Slashdot Mirror


ODF Plugins and a Microsoft Promise of Cooperation

Andy Updegrove writes "Last week, the Massachusetts Information Technology Division (ITD) issued a Request for Information (RFI) on any plugins that might be under development to assist it in migrating from a MS Office environment to one based upon software that supports ODF. The RFI acknowledges the fact that it may be necessary or advantageous to see some of the code in Office in order to enable the types of features that the ITD is looking for. Conveniently, Jason Matusow, Microsoft's Director of Standards Affairs, had this to say on the occasion of ODF's approval by the members of ISO and the IEC: "The ODF format is limited to the features and performance of OpenOffice and StarOffice and would not satisfy most of our Microsoft Office customers today. Yet we will support interoperability with ODF documents as they start to appear and will not oppose its standardization or use by any organization. The richness of competitive choices in the market is good for our customers and for the industry as a whole." Presumably such support will include helping the plug-in developers that will assist Massachusetts migrate from a MS Office environment to one based upon ODF-compliant office productivity software."

30 of 262 comments (clear)

  1. let me be the 1st to say ... by xlyz · · Score: 5, Funny


    embrace and extend!!

    1. Re:let me be the 1st to say ... by jb.hl.com · · Score: 5, Insightful

      *sigh* OK, if Microsoft don't implement ODF they are rejecting open standards. If they do, they're embracing and extending.

      They can't win, can they?

      --
      By summer it was all gone...now shesmovedon. --
    2. Re:let me be the 1st to say ... by Realistic_Dragon · · Score: 4, Informative

      It depends on how they do it. If they impliment a working standards compliant version... well, that'll be great.

      Based on what they did to Java, HTML and everything else they have ever touched it'll be a almost compliant version, to an out of date standard, that is a massive pain in the ass to use with non-MS products. (Ref IIS/IE/Frontpage etc etc.)

      --
      Beep beep.
    3. Re:let me be the 1st to say ... by cyber-vandal · · Score: 4, Informative

      That's the disadvantage of being a habitual criminal, trust is hard to come by.

    4. Re:let me be the 1st to say ... by fatman22 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      It speaks volumes that Microsoft chose to call the position "Director of Standards Affairs" and not "Director of Standards Compliance".

  2. So uh... by Spazntwich · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Did Microsoft take the time to clarify exactly which features their Office suite offers that Open and Star offices don't?

    Gosh, not that I'd like to insult the integrity of a company with such a spectacular record of interoperability and standards compliance as Microsoft, but I really just can't think of anything obvious that their closed document format offers beyond lack of compatibility with anything but their own products.

    1. Re:So uh... by Bacon+Bits · · Score: 5, Informative
      Did Microsoft take the time to clarify exactly which features their Office suite offers that Open and Star offices don't?
      Excessive amounts of metadata, probably.

      Seriously, open up a Word document that you've worked on and modified several times. Select the whole document, copy it, paste it into a new document, and save it. The documents should largely be identical (you might've missed headers and footers or page margins). Now compare the fize sizes. The old document might be several megabytes. The new one is probably a few hundred K.

      What's missing? Gobs and gobs of metadata about every keystroke, ever action, every cursor positioning.

      Ever open up a Word document, scroll arounda nd read but make no changes, close it, and have Word ask to save changes? Metadata.

      --
      The road to tyranny has always been paved with claims of necessity.
    2. Re:So uh... by qazwart · · Score: 5, Interesting
      the son of a respected Deal rabbi, is also vice president of the 300-plus student Deal Yeshiva


      Oh, there are lots of features only found in MS Word that aren't in OpenOffice. These are things like their document wizard, VBA scripting, object insertion, watermarking, cross-referencing, index marking, and our favorite, Clippy the paperclip.

      Ever used these features? No? That's probably why they're not in OpenOffice.

      There are several reasons for all of these features: You've got one application that's trying to make sure that anyone who uses it can find the features they need. Because MS has hundreds of developers working full time on MS office, and they got to do something to justify their jobs. It looks good in ad copy (millions of features!). And, it is an important element of FUD. (If you switch to OpenOffice, there might be some feature not in OpenOffice that you will need.)
    3. Re:So uh... by belmolis · · Score: 3, Informative

      Another alternative is R, which is much more powerful than anything MS Office has to offer, is Free, and runs on most platforms.

    4. Re:So uh... by Tim+C · · Score: 3, Insightful

      document wizard,

      Yes, although rarely.

      VBA scripting

      Yes.

      object insertion

      Yes.

      cross-referencing

      Yes.

      Ever used these features? No? That's probably why they're not in OpenOffice.

      Just because *you* don't use a feature, or know anyone else that does, doesn't mean that no-one uses it.

  3. The OpenDocument Foundation already has a plugin by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative

    As groklaw has already reported there is a plugin for importing and exporting ODF files for MS Office all the way back to Office 97. It was recently finished and is in testing.

  4. Excellent by extra+the+woos · · Score: 3, Insightful

    While we cannot and should not assume that Microsoft has OpenOffice's best interests at heart (of course they don't) this is still excellent news.

    This is extremely significant news. What this means is that, after years and years of MSO having no competition, years after they basically wiped out wordperfect etc... There is now significant competition to Microsoft Office, and they are being forced to acknowledge it.

    Hopefully this will mean that Microsoft will start developing some new revolutionary stuff in Microsoft Office instead of just resting on their laurels (sorry but I don't think any version since 6.0 has been that huge of an upgrade compared to going to 6.0). This is good news. We are all going to get better products instead of everyone just copying each other's minor features.

    Open Office is here to stay. They have succesfully gotten a multi-billion dollar company to acknowledge them as a serious competitor just like Linux forced them to acknowledge that windows has competition. Microsoft no longer has the monopoly they did a few years ago.

    --
    replacing it with NEW Folger's Crystals! (lets see if they notice the difference)
  5. Genuinely interested by Alioth · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I'm genuinely interested to know what features of Microsoft Word "most users use" that are not in OpenOffice or KOffice (which also does ODF).

    Nearly all the users in our office are doing standard officey things in MS Office. None of them use features that aren't present in OpenOffice - in fact, hardly any of them use MS Office as anything more than a glorified typewriter with a handy spell checker.

    1. Re:Genuinely interested by jmv · · Score: 4, Interesting

      There are many areas where OO.o is still lacking badly. One of them is the math editor. I still think writing a scientific document in MS Word (and not LaTeX) is a dumb idea in the first place, but OO.o is far worse than even MS Word. Support for sound (works but buggy) and video (inexistant AFAIK) in presentations is another example. These are "just" implementation issues (not ODF-related), they will need to be fixed if OO is to compete with MS Office at the feature level (I refuse to us MS Office because the format is closed, but not everyone care about that).

    2. Re:Genuinely interested by Tom · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I'm curious if the commenting/version-tracking stuff is in there. This is one area where Word really shines, and has noticably improved in the past few versions.

      Can I get some of what you're smoking? The commenting is one hell of a mess. Oh yeah, it looks all shiney and look! colours! on the surface, but have you ever tried to really _work_ with it? The only use is within small workgroups where a little bit of improved communication would make it superfluous anyways.

      I've tried working with both commenting and versioning in a non-trivial environment where several different - and at times hostile - parties are involved. You can forget about it. We're currently using .rtf because .doc contains too much hidden information the parties don't want revealed to each other, just as one example.
      In .odf I could at worst write a small script to get it out, if it were stored at all (I've done scripts to touch-up .sxi files before, it's easier than it sounds).

      And let's not even speak about versioning. 20 year old CVS beats it with one arm tied behind its back.

      Almost all of Words advanced features are half-assed at best. I'll celebrate the day its market share plummets to insignificance.

      --
      Assorted stuff I do sometimes: Lemuria.org
  6. Time for the obligatory Admiral Ackbar quote by TAZ6416 · · Score: 4, Funny

    It's a trap!

    Jonathan

    http://www.justgofaster.com/

  7. Re:Kooks. by chronos · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It is more like Microsoft must provide ODF compatibility or the state government as well as local governments will not be buying Office. Notice that this promise came after they tried to bribe and threaten the state government to back down on its ODF requirement.

    Failure to reverse the ODF decision means that no matter what decision Microsoft makes they will lose the Office monopoly. Bill Gates can choose to keep a piece of the action or lose everything.

  8. delusions about ms office by joevai · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I am constantly amazed by the sort of mass-delusion people seem to have about MS office, intentionally perpetuated by ms - the idea that ms office is a framework of acceptably workable office productivity applications. Wrong wrong wrong.

    Each and every office application is buggy, has gaping holes in terms of usability (for example the Access report designer makes adding columns to data a nightmare - you have to align line elements to the pixels manually, or use the severely clunky grid system), and makes any use beyond bare minimum severely frustrating (my job is to work with Microsoft Office and I'm at expert level with it so I know those only too well).

    Microsoft dominate the market, and they have abused it as most public companies in a monopoly would do. The software is incomplete and as far as I'm concerned unacceptably faulty but it's the best out there given that they have had virtually no competition. Now that's changing, they act as if their so-far monopolised customer base would find other software unacceptably bad. It's ridiculous.

    Thank God for open source giving people a more usable, workable solution not only for portability's sake but to finally give us an alternative so we can all show ms what is and isn't acceptable. In my opinion it isn't there yet - but it's only a matter of time before Openoffice exceeds MS in terms of functionality I'm convinced of it.

    I know I'm probably gonna be modded down for trolling/off-topic/etc. but I feel so strongly about this - please can we all stop acting as if their software is acceptable. In any other industry a company producing such faulty goods would have gone out of business, and rightly so from the customer's point of view. We're only encouraging Microsoft to not bother fixing anything time and time again if we stay complacent, and yet again us customers' will be cheated out of decent software. They could do it. They have very talented people working for them. But they only understand the language of commerce - so let's make the competition strong and force them to change their ways. It's time for change.

    /rant

  9. slashdot covered the plugin too... by Xtifr · · Score: 4, Informative

    On May 4th, slashdot covered the followup to this story. Now, three days later, they get around to mentioning the original story. I guess this doesn't actually qualify as a dupe, but it's definitely some sort of mutant nephew of a dupe, or something.

  10. Re:Before we get the usual FUD and Tinfoil Respons by vidarh · · Score: 4, Insightful
    The fact that nobody pays attention to the issues you mention should be a clear indicator that most people don't care about those features. Even so, none of the products using ODF as default storage supports them, leaving plenty of room for adding specifications later.

    If Microsofts wants to support ODF, and needs more features, all they'd have to do is propose extensions and present a well founded argument for why they should be allowed. They haven't.

    In essence, Microsoft likes to whine about this, because it serves their purpose to keep ODF adoption rates down, but they show no interest in doing anything about it.

  11. People don't need most features by mangu · · Score: 5, Informative
    I would say most if not all features in MS office are there because someone, somewhere needs those features on a regular basis


    No. About ten years ago I read an interview by a top executive from Microsoft (Nathan Myrwold, iirc) that most features do not come from customer requests, but from magazine comparisons. When someone wrote an article comparing different office suites they would include a table with tickmarks showing which features were included in each software. It became an obvious competitive advantage to have more tickmarks than the competition.


    In that interview, Myrwold mentioned that MS-Word had over a thousand different commands, and that was a problem because most of those commands would never be used by the majority of users and it had a big impact on usability. That's how Clippy was born, it was an attempt to concilate the wants of marketing who insist on putting useless features with the needs of users who want to perform simple tasks most of the time.

  12. Decent performance; extended XML by Craig+Ringer · · Score: 4, Informative
    Lots. One that's not specific to the file formats, though probably affected by them, is performance. OO.o can be very slow at accomplishing common tasks, particularly loading and saving files. I am constantly amazed as I use OO.o day-to-day by how much RAM it manages to use on simple documents, and how long they can take to open and save. I have it sitting beside MS Office, so I can make a very direct comparison on the same hardware and OS. There are lots of things I do like about OO.o, but its performance is not one of those things.

    Beyond that, I can't say there's too much I've run into that I can do in Office but not OO.o . A lot of things are much smoother in Office, though ... one could argue that except where OO.o has gone and done something new and intersting, most of its UI is a bad clone of an old version of a bad UI (Office '97). Office has moved on, and while its UI is still pretty poor, it's a lot better than it was ... but OO'o's really hasn't moved much. Frankly, it sucks badly to use, and that's despite my being more familiar with OO.o than Office.

    I think MS's argument is a lot weaker with regards to the file format, though I'm certainly no expert. I do expect that they'll be able to implement their own formats with better performance in Office than the ODF formats, but that's hardly surprising given that they designed them with that as one of their key goals.

    More interestingly, the Office XML formats require implementing programs to preserve unrecognised valid markup from other namespaces. This lets you do things like embed (eg) an order record in an Office document, embed a JDF specification (when Publisher gets around to going XML as well), and so on. It's not exciting for the end user, but for developers and larger businesses it's a really nice thing to see. One could argue that Microsoft are getting XML "right" in a way that few have so far. Most interestingly by far, you can link the foreign markup in to your Office documents, so that (eg) a user can fill in a form in a document that's actually an XForm with your own structured data. Alternately, a newspaper could insert some custom metadata when exporting stories from a database, so it can tell what's been done with it, keep the DB up to date when the story is imported again, and so on. It's quite interesting stuff. Check out Brian Jones' weblog for some interesting use cases and discussion (and some persistent questions about the licensing issues from me).

    The ODF spec only briefly refers to this issue at all. IIRC it permits apps to do this perservation, but does not require it or provide any facilities to support it. If apps aren't required to preserve your markup, then in my view it's not much darn good - it's somewhat like saying that apps may preserve your document text and structure. OpenOffice doesn't preserve foreign markup at all. If it's not directly in the ODF spec, you can't use it. This really loses one of the great advantages that XML has, and is very disappointing.

    If we had a standard office document format that I could rely on having these features, there are some very interesting things I could do with it, especially at work. This fragementation and the ODF limitations are extremely frustrating, especially given that the ODF folks are always banging on the XML gong while missing one of the key abilities of XML entirely.

    I think MS screwed up very badly at the start by attacking ODF with rhetoric and poorly thought out garbage, not a solid arguement over capabilities and other real issues. Insufficient audiovisual support indeed...

    Personally I don't care much whether ODF or MS Office XML wins, so long as the resulting standard:
    • can be reasonably supported in all office-style apps
    • isn't too much of a moving target
    • is royalty free, including automatic royalty free licenses on any required patents
    • is controlled by a standards body
    • specifies enough core functionality that incompati
  13. That's fine by rhizome · · Score: 5, Informative

    The issue with ODF as it's come up (and Massachussetts in particular) is that they wanted to be able to publish information for the public in a format that they could use regardless of several factors, the big two of which are choice of representation and futureproofing. As has been related many many times before, there are aspects of Microsoft's own Office formats that do not get imported - or get imported in a broken state - when opening documents in more current versions of Office than they were saved in. This is where future-proofing come in.

    The idea is that the constituents of the Commonwealth should be able to read the digital documents produced by their government. It is FUD in the most classic sense that the idea was to mandate some ODF-only office suite that allowed people to work only in ODF. This is not the case. The point is accessibility for the final product.

    Think of a magazine. Magazines are commonly laid out in Quark XPress (as a common example). Quark has features like revision control, graphics control, text kerning and leading and flow-control. Myriad tweakable parameters that allow the people who work on the magazine to make it look and read the way they feel is best. We as magazine readers do not need this functionality at all in order to read the magazine. We just want to be able to pick up the publication and flip through the pages and read stories, look at pictures, and so on. These are two completely different modes of interacting with the document that are not mutually exclusive, but that intersect in the act of publication. ODF is this simplified translation for uses that do not require things like XAML.

    This is where Microsoft sought to sow seeds of doubt that the sky of document creation and workflow was falling. This is not the case, and what we read here is that what ODF proponents predicted has come true: Microsoft would not stand in the way of their users choosing to "Save As..." in the ODF format. It's just bad business for them to do so and I for one see this story as Microsoft acknowledging a big, fat "I told you so."

    I don't even want to touch the accessibility/ADA aspects of embedded media, which is entirely uneccessary for the purposes that Massachussetts wants to use ODF for, but that Microsoft purported to be 110% necessary for anybody to create documents in the future. They were trying to embrace and extend their reach into the very act of creating a document. Is any government document dependent on the creator being able to publish their Inkitudes in a native format? I don't think so! The fact remains, however, that government employees can use whatever techniques they like to create a document, but if it's going to wind up being a public document then people need to be able to access it forevermore. I certainly didn't see them promising THAT in the runup to MA's decision to use ODF.

    ODF is just another output format and there's no reason that the laws and other byproducts of governmental communication can't be published in a format that people can be confident can be incorporated into future products - it being an open and documented format - and won't be aged out in favor of Microsoft's decision that maybe Ink should be the lingua franca of Office formats (downsampled into Palatino if desired). Microsoft did not want to cede control of one iota of their Office franchise and they preferred to be able to hold the reins on just what software would be able to read a Microsoft Office document.

    --
    When I was a kid, we only had one Darth.
  14. Re:Before we get the usual FUD and Tinfoil Respons by ozmanjusri · · Score: 4, Informative
    Microsoft Word uses technologies like 'Ink' and as well as even voice structure, in addition to rich media formats that there is no STANDARD way of storing this in an ODF.

    "Ink" information can be stored in an ODF document using the Gif format as a metatdata container. This can be specified by using the Gif parameter of the Ink.Save Method.
    From MSDN;

    Gif
    2

    Specifies ink that is persisted by using a Graphics Interchange Format (GIF) file that contains ISF as metadata embedded within the file.

    This allows ink to be viewed in applications that are not ink-enabled and maintain its full ink fidelity when it returns to an ink-enabled application. This format is ideal when transporting ink content within an HTML file and making it usable by ink-enabled and ink-unaware applications.

    --
    "I've got more toys than Teruhisa Kitahara."
  15. Say what? by myxiplx · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Gotta love that. MS say they will support OpenDoc? Makes a change from last year "Yates reiterated the Microsoft does not intend to natively support the OpenDocument format" - Sept 05 (ZDNet) Also a little confused about this line: "The ODF format is limited to the features and performance of OpenOffice and StarOffice". I thought OpenDoc was created by an open consortium of companies and was based on real world needs instead of an artificial construct to match the features of a particular program. Surely MS' doc format is the only one limited specifically to the features of a particular program? And last, a real doozy: "we will support interoperability with ODF documents ... and will not oppose its standardization or use by any organization." Hmm... so how come MS spent so much time & effort lobbying Mass. in an attempt to derail their attempts to implement OpenDocument?

  16. KOffice also supports the ODF format by UseFree.org · · Score: 5, Informative

    The ODF format is limited to the features and performance of OpenOffice and StarOffice

    Micro$soft is lying through their nose. They know very well that KOffice, the Free & Open Source office suite that comes with the KDE desktop environment also supports the ODF format. In fact, they were publically informed about KOffice's capabilities last year in a open letter sent by the KOffice developers.

    Yet they continue to spread the outright lie that only OpenOffice and its derivatives support the Oasis Open Document Format (ODF).

    KOffice has a much cleaner architecture and a leaner codebase than OpenOffice, making its startup faster and facilitating the addition of new features. Because improving KOffice to meet the usability needs of governments, businesses and disabled individuals can be done with much less effort, KOffice is an even greater threat to Micro$oft.

    --
    Get computers and accessories from Linux-friendly manufacturers
    1. Re:KOffice also supports the ODF format by Dhraakellian · · Score: 3, Informative

      It doesn't run on Windows yet. But QT is being ported, and it seems that the next version of it will already run.

      Qt has pretty much always had a Windows version. The problem with Qt3, which is what KOffice 1.x uses, is that the Windows version isn't available under a F/OSS license. Qt4, however, is F/OSS-friendly on all three major platforms instead of just Mac and *nix/X11.

      KDE4 and KOffice 2 will use Qt4 (this is probably the porting that you were thinking of). With KDE and KOffice using a toolkit that is available Freely on Windows, it's only a matter of time before someone ports them over.

      --
      I've read Grocklaw. BoycottNovell, you're no Grocklaw
    2. Re:KOffice also supports the ODF format by Mateo_LeFou · · Score: 4, Interesting
      Yes. Microsoft's response to ODF has been a year-long version of that stupid dialog box that comes up and says "you are about to save in a text-only format. are you sure? you might, y'know lose some formatting or features or something"

      I'd love to rewrite that dialog so that it says something like
      "you are about to save in a text-only format. are you sure? if you do this, you will be able to access this information for the rest of your life, even if you don't continue to buy our software. Think about it very carefully, then press continue...

      --
      My turnips listen for the soft cry of your love
  17. Embrace & Destroy by gvc · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Nothing new or encouraging about this. Microsoft ruined html, Java, and so on by embedding non-standard features supported only by their software. They're well on the way to embedding Windows dependencies in Windows-generated Postscript and PDF files, too.

    Transparent as it is, the strategy is remarkably effective. The masses blame the standards-compliant software for "not working", not Microsoft for having poisoned the standard. The courts will sit on their hands and a couple of billion-dollar buyouts will silence the commercial opposition.

  18. Let's see now ... by ScrewMaster · · Score: 3, Funny

    a Microsoft Promise of Cooperation

    ... and you can take that to the bank.

    --
    The higher the technology, the sharper that two-edged sword.