they announced that Office 12 would be moving to an "open document format". Looks like they're attempting to flood the market with too much data.

  70. Multiple standards good? Not by guice · · Score: 1

    I distinctly remember it being dubbed that multiple DVD standards would be BAD for the consumer. How is this going to be good for the consumer?

  71. A man with 2 watches by MountainMan101 · · Score: 1

    A man with one watch knows what time it is, a man with two doesn't have a clue.

  72. standards compete these days? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well tickle me pink, what next?

  73. Protect the Lock-In by AeroIllini · · Score: 1

    This seems like a pretty predictable move to me. Microsoft's entire Office business model is based on vendor lock in; word processors in general are starting to plateau, since they have reached a point where new features are giving diminishing returns. Other than opening legacy documents, there is no reason for companies to use MS Office over one of the alternatives, so Microsoft is counting on vendor lock-in to keep selling licenses. Office currently represents one quarter of Microsoft's total revenue, and they will do anything to protect that.

    Once open standards are prevelant, MS Office will simply become one of many alternatives, and seen in that light it doesn't really stand out. To protect their status, Microsoft has to convince the PHBs that "open" means "clear text storage format"... and then they embrace, extend, extinguish.

    The ray of hope in all this is moves like the Massachussetts state government made, where they specified that "open" means what we (at Slashdot) all know it really means: fully documented, standardized, cross-platform, and format-frozen. Then they required that document formats used by the state conform to true openness. Microsoft can rant, rave, market, convince, and press-release until they are blue in the face, but if their format is not truly open, MA won't use it. Period. We need more initiatives like that, especially from some of the larger companies. Then maybe Microsoft will be forced to compete in the word processor market on the basis of product quality, and not vendor lock in. I think Microsoft could write an office suite that really kicks some serious ass and does it all with truly open formats, but they would have to change their focus quite a bit, and their inertia is currently preventing them from doing that.

    --
    For security, the MD5 hash of this message and sig is 09f911029d74e35bd84156c5635688c0.
  74. open OpenDocument documents by trollable · · Score: 1

    Well MS Office is still unable to open OpenDocument documents...
    If they don't add quicly import/export features, MS Office will become irrelevant. Not because it is a bad product but because their users will be unable to open the documents they receive. Because companies/agencies are switching massively (from what I can see).

    1. Re:open OpenDocument documents by angrykeyboarder · · Score: 1

      Honestly, I don't think Microsoft has anything to worry about. The overwhelming majority of documents an MS Office user will receive will not be in OpenDocument format.

      That's part of the point of Microsoft choosing to ignore OpenDocument. They know they can get away with it.

      It stinks, but they can get away with it and they know it.

      --
      Scott

      ©20014 angrykeyboarder & Elmer Fudd. All Wights Wesewved
  75. Mars... by St.+Arbirix · · Score: 1

    Wasn't crashing a probe into Mars proof enough that competing standards only introduces unforseen problems? I think some amusement park had a ride derail for pretty much the same stuff.

    --
    Direct away from face when opening.
  76. NASA Proved Two Standards are Bad by codepunk · · Score: 2, Insightful

    One only has to look at NASA to see just how bad using two standards can be. NASA used two standards of measurement (english and metric), the result is a pile of parts strewn across the red planet.

    --


    Got Code?
  77. Yes, and they even broken the "export" tool by blueZ3 · · Score: 1

    For older versions of Word, there was a tool call "compact HTML export" that you could download from MS that resulted in "almost clean" HTML coming out of Word docs. No "mso" tags, no weird bullet styles, no tables used to present 'bulleted' lists. It was great for when someone passed you a Word file that they wanted put on a Web site (I manage a couple of non-profit sites).

    Unfortunately, that tool now doesn't work as it once did. I used a newer version the other day, and still got about 100 lines of crud that needed to be cleaned out. DreamWeaver's "Clean up Word HTML" tool has also suffed some degradation, so I'm down to copying out the text and then reformatting it all by hand. Not a difficult task, but it eats up time.

    It's the one screwed-up thing about Word that consistently makes me frustrated. I can live with the broken number tokens, the automatic reformatting, and the inability to handle log docs. But this just kills me.
    \
    At this point, I'm going to re-install OO and see if I can get better results.

    --
    Interested in a Flash-based MAME front end? Visit mame.danzbb.com
  78. Microsoft doing something....fair? Yeah right. by TheDarkener · · Score: 1

    Now sit back and ask yourself why Microsoft would want to create a second standard instead of embracing the one that already exists.

    OSS People: "Oh wow, the MS open standard has THIS, maybe we'll start using that in OpenOffice.org..."

    Microsoft: "Muhahaha!"

    News for Nerds at 11: "Microsoft has just announced some proprietary new extentions to their open document format, which uses C# and .NET to show shiny widgets in your documents instead of the open standard way of doing it!"

    OSS People: "Oh crap."

    --
    It is pitch black. You are likely to be eaten by a grue.
  79. Brought to you by Faux News... by benjamindees · · Score: 1

    Massachusetts Should Close Down OpenDocument

    Written by Jim Prendergast, executive director of Americans for Technology Leadership. Microsoft Corporation is a founding member of ATL.

    This article is filled with so much bullshit it's difficult to know where to begin rebutting it:

    OpenDocument applications would have to be built from the ground up.

    Pure FUD. Applications already exist that implement OpenDocument. In fact, OpenOffice is mentioned in the article right in the next paragraph! Anyways, adding a new file format or converter to an existing application is easy enough to be trivial.

    Massachusetts may be aligning with what becomes a second-rate file format as Microsoft
    keeps expanding into XML and metadata and OpenDocument may have trouble keeping up.


    Yeah, we all know Microsoft are the ones "innovating" with XML and those who choose an open format will be left out of all the great new proprietary lock-ins that MS will come up with. Give me a break. Reality is, if Massachussets goes with an open format, other states will follow, and Microsoft will do their best job of implementing it poorly to try to kill it. Same... as... always... (yawn)

    The policy promises enormous and unnecessary migration costs to Massachusetts' taxpayers.

    Yes it does. And so do Microsoft's closed formats. The difference is, this cost is basically one-time. Those other costs are recurring and arbitrary.

    Businesses, organizations and citizens who interact with the state will also be forced to support Massachusetts' mandated technologies.

    And they already do. The difference is, this mandatory technology is open and can be implemented by anyone, for free. Microsoft's mandatory formats require you to use Microsoft products, on a Microsoft operating system, on a computer built by a Microsoft partner.

    Government is not directly in the business of innovation, but it should support policies that drive innovation.

    So, do paved roads stand in the way of innovation? Should government outsource that as well? Are we really expecting a growth of *innovative* new ways to exchange text?

    The main advantage to using Microsoft products in an office environment is that, in large measure, these products provide very reliable interoperability and rich functionality. Since most of our users are not IT experts, such interoperability and functionality are critical to the day to day operation of our offices.... We are unaware of any organizations with which we exchange documents that use products such as OpenOffice or StarOffice.

    Obviously, not IT experts. Sounds like they don't even have IT personnel. Not even halfway knowledgeable users. They don't realize that OpenOffice and others do an exceptional job of reading and writing Microsoft's reverse-engineered proprietary file formats. And they think sticking with those file formats is the way to foster "interoperability". Ah, well, I should expect nothing less from an article written by yet another Microsoft shill.

    --
    "I assumed blithely that there were no elves out there in the darkness"
  80. Double-standard Double-speak by Sean0michael · · Score: 1
    So Microsoft has done an about-face about OpenDocuments and such. But we all know what MS means by "open."

    And what about the Blu-Ray vs. HD DVD battle? Would they say two standards are good? Since recent Slashdot news reported that Blu-Ray is winning, will we see the same push for double standards?

    --
    Funtime Candy Wow! - my plan for eventually conquering Japan.
  81. OK, but if it's kosher XML by smittyoneeach · · Score: 2, Insightful

    How do you preclude an XSLT to un-frobnicate documents bearing the Redmond taint?

    --
    Get thee glass eyes, and, like a scurvy politician, seem to see things thou dost not.--King Lear
    1. Re:OK, but if it's kosher XML by the+eric+conspiracy · · Score: 1

      MS XML Format: .... /binary?

    2. Re:OK, but if it's kosher XML by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      With patents that cannot be relicenced -> no gpl/lgpl implementations.

    3. Re:OK, but if it's kosher XML by petermgreen · · Score: 1

      define "kosher XML"

      i could take a binary word document, base64 it add a few tags arround the outside and it would be perfectly valid XML. Can't do anything with it but retrive the original word doc though.

      while i doubt ms will go as far as doing that to the whole document i bet there will be embedded objects in there which are just binary data encoded into something that can be used inside xml.

      --
      note: i'm known as plugwash most places but i screwd up registering that here somehow in the past and now can't register
    4. Re:OK, but if it's kosher XML by smittyoneeach · · Score: 1
      define "kosher XML"
      That by which the market lets itself be flogged.
      --
      Get thee glass eyes, and, like a scurvy politician, seem to see things thou dost not.--King Lear
  82. UMMM??? by joey_knisch · · Score: 0, Troll

    Interesting? How? Why? I know this and guess what, I DONT USE WINDOWS!

    The parent clearly does not no how to use Windows. All one must do to remedy this is:
    1) uninstall MS Office
    or
    2) right click on the document you want to open in ooo, click "open with", click "always open with" checkbox, select open office, and click ok.

    Seriously, how is this interesting at all?

    1. Re:UMMM??? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful
      Wow... not very good at the whole reading comprehension thing, are you?

      Maybe I can spell it out using nice, short little sentences for you.
      1. User uses MS Word trial edition to view/edit documents.
      2. MS Word trial edition expires.
      3. User double-clicks on Word document, Word says "Piss off, I've expired".
      4. User installs OpenOffice (and doesn't change any file associations).
      5. User double-clicks on Word document, Word opens document and says "Yes, I would be happy to serve you. Don't forget to license me sometime!"


      See, the interesting part comes from the change in Word's behaviour upon installing OpenOffice. That wasn't so hard, was it?
    2. Re:UMMM??? by crabpeople · · Score: 1
      "Wow... not very good at the whole reading comprehension thing, are you?"

      Well i guess im not either because the grandparent wrote the following:

      I try to open an MS document now it does open using Word except it does ask me to license the product


      so in actuality, you ( i assume you are the GP because you posted as an AC and you rabidly defended the GP from a valid complaint ) cannot write proper sentences. That sentence clearly says that it DID ask you to license the product. Who knows if you really meant does NOT instead of does? you do maybe but thats not what you wrote.

      When a user installs open office with msword on the same system, very frequently MSword will steal all the file associations back. the parent and I both guessed, based on the literal words you used, that that is what was happening. How was anyone to know you actually meant the exact opposite. magic?

      --
      I'll just use my special getting high powers one more time...
    3. Re:UMMM??? by drew · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Try reading the same sentence again, and emphasizing a different portion of the sentence.

      I try to open an MS document now it does open using Word except it does ask me to license the product.

      When compared to the previous sentence:
      I used Word until the trial period expired then when I could no longer open documents...
      we see that the interesting part here was the change in behavior from not opening documents to opening documents. It does still ask him to license the product (which it probably did during the trial phase as well) but that is not really the interesting part- because we know it hasn't ever been registered, the fact that it would ask shouldn't be very surprising.

      --
      If I don't put anything here, will anyone recognize me anymore?
    4. Re:UMMM??? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      so in actuality, you ( i assume you are the GP because you posted as an AC and you rabidly defended the GP from a valid complaint ) cannot write proper sentences.


      That assumption would be wrong. My "rabid" defense was actually just trying to respond in tone similar to the original reply, which has now, justifiably, been moderated as a troll.

      I do agree that the original post (not mine, I might remind you) could have been written more eloquently, but, given that people on Slashdot don't even care about using capital letters, I am certainly willing to forgive him/her some slack.

      Fortunately, someone has already replied to you, explaining why the original comment was not terribly ambiguous. Thanks for coming out!
  83. Insightfull? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So, MS doesn't compete - and yet they are the biggest, richest corp ever.

    If they're not competing, then what the fuck are they doing 'gasmondo'? Magic? Hypnosis?

    Insightfull my aching ass! That has to be one of the most braindead comments ever to be modded 'Insightful' in the lamentable history of lame, half-assed slashdot posts ever (and that's a big claim).

    Please mods, put down the fucking pipe and THINK once in a while!

  84. XML-RPC vs. Document/Literal Web Services by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Absolute rubbish. The competition between XML-RPC (as used by most open source libraries) and Document/Literal Web Services (used by .Net) has made creating interoperable Web services a pain. Having 2 standards for open documents would also make it a pain!

  85. Translation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They want a format they control to be considered a "standard" so that they can crush the truly free competition using their office software monopoly, making their standard the only one remaining, at which time they will be free to add proprietary elements.

    Same bullshit MS song and dance. Nothing to see here folks.

  86. Not acceptable. by electrosoccertux · · Score: 1

    What you say is simply not acceptable. If we say we'll embrace MS as soon as they release their Open format, then they instantly have everything to gain and nothing to lose. Simple thought process for Microsoft: "Hm...seems like a win/win for us. We do everything we can to get people to accept our monopoly, and if they don't, we'll change, apologize, and then they'll accept us. Either way we win without a gamble."

    1. Re:Not acceptable. by Just+Some+Guy · · Score: 1
      What you say is simply not acceptable. If we say we'll embrace MS as soon as they release their Open format, then they instantly have everything to gain and nothing to lose.

      You guys are misreading what I said. I won't embrace Microsoft, but I'd be willing to consider their offerings based on their technical merits (or lack thereof).

      Suppose that OfficeXML or whatever they're calling it was truly superior to OpenDocument, and available under a Free license with a non-expiring patent waiver. I don't see the inherent evil in adopting that as a standard, or even with OpenOffice migrating to it as their official format. Who cares if Word can also interact with it? Why would that be worse than MS giving Word a full-featured input/output filter for OpenDocument? In either case, both office suites would have the ability to read and write the same files and could compete in other areas like price, Freeness of source, features... Isn't that what fair competition is all about?

      Not that I don't still believe this is all academic. Regardless of what some people think, until Microsoft coughs up that patent waiver, in my opinion it doesn't exist. Other people obviously take them at their word, or else we wouldn't have things like Mono, but that's a subject for a different day.

      --
      Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
    2. Re:Not acceptable. by belmolis · · Score: 1

      If Microsoft came up with a technically superior standard I would have no problem adopting it if it were truly open and unemcumbered, AT THE RIGHT TIME. The problem with what they're doing now, beyond the fact that they still don't seem to be ready to go with a truly open standard, is that they're late to the game. Competition among standards is fine at an early stage, but after some evolution and refinement, when the desirability of a true Standard becomes apparent, we want to settle on a single standard. At that point a negotiation takes place. It may result in one of the existing standards being chosen or it may result in the development of a hybrid of some sort. That process has already taken place. Until now, Microsoft wasn't interested. Only now that they realize that there is a real movement toward an open standard and that their lock-in strategy is in trouble are they interested in playing ball. Its too late.

      In any case, as far as I can see there is no technical advantage to Microsoft's proposal.

  87. It's actually called "Office Open XML" by fritsd · · Score: 1

    Really! Office Open XML! ("MOOX") I wonder how Microsoft came up with that name? :-)

    http://www.microsoft.com/presspass/press/2005/nov0 5/11-21EcmaPR.mspx

    --
    To be, or not to be: isn't that quite logical, Slashdot Beta?
  88. Who kidnapped Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Microsoft says that the consumers should have the choice", Microsoft said what?!

  89. Twoddle! by Wite_Noiz · · Score: 0

    What a load of twoddle! If you ask me, they're too proud to accept that some non-MS ideas are good ones.

  90. Oblig. Princess Bride... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Standards!"

    "You keep using that word. I don't think it means what you think it means."

  91. Two standards are always better, one is ignored. by CFD339 · · Score: 1

    There must be at least two standards, and they must be at "WAR" all the time. What will the industry press write about otherwise?

    There once was a lawyer who moved to a small town in Vermont. As there were no other lawyers in town, he assumed he'd make a fortune. Nobody called. Finally, he convinced a friend from law school to open another law firm in town. They've been busy ever since.

    --
    The problem with quotes on the internet, is that nobody bothers to check their veracity. -- Abraham Lincoln
  92. Competition between standards: good?!? by egarland · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Take for example Betamax vs VHS. That was very good thing. Oh wait, no, the other thing. A major catastorphy. It caused consumers tons of pain, cost everyone tons of money and set the industry back years.

    Competition is good. Standards are good. Competition between standards: very bad.

    "And we go round and round and round in the circle game."

    --
    set softtabstop=4 shiftwidth=4 expandtab nocp worlddomination
  93. Missing from the article quote by alexborges · · Score: 1

    'Competition between standards we believe is a very good thing.' .... For us....

    --
    NO SIG
  94. Microsoft's definition of "open" by AirDave · · Score: 1

    When a vendor (Microsoft in this case) says "Open" what they mean is "Open your wallet if you want to use our format".

  95. So they think competition is good? by scruffylooking · · Score: 1

    So why do they try so hard to stamp it out in every market they enter?

    1. Re:So they think competition is good? by SmurfButcher+Bob · · Score: 1

      More to the point, why was their format "Closed" before MA walked?

      --

      help me i've cloned myself and can't remember which one I am

    2. Re:So they think competition is good? by scruffylooking · · Score: 1

      Exactly!

  96. Another F/OSS vs. MS battle by recharged95 · · Score: 1
    Basically, the only problem with opening formats is time. Office is really Microsoft's flagship product. people actually respect it. Their OS is just a crappy vehicle to Office considering the number of versions (95/95/Me/NT/2K/XP/blah blah) and the problems that each version currently have.

    At this point, either Microsoft is betting their Office team can "out do" the F/OSS community such as Oo or this is all vaporware. If they play fair with their "open" format, then this could be a race about who turns out a better product: F/OSS or corporations... Basically this could be a test if FOSS can live up to the promise of quick feature turn around and reliable s/w (time). If the F/OSS can't take advantage of the open formats with robust, reliable apps, then Office wins.

    If I were Microsoft and wanted to compete in the F/OSS world, Office would be a good weapon to use against the competition. Who would you bet on (Office, Oo, WP)? The problem I have with my theory: Is Microsoft willing to compete or just play the system as usual?

  97. The case for Microsoft by J.R.+Random · · Score: 1

    Microsoft is right. That's why we're so much better off with half the computer users using ASCII and the other half using EBCDIC. Think of the stagnation that would have happened if everyone had settled on ASCII.

  98. I've corrected Mr. Yates statement by RouterSlayer · · Score: 1

    I've made the corrections for you-

    Microsoft's Yates said that OpenDocument and Open XML come from very different marketing objectives. 'In the future at some point there will be convergence to Microsofts products,' he said. In the near term, the transition period from actual open standards document formats to Microsoft proprietary Open XML-based ones will be 'messy and complex,' he added. 'Competition between standards we believe is a very good thing, as long as Microsoft ends up owning them and getting the royalties.'"

  99. competition by SebNukem · · Score: 3, Insightful

    "Competition between two standards we believe is a very good thing"

    What a ridiculous statement.

    If there are multiple standards then there is no standard by definition.

    Competition between products using a common standard is a good thing.

  100. MS Demands straight vote up or down in the Senate by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...as long as the right party controls the senate.

  101. Competition between standards is very beneficial. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    > 'Competition between standards we believe is a very good thing.'

    Absolutely!

    Remember Betamax v. VHS? Consumers were thrilled at the choice; and were gratified when the technically-superior format finally won in the end.

    Remember how the Pascal programming language fractured into multiple dialects? Clearly, the competition between those dialects helped to strengthen Pascal's dominance.

    And today, consumers are delighted to see all the format choices they have when they purchase a next-gen DVD recorder. And the industry is pleased to see how much that choice is helping to accelerate sales.

  102. Unintended side effects for Microsoft by IGnatius+T+Foobar · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Microsoft "opening" their XML format has an unintended side effect. Sure, they may end up winning the purchasing agreement for office software for the Massachussetts state government ... but by opening the format, they've also opened the door to allowing the OpenOffice.org software to read/write Microsoft's format -- legally. This will allow the free world to continue using OpenOffice.org in a Microsoft-centric world.

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    1. Re:Unintended side effects for Microsoft by NutscrapeSucks · · Score: 1

      Jeez, give MS some credit ... Obviously after 20 years of obscuring their file formats, they had to realize that an open spec would improve other suites' interoperability with MS Office.

      The bottom line is that OpenOffice is a pretty irrelvant competitor, when compared to older versions of MS Office that work just fine.

      --
      Whenever I hear the word 'Innovation', I reach for my pistol.
  103. Re:Two standards are always better, one is ignored by narcc · · Score: 1

    We are at war with Open XML. We have always been at war with Open XML and allied with OpenDocument... Winston Smith knows this...

  104. Microsoft's Double Standard by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If Microsoft encourages competition between standards, then why make a new format? There already is competition between OpenDocument and Word Document. I think this is just a new scheme by Microsoft's marketing department to cash in on the new "Open" buzzword the average user is starting to hear and Microsoft is just upset that Word is beginning to lose popularity (especially in government offices, Mayland anyone?).

  105. There are already multipler 'standards' available by I'm+Don+Giovanni · · Score: 1

    There are already multiple 'standards' available for document representation. I don't know if they've been recognized by standards bodies, but there are defacto 'standards' like RTF, that everyone supports (despite it being a format created by, *gasp*, Microsoft). It's funny to see OSS fanboys scared to compete after all their huff and puff about competing on merits. Rather, you want *government* to declare ODF to be the one true standard. Wait, I went too far; I forgot that you guys support *governent* giving its blessing to PDF, a 'standard' controlled by a single entity Adobe (only an outdated subset of PDF has been recognized by ECMA). LOL The irony and hypocrisy is delicious. Let ODF compete and succeed or fail based on its merits rather than winning by government fiat.

    Let's cut to the chase. OO.o couldn't compete with MS Office based on merit, so it changed the rules of the game by declaring its format as a 'standard' and saying, "You should use us because although we lack MS Office's functionality, ease of use, speed, and relatively small memory footprint (OO.o is a slow pig), our format is a standard!!" And they even got Mass to go along with using 2nd rate software for the sake of a standard format, which delighted you guys to no end. But hold on, Microsoft does something that you never dreamed that they would do (and secretly feared that they would do); MS makes its own format a standard, and we go back to OO.o having to compete on merit again. This is why you guys are pissed off.

    --
    -- "I never gave these stories much credence." - HAL 9000
  106. ODF Introduction flawed by hackwrench · · Score: 1

    In the Mixed content model section, it gives a hyperlink example in which the Microsoft example doesn't show the reference http://example.com/ so it isn't equivalent to the ODF example.

  107. Anti-dual-boot pricing by tepples · · Score: 2, Informative

    This still leaves open the question of why PC makers preinstall their software and none others. Clue: it's not because the MS Mafia forced them to.

    O rly? I've read tales of OEMs getting deep discounts if they install only Windows but having to pay nearly full retail if they partition the hard drive and install Windows and GNU/Linux. This would seem to become even more important as the cost of PC hardware falls and the Windows license becomes a greater proportion of the cost of goods.

  108. Independent or joint competition? by Jadrano · · Score: 1

    I don't necessarily think competition between standards is always bad. In this case, most independent experts agree that ODF is better. But if people at Microsoft aren't sure about that, they could create a new version of MS Office that supports both ODF and their own format. That way, there would be two independent competitions, one between standard formats and one between different software. However, Microsoft wants joint competition rather than independent one - hoping that their large market share will also help their standard.
    Anyway, other Office suites will support both ODF and Microsoft's format, so those who will really want to try out different standard formats and let them compete in personal use will have to choose non-Microsoft office software.

  109. Microsoft misses the point... or do they? by Eric+Damron · · Score: 1

    The point of a standard is to allow multiple entities to develop software in a way that will be compatible with other developer's implementation of that standard. If you have too many standards then nothing is really standard.

    It is a good idea to encourage competing products that use a common standard. It is NOT so good to encourage competing standards. Microsoft knows this full well. Like most of what Microsoft say and do they feel they can leverage some unfair advantage. Gee what could it be? The undocumented extensions that they plan maybe? Legal obstacles that block open source from implementing their standard?

    With Microsoft's past record of dirty tricks we would be fools not to ask such questions.

    --
    The race isn't always to the swift... but that's the way to bet!
  110. As long as the standards are XML-based, it is OK by drgroove · · Score: 1

    As long as the standards are XML-based, it is OK to have multiple standards. You can always use XSLT to transform one format to another.

    Just look at the competing XML standards between Oasis and Acord in the insurance industry, for example. Both are valid, useable standards - one or the other happens to be more appropriate for various purposes. If you end up in a situation where you need to translate Oasis to Acord or vice-versa, just use XSLT.

    The same concept should hold true for open document standards for office productivity suites as well, or for any open document format for that matter. As long as it is in XML, there should be no real issue. Besides, competition spurs innovation - that's a simple hallmark of the American capitalist system.

  111. Attribution by swillden · · Score: 1

    standards are great, there are so many to choose from.

    If you're going to paraphrase someone, you might as well get it right and provide attribution. It was Andrew Tanenbaum who said "The good thing about standards is that there are so many to choose from."

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    Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
    1. Re:Attribution by swillden · · Score: 1

      Oops. Here I am talking about getting it right, and then I mess it up.

      s/good/nice/

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      Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
  112. what about tcp ip by sniggly · · Score: 1

    'Competition between standards we believe is a very good thing.'

    im glad they werent about when tcp/ip was invented... the russians had a different width between rail tracks so that the germans couldnt easily use their rail system in case they would invade. That's the purpose behind having different standards, it's to make sure someone elses stuff cant work with your infrastructure and derail you..

    --
    Of those to whom much is given, much is required.
  113. Not buying it by ShimmyShimmy · · Score: 1

    Yeah, that's right Microsoft. Consumers ashould have the right to choose between .xls and .xlt to save their spreadsheet.

    --
    Partial Credit: The Engineer's Best friend
    "Well, the bridge didn't fall all the way down!"
  114. Different between the formats by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I get the impression that Microsoft's XML format is basicly an XML serialisation of their existing binary format. It's as if they took the classes used within Word to represent its internal data structures and instead of using the old MFC binary serialiser used an XML one instead.

    This is cheaper to implement for Microsoft, and will also load faster as no translation between structured form and internal representation is needed, but it isn't very useful for document processing. Open Document is more structured and better organised, so is more useful.

    If you consider that even in the days of Dot-Net-2 most of their systems are legacy COM, something which I hear will continue well into Windows Vista, it seems Microsoft have little time to reimplement things. Pity, as Dot-Net would make possible some nice features that the COM layer and whole program loader system prevents.

  115. Re:MS is coercing, not competing by meosborne · · Score: 1

    Yeah, Microsoft is big on allowing users to actually make a choice. That is why, when I went to purchase computers for our company and simply wanted the Windows licenses not to be tied to the machine I was told that *Microsoft* wouldn't allow it.

    Microsoft also wouldn't allow our vendor to sell us machines without windows at all. We were told that we could purchase Windows *again* to get what we wanted. Rediculous.

    Who cares what the customer wants, it's what Microsoft wants that matters.

    About the same time this happened it was revealed that Microsoft was giving "rewards" to vendors who reported on customers who asked for naked machines. It's amazing that Microsoft felt that they had some right to know about a transaction from which they were explicitly excluded.

  116. Y'ok. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I read resumes on a day to day basis, had to comment.

    Programming : Micro Soft Visuals: Basics, C, C+, C#, C++, Java, Internet.

    There is no language called Basics, and if you're referring to VB, then I highly doubt you actually know it well enough to put it on a resume, especially when you can't even get the name right.

    There is no such language as C+!

    It is quite obvious that you MIGHT know some C-based language and therefore think you can apply it to every other one. "Internet" is not a programming language, unless you're referring to HTML, which isn't something one brags about knowing on their resume for an IT-related position.

    * Databases: Average programming knowledge in Oracle 8.0,Visual Basic, Mysql.

    Visual Basic is not even a database.

    Web Design: Average programming knowledge, http://some-ugly-as-hell-web-site-made-with-an-onl / ine-page-builder/

    Web design with an online page builder? Are you kidding? My 14 year old niece can make homepages in that manner. Besides, aren't you proficient with "internet" programming?

    Computer assembly and repair: Advanced knowledge as a technician, effective use of the Internet.

    Effective use of the internet? That is something a child can literally do. Trying to sell yourself to an employer by citing internet usage as a proficient skill is like trying to get into the Olympic marathon because you can stand on two feet.

    Office suites: Word, Access, Excel, Power Point,Outlook.

    All of the above that you listed aren't Office Suites, they comprise one Office Suite. On top of that, this is again a skill that anyone who's been in just about any workforce and has a computer at their desk probably already know.

    Others: Paint Shop Pro 7, PhotoShop, Emule, Kazza, Paint, WordPad, Acrobat Reader, Winzip, WinRar.

    I must admit, this is the first resume that I've seen that actually brags about the ability to use Acrobat READER and Kazaa as selling points.

    Don't try to BS a place like this until you at least have a college degree, kid.

  117. $125 million cost of competing standards by zufar · · Score: 1
    "Competition between two standards we believe is a very good thing"


    The Mars Climate Orbiter was lost at the Red Planet on Sept. 23,1999 because of a mistake by engineers who delivered navigation information in English rather than metric units, according to a mission failure investigation report released.


    http://www.space.com/news/mco_report-b_991110.html
  118. Competition by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Competition between standards might be good for the emerging standards, but it is bad for emerging applications which have to decide to support one standard or the other, or both through some kind of abstraction layer.

    My $0.02

  119. Competition between Standards, an Oxymoron by Kamiza+Ikioi · · Score: 1

    'Competition between standards we believe is a very good thing.'

    Now I know MS is on crack. The whole point of a standard is that it is standard. MS even helped develop the standard they plan on competing with. Now, they've embraced and extended it, and hope to "converge" their proprietary licensing on top of it. No, competition between standards is a very bad thing. The VHS Beta-max wars didn't result in any great euphoria of enlightenment upon the VHS standard. That's like saying that Compact Disks somehow benefited from competition from Cassette Tapes. Its the same with the BluRay/HD-DVD fight that is about to ensue. It's not beneficial to anyone that this happens. All it will do is put more money in the pocket of the winner, because the consumer who initially chose the loser will have to go out and repurchase everything they bought in the new format.

    No, there is little or no benefit here. An open standard can always be improved upon. Competing against a proprietary standard only muddies the water. This is much like MS creating their own proprietary web standards. Are those also "very beneficial"? Are we all reaping the rewards of divergent standards? If divergent standards are so beneficial, then the whole idea of "standards" are then, what... not beneficial?

    Someone help me understand this, because every time MS talks about OpenDocument, it sounds like they are either A) talking completely out of their ass, and are having the marketing guys (who couldn't tell a TCP from an IP) make these decisions, or B) flat out lying to the non-tech public about what this debate really is about. And what it really is about is that going to OpenDocument, which is fully supportable in MS Office if they want it to be, is one VERY large step towards putting MS Office out the way Firefox put out IE, and that they are willing to do anything to prevent that from happening, even if it means forking an open standard with a proprietary one, muddying the waters, FUD, and preventing governments from doing whats best for its citizens.

    Ever wish you could have been that guy that threw the cream pie in Gate's face?

    --
    I8-D
  120. translation by smash · · Score: 1
    2 open document standards better than one for us

    smash.

    --
    I run: Windows, OS X, Linux, FreeBSD. Just because you have a hammer, doesn't mean everything is a nail.
  121. In Other News.... by rm69990 · · Score: 1

    'Competition between standards we believe is a very good thing.'

    Hell Freezes Over

  122. design by Tom · · Score: 1

    OpenDocument and Open XML come from very different design points.

    Absolutely! One was designed to be an open document format useful to both users and developers, and the other was designed to embrace&extend the idea and create a fake impression of being open while keeping the customer solidly tied to one product.

    --
    Assorted stuff I do sometimes: Lemuria.org
  123. Losing by Tom · · Score: 1

    M$ is losing this battle and knows it. You can see that from the comment. Why? Because only he who knows he is at #2 says "hey, why not have two winners?".

    --
    Assorted stuff I do sometimes: Lemuria.org
  124. Remember Mars... by mathfeel · · Score: 1

    Remember when the confusion between SI and English unit cause a crash? I hope NASA won't contract their work to some company that use a different standard...

    --
    The only possible interpretation of any research whatever in the 'social sciences' is: some do, some don't
  125. BS MODS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Troll? WTF?

    I guess I can't expect much today from the moderators since they marked the parent as "interesting."

  126. one or two, but please do chose by TLouden · · Score: 1

    one OS and one document format or two of each. or would you like to have your cake and eat it too.

    --
    -Tim Louden
  127. Not exactly by CarpetShark · · Score: 1

    Well, PAL is a standard in some countries, whereas NTSC is a standard in others. They're competing standards, but not in the SAME place.

    At BEST, allowing people to choose between ODF and MSXML will lead to division and confusion and incompatibility within Mass. ITD, which is exactly what Quinn wanted a standard to solve. So, it defeats the purpose in the best case scenario. In the worst case scenario, however, you have an inferior format and all the vendor-lockin that goes with it chosen over the CLEARLY superior ODF format.

    Also, you have MS manipulating governments to make it happen, when the (original) powers that were clearly favored the superior format and understood WHY they favored it.

    There is absolutely nothing good about this, except for Microsoft. I don't know if this is a final decision, but if it is, then corporations have won over the citizens they're supposed to exist for yet again.

  128. The nice thing about standard... by Per+Abrahamsen · · Score: 1

    ... is that there are so many to choose from.
        -- Andrew S. Tannenbaumaum

    The sad thing is that when Andy first wrote this, everybody understood that it was a joke.

  129. D'Oh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Thanks for the Latin FYI, err, thanks for Latin FYI.

    Well I Googled:

    "The Pope is Catholic" 9740 results
    http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q=%22The+Pope+i s+Catholic%22

    and

    "Pope is a Catholic" 481 results
    http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q=%22pope+is+a+ catholic%22

    The latter sounded funny to my ear as it is not
    the common expression (comaring two four letter
    phrases each with a common article should be fair).

  130. What versions? by SgtChaireBourne · · Score: 1
    Igot a new laptop and it had MS works installed. I used Word until the trial period expired then when I could no longer open documents I downloaded OpenOffice. Lo and behold when I try to open an MS document now it does open using Word except it does ask me to license the product.

    Which versions of McWerks/ McWerd / McWindoze? If what you have observed can be duplicated by others, there will be big news.

    --
    Beta is broken and the link to classic doesn't work. Stop wasting our time or there won't be anybody left here.