Microsoft Announces OOXML-UOF Project with China
Andy Updegrove writes "Today, Microsoft announced its own interoperability project to bridge the gap between China's domestically developed Uniform Office Format (UOF) and Microsoft's OOXML. In the continuing tit for tat battle between ODF and OOXML, this announcement tracks the intent of an already-existing 'harmonization' committee, hosted by OASIS, that is exploring interoperability options between ODF and UOF. Like the OOXML-ODF translator project announced by Microsoft last year, the new effort will be an open source project hosted by SourceForge. The announcement is, in one sense, no surprise. Microsoft has been waging a nation-by-nation battle for the hearts and minds of ISO/IEC JTC1 National Bodies, in an effort to win adoption of OOXML (now Ecma 376) as a global standard with equal status to ODF (now ISO 26300). In order to do so, it needs to offset the argument that one document format standard is not only enough, but preferable. With UOF representing a third entrant in the format race, easy translation of documents would obviously be key to lessen the burden on customers of products based upon one format or the other."
Microsoft: "You want to go together on a new 'standard'?"
China: "Sure, whatever."
Microsoft: "What's wrong?"
China: "Can we still pirate software?"
Microsoft: "Sure, whatever."
"Please, shut up. Just when I think you can't say anything more stupid, you speak again." -Archie Bunker.
...yet another freakin format? Seriously!
Why are so many people so satisfied with the status quo of being locked-in to Microsoft products? Why would you want to put all your information in a basket owned by a single vendor who keeps you at their mercy? I don't want to wear any software vendor's handcuffs, even if I trusted them, and I really don't trust Microsoft at all at this point.
The only straight answer I've heard thus far was from one guy who told me it was because he owned stock in Microsoft. Windows & Office, after all, are the only two profitable divisions in all of Microsoft (and they do make one hell of a profit, precisely because of the lock-in).
A design competition for file formats would persumably benefit programmers who write word processors. But once the design is fixed, they too would rather implement one format rather than two. Again, the word processor has an internal representation of the data, and reading/writing to disk can be done in many ways. Of course, having the format be a dump of the internal (binary) data structures of your program would be a big boost -- but that can hardly be said to foster competition.
One Standard Per Child? ... let's start a organization to develop a lot of them.
Open Standards are great!
Their, their ... its not worth getting you're self upset about it. Its the tone of you're comment that infers there doing it on purpose.
it's /. not ./
retard
The article uses a quote from Churchill's WWII speech:
We shall go on to the end, we shall fight in France, we shall fight on the seas and oceans,...we shall defend our Island, whatever the cost may be, we shall fight on the beaches, we shall fight on the landing grounds, we shall fight in the fields and in the streets, we shall fight in the hills; we shall never surrender...
- Winston Churchill, June 4, 1940
It is sort of disturbing to see that and then this text in the next paragraph:
If there was any doubt left in anyone's mind that Microsoft will do everything that it can, and wherever it must, to ensure that ODF makes the minimum inroads possible into its vastly profitable Office franchise, the news of the day should put that doubt to rest. In the continuing tit for tat battle between ODF and OOXML, Microsoft announced yesterday it's own interoperability project to bridge the gap between China's domestically developed Unified Office Format (UOF) and Microsoft's OOXML...
and then this little piece: This will hardly be the last beach upon which Microsoft will defend its Office franchise.
So by this logic MS is a liberator fighting against the evil forces of Free Software.
Probably there is some comedic value in it, but honestly this leaves a very unpleasant taste.
You can't handle the truth.
I'm curious what benefits this will have to Microsoft? I thought Office as their big money maker next to Windows. The main reason to have it is because of the format war. If they support an open format, and OSS can adjust (like they have been with OpenOffice) this would drastically hurt sales of Office. There must be something that will work to their benefit else they wouldnt do it.
Hey ColonelPanic, Please Relax, they are just kids doing the best they can. Blame it on their parents. It's not their fault. Peace :)
I'm sure China would prefer their home grown standard.
The question is whether or not the features of that standard can be incorporated into ODF soon enough for China to adopt ODF as their standard instead of their home grown one.
Or can a big enough chunk of them be incorporated so that they can evolve in parallel and merge some time in the future?
Don't panic!
It's easy to loose perspective given the persistant grammar errors.
---
Cry Havoc! and set lose the dogs of war!
She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.
I don't know why these people take so long to make their standards (or "standards") into one unified format. I did it in 2 minutes. Here it is:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<gandunifieddocumentformat xmlns="...">
<ODF>
<!-- ODF stuff -->
</ODF>
<OOXML>
<!-- OOXML stuff -->
</OOXML>
<UOF>
<!-- UOF stuff -->
</UOF>
</gandunifieddocumentformat>
DONE!!!
- Bill Lennon
Home fucking is killing prostitution.
You owe me a new keyboard. :)
"We make our world significant by the courage of our questions and by the depth of our answers." Carl Sagan
Strong bad taught me this rule!
"Ooooooh if it's possessive, it's just I-T-S, buuuuuut ifit'ssupposedtobeacontraction then it's I-T-Apostrophe-S!"
I think it's only fair if everybody gets a standard of their own.
It's only right.
I thought so :)
As Andy Updegrove writes on his blog, Microsoft is taking a balls-out effort to do whatever is within its power to kill ODF. Gosh, I wonder why...
And in other news: http://www.bytesfree.org/bfblog/index.php/2007/05/ 21/all-your-rights-are-belong-to-us/
-Cyrus
I keep hearing about Word's outline view - what does it offer that OpenOffice.org's Navigator does not offer? I can move sections around, demote and promote sections, quickly jump to a section/table/picture in the document from the Navigator. Please enlighten me!
Cheers,
Toby Haynes
Anything I post is strictly my own thoughts and doesn't necessarily have anything to do with the opinions of IBM.
Your documents interoperate you.
No ODF and OOXML aren't working toward compatibility and interchange.
They are just both converging with UOF, each on it's own.
Looks just like bad behaving child that up until the end won't admit working together, and China (!) takes up the role of the elder brother/parent coming to help them.
Sometimes you can try hard making up thing, but reality will always beat you a the weirdness contest. (China is the superglue holding microsoft and Free software together).
"Sufficiently advanced satire is indistinguishable from reality." - [Tips: 1DrYakQDKCQ6y52z6QbnkxHXAocMZJE61o ]
I had ALOT of fun reading you're comment!
The press release starts with: "As part of its continued commitment to deliver interoperability by design, Microsoft ...". This is just hilarious. If lies would hurt, MS PR writers would scream the whole day.
...the pedantic "Owe owe ex ehm ell dash you owe eff" or the retarded "Ooksmul dash you off"...
Looks like it should be the caption after Batman socks The Joker in the jaw.
Stasis is death. Embrace change.
That's the great thing about standards - there are so many to choose from !
I get too much work from the .NET realm to ever diss Microsoft, because some of their stuff works quite well and saves me quite a bit of time. Some other products... forget it. I think however that when a corporation takes on more than (arbitrary number) say 40 workers, it becomes evil. And now Microsoft has fallen into that evil, and is joining with the empire that emits more greenhouse gasses than the USA, spies on our military, threatens minorities, pollutes recklessly, threatens the US with nuclear weapons, and is building up its military to challenge the US and Europe. Is the new evil empire a Microsoft-China alliance?
Anti-Globalism
We still haven't got a 'standard' image format, so why should we ever expect to see a single document format?
Consider that images are fairly easy to describe - "a grid of pixels, each pixel being a particular colour" - and then consider the plethora of image formats still in use today - bmp, jpeg, tiff, gif
Why is this the case? Because needs change depending on context - for images, format choice depends on: file size, fidelity/lossyness, multiple image support, transparency, and the doozy - backward compatibility.
Documents are much more complicated than images - fonts, content, frames, tables, embedded images etc. We'll never see a document format for the ages. Also, things change - e.g. electronic paper might see the rise of animated text/images in documents.
The best we can hope for is tools that can convert between document formats, the same way we deal with multiple image formats. And this means that the formats themselves needs to be very well defined, publicly available and not encumbered by patents.
Is this in revenge of the small number of Vista copies sold in China?
Who would win this election: Andrew Weiner vs Andrew Weiner's weiner.
http://www.searls.com/m+n.html
Note, in particular, Bill Gates' notorious "Pearl Harbor" speech of December 7th 1995, in which he warned of the emerging global threat from Java and Netscape. The author of the page cited above, Doc Searls, seemed to think that all the warlike references were just good clean fun. Gates began his speech as follows:
MR. GATES: Well, good morning. I was realizing this morning that December 7th is kind of a famous day. (Laughter.) Fifty-four years ago or something. And I was trying to think if there were any parallels to what was going on here. And I really couldn't come up with any. The only connection I could think of at all was that probably the most intelligent comment that was made on that day wasn't made on Wall Street, or even by any type of that analyst; it was actually Admiral Yamomoto, who observed that he feared they had awakened a sleeping giant. (Laughter.)
Searls' comment on this? 'I see. The "veiled threat" was Bill's opening laugh line. Even if this was "a veiled threat," it was made in good humor'.
It was news to me at the time (1995), and still is now, that there was anything funny about Pearl Harbor. From what I know of Americans' feelings of patriotism, I would have expected Gates. remarks to raise a storm of protest. But no one said a word.
So it goes.
I am sure that there are many other solipsists out there.
Rambus anyone?