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.'"
We might not be able to beat one good format, but we can easily defeat two.
"standards are great, everyone should have one."
abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz
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.
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?
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.
so up yours.
Laws are for people with no friends.
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."
If Microsoft had to actually compete, they would cease to exist.
http://religiousfreaks.com/<html>
/* Style Definitions */
d y lang=EN>
<head>
<meta http-equiv=Content-Type content="text/html; charset=windows-1252">
<meta name=Generator content="Microsoft Word 11 (filtered)">
<style>
<!--
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>
<bo
<div class=Section1>
<p class=MsoNormal><span lang=EN-US>Idiot</span></p>
</div>
</body>
</html>
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
Please, the transistion will only be "messy" because Microsoft wants it to be.
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.
"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
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.
...is that tere are so many to pick from!
The True FOSS Skype Replacement
Last time I checked, TWO ain't a standard. It's a competition.
What'dya mean there's no BLINK tag!?
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!
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."
It's just marketing BS. Bleh!
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"
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,"
Linux/Open Source/Anti Microsoft News
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!
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."
Notepad & Wordpad
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!
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!
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!!!!
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.
"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."
0 5/11-21EcmaPR.mspx
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/nov
He who knows best knows how little he knows. - Thomas Jefferson
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.
'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.
"... is a very good thing."
apparently he never owned a betamax.
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?
...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.
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.
We do...
Have you ever saved a word document as an html document in Microsoft Word?
I call that output mshtml!!!
Before: "Open standards harm competition"
After: "Two open standards are better than one".
C'mon, Steve, you can do better than that.
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.
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.
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.
Some animals are more equal than others.
The simple truth is that interstellar distances will not fit into the human imagination
- Douglas Adams
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
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.
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.
Wasn't it called "microsoft blackbird" or something? Flopped, whichever. Good riddance.
"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.
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-
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.
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=-
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.
I'll do the stupid thing first and then you shy people follow...
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.
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/
... this looks a good case of "divide and conquer" to me!
This tagline was transcoded to result in at least one smirk. If you experience failure to smirk, please consult your Gen
(Why do I get that uncomfortable feeling).....
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.
Slashdot social media options: AIM, ICQ, Yahoo, Jabber and Mobile Text. Why no MySpace?
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.
"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.
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.
... 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....
For any flavor of Marzipan, just use a comparable amount of sand. Should taste about the same.
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.
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".
Groklaw has a good article http://www.groklaw.net/article.php?story=200512150 14700305 on this story including the transcript of Alan Yates.
i don't think slashdotters can have standards if they hope to get laid :p
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??
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
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.
...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.
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?
A man with one watch knows what time it is, a man with two doesn't have a clue.
Well tickle me pink, what next?
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.
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).
Million Dollar Screenshot
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.
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?
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
Now sit back and ask yourself why Microsoft would want to create a second standard instead of embracing the one that already exists.
.NET to show shiny widgets in your documents instead of the open standard way of doing it!"
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
OSS People: "Oh crap."
It is pitch black. You are likely to be eaten by a grue.
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"
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.
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
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?
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!
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!
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.
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."
Really! Office Open XML! ("MOOX") I wonder how Microsoft came up with that name? :-)
0 5/11-21EcmaPR.mspx
http://www.microsoft.com/presspass/press/2005/nov
To be, or not to be: isn't that quite logical, Slashdot Beta?
"Microsoft says that the consumers should have the choice", Microsoft said what?!
What a load of twoddle! If you ask me, they're too proud to accept that some non-MS ideas are good ones.
"Standards!"
"You keep using that word. I don't think it means what you think it means."
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
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
'Competition between standards we believe is a very good thing.' .... For us....
NO SIG
When a vendor (Microsoft in this case) says "Open" what they mean is "Open your wallet if you want to use our format".
So why do they try so hard to stamp it out in every market they enter?
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?
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.
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.'"
"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.
...as long as the right party controls the senate.
> '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.
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.
Tired of FB/Google censorship? Visit UNCENSORED!
We are at war with Open XML. We have always been at war with Open XML and allied with OpenDocument... Winston Smith knows this...
Required reading for internet skeptics
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?).
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
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.
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.
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.
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!
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.
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."
Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
'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.
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!"
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.
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.
I read resumes on a day to day basis, had to comment.
l / ine-page-builder/
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-on
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.
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.htm
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
'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
smash.
I run: Windows, OS X, Linux, FreeBSD. Just because you have a hammer, doesn't mean everything is a nail.
'Competition between standards we believe is a very good thing.'
Hell Freezes Over
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
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
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
Troll? WTF?
I guess I can't expect much today from the moderators since they marked the parent as "interesting."
one OS and one document format or two of each. or would you like to have your cake and eat it too.
-Tim Louden
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.
... 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.
Thanks for the Latin FYI, err, thanks for Latin FYI.
i s+Catholic%22
+ catholic%22
Well I Googled:
"The Pope is Catholic" 9740 results
http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q=%22The+Pope+
and
"Pope is a Catholic" 481 results
http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q=%22pope+is+a
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).
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.