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ISO Approves OOXML

sTeF writes in, with the hope that this is an April Fools joke. Doesn't look like it though. An article up at Intellectual Property Watch claims they have obtained a document (PDF) enumerating the vote after Microsoft's OOXML won ISO standard status.

435 comments

  1. Support Needed. by gnutoo · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Microsofts statement hailed the appearance of extremely broad support for the standard at the end of the ISO voting process.

    Broad? I think they mispelled bold faced fraud.

    1. Re:Support Needed. by mrbluze · · Score: 2, Funny

      Broad? I think they mispelled bold faced fraud. Or maybe they won the support by supplying extremely broad broads, or something similarly corrupt.
      --
      Do it yourself, because no one else will do it yourself. [beta blockade 10-17 Feb]
    2. Re:Support Needed. by nuzak · · Score: 5, Funny

      > I think they mispelled bold faced fraud.

      Perhaps their OOXML formatters have problems with boldface, and that's just how it rendered.

      --
      Done with slashdot, done with nerds, getting a life.
    3. Re:Support Needed. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

      No, they misspelled bribe.

    4. Re:Support Needed. by gnutoo · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Problems? That's what digital restrictions are for!

    5. Re:Support Needed. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      ISO takes pride in seeking consensus. To compare sentiment does anyone have an overview of voting results for other standards? How many opposed ODF when it was approved? How does it compare to other standards within the same area or votes for ISO-standards in general?

    6. Re:Support Needed. by ShieldW0lf · · Score: 5, Funny

      ISO... ISO... aren't they that defunct organization in Switzerland, the one that used to represent standards before they got into the advertising business and disappeared?

      --
      -1 Uncomfortable Truth
    7. Re:Support Needed. by Zymergy · · Score: 2, Insightful

      No, No, its not that random. They have an ISO standard for it!
      -They use the "ISO Standard" for the voting and selection procedures as implemented by the International Olympic Committee: http://www.google.com/search?num=50&hl=en&safe=off&q=International+Olympic+Committee+corruption&btnG=Search

    8. Re:Support Needed. by Xiph · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Lets wait for the announcement tomorrow, ISO is deliberately avoiding an Aprils Fool announcement, which could mean that it might be of a more serious nature.
      Of course if the serious nature of the announcement is approving OOXML, I'll be sending them some emails telling them what a disgrace the process has been.

      It might not change anything, but I encourage anyone with the ability to send email to do something similar.

      --
      Blah blah sig blah blah blah irony blah blah
    9. Re:Support Needed. by Ilgaz · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Investigation should have started right after they gathered ISO support for .NET. Sold out geeks kept claiming .NET is a standard and while they are stuck on version 1.0 of standard with their "mono", .NET 3.0 Apps are all over the place. .NET became Dolby Digital EX while they are stuck in Mono.

    10. Re:Support Needed. by garfi5h · · Score: 1

      Maybe they wrote the article in "OOXML Text", converted it to "OOXML Sheet" and finally converting it to "OOXML Presentation" before exporting it to HTML.

      See http://www.robweir.com/blog/2008/03/disharmony-of-ooxml.html.

      OOXML internally follows a standard which, I think, is very much similar to ISO. heh

    11. Re:Support Needed. by Gravatron · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Given the nature of the corruption this process showed, I don't think sending email is going to do much good unless said email contains bank account numbers pointing to a few million dollars.

    12. Re:Support Needed. by Quixotic+Raindrop · · Score: 1

      Done. Wrote (and waiting to send) a tersely-worded letter about the dwindling relevance of ISO when their standards ratification process is transparently manipulable. I second your motion, and encourage all who value the idea of an independent standards body ratifying standards based on their utility, technology-neutral implementation, and technical merit to write the ISO and demand accountability and review of OOXML as a standard, should that be the the announcement tomorrow.

      --
      Only two things are infinite, the universe and human stupidity, and I'm not sure about the former. (Einstein)
    13. Re:Support Needed. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It might not change anything, but I encourage anyone with the ability to send email to do something similar.

      I agree, and while e-mails are good and easier to send, they are also easier to block and pretend they never received. A good method will be to send them postcards, or letters....thousands, its more difficult to deny the fact that many letters arrived, and the space and time it takes to "manage" (shred, burn, trash) them should make them unhappy (I hope).....

    14. Re:Support Needed. by sxeraverx · · Score: 3, Funny

      Yes, and people voted for Bush. The second time around.

    15. Re:Support Needed. by Goalie_Ca · · Score: 1

      The .net is a really solid platform but i'm under no illusion that "compile once and run everywhere" will ever happen.

      --

      ----
      Go canucks, habs, and sens!
    16. Re:Support Needed. by supernova_hq · · Score: 5, Funny

      Or perhaps bank account numbers they recognize that no longer point to a few million dollars, if you catch my drift.

    17. Re:Support Needed. by Cecil · · Score: 1

      Remove the "compile once" step then.

      Interpreted languages FTW.

    18. Re:Support Needed. by Hal_Porter · · Score: 1

      How can you object to this? Suppose the stories are true and they paid people off to agree with them. How is that morally worse than using sockpuppets to support yourself in online arguments?

      --
      echo -e 'global _start\n _start:\n mov eax, 2\n int 80h\n jmp _start' > a.asm; nasm a.asm -f elf; ld a.o -o a;
    19. Re:Support Needed. by EvilNTUser · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Forget about the ISO. Send your emails to your antitrust authority instead. I doubt the US will do anything, but the EU might.

      Make sure you concisely explain why truly open document standards are important and what is wrong with Microsoft's offer.

      --
      My Sig: SEGV
    20. Re:Support Needed. by n3tcat · · Score: 2, Insightful

      It doesn't have to point to a few million dollars in gains, so long as you point out the millions of dollars in losses they will suffer with a lack of global support.

    21. Re:Support Needed. by Bert64 · · Score: 2, Informative

      I seem to remember there were no votes against it, and 1 abstention... The actual number of countries voting was much smaller too, as microsoft hadn't stuffed the system with easily bought countries by that point.

      --
      http://spamdecoy.net - free throwaway anonymous email - avoid spam!
    22. Re:Support Needed. by tpheiska · · Score: 1

      It's official http://www.iso.org/iso/pressrelease.htm?refid=Ref1123

      How can I pull a bit to half mast?

      --
      "wahts woring iwth my tyoping?"
    23. Re:Support Needed. by cloricus · · Score: 1

      I think if this is really true it is the end of ISO.

      Maybe not now or in six months, but other companies will follow Microsofts lead and a general no confidence situation will come up. At which point ISO will fall to the status of the likes of ECMA who I'm sure most people don't know about or care about. Maybe another organisation can be put together that involves truly transparent voting and better cooperation with rules that govern suspected corruption.

      Another question this raises is which previous standards are the result of corruption?

      So if you really want to call attention to ISO I suggest writing to your editorial tv shows and newspapers (Times or 60 Minutes for example) pointing out the blatant documented issues like the vote rigging and 'every one voted no but it still came out yes' situations. Some of them will do stories on it which should be enough to bring this scandal in to the open.

      --
      I ate your fish.
    24. Re:Support Needed. by matpod · · Score: 1

      i thought it was just an ecma standard, but anyhow, they had a 3.0 cli compiler out before ms, and are across theboard at approx full implementation of .net 2 these days, for the record.

    25. Re:Support Needed. by Chuq · · Score: 1

      Sorry, your generic MS Office vs OpenOffice.org troll doesn't really apply here. This is about defining a blatantly proprietary file format as an open, standard file format.

      --
      - Chuq
    26. Re:Support Needed. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Aren't they measuring the weight of shit?
      Bono has a weight of 37 curix, ...

    27. Re:Support Needed. by h4rm0ny · · Score: 1

      How can I pull a bit to half mast?

      I'm sure if you give ISO enough money, they'll happily produce a standardised Bit that can have a value of 0.5.
      --

      Aide-toi, le Ciel t'aidera - Jeanne D'Arc.
    28. Re:Support Needed. by pablochacin · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I'm afraid that this hardly will hurt ISO too much. They have some of the most important and widely used certification standards like ISO1400 (environmental management ) and ISO900 (quality management systems). Sorry, but they will be up and running for a long time.

    29. Re:Support Needed. by ShieldW0lf · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I'm afraid that this hardly will hurt ISO too much. They have some of the most important and widely used certification standards like ISO1400 (environmental management ) and ISO900 (quality management systems). Sorry, but they will be up and running for a long time.

      Yeah, I know a lot of people would like to receive credibility because they met the ISO certifications. But I'm afraid that the ISO certifications doesn't really give you credibility like it used to.

      A lot of people like the prestige that a university degree brings, but when people find out that all you had to do was pay a bunch of money and you got your certification in the mail, they're not going to give you the job. This isn't any different.

      Welcome to the modern age, where the dollar value of a good name is in how long you can deliver substandard overpriced service before people stop coming back.

      --
      -1 Uncomfortable Truth
    30. Re:Support Needed. by chrish · · Score: 2, Funny

      The quality management systems one is ISO 9000.

      You need to review your process.

      --
      - chrish
    31. Re:Support Needed. by pablochacin · · Score: 2

      I Never said I hold one :-D

    32. Re:Support Needed. by plague3106 · · Score: 1

      What the hell are you talking about? All an ISO standard means is that people can look at the standard, and implement it. So that if two people implement the same ISO standard, they should have the same implementations. I don't think it has any bearing on whether the standard is good or not.

      Sql is an ISO standard; does that mean everything in ISO Sql makes compete sense, or functions as you'd expect? No, but you DO know how everyone else that implements it expects it to act.

    33. Re:Support Needed. by mangst · · Score: 1

      Given the nature of the corruption this process showed, I don't think sending email is going to do much good unless said email contains bank account numbers pointing to a few million dollars. This kind of talk kills me. Just send a blasted email. Like with voting, it's not necessarily about making a difference...it's about expressing your opinions. The difference made becomes apparent when the sum total is taken into consideration. Indeed, one email will not make a difference, but 10,000 emails just might.
    34. Re:Support Needed. by surfi · · Score: 1

      ISO's media/press contact:

      Roger Frost
      Manager, Communication Services,
      Marketing & Communication
      E-mail frost@iso.org

      the right place to ask if ISO has any official statement about this scandal (norway, poland, EU investigation, massive irregularities..)

    35. Re:Support Needed. by Bogtha · · Score: 2, Interesting

      ISO is deliberately avoiding an Aprils Fool announcement

      Which in itself is an announcement. If they rejected OOXML, would anybody think it was a joke? No. If they rubber-stamped OOXML, would anybody think it was a joke? Yes. So, by admitting there is a danger of it being construed as a joke, what is ISO telling everybody?

      It's either that, or they aren't bothered about the joke aspect and are just using it as an excuse to stall while they figure stuff out.

      --
      Bogtha Bogtha Bogtha
    36. Re:Support Needed. by Darfeld · · Score: 1

      I wonder witch ISO is the standard for corruption...

      --
      (\__/) This is Lapinator
      (='.'=) copy it in your sig
      (")_(") so it can take over the world
    37. Re:Support Needed. by Ilgaz · · Score: 1

      If a thing runs on only one OS/platform (Win32/64 on x86) and it is interpreting things on exact same machines which runs C programs happily, I would wonder the reasons of shipping such a useless product. It must have some other reasons rather than the proposed one.

      Look at Apple, they are shipping their frameworks one by one to Windows and they never claimed they code multiplatform standard. They say "Quicktime is multiplatform" and you see the result, sometimes Windows Quicktime works better and more compatible than the Quicktime on their own OS. They silently allow open source products to ship Quicktime reading/writing apps which sometimes shows their own product as a joke.

      I say, if there is an example of a true multiplatform, compile once and run anywhere product, it is Java. I give only 2 software names, "Opera Mini" and "Azureus". Single JAR, runs anywhere and more advanced than pure C apps. If J2EE wasn't true "write once run anywhere", mainframe guys wouldn't even touch it too.

    38. Re:Support Needed. by innerweb · · Score: 1

      China, Microsoft, whats the difference?

      [/humor]

      InnerWeb

      --
      Freud might say that Intelligent Design is religion's ID.
    39. Re:Support Needed. by LearnToSpell · · Score: 1

      /

    40. Re:Support Needed. by dossen · · Score: 1

      Well, corruption could be seen as a business process, so I guess the one could design, document and implement an ISO 9000 compliant process for paying and receiving bribes etc.

    41. Re:Support Needed. by canuck57 · · Score: 1

      Forget about the ISO. Send your emails to your antitrust authority instead. I doubt the US will do anything, but the EU might.

      If the anti-trust people wanted to do anything, they would have done it a long time ago. Now I am not normally a conspirator type, but MS smacks of it like dripping wet.

      My suspicions is Microsoft is allowed to bypass anti trust by the US government goes back in time to NSAKey. The government deliberately overlooks and actually endorses Microsoft's monopoly in the in as so long as it provides the US intelligence community the back doors to your desktop and servers. Think, you register your computer, the CPU ID and OS keys go out, they evn know where you traveled and when! Microsoft is not alone in this, Sun and IBM also have call home features. It would not be too hard to say if customer 23BCD-3WEK-FU---... called in for updates to slip in a back door. Maybe that is why MS even wants the AV business, to make sure it's tools don't get filtered.

      Now they put out MOOXML, with enough ambiguity they have a proprietary standard trying to make if difficult for vetted software to compete....

      To me, MOOXLM is like RS422, no one used it. And I don't expect the US government to enforce their anti-trust laws with Microsoft. Bundling is condoned as long as it is MS.

    42. Re:Support Needed. by marcosdumay · · Score: 1

      "I say, if there is an example of a true multiplatform, compile once and run anywhere product, it is Java."

      Oh, no. You are looking for Perl (just forget about all that "compiling" stuff). Java runs on everything, assumed that it is a PC.

    43. Re:Support Needed. by msuarezalvarez · · Score: 1

      The scale of the issue and the consequences of the actions should always be taken into account when trying to make moral and ethical assessments...

    44. Re:Support Needed. by Anonymous+Brave+Guy · · Score: 1

      Sorry, friend, but I think you've misunderstood what ISO 9000 is all about.

      It doesn't require you to have a good process, only that you have some process and actually follow it.

      Of course, in my business (software development), the only reason to get formal certification for things like ISO 9000 or TickIT compliance is as a means to get contracts with clients (typically governments... surprise!) who insist on it. If anyone thinks it's actually about improving the productivity of businesses or quality of the products they make, consider that almost every practical improvement in modern management of software development processes has moved away from heavyweight formal processes that do everything step-by-step and toward more lightweight, iterative, interactive approaches in one way or another. You don't necessarily have to buy into the trendy things with words like "extreme" and "agile" associated with them, but seriously, the waterfall model died decades ago in everywhere but ISO land.

      --
      If you disagree, post your argument. (-1, Overrated) isn't your personal censorship tool for views you don't like.
    45. Re:Support Needed. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That assumes that the documentation of OOXML is accurate or complete enough in scope to cover interoperability, which it isn't :(

    46. Re:Support Needed. by Xiph · · Score: 1
      Hi again, i finished my letter, it is now send. as I'm curious as to what others might have written, here's the email i wrote:

      I'm sure you're already aware of this, or that at least the people who should be aware of this are.

      But the process which has lead to the approval of ISO/IEC 29500 OOXML has been an absolute disgrace, which raises serious questions about the standard approval processes.
      As a third party observer (I know that means I should have nothing to say) it appears clear how much this vote has been mired in corruption and cronyism, Disgrace!

      The voting process has been affected in a way which has,nothing to do with professionalism/everything to do with corporate politics. I'm saddened that this is the state of a standards body.
      If you have been paying the least bit of attention to how things have happened, I hope you are at least launching an investigation into the irregularities.
      If you are not aware of what's been going on, you should not be approving standards in the field of computing.

      Having enjoyed a lot of the previously excellent work in the field of computing, i sincerely hope that this a lapse of judgment and not a trend.

      I have to reiterate:
      As a professional it saddens me to see this 6000+ page document, which is riddled with inaccuracies approved as a standard.
      It saddens me to see that one company is able to hijack the voting process in such a horrifying obvious way as MSFT has done
      It saddens me to see a guild of professionals hijacked by corporation.
      It saddens me that those who have the option to step in, are doing nothing.
      It saddens me that ISO standards, which have so far been necessary, are now worthless.
      It saddens me that while engineers are crying foul, the standard body created by and for engineers is approving.
      It saddens me to see a standard approved, where the examples do not live up to standards. This seems beyond the scope of idiocy!

      While this is only a standard concerning office documents, for which I care relatively little, it sets a precedent which you should be fully aware of. Companies, not professionals control standards now.
      If this is how you wish it to be, so be it. I won't be adhering to agreements between companies, I hope (and suspect), I am not the only one.

      To clarify my views on what a standard should be:
      Concise.
      Disambiguous.
      Serving a purpose and extending no further.
      Neutral of environment, unless specifying the environment.
      Created and maintained by people affected by it.

      Noone should be able to sign off a standard, they do not understand!
      Noone are able to understand ISO/IEC 29500 because several key issues have NOT been specified

      Madness, Disgrace, Stupidity, Ignorance, Amateurish, Sloppy, Corrupt, Ugly and Sad

      I sincerely hope this is not the future, or I'll create my own standards body.
      --
      Blah blah sig blah blah blah irony blah blah
    47. Re:Support Needed. by Kalriath · · Score: 1

      Sql is an ISO standard; does that mean everything in ISO Sql makes compete sense, or functions as you'd expect? No, but you DO know how everyone else that implements it expects it to act. Ironically, it's near impossible to find two identical implementations (MSSQL, MySQL, PL/SQL, ad infinitum)
      --
      For a site about things like basic rights, Slashdot users sure do like to censor "dissent".
    48. Re:Support Needed. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      OTOH, the factory where my in-law works have an ISO 14000 certificate despite they contaminate heavily.

    49. Re:Support Needed. by LingNoi · · Score: 1

      uh, ok now this has gone too far, just because twitter / whoever is posting doesn't make it trolling. Stop acting like a twelve year old with all these "OMG TWITTER!!!" posts, it's getting old.

      If you can explain how the above GP is trolling rather then a mild jab, be my guest; but I'd rather have this then the "I eat shit" posts, or the random links to some dudes ass, oh and the most pointless posts on them all, the "OMG TWITTER!" posts.

      You see your post says nothing about why he should be modded troll, it's just a hate post, hence you are in fact the troll. Yes you've come what you hate most, congratulations.

      Next time instead of writing "OMG TWITTER" why don't you write something of value? Then I'll have something interesting to read that rebukes whatever twitter says instead of having to read these stupid one liners of no value which wastes everyone's time.

    50. Re:Support Needed. by LingNoi · · Score: 1

      No one voted against it. Now we have a standard for word documents, yay. So why do we need two standards on the same damn thing?

      So now if you're writing your app you have to support both ODF and OOXML. Great, waste more people's time on useless crap.

    51. Re:Support Needed. by plague3106 · · Score: 1

      MS Sql is known as T-Sql. Anyway, you can write ISO standard Sql, and all of those databases should execute the query in a consistent matter. So they all implement the standard, but also allow their own extensions. The point though is that if you want to target any Sql server adhering to the ISO standard, you can.

  2. wow that is so funny by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    But it isn't funny to make BSD is dead jokes ? i don't get it.

  3. Do they not know their own rules? by Adaptux · · Score: 5, Informative
    While I still have some doubts regarding the genuineness of this document (for example, why does it purport to come from the ISO Central Secretariat rather than from the ISO/IEC "Information Technology Task Force" (ITTF) which has been managing the voting process?), the document seems to accurately reflect the previously available information regarding the voting decisions of the national standardization bodies.

    However, how valid are those votes? For example, the ISO/IEC JTC1 directives seem to pretty explicitly forbid changing the vote from "disapprove" to "abstain" like AFNOR (the French standardization organization) did (under the influence of heavy lobbying from Microsoft and HP).

    1. Re:Do they not know their own rules? by KwKSilver · · Score: 5, Funny

      The rules? Haven't you heard of the Golden Rule: "He who had the gold makes the rules!" This is the "new and improved" ISO, aptly described by someone at Groklaw:

      I = I
      S = Sold
      O = Out

      --
      If you want your life to be different, live it differently.
    2. Re:Do they not know their own rules? by h4rm0ny · · Score: 1


      Heh! Nice one. Maybe it's time for a good old-fashioned Google-bomb for "I Sold Out"

      --

      Aide-toi, le Ciel t'aidera - Jeanne D'Arc.
    3. Re:Do they not know their own rules? by wamatt · · Score: 1

      So true.

      PS Thank you for not saying, "over at xyz (Groklaw)". Its been so overused.

  4. Abandon All Hope by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    Ye Who Code This Standard!

    1. Re:Abandon All Hope by JonathanR · · Score: 1

      Cue persistent formal requests to MS for specification details regarding "auto space like Word 95" et al. It's obviously the first step on the road to litigation/anti-trust cases.

    2. Re:Abandon All Hope by I'm+Don+Giovanni · · Score: 3, Insightful
      "Cue persistent formal requests to MS for specification details regarding "auto space like Word 95" et al. It's obviously the first step on the road to litigation/anti-trust cases."

      --------------
      This shows your ignorance (and that of the general slashdot population). The "auto space like Word 95" issue has been addressed in the latest spec (the spec that's beeen approved). That "auto space like Word 95" behavior, and the others like it, are now marked as "deprecated" (i.e. should not use for new documents) AND are fully spec'ed.

      Compatibility Settings - AutoSpaceLikeWord95

      There has also been a lot of interest in the Compatibility Settings that include the famous "AutoSpaceLikeWord95" or "truncateFontHeightsLikeWP6". Ecma worked to provide in this batch the full information necessary to implement all compatibility settings without any dependency on any product. This documentation is provided for the completeness of the spec, but these features should not be used when creating new documents. I'll discuss the compatibility settings in more detail in my next post And here are further details.

      See, this is the problem: So many of you that are railing against OOXML and against the ISO process are completely ignorant of the facts on the ground. The technical issues that you claimed to be concerned with have been addressed. So there's no technical reason to reject OOXML (there may be *political* reasons, but such reasons should have no bearing on ISO).

      For example, the Czech Republic voted NO in September, but switched to YES. Why? Because nearly every one of their issues have been addressed now.
      http://xmlguru.cz/2008/01/ecma-response-to-czech-ooxml-comments
      Do you really expect the Czech Republic to continue to oppose OOXML when nearly all of its objections to the original spec have been fixed? Why would they do that? The problems were fixed, so they switched to YES, and this was the case with many countries (those without a political agenda).

      It's like you guys are impervious to the fact that the OOXML spec has been quite improved (and that you're ranting about some old issue like "auto space like Word 95", an issue that has been resolved, *proves* it). Maybe, just maybe, if you took some time to learn the facts, learn how the spec has been changed since Sept, you'd not be so against OOXML (unless, as I suspect, your opposition is due to *political* reasons, under the mere guise of technical reasons).
      --
      -- "I never gave these stories much credence." - HAL 9000
    3. Re:Abandon All Hope by profplump · · Score: 5, Insightful

      So apparently it's not valid to complain that the new standard shouldn't need to support "truncateFontHeightsLikeWP6" in the first place? Wouldn't it be technologically superior to require MS Word to emulate "truncateFontHeightsLikeWP6" using standard formatting directives, rather than forcing every other implementer to code for compatibility with some file format that isn't even part of the spec?

      Try this one one for size:
      "15 years ago we had a file format that stored text using EBCDIC encoding. While we no longer write any files using this encoding, we propose that the new standard file format include an EBCDIC mode. We realize that traditional arguments for "backward compatibility" don't apply -- obviously none of our 15-year-old products ever produced any output in the new file format being proposed -- and we concede that we could just convert to UTF-8 encoding when saving old documents into the new format. But such conversions would require more work on our part than simply adding another encoding mode to the new file format and reusing our existing code to render in that mode. We acknowledge that this formatting directive will only benefit our product, as no one else can read our 15-year-old, unpublished format, so we'll note that the EBCDIC mode is deprecated. In spite of that note however, we will generate new files using EBCDIC mode, and therefore competing implementations must implement it as well to be functionally compliant."

    4. Re:Abandon All Hope by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The fact that "bendItLikeWord9x" is gone is good news. Unfortunately the rest of the spec is just an incredible hodgepodge. It's full of tags that look like hungarian notation or misspellings. Every office application is an island, with a completely different schema -- and speaking of schemas, some don't even use namespaces! It has a half-dozen date formats, and I don't mean supporting them, I mean different ones as defaults.

      But all that can be put aside: there were irregularities. Numerous ones. Yet you're dismissing each and every allegation as "a political agenda"? Perhaps the Czech Republic changed its vote for good reason. What about Norway? What about France? If you're alleging that there's political agendas, why don't you get specific on what those are?

      I think that half the allegations against Microsoft are unfounded. Unfortunately that still leaves a raft of ones remaining.

    5. Re:Abandon All Hope by Trails · · Score: 1

      The fact that you've only deprecated a bullshit hack like autoSpaceLikeWord95(which still requires that implementers must implement support for it), in fact proves that:
      a) the issue hasn't been resolved, just trivially mitigated enough for your truthiness spinning to just barely squeak buy as not an outright lie to anyone non technical
      b) *proves* nothing of the sort

      That OpenOffice, SunOffice, and any other office suite has to implement handling for something called "autoSpaceLikeWord95" *proves* that the standard is in at least some parts an XML dump of MS Office's data model, and also *proves* that you're a corporate shill and/or idiotic MS/MS-funded PR hack to be spouting such misleading and self-contradictory rhetorical shit.

      If anyone tried to introduce a new markup standard for the web, for example, with something like that, they'd get ridden out on a rail, unless you jackasses managed to buy out that process too.

      You cannot distract from the simple fact that:
      a) a standard should be platform independent
      b) were I to implement some software supporting OOXML, I would have to handle crap like autoSpaceLikeWord95
      c) if I ever submitted a schema with an attribute or element named thusly, I would be shitcanned as soon as the CTO finished wiping the tears of laughter from his eyes, and rightly so

    6. Re:Abandon All Hope by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      LOL
      I like the name calling ("shill", "PR hack", "jackass"), since it only goes to undercut your already very weak argument.

      BTW, there's no requirement to handle deprecated features, just a there's no requirement for browsers to handle every piece of HTML.

      Finally, how is OOXML not "platform independent"? And don't say "OLE", since ODF supports OLE too. Mac Office and iWork support OOXML, which proves that it's platform independent.

      This made me laugh out loud: "if I ever submitted a schema with an attribute or element named thusly" because I seriously doubt you've ever submitted a schema for anything in your life. You're too dumb.

    7. Re:Abandon All Hope by I'm+Don+Giovanni · · Score: 1

      I don't care whether you complain that "truncateFoneHeightsLikeWP6" shouldn't be there in the first place. Go ahead and complain.

      But the point is the poster to which I replied said, "Cue persistent formal requests to MS for specification details regarding "auto space like Word 95" et al. It's obviously the first step on the road to litigation/anti-trust cases.", completely unaware that "auto space like Word 95" has already been fully detailed in the ISO-approved spec. And it shows that most of you are speaking out of (sadly, willfull) ignorance on these matters.

      --
      -- "I never gave these stories much credence." - HAL 9000
    8. Re:Abandon All Hope by Hal_Porter · · Score: 1

      Wouldn't it be technologically superior to require MS Word to emulate "truncateFontHeightsLikeWP6" using standard formatting directives, rather than forcing every other implementer to code for compatibility with some file format that isn't even part of the spec? It's suppressTopSpacingWP. Look at the part of the spec quoted here -

      http://blogs.msdn.com/brian_jones/archive/2008/01/18/suppresstopspacingwp-compat-settings-1.aspx

      This is what happens when the user selects "Suppress extra line spacing like WordPerfect 5.x" in Tools->Options->Compatibility. If suppressTopSpacingWP didn't exist, that UI element could not work. If you don't want to implement it in your competing office suite, no one is forcing you. If you do want to support documents saved when it was checked, the effect it has on basline to baseline distance is documented thanks to the ISO process where people complained until it was documented. That was the quid pro quo for them voting for it as a standard rather than against.
      --
      echo -e 'global _start\n _start:\n mov eax, 2\n int 80h\n jmp _start' > a.asm; nasm a.asm -f elf; ld a.o -o a;
    9. Re:Abandon All Hope by profplump · · Score: 4, Insightful

      If you'd like to comment on how some people are not aware of recent changes to the specification, and how those specific arguments against the spec aren't technically sound, be my guest. In some cases, such as the specific comment you replied to, you'd be perfectly justified.

      But your language doesn't contest the validity of a particular comment -- even your most recent comment here accuses "most of [us]" of willful ignorance. And your prior comment likewise accuses the community at large of having only political objections to this new "standard". It's a bit hypocritical to make generalized accusations and then dismiss rebuttals as irrelevant because they didn't address the specific comment to which you general attack happens to be attached.

    10. Re:Abandon All Hope by Alsee · · Score: 1, Troll

      there's no technical reason to reject OOXML

      Hahaha. That's a hoot.

      Yes a thousand or some such problems have been partially or completely improved during this ridiculously brief superficial joke of a fast-track process. But that is only because there were five to ten thousand or more errors and flaws in this hastily and carelessly slapped together OOXML proposal.

      Hell, some of the "fixes" applied in the last vote in fact BROKE the OOXML document in. In this this total joke of a process they forced blind "yes-no" votes on many hundred "fixes" to many hundreds of errors and flaws of this absurdly broken document without permitting any chance to analyze and discuss those proposed "fixes", and some of those "fixes" were contradictory or otherwise themselves broken. It has merely been a quickly first pass at assembling a laundry list of problems, and we have had an absolutely half-assed first pass at fixing the errors of that first pass laundry list.

      Claiming that "there's no technical reason to reject OOXML" is a total joke. Either you are astroturfing, or you don't actually know anything about the technical state of OOXML and for some bizarre reason you have total blind faith in the the Microsoft party line of gross misrepresentations and outright lies.

      I am a programmer. I have looked at parts of this OOXML document. There are still endless technical problems with it. The normal non-fasttrack ISO process would take years and years struggling to rework this OOXML mess up to par for an ISO standard.

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    11. Re:Abandon All Hope by profplump · · Score: 1

      If suppressTopSpacingWP didn't exist, that UI element could not work

      I find that hard to believe. For that matter I find it hard to believe that you believe it, at least if you think about it. That's like saying that you need a special formatting directive just because WordPerfect 1.1 had a checkbox that said "Set all text to 12 point Times" -- you could simply set the font type to "Times" and the size to "12" without losing any text or changing any formatting.

      The file format should not dictate a user interface, nor be dictated by one -- it should simply provide a way to preserve the data needed to accurately recreate the document in any compliant implementation. That leaves implementations free to make their own decisions about what behaviors are document-specific vs. program-wide.

      Now if you'd like to stash some implementation-specific data into a comment or other non-document-data section of the file to support your user interface, be my guest. I'm all for preserving UI settings between sessions among implementations that share a common UI. Just don't confuse the UI data with information necessary for reconstructing the document data accurately.

      Heck, MS already does this with the HTML generation from Office programs -- they output a reasonably-compatible (for MS at least) HTML document, but it's full of tags intended to help MS Office programs restore various OLE data that has no meaning in HTML. The document contains all the information necessary to accurately render the document in any HTML engine, but also preserves Office-specific data for programs that know what to do with it. Is there some reason all these backward-compatibility hacks couldn't do the same thing?

      If you don't want to implement it in your competing office suite, no one is forcing you. If you do want to support documents saved when it was checked.

      I'd like to support the formatting implied by that checkbox, so I can render documents consistently with other implementations. But I have no use for the checkbox itself, and I don't see why the effect of the checkbox couldn't be translated into more general formatting directives to produce the same output without requiring a whole separate rending mode.

    12. Re:Abandon All Hope by seebs · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Nice flagrant lie.

      Not about the deprecation. About its impact.

      The impact of deprecation? ZERO.

      Everyone still has to implement it, or they are not correctly implementing the standard for existing documents. Failure to implement that means failure to comply with the standard.

      This is how we know OOXML is not a real standard. It's just a documentation of the state of MS software at a particular point. In a standard intended for actual use by more than one party, the historical things would not be a part of the standard at all; they would be extensions which most people wouldn't use.

      Seriously, I went over this document not that long ago. It's still a joke. It's still not a technically viable standard. The "addressing" you point to doesn't come close to the minimal requirements we'd have imposed on one of the real standards.

      I could be mistaken. I mean, hey, I only did about a decade of work on ISO C. Maybe nowadays we just slap any old thing together, and declare that it "fixes" a problem if we say that something is deprecated, and while everyone is absolutely required to implement it, we don't want people making it happen in new code anymore.

      But I don't think so.

      --
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    13. Re:Abandon All Hope by Bert64 · · Score: 1

      Well, ODF "supports" OLE being embedded in it, but i believe you can only use it on windows systems.. If you load such a document on a mac or linux system it won't work correctly.

      Mac office supports MOOXML, which is based on the original OOXML spec, not the newer version, and is still not fully compliant even with that version.

      As for iWork, why don't you try passing documents back and forth between the 3 supposed OOXML supporting apps, start using some of the more exotic formatting features and see what happens...

      --
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    14. Re:Abandon All Hope by Hal_Porter · · Score: 1

      I find that hard to believe. For that matter I find it hard to believe that you believe it, at least if you think about it. That's like saying that you need a special formatting directive just because WordPerfect 1.1 had a checkbox that said "Set all text to 12 point Times" -- you could simply set the font type to "Times" and the size to "12" without losing any text or changing any formatting. From the document I linked to, which you really should read, it looks like this strange compress top spacing is almost like a bug in WP5.x and you can't get the same effect in other ways. And your proposed equivalent solution isn't really the same thing. The point about this attribute is it compresses the space above every line of text in some special way, regardless of how the text is formatted and without otherwise changing the formatting. That's not equivalent to reformatting everything to Times 12pt. Most people would kill you if you did that to a document they had spent time working on.

      Do you have much experience in writing office packages by any chance? Given that you didn't sit in on the design meetings for this feature, it seems a bit presumptive of you to claim that there's a better, simpler solution. If you're making millions out of selling the world's best selling office product, there are probably constraints on how you implement things. You know, like compatibility with all the software you've shipped.

      I'd like to support the formatting implied by that checkbox, so I can render documents consistently with other implementations. Well you can now, because it's documented. And it's an official ISO standard, so it seems like they managed to convince a few people that it was OK. OpenOffice is already implementing it too.
      --
      echo -e 'global _start\n _start:\n mov eax, 2\n int 80h\n jmp _start' > a.asm; nasm a.asm -f elf; ld a.o -o a;
    15. Re:Abandon All Hope by amorsen · · Score: 1

      The file format should not dictate a user interface, nor be dictated by one -- it should simply provide a way to preserve the data needed to accurately recreate the document in any compliant implementation. That leaves implementations free to make their own decisions about what behaviors are document-specific vs. program-wide. Or, in other words, you should abolish word processors. I'm completely with you on that one. Word processors are all horribly buggy, and users rely on the formatting bugs when they make their documents. If you then FIX the bugs, the documents end up looking like crap (well even more like crap than such documents look even in the best case.)

      Anyway, it is basically impossible to emulate the bugs by putting the appropriate formatting directives in the files. The format isn't expressive enough (despite the 6000 pages).
      --
      Finally! A year of moderation! Ready for 2019?
    16. Re:Abandon All Hope by jollyreaper · · Score: 1

      I prefer "Abandon all hope ye who [press] enter here."

      --
      Kwisatz Haderach
      Sell the spice to CHOAM
      This Mahdi took Shaddam's Throne
    17. Re:Abandon All Hope by Znork · · Score: 1

      and that of the general slashdot population

      I'm sorry, we just haven't been paid as much as you.

      So there's no technical reason to reject OOXML

      With the level of bribes and vote stacking Microsoft had to engage in to get this passed it's obvious it would have been rejected on technical merits.

    18. Re:Abandon All Hope by mrchaotica · · Score: 1

      This shows your ignorance (and that of the general slashdot population). The "auto space like Word 95" issue has been addressed in the latest spec (the spec that's beeen approved). That "auto space like Word 95" behavior, and the others like it, are now marked as "deprecated" (i.e. should not use for new documents) AND are fully spec'ed.

      I see links to a blog. Where are the links to the spec? Proof or STFU!

      --

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

    19. Re:Abandon All Hope by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

      BTW, there's no requirement to handle deprecated features, just a there's no requirement for browsers to handle every piece of HTML.
      But Microsoft's promise not to sue you over violating their patents on parts of OOXML only applies to complete implementations. So, those deprecated features are just as optional as not getting sued is.
    20. Re:Abandon All Hope by MightyMartian · · Score: 1

      I'm pretty sure you pop up here every time OOXML is discussed and spread the bullshit pretty liberally. I think it's pretty obvious now that you are a shill, no doubt on command from your masters at Redmond to bald-faced lie. The OOXML spec still makes the references, they have not been adequately dealt with, and it will still mean guys like OO.org are going to have to reverse engineer, and potentially put themselves in the way of future litigation since your masters won't release OOXML in a real public license.

      Now slink back, you lying sack of crap.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    21. Re:Abandon All Hope by mydn · · Score: 1

      Sweet! Since I have to deal with EBCDIC every day from the IBM mainframe that our .NET apps integrate with, this would be very useful!

    22. Re:Abandon All Hope by Alex+Belits · · Score: 1

      Or, in other words, you should abolish word processors. I'm completely with you on that one. Word processors are all horribly buggy, and users rely on the formatting bugs when they make their documents. If you then FIX the bugs, the documents end up looking like crap (well even more like crap than such documents look even in the best case.) Do you believe that document formats:

      1. are formats for files that store word processors' internal state,

      or

      2. represent information that user intended to store in the document?

      If it's the first, you are in Microsoft camp -- formats exist for benefit of the software vendors, and software vendor should forever remain a gatekeeper between user and his data. If it's the second, then there is absolutely no reason for keeping anything in the document that makes initial developer's life easier (does not have to convert every peculiar formatting into generalized form) but does not benefit the user (all software that the user uses from this point has to have re-implementation of every broken logic once used to [mis]-format the text, wasting massive amounts of resources and developers' time).
      --
      Contrary to the popular belief, there indeed is no God.
    23. Re:Abandon All Hope by toriver · · Score: 1

      Sort of; it could still have minimum requirements that didn't cover the whole. So a "compliant" application would have to be able to *read* a standard document but be allowed fallbacks

      E.g. SQL-92; I saw an Oracle manual where it addressed standard compliance, and said they implemented SQL-92 *basic*, and heaved a lot of proprietary molasses on top.

      Or CSS1: Where they helpfully operate with a "CSS Core" concept which lets an implementor, even if they have to *parse* e.g. "border-style" correctly, can get away by implementing this: "CSS1 core: UAs may interpret all of 'dotted', 'dashed', 'double', 'groove', 'ridge', 'inset' and 'outset' as 'solid'.". Not ISO, but still. In fact for internet technologies it could be argued both the W3C and IESG are more important than ISO...

      ISO standards are otherwise frequently full of aspects "left for further study" (if a deadline suddenly appeared around the bend) or "left to the implementation" (if corporate infighting in the JTC reared its ugly head). So how helpful they are is up for diuscussion.

    24. Re:Abandon All Hope by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, God forbid that anyone actually tries to counter the FUD that goes on around here.

    25. Re:Abandon All Hope by amorsen · · Score: 1

      Do you believe that document formats: 1. are formats for files that store word processors' internal state, or 2. represent information that user intended to store in the document? I believe 2), but I do not believe it is possible to make a word processor which actually does that. At least none so far have come close.

      We'd be much better off if that type of application was never invented, and we instead used something like FrameMaker. Anyway, have you ever read ODF files (after unzipping, of course)? They aren't as ugly as OOXML, but they certainly aren't something you can immediately make sense of without knowing the standard, like nice HTML. If only CSS had worked out to be strong enough that you could do a close to 1 1 conversion of FrameMaker documents, it would probably have replaced a lot of Word documents.
      --
      Finally! A year of moderation! Ready for 2019?
    26. Re:Abandon All Hope by MightyMartian · · Score: 1

      Well, now that you've admitted you're one of Redmond's little whores, you can bugger off and tell your masters that you failed, that no one believes Microsoft's bullshit stories and that MightyMartian, who actually, for real, administers a network with MS machines is going to making recommendations in the next year that my organization move away from overpriced proprietary Microsoft office apps to more open ones, as the first stage in a strategy to purge Microsoft's expensive, standards-evading "solutions" from the network. May be stuck with XP for a while, but then again, we weren't going to be upgrading to your whoremasters' Vista horror story anyways.

      Kindly shut the door behind you, Redmond whore-boy.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    27. Re:Abandon All Hope by Alex+Belits · · Score: 1

      We'd be much better off if that type of application was never invented, and we instead used something like FrameMaker. And it would work, too, if its internal format was as flexible as TeX. And it still can provide a wordprocesor-like user interface at the expense of creating more markup behind the scenes but allowing a "clean" layout/markup mode for those who appreciate it.

      Anyway, have you ever read ODF files (after unzipping, of course)? They aren't as ugly as OOXML, but they certainly aren't something you can immediately make sense of without knowing the standard, like nice HTML. If only CSS had worked out to be strong enough that you could do a close to 1 1 conversion of FrameMaker documents, it would probably have replaced a lot of Word documents. Not only I did, once when I had to HTML-ize documentation that I made in OpenOffice, I used semi-manual conversion from ODT XML, and ended up with one of the best-formatted documents I ever produced. Those two representations are made from the same ODT file:

      PDF

      HTML.

      It's also important to take into account that people started using Wiki for documentation, so clean, recognizable markup elements are finally becoming welcome in the horrible mess that is corporate documentation processing.

      A wordprocessor that can cut and paste a Wiki-formatted page, and a spreadsheet that can produce separate representation of static text, formulas and combination of two would be infinitely superior to everything Microsoft ever produced, however those products would have to carry a massive baggage of braindead formatting modes if they were to be compatible with OOXML documents, Microsoft Office will continue churning out.
      --
      Contrary to the popular belief, there indeed is no God.
  5. oh yea by play+with+my+balls · · Score: 1, Funny

    I'd let the ISO nestle it's balls in my mouth.

    --
    I have enormous balls
    1. Re:oh yea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      nestle it's balls

      "its".

  6. Here come Barbra... by Naughty+Bob · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I think we all expected MSFT's chicanery to work in the short-term.

    But witness that recent brand-awareness survey- As understanding of the computer world seeps into mainstream conciousness, MSFT's rotten practices are coming back to haunt them.

    Let's hope that the mainstream media picks up on the insanely obvious corruption involved here, and the Streisand Effect kicks in.

    I don't think this is the best outcome for open/free standards, but it should still be viewed as a win, long-term.

    --
    "Be light, stinging, insolent and melancholy"
    1. Re:Here come Barbra... by freedumb2000 · · Score: 1

      Let's hope that the mainstream media picks up on the insanely obvious corruption involved here, and the Streisand Effect kicks in. Let me make a prediction: they won't. Please, let this be an Aprils fools joke.
    2. Re:Here come Barbra... by Zeinfeld · · Score: 1

      I think we need a standard for Slashdot dupe elimination. Admittedly the first story purported to be a leak but so is this, surely this is at most an update to the previous story?

      --
      Looking for an Information Security student project suggestion?
      Try http://dotcrimeManifesto.com/
    3. Re:Here come Barbra... by v1 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      And they ask "why?" Because there's nothing to bolster your company like buying a standards committee or two. I wonder which one they'll shop for next? ISO is going to be a pretty tough bargain to beat.

      --
      I work for the Department of Redundancy Department.
    4. Re:Here come Barbra... by westlake · · Score: 0, Troll
      But witness that recent brand-awareness survey. As understanding of the computer world seeps into mainstream conciousness, MSFT's rotten practices are coming back to haunt them.

      The surveys that Microsoft cares about tend to look more like these:

      The Year of Office 2007
      Microsoft SharePoint taking business by storm
      Microsoft Q2 2008 by the Numbers
      Top Operating System Versions Share Trend for May, 2007 to March, 2008, Top Operating System Share Trend for May, 2007 to March, 2008 , Operating System Market Share for March, 2008

      In the Net Applications stats you'll find Vista winning a healthy 14% share of the market and Linux neatly sandwiched between Win NT and Win 98 with a 0.61% share.

    5. Re:Here come Barbra... by wellingj · · Score: 1

      Nah they are going to get their millage out ISO now that they bought it. We are going to have a standardized OS for every PC.

  7. Vader by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    NOOOOOOOOOO!!!

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

      No, it's a good thing for Vader. It means he won't have to dodge any flying chairs next time he meets his boss.

    2. Re:Vader by ksd1337 · · Score: 1

      Dick Cheney?

  8. Thank God by Mateo_LeFou · · Score: 5, Funny

    I've had so many clients asking if I can scrape data from their legacy lockinware. Now I can confidently say "Yes" and bill them for the 1400 hours it takes to read this spec.

    Thank you MS!

    --
    My turnips listen for the soft cry of your love
    1. Re:Thank God by brunascle · · Score: 1

      i know you're joking, but actually scraping the text data wouldnt be hard at all. about as hard as a properly formatted XHTML file, the same with ODF. the text is stored in a fairly easy to understand XML document. it's the styling stuff that's screwy.

  9. Good. Now at least we know where the filth is by unity100 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    and what to avoid. and no, im not a bigoted fanboi of any camp - im just reflecting upon the series of stunts ms pulled to get that format validated. judging from the level they lowered themselves in dirty work to get this through with bribing and manipulating, i'd say that their format has to be total crap. else it wouldnt need that level of filthy campaigning.

    1. Re:Good. Now at least we know where the filth is by loafula · · Score: 3, Funny

      so, basically microsoft is like hillary clinton?

      --
      FOXTROT UNIFORM CHARLIE KILO
    2. Re:Good. Now at least we know where the filth is by Adult+film+producer · · Score: 1

      no, not like hillary but more like Miguel De Icaza of microsoft, i mean Novell.

    3. Re:Good. Now at least we know where the filth is by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, they are like Hillary Clinton, and like John McCain, and like Barack Obama. Thank goodness for competing standards.

  10. Basically, what they just did by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    was to retroactively standardize 20 years of legacy document formats. All MS-OOXML really is is a forwards-compatible XML serialization of the Microsoft Office 2003 formats.

    And yes, many at Microsoft do consider the whole standardization process to be a sham. (I know, because I work there.)

    1. Re:Basically, what they just did by eerok · · Score: 4, Interesting

      "All MS-OOXML really is is a forwards-compatible XML serialization of the Microsoft Office 2003 formats."

      In other words it's not an open document format due to all the legacy proprietary crap it embodies. Thanks, but we knew that already.

      Actually, all MS did was make a joke out of the process of establishing standards. That's okay, the world can take a joke. But it holds grudges.

      --
      "The happiness of credulity is a cheap and dangerous quality." -- George Bernard Shaw
    2. Re:Basically, what they just did by garfi5h · · Score: 1

      was to retroactively standardize ... You call this standard? http://www.robweir.com/blog/2008/03/disharmony-of-ooxml.html
    3. Re:Basically, what they just did by westlake · · Score: 1
      Basically, what they just did was to retroactively standardize 20 years of legacy document formats.

      explain to me why such a pragmatic decision should come as a surprise to anyone. or, to put the question another way, how many industrial standards simply rationalize practices of long standing?

    4. Re:Basically, what they just did by Chris+Burke · · Score: 4, Insightful

      explain to me why such a pragmatic decision should come as a surprise to anyone. or, to put the question another way, how many industrial standards simply rationalize practices of long standing?

      Ah, that's very common. There will be various competing versions of something, and they vie in the marketplace as much as before standards boards, and eventually one is chosen as the standard. Including using dirty tricks to influence the process, to gain the advantage of it being your version which all your products already use that becomes standard.

      Here's what's different:

      At the end of the day, after the politics ended, the intent and result of these proceedings was to standardize and thus increase interoperability. The standards themselves enabled that, allowing multiple implementations of the standard that would work together. Even if one company gains an advantage in the near term, that doesn't last long and then things just start working better together, and choice and opportunity are increased.

      This is the exact opposite. The intent and result of this process is to damage interoperability by creating a standard that nobody can duplicate, that not even Microsoft themselves have implemented. It's only purpose is to derail acceptance of a true open standard like ODF. There will be no market around OOXML tools and products, because the only one that will ever use it is MS Office, and they aren't even obligated to follow the standard they created. That doesn't matter. All they want to be able to do is shout "We're an ISO standard!" when the government rep starts talking about how they require "open" documents. That's all.

      --

      The enemies of Democracy are
    5. Re:Basically, what they just did by WebCowboy · · Score: 1

      retroactively standardize 20 years of legacy document formats

      And this comes as news to who exactly? There is an ancient joke, one I first heard when Windows 3.x was still current:

      Q. How many Microsoft employees does it take to change a light bulb?
      A. NONE. Microsoft just declares darkness to be the new standard in illumination.

      MSFT built its success on creating de-factor standards starting with its very first product. Microsoft BASIC was born on the Altair 8800 and was the only serious BASIC implementation on S100 bus systems. MSBASIC was then ported to 680x and 6502, then licensed to Tandy, Commodore then Apple. It became the "standard" dialect of BASIC, and if you wrote MS-BASIC code without using embedded machine language (PEEK, POKE and CALL/SYS/USR), graphics beyond ASCII-art and sound (ie. support "lowest common denominator" hardware) then that code would run unmodified on basically ALL S100-based machines, Commodore machines, TRS-80s and Apple ][s with Applesoft BASIC.

      De-facto standardisation is what "embrace and extend" is all about too: MSFT buys or licenses (for a one-time bargain fee) some emerging technology, or blatantly copies it, then adds its own "flavour" to it. Then it leverages its position in the market to make it ubiquitous and thus a "de-facto standard". MSFT bought out SCP and used SCP's CP/M work-alike and its leverage with the IBM deal to make MS-DOS into such a standard. It licensed Mosiac from Spyglass and extended it into IE and made it the "standard" browser, leading to a giant legion of tragically lazy web developers turning out piles of garbage code that was "good enough" because it worked with IE.

      All that is new is that MSFT is now pulling out all the stops to make their pseudo-standards into "official" standards because legislation was getting in the way. This started with participation in WWW standards (MSFT was involved early and heavily in CSS, SOAP, ECMAscript/Javascript...), then it got standards approval for .NET back at 1.0 and now it has OOXML. I'm all for MSFT being an active participant in creating standards, however they have a poor track record on compliance:

      * They maintained non-standard IE behaviours and extensions in Javascript, and maintained support for its own bastardised scripting dialect VBScript, and continues to do so to this day in the name of "compatibility" that nobody needs anymore.

      * Despite being so involved in getting CSS level 1 to fruition, it wasn't until IE7 that they even came close to being serious about complying with the standard...and once again they maintained a broken box model in "quirks mode" to this day in the name of compatibility so that lazy web developers wouldn't have to look at their crap code ever again...even though the WWW is so dynamic that web pages are reworked with regularity anyways.

      * .NET is an official standard, and there exists a multi-platform implementation in the form of MONO, but MSFT has done nothing to make extensions from .NET 2.x and later standard...that mess up the embrace and extend strategy.

      OOXML will follow just this path, I'm quite sure. Their own Office 2007 doesn't fully and properly comply with even the draft approved by ECMA. MSFT products will NEVER fully comply, but they are first out the door to "support" OOXML, in the same sense that IE "supports" HTML, CSS and Javascript. This ensures that non-complying MSOffice 2007 documents may suffer "fidelity loss" when opened, say, in OO.o, but, as they say, "it's good enough for government work" (ie. it gets them past standrads legislation and ensures agencies favour MSFT because it "works the best" with the most prevalent OOXML dialect).

      Furthermore, the copious amounts of deprecated, "backwards compatiblity directives" are basically "de-facto lock-in features". You just KNOW there are tons of Office 95/97/2000 and even WordPerfect docs archived out there. When these are passed through MSOffice 2007 or later and

    6. Re:Basically, what they just did by SirraH77 · · Score: 1

      I totally agree. Now they can say that OOXML is an ISO standard when some one (making it decisions) is knowledgeable enough to ask about it.

  11. ISO death bell by mugnyte · · Score: 5, Insightful

    And with that - the "standards body" of ISO was effectively taken down. FUD shovelers everywhere will begin the slow, purposeful targeting of Government, school and corporations to use MS's products for long-term archival concepts.

      Perhaps with only gnashing of teeth from the geek side, initially. After some time, say 3 or 4 product cycles, MS's formats, content and programs will have slipped into breaking changes - with various patches, pieces, conversion tools and sunsets. Then and only then, will the true colors of MS's saletroopers, who overrule the tech side, be shown. But you know this - why else would you be trawling the /. comments down here?

      In other news, the business of writing code to munge data from old MS formats into new MS formats is alive and well. Programmers rejoice! There is an endless market of chagrined middle managers who are willing to port old crap to new crap for good $/hour.

    1. Re:ISO death bell by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      LOL. You clearly have no understanding of the ISO. They're responsible for thousands of standards in a wide variety of industries. Even if people ignored their computer-related standards, few would notice. The ISO is mostly known for their manufacturing process and quality control standards.

    2. Re:ISO death bell by Akaihiryuu · · Score: 1

      Maybe so...but if this is true noone will ever trust any of their computer-related "standards" again.

    3. Re:ISO death bell by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      They didn't anyway - ISO are the jokers that gave us the ridiculously baroque and unused 7-layer network model that many a 90s undergrad was made learn by rote. ISO are the ones that decimalised "megabyte" (arguably correctly - but came up with the ridiculous-sounding "mebi" alternative. ISO have always been of dubious relevance in the computing industry (until Microsoft bought them too, ECMA were much more relevant). The real relevant force in computing is the IETF. Now, that standards process still works, despite microsoft's active involvement.

    4. Re:ISO death bell by Akaihiryuu · · Score: 1

      Interesting. This means I can now forget about their "megabyte" definitions and insist that one MB is 1024K and one GB is 1024MB, as it should be.

    5. Re:ISO death bell by Ilgaz · · Score: 1

      A standards body is non existent if people/governments and large corporations openly accuses them or suspects fraud.

      They would gather and setup ISO 2.0. If you think about JPEG being an ISO standard, you can imagine how important ISO is. Wonder if they will approve "HD Photo" from Microsoft as a ISO standard too?

      With that decision, they are open to every kind of accusation. A company can remind "OOXML" when a completely irrelevant standard passes which would be in favour of a large corporation.

      Companies should ask themselves "What if Microsoft goes chapter 11 in matter of a decade" and decide their formats based on that. All computers I owned in 1980s were made by huge, untouchable large companies which nobody could even imagine their fall. It happened.

    6. Re:ISO death bell by gregorio · · Score: 2, Insightful

      A standards body is non existent if people/governments and large corporations openly accuses them or suspects fraud.
      ISO was never accused of fraud by anyone relevant. The only time when "irregularities" were mentioned, it was related to Norway's own standard comitee, and not ISO's.

      They would gather and setup ISO 2.0. If you think about JPEG being an ISO standard, you can imagine how important ISO is. Wonder if they will approve "HD Photo" from Microsoft as a ISO standard too?
      So...? Lots of international standards, from ISO, DIN, JIS, ASTM and others are redundant. Those institutions aren't responsible for choosing "the format". Their job is to give a name to accepted technical specifications, to distribute them and also inspect how companies and products are being certified in relation to these standards.

      Almost every single OSS nerd, even the ones opening anti-ooxml websites and posing as experts, are spweing this crap around the interwebs. Repeat after me: standard bodies are not responsible for definitive and unique specifications, lots of standards fill the same void and specify things related to the same subjects.

      With that decision, they are open to every kind of accusation. A company can remind "OOXML" when a completely irrelevant standard passes which would be in favour of a large corporation.
      Standards are not laws. Companies will only follow standards only if they're useful for the process of making money. Standards are created to allow the participating parties of a project, including the open market, to speak the same language. And that's not because they want to play nice, but because that saves money. If a standard is not relevant to the company's profit margin, it will not be used weather it was defined by Microsoft or by friendly buddhist monks.

      Companies should ask themselves "What if Microsoft goes chapter 11 in matter of a decade" and decide their formats based on that. All computers I owned in 1980s were made by huge, untouchable large companies which nobody could even imagine their fall. It happened.
      They should only ask that if their documents are not stored in the format defined by the ISO standard. If their documents are OOXML-based, your suggestion is pointless.
    7. Re:ISO death bell by gregorio · · Score: 0, Troll

      LOL. You clearly have no understanding of the ISO. They're responsible for thousands of standards in a wide variety of industries. Even if people ignored their computer-related standards, few would notice. The ISO is mostly known for their manufacturing process and quality control standards
      Even worse: almost 100% of the people and companies who are the real ISO's customers and user base were in OOXML's favor. Not because they love Microsoft, or because they're dying to choose OOXML instead of ODF, but because they actually understand the standardization process, and having companies specify their formats (even when there are other standards on the same subject) is part of why we have ISO in the first place.

      Those international standard bodies could not care LESS about what OSS zealots think. They're not relevant to their operations and existance.

      What actually happened in this whole OOXML situation was OSS zealots making fools of themselves, in front of the entire market. Every smart person realised that it was just a silly, childish "omg, let's fight hard to screw microsoft on this one" festival of crappy activism.
    8. Re:ISO death bell by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You can, because Google agrees.

      1 MB in bytes -> 1 megabyte = 1 048 576 bytes

    9. Re:ISO death bell by epine · · Score: 1

      Standards are not laws. Companies will only follow standards only if they're useful for the process of making money. You've completely missed the point. Any jurisdiction that signs into law a requirement for government to use standardized document preservation formats can now elect to continue using Microsoft Office.

      What the heck did you think they were fighting over in the first place?
    10. Re:ISO death bell by amilham · · Score: 1

      You know, filing "chapter 11" does not mean going out of business.

    11. Re:ISO death bell by Hal_Porter · · Score: 1

      That was the IEC. They were also responsible for getting Hitler interested in military history.

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Binary_prefix#IEC_standard_prefixes

      What I think is funny about that is the way the percentage difference between what hard disk manufacturers define as a [kilo|mega|giga|tera] byte, i.e. 10^(3n) and the 'traditional' binary definition i.e. 2^(10n) grows with n. So a hard disk maker's megabyte is 95% traditional megabytes. But with gigabytes it's 93% and terabytes it's 90%. So this scheme devalues the [kilo|mega|giga|tera]byte a bit more each generation. Genius.

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Binary_prefix#Approximate_ratios_between_binary_and_decimal_prefixes

      --
      echo -e 'global _start\n _start:\n mov eax, 2\n int 80h\n jmp _start' > a.asm; nasm a.asm -f elf; ld a.o -o a;
    12. Re:ISO death bell by Ilgaz · · Score: 1

      The only and strictly single way of opening a OOXML document in its pixel/inch perfect form with every detail is having $400 MS Office '08 which even OS X version has some problems.

      They voted that "thing" to be a international standard. It is basic as that.

    13. Re:ISO death bell by cgenman · · Score: 1

      ...And a thousand other companies saw what happened here today. A thousand drafts have already been started for ISO standards for iTunes file protection, arbitrary file compression, and so forth.

    14. Re:ISO death bell by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      "You've completely missed the point. Any jurisdiction that signs into law a requirement for government to use standardized document preservation formats can now elect to continue using Microsoft Office."

      FINALLY!!
      Finally someone is actually being honest about their true motivations. This isn't about standards, this is about banning MS Office from government use! And a higher cause, of which I cannot imagine!

    15. Re:ISO death bell by marcosdumay · · Score: 1

      No, that is about banishing closed proprietary formats from govenment distribution. There is no provision at my country's Constitution giving Microsoft power to tax me.

    16. Re:ISO death bell by gregorio · · Score: 1

      No, that is about banishing closed proprietary formats from govenment distribution. There is no provision at my country's Constitution giving Microsoft power to tax me.
      I guess youre confusing "closed" with "from companies I hate", because OOXML is now a standard, even if you try to argue that it is a poorly-written one.
    17. Re:ISO death bell by gregorio · · Score: 1

      "You've completely missed the point. Any jurisdiction that signs into law a requirement for government to use standardized document preservation formats can now elect to continue using Microsoft Office."
      FINALLY!! Finally someone is actually being honest about their true motivations. This isn't about standards, this is about banning MS Office from government use! And a higher cause, of which I cannot imagine!
      That was exactly my point on a previous message. This is all about creating a forced monopoly for ODF, and not about true technical issues. Most people want to just screw Microsoft over with this issue. They care about only "Governments being able to keep using Microsoft".
    18. Re:ISO death bell by gregorio · · Score: 1

      The only and strictly single way of opening a OOXML document in its pixel/inch perfect form with every detail is having $400 MS Office '08 which even OS X version has some problems.
      So I guess youre against official standards for HTML, right?
    19. Re:ISO death bell by Ilgaz · · Score: 1

      OOXML is more than official standards of HTML, a lot more. Also even if it was just HTML, I wouldn't trust word of company who undermined the official HTML standards for years and just recently promised to support them in full right after Opera Software sued them.

    20. Re:ISO death bell by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > I guess youre confusing "closed" with "from companies I hate", because OOXML is now a standard.

      So you prefer calling "open" a standard whose only fully compliant implementation can come from one vendor, and maybe you advocate entrusting gov. data to that standard? "Closed" is the best approximation. Of course when there will be a free software implementation which is compliant for every practical purposes, you'll be right. It will be years and terabytes of data hidden by MS.

    21. Re:ISO death bell by marcosdumay · · Score: 1

      I guess youre confusing "closed" with "from companies I hate"

      No, I am not. OOXML is still fraudulent and MS Office still doesn't implement it.

  12. Weirdest April 1st Ever! by darkfnord23 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Assuming it's not a joke... Anyone using this standard for anything deserves a punch in the face.

    1. Re:Weirdest April 1st Ever! by codemachine · · Score: 5, Interesting

      The fools are those at ISO who voted to approve this horrid "standard". It definitely wasn't good enough to be fast-tracked, let alone made into a standard.

      Should be interesting to see the next moves from IBM and Sun though. Could there be some sort of challenge or appeal coming? I don't think we've seen the end of this.

    2. Re:Weirdest April 1st Ever! by the_olo · · Score: 5, Informative

      Could there be some sort of challenge or appeal coming?

      According to ISO press release , "Subject to there being no formal appeals from ISO/IEC national bodies in the next two months, the International Standard will accordingly proceed to publication". So there's still 2 months for appeals from NB's.

    3. Re:Weirdest April 1st Ever! by codemachine · · Score: 1

      If MS can convince/bribe a bunch of national bodies to vote in favor, I'm pretty sure IBM can find one willing to appeal. Given how terrible the OOXML "standard" is, they may not even need to bribe them into it.

  13. pyhrric by apodyopsis · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Its the Pyhrric victory to end all.

    (1) if they lost the ISO process then they lost

    (2) they won the ISO process then they lost as it forced a deep examination of the standard, and raised critical questions and caused them more problems then it solved.

    (3) if nobody else implements this flawed standard then they lose as some Goverments are now also specifying cross platform implementation as well as open standard (perhaps in response to this mess)

    (4) if (and this is real unlikely) there are other implementations of this standard (eg OO) then they lose as MS Office is no longer required to be ubiquitous on the desktop

    This is NOT really a win for MS the way that I see it. They can spin this how they want and surely get away with it for a large amount of the population - but big business and govermental contracts (where the real money is) are already looking for an escape from propietry formats and have been for a while.

    I'm really fucked off about the perversion of the ISO system, the bad practice, the lack of any "technology morals" in decisions that needed to be unbiased. But I am not that upset about OOXML being passed - I really do not think MS has won this one.

    The important thing to watch now is how MS spins this and where the important money goes (big contracts, goverment).

    1. Re:pyhrric by holloway · · Score: 5, Informative

      I agree. We're back to where we were a year ago only now with a lot more awareness of the office monopoly and how much money is wasted.

      Here are two reports on OOXML that I recently released, one (PDF, 0.9MB) and two (PDF, 0.8MB).

    2. Re:pyhrric by earbenT · · Score: 1

      No, it's really just business as usual. Regardless of which format wins out, Microsoft will simply embrace and extend it in order to maintain its Windows and Office monopolies (separating the two would be redundant if it weren't for the fact that Office is also on Macs).

    3. Re:pyhrric by pembo13 · · Score: 1

      OpenOffice is already adding support. I don't know why.

      --
      "Thanks for all the money you paid to us. We've used it to buy off ISO among other things" -Microsoft
    4. Re:pyhrric by MightyMartian · · Score: 2, Interesting

      (3) if nobody else implements this flawed standard then they lose as some Goverments are now also specifying cross platform implementation as well as open standard (perhaps in response to this mess)


      Open source developers will likely shoot themselves in the foot there. OOXML support is already under way for OO.org, and you can be sure that KOffice will likely follow, along with a number of other open source office apps. These will be similar to the efforts to get the Office 97-2003 formats working, seeing as the specs, even once decrypted, will only get you so far. It won't be good enough for these apps to be drop-in replacements, and even if it is, Microsoft will be recreating OOXML with every new release, so it will be the same old game of catch up. Even worse, Microsoft might even all-but-abandon OOXML, leaving it in as a legacy format, but defaulting to some new document format.
      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    5. Re:pyhrric by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

      It's part of Microsoft's master plan to force OpenOffice to become a big, bloated, unmaintainable blob of code.

    6. Re:pyhrric by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative
      It's not really OOXML support, it's Microsoft Office 2007 support. The OpenOffice.org support includes things that MS didn't submit to Ecma or the ISO like OLE, VBScript Conversion, etc.

      So it's the same old story about reverse engineering Microsoft Office, not implementing a poorly defined inconsistent "standard".

    7. Re:pyhrric by poot_rootbeer · · Score: 1

      Microsoft will be recreating OOXML with every new release, so it will be the same old game of catch up.

      Wouldn't Microsoft have to either:
      a) submit and get approved revisions to the ISO OOXML standard, or
      b) deviate intentionally from the established ISO OOXML standard
      in order to keep up their old routines?

    8. Re:pyhrric by Wavebreak · · Score: 1

      Because they have to. They don't have the market share to force non-adoption, and not supporting it would mean lost customers to MS when someone who doesn't know better inevitably does use it for something important.

      --
      Nobody expects the British Columbia Human Rights Tribunal.
    9. Re:pyhrric by Wavebreak · · Score: 1

      Er, and by 'customers' I obviously mean 'users' in OO's case.

      --
      Nobody expects the British Columbia Human Rights Tribunal.
    10. Re:pyhrric by Handover+Phist · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Perhaps because OO wants to keep as much MS Office compatibility as it can.

    11. Re:pyhrric by Adaptux · · Score: 3, Funny

      they won the ISO process then they lost as it forced a deep examination of the standard, and raised critical questions and caused them more problems then it solved.

      Microsoft has a legitimate business interest to be seen as the leader in office document formats, and this interest is best served by participating in the ISO/IEC processes for refining and improving OOXML in good faith and with an active desire to resolve the issues that are raised.

      While I am highly critical of all national standardization organization officials who have contributed to allowing Microsoft push OOXML through via the "fast track" which IMO has proved to be clearly inappropriate, I'm really getting the impression that there is a tendency of seeing Microsoft primarily as an enemy which is getting in the way of our abvility to see reality as it is. I can personally testify that at the BRM and since then, Microsoft has shown every indication of willingness for the known technical shortcomings of OOXML to be corrected, and since I believe that it is in Microsoft's best interest to continue in this direction, I currently see no reason not to believe the Microsoft people that I have been communicating with when they indicate that it is Microsoft's intention to continue with this bona-fide cooperative stance regarding OOXML.

    12. Re:pyhrric by I'm+Don+Giovanni · · Score: 0, Troll

      Sounds like you're having difficulty accepting defeat and are engaged in spin.
      It's like the five stages of grief:
      1. Denial
      2. Anger
      3. Bargaining
      4. Depression
      5. Acceptance

      You're at stage 1 right now, trying to spin defeat into victory, and are already headed to stage 2 ("I'm really fucked off about ...").

      BTW, others have already implemented OOXML (the original ECMA version, though updates will be made for the new ISO version), but MSO will have no problem competing on features, UI, integration, enterprise solutions, office dev platform, etc.

      --
      -- "I never gave these stories much credence." - HAL 9000
    13. Re:pyhrric by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The support is there because OpenOffice is written by Sun Microsystems who accepted $2Billion in hush money from Microsoft.

    14. Re:pyhrric by westlake · · Score: 1
      OpenOffice is already adding support. I don't know why.

      Here is a hint: Sun doesn't provide staff and funding for OO.org simply out of the goodness of its heart.

    15. Re:pyhrric by Ambidisastrous · · Score: 2, Informative

      Presumably because they thought this might happen. OpenOffice already supports pretty much every format under the sun, so deliberately ignoring OOXML would be obvious, petty, and somewhat self-destructive.

      It would be a lock-in tactic, and open-source software isn't really capable of that: If there was demand for OOXML import/export, and Sun didn't implement it, someone else would write an extension for it anyway (or worse, fork the whole project). If organizations are going to ask for OOXML support (if only to handle the stray .docx file that comes from outside), then it's better to have OOo support it competently than require an extension that does it poorly.

    16. Re:pyhrric by Gravatron · · Score: 1

      isn't it normally the process that you Fix your format before making it a written in stone standard? MS wanted ISO standardization so they could use it as a marketing tool. Once it's a standard, they have no reason to pour resources into fixing it, if that means they have to do all this over again. If they do, it will be a fix who's only function is to keep competators from utilizing the standard, thus preserving their lock out.

    17. Re:pyhrric by Divebus · · Score: 1

      Perhaps it's time to make Microsoft taste it's own pie. For years, Microsoft has built systems to make every other format they didn't own behave at least klutzy and at most inoperable. OO.org and every other developer group should shred the implementation of OOXML in different ways so it won't interchange reliably and ultimately be abandoned within a few years with a bad reputation. It might drive everyone to ONLY use MS Office for OOSML in the short term but will make long term planners wary of using a Microsoft-only product and choose ODF instead.

      There's a thought in there somewhere.

      --

      Most of the stuff on /. won't survive first contact with facts.
    18. Re:pyhrric by qbast · · Score: 1

      So me (and others in similar situation) will not be forced to switch Windows + Office 2007 at work after rest of company went through round of upgrades (some MS subscription license) and suddenly .docx documents started appearing everywhere. From idealistic standpoint OO.org authors' decision may look like sellout but from pragmatic one it allows many people to cling to their 'free' niches they built for themselves.

    19. Re:pyhrric by VON-MAN · · Score: 1

      "others have already implemented OOXML"
      Link, please.

    20. Re:pyhrric by Bert64 · · Score: 1

      If they had an active desire to develop a good open format, they would have joined the ODF committee when they were originally invited.
      They didn't, they chose to ignore it in the hope that ODF would just disappear...
      When it failed to disappear and started gaining traction, they realised they had no control over it, and rather than join the process and work with other parties, they sought to derail ODF and created their own competing format from scratch.

      --
      http://spamdecoy.net - free throwaway anonymous email - avoid spam!
    21. Re:pyhrric by temcat · · Score: 1

      others have already implemented OOXML

      Who would that be? Surely not MS, because Office 2007 formats are not OOXML.

      Thanks for playing.

    22. Re:pyhrric by Adaptux · · Score: 1

      isn't it normally the process that you Fix your format before making it a written in stone standard? I agree that that's what the process *should* be. However ISO/IEC JTC1 really doesn't have a good track record with regard to insisting on this.

      MS wanted ISO standardization so they could use it as a marketing tool. Sure. And the same can be said about the backers of ODF, about the backers of quality management standards etc etc. This is an essential aspect of how currently standardization processes function economically.

      I don't think that this situation is good or healthy, and I definitely want to try changing the situation so that the influence of the public interest (that standards should be high-quality and genuinely open) is significantly increased, but this is a set of problems that really cannot be blamed on Microsoft.

      Once it's a standard, they have no reason to pour resources into fixing it, if that means they have to do all this over again. It doesn't mean that.
    23. Re:pyhrric by the_olo · · Score: 2, Informative

      I don't mean to sound like format correctness Nazi, but your PDFs could be much, much smaller.

      You just need to substitute the Nimbus family of fonts (which are in Type 1 format) for some corresponding TTF fonts, like the FreeSans/FreeSerif families.

      The problem is that OpenOffice PDF exported currently cannot do subsetting for Type 1 fonts, only for TTF fonts. So it embeds the full Type 1 fonts (Nimbus in your case) in the file. All the characters, including unused ones, like Japanese, Hindi and Chinese glyphs!

      That's why your PDFs are almost 1 megabyte when in fact they could be twice as small.

      Look in the properties of your PDFs (or use pdffonts utility) - when your see font names like "DAAAAA+font_name" then it's good - they are subsetted.

      But font names that aren't prefixed with those "?AAAAA+" strings are embedded fully, without subsetting - they occupy lots of space!

      Eliminate those fonts from your document when exporting to PDF, until OpenOffice issue 46305 is resolved (not likely in the near future...).

    24. Re:pyhrric by mrchaotica · · Score: 1

      I don't mean to sound like format correctness Nazi, but your PDFs could be much, much smaller.

      Buddy, just be glad it's not rasterized!

      --

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

    25. Re:pyhrric by MightyMartian · · Score: 1

      No, they'll just include a partially broken OOXML implementation (like they have now). It won't do a very good job at opening the ISO dialect, and Microsoft will simply rely upon the consumer to abandon any given variant of OOXML as they upgrade. Just look at how quickly docx files are appearing. By making "Office 2010 XML" (or whatever) the default for saving, they basically lead most users around by the nose.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    26. Re:pyhrric by MightyMartian · · Score: 1

      I doubt Microsoft would even care. Whether OOXML survives in the medium term is irrelevant to them. If it does survive as the next big document standard, they know that OO.org and the rest of the open source pack will be playing catch up (just like they are now). If it doesn't, oh well, they can still advertise "Office 2010 - with ISO OOXML support", even as they continue to mutate the format to guarantee their monopoly.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    27. Re:pyhrric by holloway · · Score: 1

      Oh, interesting, I didn't know that. Thanks for the tip. I'll choose TTF equivalents in the future.

    28. Re:pyhrric by Kalriath · · Score: 1

      ...

      Like now?

      (Sorry, but you know OSS folks always tout the awesomeness of how if you find a bug in Firefox, you can just fix it and recompile, while apparently none have ever tried it - because they wouldn't call it easy if they had!)

      --
      For a site about things like basic rights, Slashdot users sure do like to censor "dissent".
    29. Re:pyhrric by Kalriath · · Score: 1

      I don't think so. The invitation to join the committee was a sham, they weren't welcome in it. There's no way Sun would ever co-operate directly with Microsoft.

      --
      For a site about things like basic rights, Slashdot users sure do like to censor "dissent".
  14. .doc attachments by csk_1975 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The referenced comments from the NBs are .doc files. If ISO mandates the use of MS Word .doc files is its existing internal processes what hope that anything other this result?

    Is the tag part of the ISO approved spec?

  15. Finally by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well, it may not be the greatest schema - but it at least will help to push IT organizations to finally upgrade to the nicer newer versions of Office.

    Really - the set of applications that well over 90% of U.S. businesses use is going to be denied standardization!?!?! I don't think so.

    This is a big interop win for everyone!

    1. Re:Finally by Bryansix · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Yikes. I like Office 2007 but it is a pain in the ass to teach people to use. Banners? Really? No File Menu? WTF MATE!!! Believe me, Open Office is going to get my vote when it comes time to upgrade here.

    2. Re:Finally by dhavleak · · Score: 1

      Office 2007 but it is a pain in the ass to teach people to use.... Open Office is going to get my vote when it comes time to upgrade here. I would think the ribbon is a lot easier to teach than telling people when they need to use Save As, and when they don't etc. and which file-format to pick under Save As etc.
    3. Re:Finally by Bryansix · · Score: 1

      It should be but I still get retard strong mother f-ers who send me .dotx file which cannot be opened even if you have the office compatability pack for Office 2003 Pro. Why they try to email me a template is beyond comprehension but they still find a way to do it.

    4. Re:Finally by Akaihiryuu · · Score: 1

      I reply with "uh...what the heck did you just send me? Please send me that in a standard format like .odf" Even though I CAN use .doc files thanks to OpenOffice, I never advertise this fact. This reply will not change no matter what the entity formerly known as ISO says.

    5. Re:Finally by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Microsoft used to be really anal about having the same standard menu available on all apps. The 'File' menu was an unspoken standard, along with several others.
      This was good for users, who didn't have to memorize a different menu layout for the same operations. Saving files, no matter what that may entail, was always in the same general place.

      Then Office '07 goes and fucks us. I can't use it for more than a few minutes without getting pissed, then I switch back to '03 and wonder why I would ever change.

    6. Re:Finally by dkf · · Score: 1

      Open Office is going to get my vote when it comes time to upgrade here. I've been using Open Office quite a bit recently, and I can't really recommend it for full "production" use. Quite apart from the fact that it handles some graphics in problematic ways, there are a number of other problems that are more serious; in terms of usability there are a number of things (highlighting, notes, tracked change review) that are harder to use than they should be. For example, there's no (obvious) way to print a document with changes in the form that it was changed to; traces of what was removed (especially section headings) always seem to show up.
      --
      "Little does he know, but there is no 'I' in 'Idiot'!"
    7. Re:Finally by Dersaidin · · Score: 1

      Why wait until you upgrade?

    8. Re:Finally by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And everyone you work with rolls their eyes and calls you a wanker behind your back. Eventually they stop rolling their eyes when they bypass you altogether, because you seem more interested in being a pain in the ass than getting work done.

    9. Re:Finally by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Honestly, the Office 2007 UI is way-ass better. It took me a day or two to get used to because I was used to the old retarded Windows UI, but it's much, much easier to figure out how to do most things, especially if you aren't a former Office user.

      Get someone who used Office 2003 for years to try 2007. After a week, ask them what their favorite new feature is. Almost invariably, it will be a feature that existed in Office 2003 but that they never knew about because it was buried in some obscure sub-menu.

    10. Re:Finally by profplump · · Score: 1

      I don't understand how they messed it up so badly. It's an idea they first tried in MS Office for Mac, and it was actually pretty useful in the implementation there -- they added a context-sensitive floating window that contained collapsable sections for each of several functional areas. It essentially made toolbars context-sensitive, floating, and collapsable. But they didn't take away the menu bar when they did it -- you could still get at everything via the menus. And they didn't try to put context-insensitive things, like "Save" or "Options" into the new floating window.

      But then Office 2007 came out and said "What if we took away toolbars AND menus. That would be twice as cool as what we did in the Mac version 4 years ago." I've long since given up on using Word for document creation -- the last version I used regularly was Word 5.0a -- but just supporting other people in Office 2007 makes my head hurt.

    11. Re:Finally by Bert64 · · Score: 1

      For people who have never used anything else, yes it's much easier...
      KDE/Gnome and OSX are also much easier for a new user to pick up than windows...

      However, people already have prior experience of doing things differently, and thus are resistant to change regardless of wether that change is for the better or not.

      --
      http://spamdecoy.net - free throwaway anonymous email - avoid spam!
    12. Re:Finally by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Assertions stated as fact. Where are your impartial sources?

    13. Re:Finally by toriver · · Score: 1

      "Getting work done" apparently is your eupheism for "being forced to buy an expensive software package from Micro-planned-obsolescence-soft".

      Do you get hard when you make these sad attempts at defending Microsoft's incompatible file formats?

    14. Re:Finally by Kalriath · · Score: 1

      And I'd respond with "uh... what the heck are you talking about? I'm not downloading a 97MB office suite just to send you a document" and stop dealing with you. You'll probably claim "and good riddance" but let's be honest, you'd run out of customers pretty fast.

      Then again, what the hell are idiots sending templates to people for?

      --
      For a site about things like basic rights, Slashdot users sure do like to censor "dissent".
  16. Umm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So? Go outside. Try talking to a woman that is not your mom.

  17. Re:Don't panic. by Macthorpe · · Score: 0

    Yet another shill from Twitter.

    Carry on, everyone.

    --
    "It does not do to leave a live dragon out of your calculations, if you live near him." - Tolkien
  18. Why no April Fools Today. by Foobar+of+Borg · · Score: 4, Insightful

    There is no April Fools today since the real news is comical enough (though in a tragically funny sort of way).

    1. Re:Why no April Fools Today. by Dr.+Eggman · · Score: 4, Funny

      But, there is an April Fools joke today on Slashdot! It's just subtle. Check your 'Foes' list and you'll see every editor has been added to it.

      --
      Demented But Determined.
    2. Re:Why no April Fools Today. by nuzak · · Score: 1

      You made me look. You're a bad man. Or egg. Or eggman. Goo goo ga joob.

      --
      Done with slashdot, done with nerds, getting a life.
    3. Re:Why no April Fools Today. by tomson · · Score: 1

      Wish I had mod points :) Only joke I fell for today!

      --
      I read slashdot for the articles.
    4. Re:Why no April Fools Today. by NtroP · · Score: 1

      You bastard! I can't believe I actually fell for it - let alone even cared enough to check!

      --
      "terrorism" and "pedophilia" are the root passwords to the Constitution
    5. Re:Why no April Fools Today. by artanis00 · · Score: 4, Funny

      I already had all the editors on my Foes list, you insensitive clod!

    6. Re:Why no April Fools Today. by phorm · · Score: 1

      Ha, that joke wouldn't work on me. All the editors were already on my foes list.

      Oh... wait.

  19. From the box of Office 14 by Tatsh · · Score: 3, Insightful

    * Microsoft's own Open Office XML (OOXML) format is now an ISO standard. This means anyone with software capable of reading OOXML can can read your documents.

    Translation:
    * Whilst OOXML is an ISO standard now, we still own the patents and the right to sue anyone who implements it (even if we issued a covenant not to sue; covenants mean nothing to Microsoft, just to let you know). Lastly, OOXML is open however we are only ones who know how to read the blob (binary) parts of the standard perfectly and no one else can.

    Internal document at Microsoft:
    * Finally we have an ISO and ECMA standard, just so we can say to you that we care about the future of digital documents, when we really just want more money. Saying OOXML is an ISO standard is a great way to have businesses automatically approve of our standard. And now we can put ODF and its hopes and dreams in the dark.
    ---
    I am very disappointed in ISO, OSI, and ECMA. I held them with high regard, until they started approving standards and licences of a company that has been holding back the PC industry all to make a little more money. I will ignore the three bodies for now, until they withdraw their positions on these Microsoft entities.

    When will MIPS-based-CPU desktops running Linux at high speeds (much faster than any x86 at the same clocked speed) take over the home PC market? x86 and even x86-64 are dying faster than we can count in my opinion the way things are going.
    ---
    (Written on Gentoo Linux 2.6.24.3 AMD64, Mozilla Firefox 2.0.13, KDE 3.5.8)

    1. Re:From the box of Office 14 by earbenT · · Score: 0

      When will MIPS-based-CPU desktops running Linux at high speeds (much faster than any x86 at the same clocked speed) take over the home PC market? x86 and even x86-64 are dying faster than we can count in my opinion the way things are going. MIPS is deader than a doornail, and considering Intel's new efforts in the ultramobile and high-end graphics markets, x86 isn't going anywhere for a very long time.
    2. Re:From the box of Office 14 by Tatsh · · Score: 1

      Sorry. What I meant to say was RISC-based PowerPC CPUs. They got to become cheap enough again to the point at which every PC is using them. Every current generation console (except PS3 which still uses an architecture similar to PowerPC) uses PowerPC or MIPS (ARM too). There must be a good reason for this.

    3. Re:From the box of Office 14 by Billly+Gates · · Score: 1

      The problem is the OOXML allows proprietary binary win32 blobs. No viewer will ever be ms compatibile and I would not be suprised if DRM used in MS Office to lock files will also lock it forever outside anything but MS. Corporations love to lock things up to block lawsuits and competitors and now can never be able to switch to openoffice or google apps.

      ISO does not mean anything anymore. Its sad the ODF is not proprietary while the ooxml is standard which means the government will require everything to be done in Office which gives ms nice fat profits for years.

    4. Re:From the box of Office 14 by Bert64 · · Score: 1

      MIPS? MIPS is all but dead, especially at the high end now SGI no longer use them...
      We won't see the death of x86/x86-64 so long as people are using closed source software. Look at IA64, a promising architecture, but poor backwards compatibility and lack of third party closed source apps killed it. An IA64 machine made a very good linux system if everything you were running on it was open source.
      The same can be said for other architectures, Alpha was hugely faster than x86, and made a really great linux system, but closed source apps weren't there, windows was ported but it was only NT at a time when most end users ran 9x, very few apps ran natively and quite a lot didn't even run under emulation.
      Similarly PPC, if you're running entirely open source software a PPC makes a great system, if you need any closed source apps or drivers (think nvidia) then you're screwed.

      For-profit companies won't develop for a new architecture until there is a sufficiently large market to make it profitable. End users won't buy systems until the software they want to run is available for it. It's a dependency loop...

      So long as closed source software is prevalent, we will forever be stuck with x86/x86-64 and extensions thereof.

      --
      http://spamdecoy.net - free throwaway anonymous email - avoid spam!
    5. Re:From the box of Office 14 by Bert64 · · Score: 1

      These architectures are cleaner (less backwards compatibility cruft) and therefore cheaper to produce... x86 only has economies of scale, but the actual per unit cost to a company like IBM is lower for PPC..
      Console makers also want customized chips, which throw the economies of scale argument out the window.
      Also because of the lack of facilities to decode complex x86 instructions into micro-ops, the chip can be smaller and produce less heat... Similarly for things like out of order execution, the chip space to implement this is quite large, but compilers can in theory generate in-order code which is just as fast, assuming they know enough about the internal workings of the CPU.... On a games console, the CPU is always the same, so such assumptions are perfectly valid.

      --
      http://spamdecoy.net - free throwaway anonymous email - avoid spam!
    6. Re:From the box of Office 14 by TeknoHog · · Score: 1

      My dream machine at the moment would have something like the PWRficient, a 64-bit PPC that consumes 7 watts per core at 2 GHz.

      Then again, the Intel Core (2) CPUs are not half bad, as long as you use the "mobile" versions. Consider these for example:

      http://processorfinder.intel.com/details.aspx?sSpec=SLA98
      http://processorfinder.intel.com/details.aspx?sSpec=SLA49

      They are basically the "mobile" and "desktop" versions of the same processor (Core 2 Duo at 2 GHz, 2 MB cache, 800 MHz FSB), but the desktop version consumes twice the power of the mobile one. My question is, why are these dumb and wasteful "desktop" processors produced at all? The answer is probably that they are the Celerons of today, the cheaper versions that failed some tests.

      It's a good thing there are Mini-ITX boards (like this one in my server/media center) for those who want to use "mobile" CPUs in a "desktop" environment.

      --
      Escher was the first MC and Giger invented the HR department.
    7. Re:From the box of Office 14 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The problem with IA64 is not the lack of backwards compatibility. It's the insane price tag.

    8. Re:From the box of Office 14 by msuarezalvarez · · Score: 1

      Whilst OOXML is an ISO standard now, we still own the patents and the right to sue anyone who implements it (even if we issued a covenant not to sue; covenants mean nothing to Microsoft, just to let you know). This is a flat out lie. To become an ISO standard, MS will have to relinguish all property rights to the format to the ISO body themselves, who will licence it to whomever wishes it (The cost of such a licence is usually about $100).

      Where did you possibly did you get that from?!

  20. Good Luck. by inTheLoo · · Score: 5, Interesting

    You are right about the size of the market but wrong about how much money it will make you and what tools to use. Sun and IBM will give you PDF of ODF output and a handy database system to keep it all. So can anyone else with Open Office. Some people are going to be automating the process better than others but it's going to be a competitive market. That's the whole point of standards, to avoid the massive cost of reinventing what should be obvious and spend resources on things people actually want. MSXML is going nowhere in a market like that.

    --
    No calls now, I'm ...
    1. Re:Good Luck. by willyhill · · Score: 1
      It's actually OOXML, not MSXML. MSXML is a COM-based XML parser.

      I actually do agree with your opinion on why standards exist and what they do to competition. I also think Microsoft's actions in regards to ISO are reprehensible. But given your obviously non-biased opinion (posted with one of your five sockpuppets) on how markets should work, at least in regards to IBM, I wouldn't try and set the rules for other companies, either.

      --
      The twitter monologues. Click on my homepage and be amazed.
    2. Re:Good Luck. by dedazo · · Score: 1

      Any minute now twitter, gnutoo, Mactrope and Erris are going to show up on this thread to correct you, and then inTheLoo will complain about their moderation, and so on. Well, you get the idea.

      --
      Web2.0: I love when people Flickr my cuil and digg my boingboing until my google is reddit and I start to yahoo
    3. Re:Good Luck. by Ilgaz · · Score: 1

      It seems the non biased opinions about "How great .NET 3.0 is?" to slashdot should be reviewed too.

      I just had a 45 minute installation session for ".NET 3.0" on my MS Virtual PC 7 while the "bulky" "bloated" Java 6 for Windows takes 5 minutes.

      Now I started to wonder who are those ".NET 3.0 is great" guys and by any chance, they got some IP in Bangalore.

      Considering the number of .gov , .mil, .edu and .com which will certainly investigate this Apri fools joke, it could be the last ever mistake of MS.

    4. Re:Good Luck. by willyhill · · Score: 1

      I'm having trouble figuring out if you replied to the wrong post. Are you talking to me? What does .NET and Bangalore (?) have to do with all this?

      --
      The twitter monologues. Click on my homepage and be amazed.
    5. Re:Good Luck. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      Took about 15 minutes for the full .NET SDK to install for me. Must be a problem with Virtual PC. A good chunk of .NET's installation time comes from prepopulating the assembly cache. Basically it's compiling to native code ahead of time, something Java doesn't do. Considering the way JIT technology works, I'm not sure .NET is really achieving a win either, but there you have it.

      Of course the only sensible way to judge a framework is by its install time, right? Or by insinuating that it comes from furriners?

    6. Re:Good Luck. by Hal_Porter · · Score: 1

      What I think would be funny would be if one of them complained about Microsoft using sockpuppets to get the standard through ISO. At least it would show he has a sense of irony.

      --
      echo -e 'global _start\n _start:\n mov eax, 2\n int 80h\n jmp _start' > a.asm; nasm a.asm -f elf; ld a.o -o a;
    7. Re:Good Luck. by Ilgaz · · Score: 1

      Apologies for not being so neutral about a framework (!) since I had to run Virtual PC, a freaking emulator to run a program (idiot Nokia, hope iPhone kills you) written in that ECMA standard, multiplatform (!) crap.

      Java exists and runs on my native OS X which does generate heavily optimised PPC Altivec/JIT ASM code realtime. That is a real framework, .NET is a bulky windows DLL. Nothing else.

  21. Does anybody else... by $RANDOMLUSER · · Score: 5, Interesting

    ...find it ironic that the document describing OOXML's ISO adoption is in PDF format?

    --
    No folly is more costly than the folly of intolerant idealism. - Winston Churchill
    1. Re:Does anybody else... by Creepy+Crawler · · Score: 4, Funny

      That is because Microsoft's implementation is not 100% OOXML compatible.

      --
    2. Re:Does anybody else... by Tatsh · · Score: 1

      PDF is an open standard by the way...

      but does anybody find it ironic that the comment links in the PDF are in DOC format?

    3. Re:Does anybody else... by $RANDOMLUSER · · Score: 1

      PDF is an open standard by the way...
      So is OOXML. Says so right on the label.

      /tongue firmly in cheek
      --
      No folly is more costly than the folly of intolerant idealism. - Winston Churchill
    4. Re:Does anybody else... by Tatsh · · Score: 1

      Yes, but most people actually wanted PDF to become an ISO standard. Adobe embraces the idea, and have since created a lot of competition against themselves, but they are willing to take this risk. So many people still think Acrobat is the only programme to produce PDFs, but there are so many out there, many are free, many are freeware, and many are FOSS (dvi2pdf and ps2pdf, for example). There is nothing bad about PDF in my opinion. Looking at blogs and documents, it looks like there was not any fiddling with the voting process. Today, I see more readers than just Adobe's and they run on every OS imaginable.

      On the other hand, Microsoft is not willing to take this risk. They have purposely not changed anything in the format which was requested and this whole process was corrupted. We all know. That is how Microsoft operates. I am not saying 'Die MS Office forever' and I am not even saying 'Release the source or you're evil' like RMS. I am simply saying Microsoft should support real standards (ODF, a practical one, even PDF export in Word without a 3rd party plug-in), embrace having competition to compete against. They have had virtually none since they got their hands on DOS. Even if Intel could (and maybe it can), I am not sure it would buy out AMD simply because competition means motivation to progress (Adobe certainly knows this, stating in its own PDF format blog that you 'may still need to pay money to use quality [PDF creation] software'). Microsoft does not progress; it spits out the same thing every few years with 'new features' that nobody needs (Vista, Office 2007, even XP, etc). And what was their response to programme incompatibility? Something in an attempt to kill Java (.NET). There is no end to this 'kill all competition by all means necessary' attitude of Microsoft. I think Microsoft is scared to death about free software making it anywhere.

      I'm glad that OpenOffice (and KOffice has plans to) supports reading and writing OOXML and all but I'm sure the implementation is not completely done yet. I also do not think the implementation can legally be entirely GPL/LGPL either. Personally, I write most of my documents, whether it be lab reports or research papers for English, in LaTeX, and generate DVIs and PDFs. If the teacher wants a digital copy I send a PDF. This is what makes PDF so great. I do not have to worry that their Office is going to say 'whoops, this binary piece was written wrong, display it wrong' when I do export in Writer, etc.

    5. Re:Does anybody else... by JucaBlues · · Score: 1

      ...and have you also noticed how ironical is the fact that in this same pdf we can see that ABSOLUTELY ALL COMMENTS from voters were sent in .doc files!? It is very interesting to see the documentation of the standartization process of a file format for office application not using the pre-existing standard format for exchange of office documents that have been stablished in the past by ISO itself.

    6. Re:Does anybody else... by I'm+Don+Giovanni · · Score: 1

      "Yes, but most people actually wanted PDF to become an ISO standard. Adobe embraces the idea, and have since created a lot of competition against themselves, but they are willing to take this risk."

      Is that why Adobe used legal threats in the EU to block Microsoft from adding built-in PDF support to Office 2007? Because they were willing to take a risk? Give me a break.

      It's Microsoft that is willing to take a risk by making its XML format a standard AND releasing the spec to its binary formats as well, with no strings (unlike Adobe, which reserves the right to sue parties that implement PDF without its blessing, as they threatened to do to Microsoft).

      --
      -- "I never gave these stories much credence." - HAL 9000
    7. Re:Does anybody else... by weicco · · Score: 1

      Nope. PDF is a pretty good format for publishing documents that aren't to be edited anymore. And when everything else is published in PDF I don't see any issue here.

      --
      You don't know what you don't know.
    8. Re:Does anybody else... by Bert64 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Intel would love to buy AMD, and VIA, and be the only source of x86 compatible chips...
      Intel, like any other company, don't want motivation to progress. They want to continue selling old products for as long as possible at the highest price point they can, not be forced to develop something new and reduce prices in order to compete. Lucky for us consumers Intel don't have that ability, thanks to AMD... The problem is that Microsoft do have that ability, and they abuse it as much as they can. In a competitive marketplace, ODF would be prevalent (supported by a majority of vendors) and OOXML would die a death (supported by only one) and microsoft would have been forced to implement ODF like everyone else.

      --
      http://spamdecoy.net - free throwaway anonymous email - avoid spam!
    9. Re:Does anybody else... by $RANDOMLUSER · · Score: 1

      They [Intel] want to continue selling old products for as long as possible at the highest price point they can, not be forced to develop something new and reduce prices in order to compete. Lucky for us consumers Intel don't have that ability, thanks to AMD...
      Spectacularly incorrect.

      "Those who forget the lessons of history are doomed to repeat them in summer school."
      --
      No folly is more costly than the folly of intolerant idealism. - Winston Churchill
    10. Re:Does anybody else... by toriver · · Score: 1

      "No strings"? Here are a couple of "strings":

      If you file, maintain or voluntarily participate in a patent infringement lawsuit against a Microsoft implementation of such Covered Specification, then this personal promise does not apply with respect to any Covered Implementation of the same Covered Specification made or used by you.

      This promise is not an assurance [...] that a Covered Implementation would not infringe patents or other intellectual property rights of any third party.

      From http://www.microsoft.com/interop/osp/default.mspx

    11. Re:Does anybody else... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is moderated as funny, but it is true.

  22. I must... by corychristison · · Score: 1

    ... still be hung over (t'was a bad night to have a few drinks with the guys - totally forgot it as 4/1)

    The only thing running through my mind is:

    what.

    the.

    hell?

  23. April Fools? by Techman83 · · Score: 1
    FTFA:

    1 April 2008A

    Office Open XML Officially Approved As International Standard Hmmm
    --
    # cat /dev/mem | strings | grep -i cat
    Damn, my RAM is full of cats. MEOW!!
    1. Re:April Fools? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What if the whole OOXML thing is a big joke, with the punchline delivered on the optimum day?
      No, life can't be that good.

  24. Possible Tags? by Bryansix · · Score: 1

    corruption, fraud, sellouts, themorethingschangethemoretheystaythesame, hopeitisajoke, itsatrap, Micro$oft$ucks, OOXMLisafraud, confusedvoters, bureaucraticbungling, flipfloppers ... I could go on.

    1. Re:Possible Tags? by teh+moges · · Score: 2, Funny

      omgponieslikeinoffice97 ?

  25. Isn't It Ironic? by Skeetskeetskeet · · Score: 0

    The day a rigged vote for OOXML passes as standard just happens to be April Fool's Day. Looks like the joke is on Ballmer and Gates, because the entire IT community knows the standard was approved under suspicious conditions and that they would rejoice over it makes them lower than a chad on a Florida voting room floor.

    --
    Yeah, my karma sucks....but so do the mods.
  26. Agree - easy solution too by cheros · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I think the best approach to this is to:

    (a) Require MS to be true to their own standard (or immediately fall foul of anti-monopoly rules - hello EU)
    (b) Ensure every procurement decision in favour of MS because of this to REQUIRE to implement MSOOXML as well. No point using it for criteria otherwise.

    That way I give it a month before reality hits. And less than that for the EU to collar the b*stards again, and this time it won't be a baby fine because that has proven not to have too much of an effect. A cute punishment would be making ODF compliance mandatory in the EU. Given that they haven't implemented a proper filter this may completely nuke the franchise. And without the Office franchise there isn't much left of MS because brute forcing people into an upgrade to something as bad as Vista hasn't exactly worked out too well. Couple that with sub prime problems and companies as well as end users may start to seek for more economic ways to spend their money.

    This story is FAR from over.

    --
    Insert .sig here. Send no money now. Owner may sue, contents will settle. Batteries not included.
    1. Re:Agree - easy solution too by apodyopsis · · Score: 1

      A cute punishment would be making ODF compliance mandatory in the EU.

      Oh sir! that really is a cute concept. And I think it will appeal to our very own guardian angel and wielder of the sword of justice Neelie Kroes.

    2. Re:Agree - easy solution too by earbenT · · Score: 3, Insightful

      And without the Office franchise there isn't much left of MS because brute forcing people into an upgrade to something as bad as Vista hasn't exactly worked out too well. Microsoft still has DirectX to lure the gaming market back to Windows.
    3. Re:Agree - easy solution too by ppanon · · Score: 1

      You mean the gaming market that has basically been completely taken over by consoles, to the extent that there are Slashdot articles about the possible demise of the PC gaming market? That gaming market?

      --
      Laissez lire, et laissez danser; ces deux amusements ne feront jamais de mal au monde. - Voltaire
    4. Re:Agree - easy solution too by The+Master+Control+P · · Score: 1

      Games that require detailed input will never run on consoles. Can you imagine trying to play Civilization, SimCity, Alpha Centauri, or most other sim/strategy games on a console?

    5. Re:Agree - easy solution too by Maxo-Texas · · Score: 1

      Wii is great.. but no strategy games at all that I know of so far.

      Lots of FPS and Hyper kenetic stuff.

      The pointer would be great for managing armies and so on.

      --
      She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.
    6. Re:Agree - easy solution too by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      the EU to collar the b*stards again,

      Hey fucker, quit pussifying language with your wildcards.

    7. Re:Agree - easy solution too by Alphager · · Score: 1

      You mean the PC-gaming market, which suffers from _heavyly_ piracy?
      Sorry, that is no replacement for the money-printing machine that Office is.

    8. Re:Agree - easy solution too by Hal_Porter · · Score: 1

      You mean the gaming market that has basically been completely taken over by consoles, Well they have a horse in that race too, just in case.

      http://www.hardcoreware.net/reviews/review-348-1.htm

      Now the PS3 is ahead in sales at the momentbut for ages the XBox360 outsold it, which is more than the XBox managed with the PS2. Of course the WII, DS and a bunch of other cheaper devices outsell 360 and PS3. But I think it's easier for Microsoft to try to migrate games from the sorts of companies it works with on Windows to the 360 than start an entirely new business based around something like a Wii. Buying an XBox n*360 every 4 years is much cheaper than feeding upgrades into a gaming PC. Of course a new Wii or the successor would be cheaper still, but it's not the sort of platform that PC games companies really know how to write for.
      --
      echo -e 'global _start\n _start:\n mov eax, 2\n int 80h\n jmp _start' > a.asm; nasm a.asm -f elf; ld a.o -o a;
    9. Re:Agree - easy solution too by Bert64 · · Score: 1

      Most consoles have USB ports...
      Most keyboards and mice these days are USB, and are dirt cheap...
      What's to stop console games implementing an option for keyboard/mouse control in some games? There are already alternative controllers for most consoles (steering wheels etc)... I would certainly go for keyboard/mouse options in some games. That's what made the Amiga good too, they connected to your TV like a console, booted games automatically like a console, used joysticks/joypads for games, and had a keyboard and mouse (optional on cdtv/cd32 but still available) for games which benefit from them.

      --
      http://spamdecoy.net - free throwaway anonymous email - avoid spam!
    10. Re:Agree - easy solution too by ZorbaTHut · · Score: 1

      And how many of those are realistically ever going to require DirectX 11?

      DirectX 9 is here for a very long time, unless MS gets off their ass and implements DX10/DX11 for XP.

      --
      Breaking Into the Industry - A development log about starting a game studio.
    11. Re:Agree - easy solution too by YaroMan86 · · Score: 1

      Indeed. And for obvious reasons.

      Many statistics claim that Vista is suddenly popular or widely used. But remember here that statistics are tremendously easy to lie with. Read the extremely insightful book: How to Lie With Statistics. It explains basically every way a statistic is a horrible horrible, yet very successful, way to convince someone of something.

      First off, you have to consider the source of the statistic. If it were coming from Microsoft, say, then one definitely has to wonder exactly which of the methods in that book they actually used to make Vista seem more successful than it actually is.

      Software companies have to consider this, too. Their goal is not to find out how much money MS is making off a system, but how much the system is actually being used. Those are two very different numbers as far as Vista is concerned. Microsoft gets to claim many sales for Vista thanks to licenses to OEMs. (Gobs of them.) This cost passes on to the customer of the OEM. Like it or not, If you bought a PC with MS bundled, you payed for Windows (Up to 1/3 of the price of the entire machine!) along with the hardware and the software included on the PC. Thus, for every PC with Windows bundled, MS gets to tally a sale.

      What isn't mentioned in MS statistics is how many of those sales are actually resulting in a persistent install of Vista! The reality: Many "upgrades" to Windows XP, or migration to Linux, *BSD, or even Mac OS X on the same hardware. (In Mac OS X's case it would be cracked versions. They're out there.) A game company, for example, has to consider their largest user base. In this case it would still be XP, but note that Linux is now getting the attention of some game companies.

      DirectX 10 isn't doing as well as DirectX9 because of its exclusivity on a platform thats user base is shrinking. DX 11 will be no better. The fact that OpenGL is and always has been technologically superior might soon become apparent. DirectX might begin to die down like Windows is. Where's the incentive to upgrade? What's the incemtive to upgrade to DX 10 or Vista? I see absolutely none for a company whose success rides almost entirely on the success of its platform. No wonder PC Gaming isn't doing as well as it could.

      Now, back to the actual topic of TFA, I'm not entirely worried about OOXML now being accepted as an ISO standard. Its a damn shame, yes, but there was another comment in this thread that lines out numerous results of this vote, all of which damage MS: Either no one will use the standard, people will see the extent that Microsoft went to get it passed, some governments are smart enough to see that OOXML isn't really an open standard and use ODF even more, and, by extension, if something like, say, OOo becomes more popular, which uses a *real* open standard like ODF, then OOXML simply exposed the corrupt mess that is Microsoft and now, ISO.

      But, OOXML sucks. We all know that, and soon anybody who is paying attention will know it. In winning, Microsoft has lost. And it will be a painful loss.

    12. Re:Agree - easy solution too by TankSpanker04 · · Score: 1

      A cute punishment would be making ODF compliance mandatory in the EU. It would be interesting to see how MS would react to such an order. Given the ODF spec is a fraction the size of OOXML's and MS has billions to throw around, who's to say MS couldn't implement the entire ODF spec in a short time period? Hell, they probably already did it "just in case". Any company willing to spend the cash to play with Singularity...
    13. Re:Agree - easy solution too by Ernesto+Alvarez · · Score: 1

      If they did, then they would have broken the lock-in themselves. Nobody would buy MS Office "because everyone reads and writes .doc".

      A few years later, the MS Office franchise would die of a thousand paper cuts, as people dissatisfied with MSO would migrate to other platforms. At the very least, it would force MS to reduce prices and enhance the product, just like what happened with IE.

    14. Re:Agree - easy solution too by ZorbaTHut · · Score: 1

      [i]DirectX 10 isn't doing as well as DirectX9 because of its exclusivity on a platform thats user base is shrinking. DX 11 will be no better. The fact that OpenGL is and always has been technologically superior might soon become apparent.[/i]

      I have to disagree with this one. OpenGL is simpler at the things OpenGL natively supports, but OpenGL's weakness has been that it really doesn't natively support the newest features for quite a while. The latest DirectX always has support for features that the majority of cards haven't even touched yet, but OpenGL tends to lag a few notches behind . . . well . . . everything.

      (For example, just now I'm trying to figure out how to do triple-buffering in OpenGL. As near as I can tell, the answer is "you can't".)

      The reason DirectX became dominant was, partially, because it's just [i]easier[/i] to deal with the unified DirectX documentation than it is to troll through eight thousand unrelated card-specific extensions. Apparently some of this is going to be fixed with OGL 3.0, and I'm looking forward to that, but OGL 3.0 ain't here yet.

      --
      Breaking Into the Industry - A development log about starting a game studio.
    15. Re:Agree - easy solution too by TankSpanker04 · · Score: 1

      Good point.

      MS might then claim their implementation of ODF is "standards compliant" - and even provide test results that "prove" it - but would somehow work differently in practice. Now THAT sounds like IE!

    16. Re:Agree - easy solution too by YaroMan86 · · Score: 1

      Good point. I was mostly speaking on third-party extensions to OpenGL. Those tend to fly out sooner for card features than DirectX. If you consider those extensions (Though unsupported.), DirectX is actually the one that is behind.

      However, I will concede, since OpenGL at its core is much slower to upgrade to new features. This is likely because OpenGL was never really intended to be a game API, unlike DirectX, which was fully intended to be a game API.

      I wonder, though, what will happen when OpenGL 3.0 comes out. It might just cause a stir.

      My opinion (Which is worth next to nothing against facts, of course.) is that DirectX was both the best thing to happen and the worst thing to happen for PC gaming. Best in that it brought it up to speed with consoles for a time at ~ DX 7 and 8. Bad in the fact it was a tool of Microsoft to effectively institute vendor lock-in. (Almost all game companies who write for Windows favor DirectX and when porting to Linux use SDL/OpenGL as an afterthought.) And with DirectX 10 and (soon) Directx11, we're gonna see some rocky roads ahead. I'm guessing one of four things will happen: 1. Game developers will ignore DX 10 and DX 11 for the most part and stick with DX 9 so they can maintain a good player base. 2. Game developers will recklessly start using DirectX 10 and 11 and lose a significant number of players who refuse to touch Vista. 3. Microsoft will finally gain some common sense and implement DX 10 and 11 on XP. (It *is* possible. OpenGL extensions have demonstrated all the so-called Vista-only features of DX 10 are quite possible under XP.) 4. Game developers abandon DirectX almost entirely and use alternatives like SDL and OpenGL.

      Personally, I prefer SDL and OpenGL. They may not be *quite* up there with DirectX, they can get damn close with additional APIs for SDL and extensions for OpenGL.

      I am actually working on my own little stuff that use SDL/OpenGL/Cairo extensively for games. A game engine and my own renderer. I didn't use DirectX at all because then I'd be stuck with Windows or, if I want to use Mac OS X or Linux, WINE. Bottom line, natively developed software always works best than those that rely on a compatibility layer.

    17. Re:Agree - easy solution too by toriver · · Score: 1

      Yeah using a mouse and keyboard over Bluetooth or USB. Unreal Tournament 3 for the PS3 for instance lets the player choose standard WASD+mouselook if they want to.

    18. Re:Agree - easy solution too by TheQuantumShift · · Score: 1

      Back? From where, the 360?

      --

      Shift happens. Fire it up.
  27. This just follows... by msauve · · Score: 1

    in the path of other well respected and used ISO IT standards, like OSI and CMIP.

    --
    "National Security is the chief cause of national insecurity." - Celine's First Law
  28. Tag: sadly!aprilfools by slimjim8094 · · Score: 1

    :(
    I hate it when Microsoft makes things its bitch. And I liked the ISO, too...

    --
    I have developed a truly marvelous proof of this comment, which this signature is too narrow to contain.
    1. Re:Tag: sadly!aprilfools by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's a big micro soft cock

  29. why a standard is needed by poot_rootbeer · · Score: 1

    I noticed that some of the links in the PDF document do not work, presumably because the file has been re-hosted on a third party's server.

    I bet this would not have happened if ISO had distributed the memorandum in an ISO-approved document format.

    1. Re:why a standard is needed by BoChen456 · · Score: 1

      Wrong, ODF does the same thing. Really, what do you expect the links to do when the original docs are NOT available yet?

    2. Re:why a standard is needed by poot_rootbeer · · Score: 1

      Really, what do you expect the links to do when the original docs are NOT available yet?

      The parent document should not validate.

    3. Re:why a standard is needed by juhaz · · Score: 1

      I bet this would not have happened if ISO had distributed the memorandum in an ISO-approved document format. Something like this one, perhaps?
    4. Re:why a standard is needed by Kalriath · · Score: 1

      You're fricking kidding, right? A link to a document, file or website that isn't up should result in the doc becoming invalid? What a dumb idea!

      Also, you do realise that the document was actually distributed in an approved document format (PDF) right?

      --
      For a site about things like basic rights, Slashdot users sure do like to censor "dissent".
  30. I don't like this idea by failedlogic · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Of all (or most) of the reasons for not liking the MS OOXL file, I oppose it the most because what if 5 or 10 years down the road with a new Office version, they decide to change the format. With this supposed "standard" we might all have to convert our documents. Locking your work in this format is also bad news if you want to retrieve it later. At least the folks at Wordperfect were kind enough to not have changed the format since the 5.x release.

    I've decided to use LaTeX to make a final copy of my documents in PDF format after writing up the document w/o markup in Text or RTF document. I'm new to using it, but the markup for most of my purposes is as easy as HTML (I don't use tables or math very much). Its too bad others don't know how easy it is (esp. with templates you can download).

    Some of my files are 10 years old and I've archived them all pretty well. But if I use a current version of Word to open it up, the formatting is all screwy. All the more reason to change.

    1. Re:I don't like this idea by BoChen456 · · Score: 1

      the markup for most of my purposes is as easy as HTML ... Its too bad others don't know how easy it is I think you need to go out into the real world some time and check out what percentage of people thinks HTML is easy (or even know what it is for that matter).
    2. Re:I don't like this idea by Akaihiryuu · · Score: 1

      I for one will be keeping my documents in a *standard* format...ODF. So I won't have to convert any of my documents. Anyone that gets suckered in by M$ deserves what they get.

    3. Re:I don't like this idea by Creepy+Crawler · · Score: 1

      HTML is a mess.

      The tags are simple enough, its the side effects of what browser you're viewing them on, and then how printing on that platform works.

      I like PS and LaTeX myself, but good luck getting them as a standard. They should be though.

      --
    4. Re:I don't like this idea by failedlogic · · Score: 2

      There's lots of people that don't know and have used GUI tools to markup a webpage. Its not to say the code was good, but it obscures the use of HTML and learning the language. Nobody has to hard-code a MS Word document with whatever formatting language it uses. I think if TeX catches on (I hope it will) a good GUI would help adoption LyX is a nice step forward.

      That said, I hope TeX language is standardized. Its increasingly popular in academia - in many fields outside of math and science, and I think its catching on in other areas as well (writing in languages other than those with romanized alphabets. Its in the last use particularly I think would help push standardized / ISO approval.

    5. Re:I don't like this idea by orpheus_okt · · Score: 1

      I for one will be keeping my documents in a *standard* format...ODF. So will I.

      A must admit, I did not follow the discussion in detail and all the time, but did OOXML gain a special power to ban ODF in some way by the... (well, most people seem to call it) "purchase" of this ISO standard? Maybe the combination of ISO and M$ sounds great and safe for certain large enterprises when they evaluate new products which their 5000 employees will have to use for the next five years.

      But why should ODF become uninteresting for the "normal" users? And ODF does not need a 80% market share of the "document handling business" in the enterprises to survive properly in the average household, does it? (Is the main danger public institutions switching to OOXML-only altogether in a short time while there won't be (really) free reader tools available? This is the only kind of force I can imagine right now to impress John Doe.) Please tell me whether I'm too naïve or short-sighted at the moment. Most comments here just sounds to me like the apocalypse is near and everyone not wanting to be an outsider will have to use OOXML tools from now on and prod ODF down the cliff.

      Man, I don't want to lose my "ODF(->PDF)" routine which I could even explain to my parents...

      --
      Axes high!
    6. Re:I don't like this idea by Akaihiryuu · · Score: 1

      Well for me it will be simple...if someone wants to create documents using OOXML, they can do what they want, but they won't get any help with me. If my parents or anyone else want help with something, if they're using Open Office, I'll gladly help, if they're using Office they're on their own.

  31. I need enlightenment... by v(*_*)vvvv · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Doesn't the old cliche of "the great thing about standards is there are so many to choose from" apply here? Or does this mean a ton of people will now be forced to use it and Microsoft will reap the benefits?

    Sorry, but every article I read about OOXML is about the voting and standardization irregularities, and nothing I've found reviews OOXML from the users standpoint, or implications of it being ISO-ed...

    1. Re:I need enlightenment... by WWWWolf · · Score: 5, Informative

      Sorry, but every article I read about OOXML is about the voting and standardization irregularities, and nothing I've found reviews OOXML from the users standpoint, or implications of it being ISO-ed...

      From user's point of view, this rushed standardisation means that the whole point of the standardisation has been defeated in OOXML's case. It also means that we now have two standards that solve the exact same problem, and thanks to the Marketing, the technically far worse format has a chance at winning: If OOXML becomes the dominant format, the promising future from OpenDocument may not be realised. It can be a major setback.

      And what was the point of the standardisation? What was the golden promise of OpenDocument? Interoperability, plain and simple.

      Simply put: In the current state of affairs, OpenDocument is implementable by third parties. OOXML is not. There can and will be many OpenDocument applications. If OOXML won't get fixed, there will be one and only one application with anywhere near compliant OOXML support.

      With OpenDocument, you can edit the documents in any ODF-compliant application - or process them with any external tool, or generate them from scratch programmatically - and there's no problems because the standards is complete, well specified, and not hopelessly tied to one application. OOXML, in comparison, has nothing of this: There's a bunch of nasty features that make writing completely compliant applications difficult, if not impossible. The end result will be that there's one application that processes OOXML "perfectly" (MSOffice) and the rest work when they work (and since consumers expect perfect behaviour, it means they aren't used very much, no?)...

      Sure, the interoperability dream is still very much there, because ODF is still out there. It's just that now we have a completely redundant standard that is a) technically inferior but b) Microsoft will make you either use it, or cry and use it.

    2. Re:I need enlightenment... by Neuticle · · Score: 4, Informative

      Sorry, but every article I read about OOXML is about the voting and standardization irregularities, and nothing I've found reviews OOXML from the users standpoint...

      That's pretty much because:
      a) the voting irregularities are IMMENSE
      and
      b) there is no review on OOXML from the user's standpoint, because there is NO implementation (ZIP, ZERO, NONE) of the ISO candidate version of OOXML to review. Not even from Microsoft, who are using a different version now, and (IIRC) have stated that they WILL NOT be using the ISO version in the future, if it is approved. AND it is likely that there will never be a complete 3rd party implementation of the ISO OOXML standard because it is so long, complex and dependent on patents and references to legacy closed source software. MS happens to own that source and those patents and aren't about to give them away. So basically it's a dead end mockery of the ISO process.

      If that's not enough to answer your questions AND piss you off, do some more reading on the topic.

      Try reading up on how and for what the Fast-track process has been used in the past: Mature, complete and currently implemented industry standards that are just being formalized; Not slap-dick, fly-by-night, throw-in-kitchen-sink 6000 page cluster-f*ks like OOXML.

      --
      "Cheeze it!" - Bender
    3. Re:I need enlightenment... by firefly4f4 · · Score: 1

      The end result will be that there's one application that processes OOXML "perfectly" (MSOffice)
      I just wanted to amend your comments by saying that note even MSOffice implements the full "standard", so even that product is far from a perfect implementation.

      A friend of mine commented to me that MS OOXML looks like they took the byte code of the DOC format, and made XML tags for each of their binary ones. That hardly makes it portable, let alone cross-product compatible.

    4. Re:I need enlightenment... by ekhben · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I think you're mistaken. There will be no applications that process OOXML perfectly. Would you, in all seriousness, prepare a slideshow for an important presentation using Office 2003 for Mac, when the presentation will be given by Office 2008 for Windows? Not twice, I'm sure. And of course, it's even worse if you do it the other way around. I'm sure glad I'm in a job where I have the luxury of simply deleting documents sent to me in MS formats and instructing the sender to try again.

    5. Re:I need enlightenment... by clickety6 · · Score: 1

      It's a great old saw and it would be true if OOXML was anywhere close to being a "standard".

      Basically ISO have (reportedly) taken a plate of dog faeces and labelled it as finest caviar - but that doesn't make it caviar!

      --
      ----------------------------------- My Other Sig Is Hilarious -----------------------------------
    6. Re:I need enlightenment... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "With OpenDocument, you can edit the documents in any ODF-compliant application "

      Rubbish. It's not even possible to implement large parts of ODF without referencing the OpenOffice source code because the spec is just full of holes. By contrast their are already competing products, such as Apple's office apps, which do implement OOXML.

    7. Re:I need enlightenment... by lurch_mojoff · · Score: 1

      It's not even possible to implement large parts of ODF without referencing the OpenOffice source code because the spec is just full of holes. Care to give an example?

      By contrast their are already competing products, such as Apple's office apps, which do implement OOXML. Ummm... nope, Apple's "office apps" do not support OOXML. Apple's very simple TextEdit application supports (a subset of the actual specification of) OOXML, but it also supports (likely again a subset of) ODF. The fact that Apple are trying to be proactive and keep their platform competitive by implementing OOXML does *not* mean that the "standard" is any good or is well documented. If it did mean that the same should apply for .doc, a subset of which Apple also supports in TextEdit and in their "office apps".
    8. Re:I need enlightenment... by jdubchak · · Score: 1
      It seems simple enough to me:
      • Embrace
      • Extend
      • Extinguish
    9. Re:I need enlightenment... by WWWWolf · · Score: 1

      I think you're mistaken. There will be no applications that process OOXML perfectly.

      Which is why I said "perfectly" very firmly between quotation marks, and specifically said MSOffice will be the only app that is "anywhere near compliant".

      My point is that MSOffice the only app that has even the chance of implementing OOXML spec in full, because Microsoft is in possession of the remaining bits that are missing from the OOXML specification - the behaviour implemented in MSOffice itself that they know exists in MSOffice but didn't bother to reverse-engineer the Office source code and specify what it actually does.

      And no, I don't believe Microsoft will bother implementing the spec correctly either; it's very likely that if MSOffice can't read a document produced by another app (no matter that the document is valid), it's obviously in Microsoft's eyes the fault of the other app.

  32. Apparently money can buy everything by Foofoobar · · Score: 1

    And this after buying votes, bullying people and several miscounts and rewriting of the rules. They finally got their way... I mean won by a broad margin.

    --
    This is my sig. There are many like it but this one is mine.
  33. Fix the headline, please by Eggplant62 · · Score: 2, Informative
    Interesting headline you have there. I think it should read:

    Microsoft buys ISO certification; World looks on with drool on its face

  34. Re:good by rtb61 · · Score: 2, Insightful
    Me thinks you have very little under standing of fractions, I'm getting more like 9/10 of /. is opposed to the corruption of ISO by M$ and the creation of a totally pointless unusable unstandard. When you have read and memorised a 6000 page standard, then you can come back and comment on it's value.

    Standards should be as brief, accurate and stable as possible, in order to be able to cost effectively apply them. This is just a sickening M$=B$ marketing exercise.

    At least in Australia it looks like OOXML is dead http://www.standards.org.au/downloads/080331_Aust_maintains_abstain_position_on_OOXML.pdf as it has been rejected by the Australian Government.

    --
    Chaos - everything, everywhere, everywhen
  35. ISO replacement by Akaihiryuu · · Score: 1

    If this is indeed true (and not an April Fools joke), then ISO's time is gone, as they have proven that they are no longer a standards body and instead are "open to the highest bidder". This means a replacement is needed. I propose something run by the community (preferably involving the Free Software Foundation)...this would kind of be a return to the days when standards were formed by posting RFC's on websites.

    But if this is true, then no reputable organization will ever seek ISO approval for a standard again.

    1. Re:ISO replacement by Wiseman1024 · · Score: 1

      You can say that again. If this is actually true, I'll never ever care for whatever crap ISO pulls out of its ass, endorse ISO standards, and bother to use them unless I'm already doing, and of course, should I ever need a standards organization, it won't be ISO. I don't have that kind of money, and I don't like to have to do something Microsoft's pestilent corruption scheme. ISO can rot for all I care.

      --
      I was about to say 13256278887989457651018865901401704640, but it appears this number is private property.
  36. Re:good by prockcore · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Using "M$" instead of Microsoft makes you look like a seething idiot.

  37. Chilling possilbilities... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Assuming that this is not an April Fool's joke... then I'm honestly pessimistic about the future of more than merely the IT industry. When a single company can subvert the very standards that governments require to interoperate... it simply does not bode well. How long will it be before a country -- one that cannot afford the M$ tax -- decides to go with another vendor's implementation of M$XML? Ambiguity in communiques between international bodies are bad enough without semi-interoperable standards increasing the likelihood that something gets misinterpreted. It is a matter of time before this unavoidable semi-interoperability costs a nation dearly - be it in blood or gold.

  38. Promote OOffice by guignome · · Score: 1

    I put a Get OpenOffice button on my website. That may not be much but still too many people use m$ word just because they don't know ooffice exists. So a marketing campaign can help the same way it did for firefox.

    1. Re:Promote OOffice by Mista2 · · Score: 1

      I always wondered why someone like dell who put so much crapware on their retail desktops couldn't include OpenOffice for free? I'd just love to see some letter or contract to get out saying "I will accept money to install this software on all new devices sold, as long as we don't also include xxxxxx software, DIV-X codecs and ogg/vorbis support."

    2. Re:Promote OOffice by Mista2 · · Score: 1

      All this is to actually support the US corporate hegemony anyway. I mean do you expect corporates from the US to follow international standards while still filling their cars by the gallon, cover many miles, and put on pounds after eating hotdogs at a world-series sporting event where no other country is invited? Don't even start me on NTSC - ugh!! I guess we're lucky the US still agrees on the length of a second and the speed of light in a vacuum.

    3. Re:Promote OOffice by davolfman · · Score: 1

      Because they aren't paid to. What? You thought they installed crippling levels of bloatware on their consumer's computers for free?

  39. Its true by javilon · · Score: 5, Funny

    Even the KDE foundation voted for it !!!

    --


    When his defense asked, "Which computer has Jon Johansen trespassed upon?" the answer was: "His own."
  40. Word beats all else by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You guys are so far up your own butts that you are being choked by your own sphincter. I was the lead developer on a competing word processor for 3 1/2 years. I have seen all of the crappy also-rans under a microscope and I must say: "Word rocks." You act like this is some kind of favor to Microsoft. You bitch when they do not disclose their proprietary formats, so why bitch now? You are the same people who think that acrobat is usable, and that Java is an open standard. Retards, all of you.

  41. Now that it is a standard .. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    we will have to wait for ECMA to 'correct' it to match what Microsoft has actually implemented, or wait for Microsoft to implement the actual standard.

    Or perhaps they won't bother to do either of those, after all 'Office is the standard' and if other applications can't do everything as Office does it then that is their problem.

  42. OT - Re:Its true by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ;)

    I'll be glad when today is over. Shitty day to have mod points.

  43. Use the standard by Iamthecheese · · Score: 0

    I may be missing something here, but now that it's a standard, can't we just automate the transfer of information to the non-Microsoft parts of the standard and move on? A document can fit the OOXML standard without any MS quirks at all. Just let MS keep pretending to be standard and code OOXML documents to a real standard. Then in OOXML version 2, MS can keep up or again be non-standard in every sense of the word.

    --
    If video games influenced behavior the Pac Man generation would be eating pills and running away from their problems.
    1. Re:Use the standard by Idiot+with+a+gun · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Well, that'd work if it weren't for tech specs that include "Wraplineslikeword95." As soon as you can tell me what the heck that means, then I'll make you a converter.

      Then there's the whole issue that nobody has implemented the standard the ISO passed, not even Microsoft. So we have no way of telling if it's even possible from them, let alone anyone who doesn't have access to the 18 or so patents they have covering OOXML.

    2. Re:Use the standard by Akzo · · Score: 1

      I haven't seen a Wraplineslikeword95 but I have seen AutoSpaceLikeWord95 which was deprecated a while ago. http://www.ecma-international.org/news/TC45_current_work/New%20proposed%20dispositions%20extend%20progress%20in%20addressing%20all%20National%20Body%20comments.htm Unless your converter has to convert Word95 documents I don't see why you would need to implement that to have a compliant converter.

      --
      Sig is for Signature, so you don't have to manually sign every post.
    3. Re:Use the standard by dumbo11 · · Score: 1

      Well if you want to open an ISO 29500 document, then yes it's deprecated. However, MS word doesn't & won't use the version accepted by ISO - making changes like that utterly pointless.

      In summary, it really doesn't matter what the spec says. You have to follow what MS does. It's a great spec - you can print it out, tear it up and use it as toilet paper, along with ISO's reputation.

  44. End of ISO? by Ilgaz · · Score: 4, Interesting

    See the story:
      An article up at Intellectual Property Watch claims they have obtained a document (PDF)

    See the article linked is "PDF"? Why? It is supported on everything down to Symbian S60 handsets and any open source software can support it. People can even race with vendors "reader" software making better ones. That is a real standard which won its place without dirty tricks.

    I bet usual suspects like Novell and their mighty Mono/Silverlight innovator Icaza will come up with a thing that supports it to some extent, advertise it and MS will use it as a proof.

    Last question: Did gnome people openly critised this decision? On their website?

    April 1 could be the end of ISO. Once you lose credibility, you don't get it back. It is not a April 1 joke either. You can even feel that one of the biggest IT scandals is waiting and this time it is not poor open source geeks anymore, it is IBM/Sun and GNU/BSD and various World governments especially those very rich ones who can even say "no" to EU. Don't forget the militaries either.

    1. Re:End of ISO? by steelfood · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately, there is no major WYSIWYG editing suite for PDF. Until there is one, PDF will be no more than a layout format. And, PDF only addresses that which fits properly into pages, i.e. documents and presentations. There's no grid file type outside of Excel as ubiquitous as PDF.

      The other major draw of Office is its cohesion. The individual components aren't as integrated as I'd personally like, but it is no trivial thing to be able to insert data from the clipboard into Word as a table what was copied out of Excel. Having Word as the default editor of Outlook's e-mails is, albeit a waste of resources IMHO, very common. And we may all like to rag on it, but VBA being available across all applications is a definite plus from a user perspective.

      My favorite text editor on the Windows platform is textpad. It has a powerful set of major features (compare, search across multiple files, regexp search), and numerous minor features that makes my life much easier when working with text files. But at its heart, it's a text editor and wants nothing to do with things unrelated to editing ascii text; it is not the document creator that Word is.

      --
      "If a nation expects to be ignorant and free in a state of civilization, it expects what never was and never will be."
    2. Re:End of ISO? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      wtf? all of the comments linked to the countries votes are links to .doc embedded in a pdf? If it's an ISO document, shouldn't they be using at least .odf and then having the option of ooxml?

  45. "Zardoz has fallen!!!!!" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Remember that scene in Zardoz? (Sean Conery rocked in that movie!)
    It's that same feeling.

  46. Sockpuppets by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Your comment is actually "insightful", I suppose, except for the fact that for some reason you immediately replied to it with one of your five sockpuppets.

    Why do you do that?

  47. Re:good by BSDetector · · Score: 0

    Correction!!! You must have meant all of them (the typical Slashdotter) - not just that particular one.

  48. Why? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I've seen OOXML stories on /. for a long time, but I don't see what the big deal is. I count 6 OOXML headlines in the last week alone. Microsoft's just asking for its new format to be standardized, right? From what I see it's supposed to be easier and more open than that old binary format. So why so much fuss? Just because Microsoft's at the front, everyone gets mad and every single piece of the story gets a headline on /.? Please elaborate; I just don't get it.

  49. Approval was not won... by QuietLagoon · · Score: 3, Informative
    Microsoft's OOXML won ISO standard status.

    Approval was not won, approval was purchased.

    1. Re:Approval was not won... by I'm+Don+Giovanni · · Score: 0, Troll

      I keep seeing this charge. Can you provide specifics? Yeah, I know about the Sweden incident last September, but MS reported that incident to the authorities themselves, and OOXML failed the September vote (to much rejoicing of slashdotters). But what about this new vote? Where is the evidence of "approval was purchased"? It seems to be a charge much bandied about around here without a shred of proof.

      Why can't you accept the fact that OOXML failed the September vote due to technical problems, ECMA/MS addressed those problems, and thus removed any real reason to reject OOXML in the new vote. Or is it that the opposition in reality had nothing to due with technical problems, but was rather politically driven, and so even a 100% pristine "perfect" spec still wouldn't pass muster with the likes of you because of the politics?

      --
      -- "I never gave these stories much credence." - HAL 9000
    2. Re:Approval was not won... by spitzak · · Score: 1

      Why did you use the initials of Multiple Sclerosis in your post?

      There appears to be two insults that Microsoft supporters cannot stand.

      Number one is to use a dollar sign. Somebody already did that above, and it immediately generated the "I am rubber you are glue anything you say bounces off me and sticks to you" comment that it always gets.

      Number two is to capitalize the S. This appears to remind them that their original name was two words. I have certainly been told off for writing "MicroSoft" because I believed it was the correct name. Therefore the initials "MS" are incorrect. Besides they really are already in common use for Multiple Sclerosis, as anybody over the age of 30 would tell you.

      My recommendation is to always write "Microsoft". Or write "microsucks" or something, for some reason that never generates the blathering "oh you are so stupid because you put a dollur sign in dood" responses.

    3. Re:Approval was not won... by Koiu+Lpoi · · Score: 1

      There are two I can think of off the top of my head:
      Lots of small African nations suddenly sign-up and favour Microsoft.
      Some countries change their vote from "decline" to "abstain", for no good reason.
      Also, see:
      http://www.groklaw.net/article.php?story=20080327231223154
      http://www.groklaw.net/article.php?story=2008032913190768

      As well, this is coming from the not-so-open-standards company of Microsoft. If they had produced a complete, clean, open standard that was truly better than the already-approved ODF (and not significantly worse), not many people would really be complaining. We'd probably be saying "wow, MS really did it up this time. Times change."

      And, as for "fixed the technical problems", I'll just quote Holloway and say that it's "inconsistent, buggy, inflexible, ugly... technically awful, broken, not-cross-platform, designed to confer the appearance of standardisation but without the detail necessary."

  50. Re:good by spitzak · · Score: 1

    M$ M$ M$ M$!!!!

    Ha ha ha ha ha. Aww I hurt your feelings by insulting your beloved Microsoft.

    Really, that predictable result from the fanboys every time somebody says M$ really shows that they are hurt by this. I notice nobody seems to say anything if somebody writes "microsucks" or "winblows". But gosh, if you put that dollar sign in, they act like their mother has been insulted! Awww, boo hoo!

    M$ M$ M$ M$ M$ M$!!!!!!

  51. Microsoft v IBM by Whiteox · · Score: 2, Insightful

    It's a sad time when MS can lobby an international standards group on a closed, propriety format.
    IBM, who have been shackled by MS with this vote and now the US government banning them from tendering, must be feeling the pinch.
    The only way to fight back in my opinion is to keep using odf and proactively supporting the ODF standard.
    Frankly, I don't mind if there are 2 document standards as well as PDF, as long as they are either fully interchangeable.

    --
    Don't be apathetic. Procrastinate!
    1. Re:Microsoft v IBM by jzhos · · Score: 1

      It is amazing to read "standard" and "closed, propriety format" in one sentence. Are you sure you know what are you talking about? I assume when it is a "standard", everyone can read it and implement it ( let alone how complete the implementation is ), that is not "closed, propriety format". And where did you hear IBM is banned by EPA because of fighting MS? I really want to know your reference.

    2. Re:Microsoft v IBM by Whiteox · · Score: 1

      I consider, or have the view that ooxml and more specifically docx is proprietary. There has been lots of discussions about how ooxml is proprietary and how translations of excel coding are not transparent, therefore closed.
      I didn't say that MS forced the US gov to ban IBM, although I wouldn't be surprised if there is a connection like this. In fact, I consciously avoided making that link. http://news.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=08/04/01/0456250 doesn't suggest that conclusion.
      2 blows against IBM in a week may be coincidental, but still smells of rotting fish.

      --
      Don't be apathetic. Procrastinate!
  52. Re:Don't panic. by renegadesx · · Score: 1

    Twitter posts, then agrees with himself. How typical nowdays.

    --
    Make SELinux enforcing again!
  53. ISO FTL by sega01 · · Score: 1

    Pathetic. The "standard" is flawed technically, its bloated, and it was superseded before it was written. Goes to show how the ISO groups can be bought with bribes. Lets just hope that this turns out to be a bad nightmare, and tomorrow OOXML as a standard becomes a thing of the past.

    I will try hard to not support this broken, worthless standard. Rise up and boycott OOXML!

  54. Re:good by MrKaos · · Score: 2, Funny

    Using "M$" instead of Microsoft makes you look like a seething idiot.
    Get over it dood, it's an accepted standard moniker when refering to Microsoft, and we have to accept standards even when we don't like them.
    --
    My ism, it's full of beliefs.
  55. Nothing has changed by mlwmohawk · · Score: 2, Interesting

    The ISO standard, besides showing how corrupting Microsoft's monopoly money is, changes nothing.

    We have the same situation today as we did yesterday.

    (1) A "standard" which is only a standard because a monopoly uses it.
    (2) A "standard" which is independently implemented by (n>1) vendors.

    So, as long as *we* the technologically literate stay "on message" like the P.R. spinmasters, we can use this in our favor.

    The "April fools document standard" AFDS for short, should be as well known as the "halloween documents." And when they ask why it is called the "april fools document standard," tell them.

  56. Re:good by bug1 · · Score: 1

    How does one "look like a seething idiot" ?

    Isnt it our thoughts/ideas that make us idiots or not, and you can actually see ones thoughts yet, and what does seething look like anyway ?

    Ah, maybe you didnt mean what you said and you were just posting like a seething idiot.

    I guess if you had an eye for detail you wouldnt be a M$ fanboi.

  57. Tag: omg!ponies by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    n/t

  58. What to do about the ISO... by spacefiddle · · Score: 1

    Hmm, this situation rings a bell...

    Delenn: If the Council has lost its way, if it will not lead... if we have abandoned our covenant... Then the Council should be broken... We must stand with the others -- now, before it's too late! Between the GNU Caste and the OS X Caste, we control two thirds of our forces! And to you I say, listen to the voice of your conscience! Break the Council, and come with me! Our time of isolation is over! We move now, together, or not at all!
  59. News by El_Isma · · Score: 1

    In other news, ISO has approved the new standard value of Pi. It is now to be valued at 4. Various industries have said that this move will make them spend less to fulfill their orders, in particular when products are bought by area.

    Nobody should care what ISO says anymore. News at 11.

  60. Re:good by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Every time someone points out that saying "M$" is childish, someone jumps to the conclusion that they must be pro-microsoft somehow. If I take offense when someone says the word kike, does that mean I must be jewish, too?

    I hate seeing people use "M$" because it often can ruin a legitimate post. It doesnt matter how great of a point you have, if you can't put aside the namecalling for the couple minutes it takes to type out a post, then a lot of people won't be able to take you seriously.

    This applies to "M$", "winblows", "microsucks", etc, just as much as it applies to "Linsux" or "Open sores". They are all childish, regardless of which "side" you feel you must be on.

    Additionally, you probably dont see people getting as upset about "microsucks" or "winblows" as much as "M$" simply because of sampling bias. I've seen orders of magnitude more posts ruined by "M$" than any other creative word choice, so you obviously will see more people complaining about it.

  61. Microsofts biggest competitor? by atuwh · · Score: 1

    M$ is going after its own customers, not the ODF user base. What incentive does an Office user have to upgrade from a perfectly good document format (that you can share with almost anyone) to a format that no one else can use? Well, now, because the new format is a standard, whereas the old doc standard is not. Microsoft's biggest competitor is Microsoft, and the ISO standard is just a way to keep milking the MSOffice teat.

    What's the big deal anyway? Anyone seriously considering which document format to standardise on isn't going to form a decision just because of an ISO standard. If only MS products support the "standard" then it doesn't really count for much. IT departments that are aware of the ISO standard would (I hope) be considering the technology on its technical merits and how it works for them and their systems.

    1. Re:Microsofts biggest competitor? by Shados · · Score: 1

      Anyone seriously considering which document format to standardise on isn't going to form a decision just because of an ISO standard
      Yes, they will. Being ISO compliant helps you get customers. Big customers.
    2. Re:Microsofts biggest competitor? by atuwh · · Score: 1

      Anyone seriously considering which document format to standardise on isn't going to form a decision just because of an ISO standard
      Yes, they will. Being ISO compliant helps you get customers. Big customers.

      Yeah, I haven't been on the vendor side of the fence for a while and hadn't considered it from a vendor point of view. However, there is a difference between being e.g. ISO9001 compliant and choosing one ISO document standard (such as OOXML) over another ISO standard (such as ODF).

      Anyway, isn't it the customer that would be choosing to standardise on a document format rather than a vendor?

    3. Re:Microsofts biggest competitor? by Shados · · Score: 1

      It takes too long to standardise on something. Once he customer tells you about it, its too late, you lost the contract. So you need to preemptively do it. Thus why its the vendor that would pick. In anticipation of the customer.

  62. Re:Popup by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Thanks for your great contribution.

  63. To: central@iso.org by Tolkien · · Score: 5, Interesting
    Subject: Re: Result of voting on ISO/IEC DIS 29500

    Hello, I'm writing to voice my opinion on the approval of Microsoft's OOXML format. It amazes me that ISO allowed such a monstrosity to pass. Everyone is aware of Microsoft's unending history of corruption. They bought out as many representatives as they could, to get this vote. Even Norway had corrupt people within its circles, though their committee chairman wasn't one of them (http://tech.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=08/03/31/200201) thankfully. It appears ISO completely ignored his protests however because this change of vote, according to the PDF file that I found here (http://slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=08/04/01/2229207), lists Norway as Yes without comments, regardless of the fact that it was originally No with comments.


    Shame on you ISO. You have successfully contributed to setting back innovation both directly and indirectly until you come to your senses and approve the ODF file format, or another format which will have been developed by a corporation that has nothing monetary to gain by standardization. How long will that be, 5 years? Maybe 10 years?


    As this file (http://www.noooxml.org/local--files/arguments/TheCaseAgainstOOXML.pdf) should illustrate, everyone with two brain cells worth rubbing together knows that those thousands of pages contain many instances of Microsoft intentionally leaving out important information necessary to implement functional OOXML files which look and act identically in all software implementations. This should have been a massive red flag for ISO to choose to not even consider OOXML as a standard, much less APPROVE it.


    I urge you to reconsider and reverse the decision to formally approve OOXML. OOXML should never have even been considered in the first place.


    After this mistake, I will never fully trust ISO's standards again, considering how Microsoft successfully undermined its voting process, and ISO made no effort to verify or rectify the corruption. I suppose the next question could be "how much money did ISO gain by approving this format?" but I dare not ask. I'm sure I'd be sadly disappointed regardless of the answer given.


    Sincerely,
    Tolkien

    1. Re:To: central@iso.org by Tolkien · · Score: 1
      Woopsie. Re: Re: etc..

      Correction to my previous e-mail, in the second paragraph I meant organization, not corporation. If only ISO could tell the difference too...
      Heh.
    2. Re:To: central@iso.org by Ed+Avis · · Score: 1

      until you come to your senses and approve the ODF file format,
      I hope this is a joke.
      --
      -- Ed Avis ed@membled.com
    3. Re:To: central@iso.org by Tolkien · · Score: 1

      I'm not sure how to respond to your comment because everyone knows ODF is better.

    4. Re:To: central@iso.org by KDR_11k · · Score: 2, Informative

      ODF is already approved as an ISO standard.

      --
      Justice is the sheep getting arrested while an impartial judge declares the vote void.
    5. Re:To: central@iso.org by Flywheel · · Score: 1

      Quite right
      The last time, the voting process was irregular in Sweden (Resulted in the sweedes abstaining from voting)
      This time it has been irregular in Norway and Denmark (Also from what I understand, the Swiss would abstain from voting if they internally was against the OOXML).

      Irregularity in Denmark I can understand - Denmark is a micro Redmond.
      But Norway .... I really don't get it.

      --
      Live long and prosper...
    6. Re:To: central@iso.org by Tolkien · · Score: 1

      I wish I had known that sooner. Heh, oh well, I believe I still made valid points though.

  64. have we learned nothing? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Oh my, have we learned nothing from our long sordid history with Microsoft? You forgot option (5) Microsoft's own software extends the standard in a proprietary fashion. What part of OOXML says "Microsoft will adhere 100% to the published standard, will not deviate from the standard, and will work entirely within the bounds of the standard"? Competitors can adhere to OOXML to the letter, and they still will not be able to properly interoperate with Microsoft products. This is how Microsoft operates. They do it over and over and over and over. If anyone thinks the future will be different please reply with your contact information and bank account number so you can help me move some funds out of Nigeria.

  65. Re:good by spitzak · · Score: 1

    I literally would not care if somebody wrote O$$ instead of OSS. I see a HUGE difference between that and "open sores".

    M$ is a very concise and obvious abbreviation and the dollar sign even looks a bit like an s and t printed atop each other and pronounces when read quickly the same. And anybody over 30 was exposed to "Jerry's kids" commercials when they were a child and "MS" means Multiple Sclerosis. I am NOT joking, that is a fact. Really would Microsoft rather be associated with money or a crippling childhood disease?

    And I literally see ZERO responses if somebody says "microsucks" or the much more common "windoze". But every single time somebody says "M$" the response is there almost instantly. I think the problem is that they really are hurt by this, while they are not hurt by obviously childish things, that (like "open sores") actually make the poster look stupid. They are hurt because "M$" does NOT make the poster look stupid so they attempt to deny that perception and claim it *does* make the poster look stupid by immediately making this response.

    I think also if you check my posting history you will see that I write "Microsoft" mostly. I used to write "MicroSoft" because I really thought that was the proper name, until somebody here complained that I was posting a grave insult to the beloved company...

  66. Why is this bad? by FirstTimeCaller · · Score: 1

    Ok, someone explain to me why a standard for office documents based on XML is bad. Surely it is better than the proprietary Office formats (e.g. .DOC) that were the defacto standard before. Oh, that's right -- it's from Microsoft. I guess that's reason enough, on slashdot.

    --
    Wanted: witty unique signature. Must be willing to relocate.
    1. Re:Why is this bad? by Otmenych · · Score: 4, Informative

      Ok, someone explain to me why a standard for office documents based on XML is bad.
      XML is not a point, OOXML is inconsistent, extremely complex, extremely verbose documented. It also may contain blob elements with an ARBITRARY content. For example, you can place WHOLE .doc document into .docx and it will be OOXML compliant despite fact that .doc is not a part of standard.
    2. Re:Why is this bad? by oldbamboo · · Score: 1

      It's bad because Microsoft will now clearly not be using the better ODF within Office, which would have given users the choice to move away from Office for their productivity suites to other suites, based upon their needs. It means that a billion odd business users will be strapped to Office whether they like it or not, because OOXML is a losing proposition for anyone else to implement, based upon it's complexity and use of proprietary MS technology. Seriously, mate, it took a while for this to sink in with me as well, but it will, and you're going to be pretty angry about this soon enough, believe me. Just read all the other comments. I was really looking forward to April Fools Day on Slashdot this year, for some OMGPonies fun, and this has been the most sobering and depressing news. A compete slap in the face...

      --
      You may not agree with what I say, but you should fight to the death to allow me to say it, by modding me up.
    3. Re:Why is this bad? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Simple

          -Binary .doc goes here-

    4. Re:Why is this bad? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      [OOXMLDoc]
        [Win32BLOB]
          -Binary .doc goes here-
        [/Win32BLOB]
      [/OOXMLDoc]

    5. Re:Why is this bad? by LingNoi · · Score: 1

      Old Format:

      0101010101011010101010101

      Shiny New XML format:

      0101010101011010101010101

  67. Your hopes are misplaced. by plasmacutter · · Score: 1

    I went to a top 20 institution for my BA's (graduating quite recently)

    half way through my time there they replaced their IT staff.

    Shortly thereafter I had to start spoofing user agents because their official websites were making like it was 1998 again (this was 2004). Namely, I was being told safari was not compatible with the same html, css, and javascript which was there for years before, and apparently only internet explorer and firefox could render the same old pages. They had apparently been impregnated with magic beans.

    --
    VLC FOR MAC IS DYING! IF YOU DEVELOP, PLEASE SAVE IT!!
  68. Stop crying, people. Start being HONEST. by gregorio · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Yes, this is a repost.

    While everyone here is shouting "omg oh noes, teh microsoft ruinz teh ISOs!!! ISO suckz becoz microsoft is teh shit!", I cant see anybody summarizing the REAL motives and issues behind the whole OOXML controversy. And by real motives I mean "Anti-Microsoft people dont want Microsoft to obtain a public international standard on documents, so Office sinks (and Microsoft gets screwed) when governments start pushing restrictions on formats for their documents".

    Lots of websites and groups were founded for the sole purpose of politically-motivated bashing of OOXML, while pretending to be about technical issues. A lot of people are complaining about small omissions related to optional behaviours such as Word 97 wrapping emulation and such.

    Seriously, look at Wikipedias summary on "technical criticism". Out of 5 mentioned "technical criticism" items, two are just silly complaints about not using W3C formats, the last one is not even a complaint or issue, and the other two are valid questions, but small details that can be changed or ignored. What the hell, that Holloway zealot, maintainer of a site built only for this issue, managed to spew 17 pages of crap only to mention 6 (yes, SIX, SIX, on 17 pages) valid (yet minor) issues about OOXML. The entire document was political, with arguments that are nowhere related to a standardization process, such as "Microsoft is historically known for...". What's next? Telling ISO about how random company's CEO cheated his wife, so they can't accept the company's standard? What happened to TRUE technical analisys?

    There are no real technichal issues that exclude OOXML from the class of standards that can be accepted by big standard comitee. A lot of people have tried to comment on this issue, even famous OSS developers, and they all received strong criticisms from the zealots that are fighting what is actually a holy crusade against OOXML, and not a valid technical opposition to a standard.

    Is it time to admit that most people are against OOXML mostly because they hate Microsoft, and they want the standard to be denied so it might help Open Office and others, and not because they actually read the spec or analysed it. It is time for people to stop pretending that they're fighting for "purity on the standards process" and admit they they're just fighting for their own political interests. They're not mad because they're actually worried about the technical issues of the spec, but they're pissed off because this situation was a good opportunity to screw-up things for Microsoft.

    This whole process has NOT turned ISO into an useless standards body and nobody except from geeky OSS zealots care about this. All engineers and big companies that rely on ISO for a lot of things will not change their minds about the institution. This is just about a bunch of grown-up babies crying and shouting.

    1. Re:Stop crying, people. Start being HONEST. by AlgorithMan · · Score: 3, Informative

      In the first ISO vote the members had 50 pages of complaints
      around 1.5% of them have been adressed in the meantime

      what non-bribed ISO member would say now "wow, they adressed so many complaints that I can go from a 'no' vote to a 'yes' vote"?

      --
      The MAFIAA is a bunch of mindless jerks who will be the first up against the wall when the revolution comes
    2. Re:Stop crying, people. Start being HONEST. by anilg · · Score: 1

      Do you have links backing up those claims and numbers, or did you pull the numbers out of you-know-where?

      --
      http://dilemma.gulecha.org - My philospohical short film.
    3. Re:Stop crying, people. Start being HONEST. by bitserf · · Score: 1

      I work in a pure Microsoft shop in a large enough company, developing against several ISO financial standards.

      I still think this has been a terrible way to create a standard. My objections are not technical, as I have not gone to the effort of reading the specification in its entirety, my objections are procedural.

      Try again.

    4. Re:Stop crying, people. Start being HONEST. by I'm+Don+Giovanni · · Score: 1
      "what non-bribed ISO member would say now "wow, they adressed so many complaints that I can go from a 'no' vote to a 'yes' vote"?"

      The Czech Republic, for one.
      http://xmlguru.cz/2008/01/ecma-response-to-czech-ooxml-comments

      ECMA already provided proposed resolution for 75 comments (out of total 75 Czech comments). This means that 100.00% of Czech comments were handled by ECMA.

      90.67% of comments were satisfactory resolved.

      8.00% of comments were resolved only partially.

      1.33% of comments were not satisfactory resolved.

      ...

      In fact I was really surprised how many "green boxes" are there at the end. I was expecting that ECMA will properly address only part of our comments. The vast majority of Czech comments was addressed by ECMA so it is time to say yes to OOXML. The countries that switched from NO to YES did so on the merits of the improvements that were made, not based on "bribes". That you and the others are actually accusing (both implicitly and explicitly) the Czech Republic and others that switched from NO to YES of taking bribes and whatnot with zero evidence is outrageous.
      --
      -- "I never gave these stories much credence." - HAL 9000
    5. Re:Stop crying, people. Start being HONEST. by mudshark · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Hey, if you can repost that same crap drivel, back atcha homes:

      You obviously have never had to implement anything that needed to conform to a defined, published standard. If you had, you would never in a million years defend a ragged mess which can't even deal with Julian dates without referencing a broken proprietary binary (Excel 97). And you wouldn't defend OOXML, in raving terms including liberal usage of boldface, all caps and ad hominem attacks, if you understood the difference between a properly written standard and one cobbled together in panic that large institutional customers would abandon a proprietary format over concerns of long-term data accessibility, bit rot and lock-in.

      Enjoy your new spec.

      --
      In other news, astrophysicists have announced that they now know what all that dark matter is: it's stupidity.
    6. Re:Stop crying, people. Start being HONEST. by Trogre · · Score: 1

      I totally agree.

      But please stop calling my office - your cheque's in the mail.

      Hugs,
      Steve B

      --
      "Nine times out of ten, starting a fire is not the best way to solve the problem." - my wife
    7. Re:Stop crying, people. Start being HONEST. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "omg oh noes, teh microsoft ruinz teh ISOs!!! ISO suckz becoz microsoft is teh shit!"
      Hey, you're good at l33t!

    8. Re:Stop crying, people. Start being HONEST. by AlgorithMan · · Score: 3, Informative
      I remembered some numbers incorrectly:
      • The ISO members (the JTC1 committee) found 3522 defects in the OOXML standard
      • The Ecma grouped these complaints and proposed 1027 changes on about 2300 pages
      • Microsoft said they had adressed 662 of the proposals
      • At the isos ballot resolution meeting (BRM) 900 of the 1027 proposals were not checked (they didn't check if MS had implemented the changes)
      • Rob Weir used a random sampling technique to estimate how many proposals were actually implemented: about 1.5%
      http://www.computerworld.com/action/article.do?command=viewArticleBasic&articleId=9065903&intsrc=news_list
      http://www.pro-linux.de/news/2008/12520.html (german)
      http://politics.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=07/12/04/0310208
      http://www.robweir.com/blog/2008/03/how-many-defects-remain-in-ooxml.html
      --
      The MAFIAA is a bunch of mindless jerks who will be the first up against the wall when the revolution comes
    9. Re:Stop crying, people. Start being HONEST. by makomk · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Of course, the Czech Republic comments covered only a tiny fraction of what was wrong with the standard, so the actual improvement was, relatively speaking, fairly negligible - even when you take all the comments submitted by all the countries, there's still far more things left unfixed than there are things that have been fixed. (There just wasn't enough time to find everything.) It looks like several of the partially-resolved issues are still likely to break interoperability, too. To be honest, saying that "OK, we can approve it now" based on this seems a bit iffy...

    10. Re:Stop crying, people. Start being HONEST. by I'm+Don+Giovanni · · Score: 0, Troll

      "Of course, the Czech Republic comments covered only a tiny fraction of what was wrong with the standard, so the actual improvement was, relatively speaking, fairly negligible - even when you take all the comments submitted by all the countries, there's still far more things left unfixed than there are things that have been fixed. (There just wasn't enough time to find everything.) It looks like several of the partially-resolved issues are still likely to break interoperability, too. To be honest, saying that "OK, we can approve it now" based on this seems a bit iffy..."

      So are you saying that you agree with AlgorithMan (the guy to which I responded in my previous post) that all countries that switched from NO to YES took "bribes"? To be more specific, are you accusing the Czech Republic, and even more specifically, Jiri Kosek (the Czech Republic's expert, the one who wrote the evaluation I cited in my previous post), of taking a bribe? Remember, bribery is a two-way street. Many of you throw around accusations of Microsoft "bribing" people but in so doing you're also accusing the experts and government reps of accepting these bribes. I would like to know if you really want to go there (accusing real people (not just Microsoft or "governments", but real people), of taking bribes without any evidence to back up such an accusation).

      --
      -- "I never gave these stories much credence." - HAL 9000
    11. Re:Stop crying, people. Start being HONEST. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why is the above modded as "Troll"? He raises a very good question. You guys are making accusations regarding bribery, but only in the "general" sense. Let's get specific. Are you guy accusing Jiri Kosek, the Czech Republic's expert, of taking a bribe, yes or no? Until you have the guts to answer that question (and not hide from it by modding those that pose the question as a "troll"), then STFU about your "bribery" charges.

  69. Creditibility vs. Virginity by buss_error · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Like virginity, credibility is only something one can perserve or loose.

    Unlike Voltare, who regarded virginity as a corectable perversion, credibility is the coin of the technical trade. Lose it, and watch ALL your works fade away.

    If the ISO doen't move to retract OOXML as a "standard", their other standards will only be seen as gross manipulation of the technical industry, and be discarded and ignored.

    Pity. Aside from how much work has gone into other ISO standards, I can't quite see the the people who have loaned their reputation sticking by a body so obviously bribed, coorsed, and schivvied into "accepting" such a "standard" to continue to support it.

    I'd think that within a very short time, those who regard their honor as something more than coin to be traded to the corporation most likely to bid high, twist arms to breaking, and cheat at every turn will start to distance themselves from the ISO because of this.

    It would be one thing if the offered "standard" met some acceptable technical goal. In my estimation, what we're seeing isn't a technical goal, but a lock in to assure undeserved profit.

    --
    Necessity is the plea for every infringement of human freedom. It is the argument of tyrants; it is the creed of slaves.
    1. Re:Creditibility vs. Virginity by Corporate+Troll · · Score: 1

      I don't think "loose" and "virginity" are compatible ;-)

    2. Re:Creditibility vs. Virginity by jollyreaper · · Score: 1

      Like virginity, credibility is only something one can perserve or loose. Does technical virginity count? Because a lot of tech organizations out there still have technical credibility.
      --
      Kwisatz Haderach
      Sell the spice to CHOAM
      This Mahdi took Shaddam's Throne
  70. Re:good by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The problem is that using "M$" causes people to dismiss whatever point you were trying to make. If you're really trying to make a convincing argument (rather than just ranting trying to score slashdot karma points), it would behoove you not to use "M$".

  71. When Liberals lose elections, they claim fraud by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Slashdot might as well be the Daily Kos. Someone call Bev Harris. The hysterical left is foaming at the mouth again... LOL

  72. Re:good by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And I literally see ZERO responses if somebody says "microsucks" or the much more common "windoze". That's generally because most people who use those terms are trolls and are ignored. If you want examples of people complaining about it, go read Twitter/Erris's older posting history. He uses "windoze" especially often, and theres usually a few replies telling him that it's stupid (not so many now that he is in karma hell, but back when his posts were visible lots of people pointed it out).

    Also I don't think anyone, ever, is going to confuse Microsoft and Multiple Sclerosis when someone writes "MS". The context of a statement would usually make it clear. In fact I can't even begin to think up a legitimate sentence using "MS" that would make the distinction ambiguous. You'd be just as likely to confuse Multiple Sclerosis with Mississippi (also abreviated MS), which is to say not very.
  73. ISO is irrelevant. by liftphreaker · · Score: 1

    The ISO is relevant to some extent in the manufacturing, heavy machinery, etc industries, but when it comes to IT they're pretty much irrelevant. My little company will continue using and working on whatever format we use today, and so will your big company there. M$ word is pretty much the default for documents, as is excel for spreadsheets. Did you expect a major change if ODF won?

    1. Re:ISO is irrelevant. by walterbyrd · · Score: 1

      I am not sure if ISO is irrelevant when it comes to government purchasing.

      > Did you expect a major change if ODF won?

      Not overnight, but yes, that would have been possible. If governments started using ODF, then big businesses, that work with the governments, would have used ODF. Which means smaller businesses would start using ODF, and so on.

    2. Re:ISO is irrelevant. by toriver · · Score: 1

      I am not sure if ISO is irrelevant when it comes to government purchasing.

      Yeah that is why goverments exclusively rely on ISO MOTIS (X.400 family of specs) for mail exchange instead of that "hacked together by nerds" un-ISO protocols like SMTP... Sent over X.25 networks instead of over "Berkeley student project" protocols like TCP/IP...

      Good thing HTML 4.0 is an ISO standard otherwise they probably would not even have websites...

  74. Did you fall for MS's ploy again? by ClosedSource · · Score: 1

    I wonder if part of MS's motivation was to distract the F/OSS community from real progress by getting them all excited by this meaningless issue. Do you remember the predictions that MS was going to control the Internet if Netscape didn't prevail? Has that happened yet?

    1. Re:Did you fall for MS's ploy again? by marcosdumay · · Score: 1

      Do you remember the predictions that MS was going to control the Internet if Netscape didn't prevail? Has that happened yet?

      Well, they did.

    2. Re:Did you fall for MS's ploy again? by Catbeller · · Score: 1

      Yes, they do, as we have to alter web page code to work on MS IE Explorer, else most of the computers in the world won't parse it correctly. And in medical records systems, I can say personally, the printed CD output is "only" readable by Genuine Microsoft Internet Explorer. No other browser will load the images properly, unless of course you navigate to the CD drive and explicitly open "default.htm", which of course no one will do, because no one tells them the option is available. Splash screen of the CD says output is readable only by Microsoft's Internet Explorer, yadda yadda. The hell they don't control the browser code market. The put Netscape out of business for a reason.

  75. ISO introduces new standard for corruption by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The new ISO standard ISO/IEC 29500 allows the assessment of corruption in countries, organizations and individuals based on a dual-logarithmic scale which correlates potential and de-facto corruption to optimize investment for multinationals.

    Gabriel Garter of ISO comments, "We are very proud to launch this latest international standard, which is now ready for deployment. This was a global effort which required the help of organizations and individuals with years of experience in achieving corruption to finally allow us to provide this valuable service to the market."

    ECMA International, the leading standardization organization in this field adds, "We were glad that years of expertise at forcing low-quality technical documentation through ISO for certification with minimum modification proved to be so useful for this new international standard."

    Microsoft, the world's largest software company comments, "Microsoft is glad that we could be of use to this project. Over the years we have assembled a valuable compendium of in-house knowledge about various corruption techniques. While these techniques constitute our intellectual property and we would pursue method-piracy to the full extent of the law, we will be offering a licensing program with reduced fees for all Microsoft Gold Partners who participated in the project."

    "Our special thanks and gratitude go to Jan van der Beld, whose tireless efforts to selfishly spread corruption have been our source of inspiration," concludes Garter. "In honor of his work, we decided to introduce a special motto for this new international standard. The phrase 'You are well paid. Shut up!' will be printed in bold on the header of every page of ISO/IEC 29500, quoting Mr van den Belds most inspiring speech available at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wITyO71Et6g."

  76. Big deal by BagMan2 · · Score: 0

    I guess Microsoft is screwed no matter what with this crowd. Seems like it was only last year that all the complaining was Microsoft using proprietary formats. Now they open up their formats by turning control of them over to ISO and the exact same crowd complains that Microsoft is trying to open-up their document format and make it the defacto standard.

    ISO isn't the authority for what format is best, they are merely an organization that serves to definitively establish what the format is in an open manner. It's not at all unusual for ISO to approval many standards that all serve the same basic purpose. It's not an endorsement of the merits of the format.

    Quite frankly, you sound like a bunch of cry-babies because now ODF is screwed. The desktop software on 95% of computers won't read ODF and never will. Now that OOXML has ISO approval, govenment agencies and others will be able to adopt it wholesale, leaving ODF with little to nothing.

    The fact is the open-source community is competing with Microsoft over which format will become the most widely used. It isn't ISO's job to decide which format should win. It's merely their job to outline exactly what the standards are. Maybe if the open-source community would quit bringing pocket-knives to a gun-fight, they would make some headway.

    Mod away...I know slashdot doesn't like opinions being seen that don't tow the party line.

    1. Re:Big deal by g4b · · Score: 1

      ISO isn't the authority for what format is best

      as we have seen, it isn't

      The desktop software on 95% of computers won't read ODF and never will.

      well now, that's the problem with ooxml becoming iso, isn't it? now it will stay this way.

      while i agree with your critics in some level, it IS a black wednesday.

    2. Re:Big deal by LingNoi · · Score: 1

      The fact is the open-source community is competing with Microsoft over which format will become the most widely used.
      THIS IS WRONG!. Open source has nothing to do with ODF. This Microsoft competitive crap that some how ODF == Open Source is BS.

      It isn't ISO's job to decide which format should win. It's merely their job to outline exactly what the standards are.
      Exactly, we already have a standard ODF. So now we have two standards for the exact same thing, hence we don't really have a standard at all.

      If I have to damn well pick which one to support in my app how the hell does that help me? Now I have to support two standards. I wish the ISO would just roll a dice and pick one already.
  77. Really ? by aepervius · · Score: 1

    I am an old PC gamer. Started with CGA... Remember defender of the crown ? Winter sport ? Well I do. And up to last week MS would have won my business just because of directx. Last week end I just went so sick of the crap shoveled to me that I bought a game console. I am NOW seriously thinking that PC gaming won't be worth the hassle except for a few big games which don't come to console. And for my oldies, I installed recently ubuntu with dosbox. After a lot of pain to start, works like a charm by the way. Thanks to all the /. which answered & helped me.

    --
    C. Sagan : A demon haunted world:
    http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0345409469/
    visit randi.org
    1. Re:Really ? by Bert64 · · Score: 1

      You played defender of the crown on CGA?
      Damn, get a copy of UAE and try the Amiga version, Amiga versions of games from that era are virtually all superior to their dos based counterparts.

      --
      http://spamdecoy.net - free throwaway anonymous email - avoid spam!
    2. Re:Really ? by prockcore · · Score: 1

      actually, the IIgs version was even better than the amiga version.

  78. ISO has played their part... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This only shows that ISO is no more relevant. A format that is open means that it's easy to deploy for most applications and a documentation of 6000+ with a lot of inconsistencies only plays into Microsofts hands. Standards are there to promote competition, this does the opposite.

  79. The Zimbabwean vote... by mr_lizard13 · · Score: 1

    ...may have been rigged

    --
    "We live in a global world" - Harvey Pitt, former Securities and Exchange Commission Chairman
  80. Re:Agree - My Proposed Solution by cyclomedia · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Here's how I envisiage fighting this

    first set up a web site with a simplish name that's anonymously funded and transparently run, indeed I am an MCP at a Microsoft only shop, i'd be happy to run the site but my priorities lie with feeding my children.

    It needs to be factual and neutral. Never yelling, or preaching. It needs to be the (webstandards.org) acid test of the document suite / format world.

    It needs to show clearly where each of several major office suites stand in relation to compatibility to both formats, and yes, it needs to highlight OO.os flaws neutrally and just as prominently as any other suite's.

    It needs to link directly and clearly to plugins for each suite for each format (where available). It needs to explain each suites compatibility issues and explain workarounds for maximum platform compatibility.

    It needs to show, clearly licencing against said office suites and support costs.

    It needs to show patent issues, again, factually and clearly.

    All of the above should be targetted not at the IT crowd but at the Pointy Haired Bosses of the world.

    Then the task will fall to us lot, the OSS advocates, to make OO.o and ODF the clear, statistical winner in the above site.

    captcha: infinity

    --
    If you don't risk failure you don't risk success.
  81. Bona-fide cooperative stance ?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm terribly sorry, but unless you're kidding (it was, after all, April 1st) I would like you to tell me what is collaborative about vote buying and ramming through a standard that isn't even ready for draft, let alone production use. You may be talking to nice people, but they too have to follow the corporate dictats in the end.

    In case you didn't notice, Microsofts actions virtually destroyed this normally proper functioning arm of ISO and removed whatever credibility the process had acquired via people doing the right thing rather than have the right rules.

    There is a sign which tells you if you have a good business partner. If you have to start reading what's in the contract you have lost the kind of trust that makes business flow smoothly - you know the other side is trying to screw you rather than do business together. *ANY*, repeat, *ANY* engagement with Microsoft *STARTS* with reading the contract, and it's not like they didn't have plenty of opportunity to show they know what collaboration looks like.

    In summary, I would suggest you examine the meaning of the word "participating" you used. I don't care if the guys you met are nice, the overall effect is that a standard has been imposed on ISO by breaking due process. That's not participation, that is wilful abuse. If those guys aren't walking around very ashamed I suggest they may not be as nice as you think. I have yet to see a move from Microsoft that demonstrates even a remote understanding what ethics and collaboration look like. I may have missed it though, I've only been in IT for 25 years and I may have blinked when it happened.

    This is precisely the whole problem, Microsoft has built up a solid track record of willingness to steal intellectual property (remember Stacker?), abuse or ignoring of any process going (QED) and screw any idiot that was willing to ignore that track record for profit (I'm waiting to see what happens to Novell). Proper collaboration is based on trust, which in turn is based on track record. It ain't looking good from where I sit.

  82. Re:Agree - My Proposed Solution by cheros · · Score: 1

    Actually, I already have the mechanism for this, on a much wider scale. Time to have a chat with some people (because I don't have the time to build it but I can guide it). Suggest you keep an eye on Switzerland - give me a month or so (have to set this up as a Uni project).

    [engaging evil part of my security brain, tab "counter social engineering"]

    --
    Insert .sig here. Send no money now. Owner may sue, contents will settle. Batteries not included.
  83. Time for OSIO? by clickety6 · · Score: 1



    Is it time for an Open ISO group to be set up to create real standards? ;-)

    --
    ----------------------------------- My Other Sig Is Hilarious -----------------------------------
  84. Unfortunately, it is true. by bitserf · · Score: 2, Informative

    Read it and weep.

    http://www.iso.org/iso/pressrelease.htm?refid=Ref1123

    Pathetic, if you ask me.

  85. underdocumented and inelegant by slashbart · · Score: 1

    MSOXML is underdocumented, which means that one can not reliably create documents in one application, and expect another application to be able to read them. This will cause the de-facto hegemony of MS-Office to continue.

    MSOXML is also very ugly, meaning that a lot of things will be much harder than they should be.

    Most of all, if one wants a document format for the future, than it should be a high quality specification, and not an obvious rush job like this one. You know what fast track is for: things like SQL, that was an extremely well established standard before it even got to ISO. Pdf would be a similar candidate.

    But I'm sure you know all this, and just asked to question to create some goodwill for MS.

  86. Just Because... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Just because it was approved, doesn't mean it wont fail.

  87. Re:good by Khaed · · Score: 1

    Dude, Linux is my primary* OS, and I think "M$" is childish and stupid. Not everyone who thinks calling them "M$" is stupid is a microsoft fanboy. I'm *certainly* not.

    *As in out of every month I spend less than five hours in Windows. If that.

  88. vote buying? by Adaptux · · Score: 1

    I would like you to tell me what is collaborative about vote buying I haven't heard of any actual vote-buying having happened. Sure, there was highly-intense lobbying, and I personally think that anti-trust laws were probably violated in all the countries were so many Microsoft gold partner companies participated in the decision-making process that their sheer number had a significant influence on the outcome.

    None of this however invalidates my point that it is in Microsoft's own interest to cooperate with people like me who care about the public interest (I'm representing the Swiss Internet User Group) on fixing shortcomings of the OOXML specification. I agree that significant conflicts of interest between the public interest and Microsoft's corporate interest exist, but it's not a zero-sum game, and I do believe that what I'm talking about is an area where cooperation is possible and makes economic sense.

    1. Re:vote buying? by Kalriath · · Score: 1

      Sure, there was highly-intense lobbying, and I personally think that anti-trust laws were probably violated in all the countries were so many Microsoft gold partner companies participated in the decision-making process that their sheer number had a significant influence on the outcome. That's not illegal, unless you're saying that any party that has any interest whatsoever in the topic at hand should not be allowed to vote. That'd be akin to saying that the President of the USA should be elected by Britain, and so forth around the world.

      --
      For a site about things like basic rights, Slashdot users sure do like to censor "dissent".
    2. Re:vote buying? by Adaptux · · Score: 1

      Sure, there was highly-intense lobbying, and I personally think that anti-trust laws were probably violated in all the countries were so many Microsoft gold partner companies participated in the decision-making process that their sheer number had a significant influence on the outcome. That's not illegal, unless you're saying that any party that has any interest whatsoever in the topic at hand should not be allowed to vote. That'd be akin to saying that the President of the USA should be elected by Britain, and so forth around the world. Check your anti-trust law. In most countries, "exploitation of a dominant market position" is illegal, regardless of the precise manner and mechanism in which the dominant market position is exploitet.
  89. independent compatibility test suite by nguy · · Score: 1

    I think what we need now is an open source compatibility test suite to detect and flag when Microsoft departs from the OOXML standard, as they invariably will sooner or later.

    We need to establish that the standard (such as it is) defines the format, not Microsoft's Diet Coke swilling VC++ hackers.

  90. Russia abstains =). by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Russia abstains after pressure of the local FOSS community. What do you say about corruption after this?

  91. Link to ISO press release by eknagy · · Score: 1
  92. Re:Don't panic. by uglyduckling · · Score: 1

    Man, how do you have time to do all this? You should write a lifestyle guru book exaplaining how you manage to spend hours writing posts on Slashdot and replying to yourself and still fit in things like eating and washing.

  93. Post approval analysis by Ice+Tiger · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Will be interesting to see who voted for what and what made them change if they did. Potentially there could be a lot of fallout for those involved as the facts come to light.

    Personally I have lost faith in ISO because it seems the worlds largest computer software manufacturer can just buy their own standards from this organisation.

    --
    "Because we are not employing at entry level, offshoring will kill our industry stone dead."
  94. Contact Information by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Roger Frost
    Manager
    Communication Services
    ISO
    Tel. + 41 22 7490111
    E-mail frost@iso.org

    Jonathan Buck
    Director of Communications
    IEC
    Tel. + 41 22 9190211
    E-mail jjb@iec.ch

  95. Official Announcement by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ISO has announced it officially here:

    http://www.iso.org/iso/pressrelease.htm?refid=Ref1123

    They say it received the necessary votes to become an international standard, and there's no mention of any controversy!

    Steve

  96. Everyone loses by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So, because of this ego-tripping we're left with 2 'open' office standards. This will probably mean that OpenOffice will have half-baked OOXML support and MSOffice will have half-baked ODF support.

    Guess everyone loses.

  97. ISO press release by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
  98. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  99. People power by benwiggy · · Score: 1

    I would encourage everyone to email their disgust directly to ISO. I have, using the webform for comments on the ISO site.

    1. Re:People power by Fenice · · Score: 1

      It look like that some people at Iso have so much money stuck in their hears that they did not listen to whatever was said about OpenXML, so why would they listen now?

    2. Re:People power by benwiggy · · Score: 1

      It look like that some people at Iso have so much money stuck in their hears that they did not listen to whatever was said about OpenXML, so why would they listen now? Maybe they don't read Slashdot? They might read their own email, though.
  100. You are lying. Msft can use ODF. by walterbyrd · · Score: 3, Informative

    >>And by real motives I mean "Anti-Microsoft people dont want Microsoft to obtain a public international standard on documents, so Office sinks (and Microsoft gets screwed) when governments start pushing restrictions on formats for their documents".

    Absolute 100% pure unadulterated crap. Msft is entirely capable, and welcome, to use ODF. In fact, I think plug-ins already exist.

    I am sick to death of this brazen lie being propagated on slashdot, and elsewhere. It is not true, and it makes no sense. You statement is based on the assumption that ODF locks msft out - and that assumption is simply not true.

    1. Re:You are lying. Msft can use ODF. by MightyMartian · · Score: 2, Interesting

      The plugin is a horrible monster.

      I hope the EU forces, under pains of billion dollar fines, Microsoft to put ODF support directly into future versions of Office, and continues to threaten them if they try to break it.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
  101. Microsoft wins big by walterbyrd · · Score: 1

    So what if everybody has to use a crappy standard, it's all about 'da bling.

  102. Press Release: ISO captured by vendor Microsoft by zoobab · · Score: 1

    Brussels, 2 April 2008 -- ISO members failed to disapprove the Open XML format. Microsoft has compromised the International Standards Organisation (ISO) during the rush to get a stamp for their Office OpenXML (OOXML), using unfair practices such as committee stuffing in several countries and political interventions of ministers in the standardization process.

    A vote by national members of ISO indicates a majority for the controversial Open XML format. OOXML received 75 Prozent approval votes of p-members of JTC1, among them many nations of questionable expertise in standardization. In September a first attempt to approve the 6000 page standard Open XML failed with more than 3500 submitted comments. As in September many of the new approval votes were won by political high level intervention and the vendors dominance in national technical committees.

    From June 2007 to March 2008, technical committees around the world studied and analysed one of the largest IT standards proposal ever, Microsoft's OOXML. In order to get its format safely through ISO, Microsoft had to stuff committees, lobby ministers, mobilize business partners, and rewrite the ISO rules.

    The rush for Open XML started with the adoption of OpenDocument format as the ISO standard for office documents (ISO 26300:2006). The open standard ODF is considered a danger for the market monopolist Microsoft with its flag ship product Microsoft Office. Governments worldwide are switching to the ISO standard OpenDocument Format (ODF) as their default format for office documents. ODF is a vendor neutral ISO open standard. The reaction of Microsoft to defend their monopoly position was to rush through their incompatible alternative format Open XML via ECMA international to become a second ISO standard. Although the Open XML format lacks maturity on formal grounds Microsoft has been able to hijack the entire ISO process. The technical review of the format was strongly obstructed by its originator and its political interference in the ISO process.

    Presence of Microsoft Business Partners has been reported in the following countries: Belgium, Brazil, Colombia, Denmark, Egypt, Italy, Ivory Coast, Kenya, Mexico, Nigeria, Portugal, Slovenia, Sweden, Switzerland and the United States of America. Furthermore, it has been reported in several countries, such as France and Malaysia, that Microsoft has lobbied the government and the responsible ministers to override the decisions of the technical committees, which spoke out against an approval of the format.

    Jan Wildeboer, Solution Architect at RedHat, explains: "OOXML was created solely for use in Microsoft applications. It is not currently suitable as an international standard, because it cannot be completely implemented by anyone without access to inside information. Although it is more than 6,000 pages long, it contains various references to things that are defined only in Microsoft's software, not in the specification itself."

    Rui Seabra, Vice-President of ANSOL and member of the technical committee in Portugal, says: "Congratulations are due to Microsoft. They've been able to push an incomplete and buggy document as an international standard, that only they can implement. It's now proven that ISO/IEC standard of quality can be subverted."

    Laurent Richard, of the Belgian Association Electronique Libre, says: "The war about office file formats only begins. The real war will be the adoption of OOXML by governments, and their citizens, which will have to buy again a copy of Microsoft Office to find out what the decision makers are doing. We will ask the European Commission to scrutinize this format, and garantee that competitors can have 100% interoperability with the Microsoft Office, which is not possible with the current OOXML pseudo-standard."

    Pieter Hintjens, of the European Software Market Association, says:"Nobody wants standards you can buy. Microsoft bought a standard at ECMA, now they bought ISO. Who wants this?"

    Graham Taylor, Openforum Europe, regards the outco

  103. You're an asshole by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You claim to have knowledge that Microsoft is corrupt yet you still work for them. That makes you just another greedy dickhole.

  104. What Microsoft wanted by Vexorian · · Score: 1

    They wanted two standards, I say give them two standards. Microsoft should immediately support ODF and ISO OOXML , right now office supports neither of them, office should be able to open both formats without any translator or complication, Microsoft must implement both formats correctly following the specs closely, and ODF must be the default, since it is the default for office formats while OOXML is, like they said many times, is the default for legacy documents.

    Microsoft have stated multiple times how they want freedom of choice, so now they should try following all the things they said. They hope we would forget all of this soon, but that's ought not to be the case.

    --

    Copyright infringement is "piracy" in the same way DRM is "consumer rape"
  105. what, in dollars-per-vote, did MS spend? by museumpeace · · Score: 1

    This may be one of the most expensive "standards" ever foisted off on the business world if you factor in the cost of all the influence buying Microsoft engaged in.

    --
    SLASHDOT: news for people who can't concentrate on work or have no life at all and got tired of yelling back at the TV.
  106. Are you serious? by pyrr · · Score: 1

    Did Microsoft happen to completely remove the Excel date bug specification from their so-called "standard"? If the answer is not "Yes", then the standard is still shoddy and should be discarded like the rubbish it is.

  107. Was there ever any doubt? by rbanzai · · Score: 1

    Microsoft can buy any vote it needs. Why was this discussed as if there would be any outcome other than a Microsoft win? You cannot stop a company with the money to buy off every major decider on Earth.

  108. Not 86% of the world by walterbyrd · · Score: 1

    > "Yes, because Microsoft obviously purchased 86% of the world."

    What kind of silly crap is that? Microsoft only had to buy off a few dozen people.

    > "This obviously will surprise you, but most people in the world are happy with Microsoft products."

    What does this have to do why msft products? And why do msft shills constantly try to confuse standards with products? Msft is no more forbidden to use ODF than msft is forbidden to use ASCII or HTML. What is wrong with ms-word supporting ODF?

  109. Need prosecution by the EU by wonkavader · · Score: 1

    PHBs will see MSOOXML (hearafter pronounce Moose-OX-Emmel) as an open standard, when we know it's not. Until there's a fraud investigation and prosecution (for any aspect of it -- no mater how small) this will stand. Once MS is convicted for some petty fraud in relation to it, there will be a concrete rebuttal. "It's an open standard." "The standard was pushed through by fraud."

    Until that day, we're left with paragraphs of response, which won't be believed -- we need a one sentence response backed up by a WSJ article.

  110. Boiled down to it's essence by Froqen · · Score: 1

    Do I implement a brand new spec that is clean because it ignores and wishes away all the legacy of the past, or do I implement a more complex spec that transitions them?

    Developers like the earlier
    Users like the later.

    OSS is typically dev oriented.
    Commercial software is user oriented (because they have to be).

    1. Re:Boiled down to it's essence by Alex+Belits · · Score: 1

      I AM a developer, and most of my problems are caused by convoluted and unclear, or never documented at all outdated specifications.

      When a wordprocessor has to imitate some obviously broken legacy behavior, usually it's better to turn it into ridiculously detailed specially-positioned but described in general terms formatting (as long as text flow is preserved) and never ever have to reproduce the bug again in a new format. Microsoft could do that and reduce its own support efforts for future products, but that would make new formats easily usable by new, cleaner and better designed software, and Microsoft can't allow that to happen.

      --
      Contrary to the popular belief, there indeed is no God.
  111. MIcrSOft Buys ISO Acceptance of OOXML by BanjoBob · · Score: 1

    All the press releases have it wrong -- ECMA/ISO didn't approve MSOOXML as a standard. Approval means it was evaluated. The standard doesn't even exist yet. There are 6000 pages that have gone unread for the most part and lots of broken pieces. No, Microsoft bought off ECMA, ISO and the others to buy the standard.

    Of course, in the process they totally destroyed any and all credibility of the ISO and the standards process. Thankfully, ODF is still a real standard that can be employed.

    --
    Banjo - The more I know about Windoze, the more I love *nix
  112. Re:Why do you say "incorrect"? by Psykechan · · Score: 1

    We are talking about the independent consumer market here.

    Intel developed the Itanium because they needed a desktop/workstation 64-bit x86 architecture since Apple-IBM-Motorola had a functional one with the PowerPC 970 (G5) and AMD was rapidly developing a competing one... one that would eventually become the standard.

    Without AMD, Intel would have been able to simply sit back and sell 32-bit Pentiums for years before the PowerPC took away any significant chunk of the market. AMD's faster, better, cheaper x86 has pushed Intel's development ahead faster than any other factor has. Even if you ignore the technical advancements that the competition brought forth, AMD has kept Intel's prices down, and by simple transposition, kept Intel's profits down as well.

    Consider this: if AMD had gone bust a few years back, Intel would've stuck with the floundering Pentium 4 architecture and not have been forced to adapt the Pentium III into the Pentium M and eventually into their current consumer line, the Core 2.

    Development time costs money. Competition costs money. Sure it is needed for products to evolve but try explaining that to the stockholders.

  113. Re:good by spitzak · · Score: 1

    From looking at "twitters" postings I believe he is a fake poster trying to make OSS supporters look stupid. His arguments are illogical and he makes obviously false claims about Linux. I suspect that is why he prominantly puts "M$ junk" into his signature, in an attempt to associate the M$ combination with more silly stuff like the word "junk".

    Would like to see a response that says "Saying Windoze is really childish" where the original post is something similar to these M$ ones where it is some argument and NO other insulting words are used other than "Windoze". I see literally dozens of instant "Saying M$ is childish" responses no matter what the wording is. I believe this is due to denial on the posters part that the M$ abbreviation is in common use. Besides, if it really was childish, why point it out?

    And "Emm Ess" is certainly confused, as that is EXACTLY what the disease Multiple Sclerosis was called. When seen in the context of a state, people do not read "emm ess", they read "Missisippi", but when reading a post about Microsoft with the letters MS they read "emm ess". You are obviously too young to have been bombarded ENDLESSLY with these adds, believe me the identification is quite deeply programmed into me and I suspect many other people.

  114. Are you guys seriously this fucked up about this? by smitth1276 · · Score: 1

    Get out more often. Seriously.

  115. Nice way to astoturf by marcosdumay · · Score: 2, Interesting

    For example, the Czech Republic voted NO in September, but switched to YES. Why? Because nearly every one of their issues have been addressed now. http://xmlguru.cz/2008/01/ecma-response-to-czech-ooxml-comments Do you really expect the Czech Republic to continue to oppose OOXML when nearly all of its objections to the original spec have been fixed? Why would they do that? The problems were fixed, so they switched to YES, and this was the case with many countries (those without a political agenda).

    Were they fixed? Really? Like the other 98% of the comments, that were "fixed" even nobody reading the "fix" due to lack of time?

    Did you know that they had to vote NO if any one of their issues weren't fixed? "Nearly every one" doesn't cut it. Also, they could vote NO even if all of their issues were solved just because they discovered a new one, or because they think some other problem that wasn't fixed is important.

    Now, how did the Czech Republic know that their issues were fixed if nobody readed the final document before voting?

  116. Re:Don't panic. by Macthorpe · · Score: 1

    still fit in things like eating and washing. I know this is a cheap shot but I can't resist - maybe he doesn't?
    --
    "It does not do to leave a live dragon out of your calculations, if you live near him." - Tolkien
  117. Buying ISO9001 Certificaton by PeeweeJD · · Score: 1

    I witnessed first hand the buying of an ISO 9001 certification.

    I used to work for a company that manufactured industrial equipment for power plants, oil refineries, chemical plants, ships, etc. The company had a "quality system" in place and had ISO 9001 certification. We used to get audited periodically and every couple years had to get re-certified (it was a big pain in the ass).

    Fast forward a few years and the company was purchased by a HUGE German corporation. When the time came for the yearly ISO audit, we were told to scrap our quality manuals and mark our departmental manuals as "reference only". I think something similar happened to the manuals at the next level up. We were then placed under the corporate umbrella and received a new ISO 9001 certification as part of this larger group.

    Since then, I have switched companies within the same industry, and I work in the sales department. I can count the number of times on one hand that we are asked to provide proof of our ISO 9001 certification each year, and it is usually the same companies that ask each year.

    I do not believe that ISO 9000 = quality products/services.

  118. I wish... by catdevnull · · Score: 1

    I wish I had a big bag of money. I'd get all kinds of stuff to go my way, too.

    --

    I might know what I'm talkin' about, but then again, this is Slashdot...
  119. Confused by jeanlucretard · · Score: 1

    Can someone please help me understand what the deal with OOXML is? If the standard sucks, and no one uses it, does it matter? Is the standard supposed to help Microsoft with its antitrust problems somehow? Is it supposed to somehow help Microsoft advance its business "unfairly"? is the problem that ISO isn't seen as legitimate organization anymore, because it passed a badly flawed standard?

  120. Resolution of spreadsheet date issue by I'm+Don+Giovanni · · Score: 1
    "Did Microsoft happen to completely remove the Excel date bug specification from their so-called "standard"? If the answer is not "Yes", then the standard is still shoddy and should be discarded like the rubbish it is."

    -------------------
    You refer to Excel's "feature" for being compatible with the leap-year bug introduced by Lotus 1-2-3 in the mid-1980's, right?
    This is tricky because there are in existence spreadsheet files that actually rely on the leap-year bug in order to work. These spreadsheet files may rely on the bug implicitly or explicitly (e.g. the spreadsheet author added code to the spreadsheet to workaround the bug), so fixing the bug would break these spreadsheets. (Anyone notice the irony that IBM, the owner of Lotus today, doesn't give a damn about helping users of Lotus 1-2-3 transition their files to ODF format and so is willing, and indeed proud, to provide no path to transition Lotus 1-2-3 files that rely on Lotus' leap-year bug to ODF? But I digress.)

    This issue has been addressed in ISO OOXML. Brian Jones made numerous blog entries since the September vote on how this issue was resolved:

    2007-12-11: Allowing for ISO-8601 Dates

    2007-12-21: Dates and the Leap Year Bug

    2008-03-15: Discussion of dates and leap-year bug at the BRM

    2008-03-25:
    http://blogs.msdn.com/brian_jones/archive/2008/03/25/can-i-mention-that-it-s-also-in-odf.aspx

    Spreadsheet Dates

    Folks have been discussing this one for about a year now; it's about the date format used in SpreadsheetML. In the Ecma responses and even in the BRM, we made a number of changes to make everyone happy. Here is where we are now with dates in SpreadsheetML:

            * There is a new date datetype for cell values, and the only way to store into that datatype is with ISO 8601.
            * For calculations primarily, there is often the need to convert from a date into a serial value or back. For this purpose you need to know the date base, or epoch, and in the ISO version of ODF there are essentially 3 date bases (only one of which is transitional)
            * The leap year bug, and issues around dates before 1900 are now only allowed in transitional conformant files, but if the file is strict it cannot use these. [Snipped text that goes on to talk about how ODF allows multiple ways of storing dates, and implementors must similar conversion techniques as OOXML once the ODF 1.1 (the version that allows spreadsheet formulas) is released.] The upshot is that OOXML spreadsheets can only store dates in ISO 8601 format (unlike ODF, which stores dates in multiple formats), and while old "transitional conformant files" may rely on the leap-year bug, such files are not in "strict" compliance with OOXML.

    So the leap-year bug is completely removed for new files, but can be used for transitional files. Which is essentially what you guys wanted, that old files may have to deal with legacy crap, but new files should be "clean". I'm sure this isn't enough to satisfy you, but it was enough for those that matter, and even Rob Weir hasn't made much effort to bash this resolution despite the leap-year bug being his main talking point for well over a year now.

    This only further demonstrates how most of you are unaware of the improvements that have been made. The (ostensible) technical reasons for rejecting OOXML were addressed. All you have left are the political reasons, and such reasons should not impact ISO.
    --
    -- "I never gave these stories much credence." - HAL 9000
  121. definitely no joke by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ISO website: press release

    From the article, "Subject to there being no formal appeals from ISO/IEC national bodies in the next two months, the International Standard will accordingly proceed to publication." I just hope there are some formal appeals.

  122. Re:good by toriver · · Score: 1

    What should we use? "Microsoft" is a trademark, and "MSFT" - their stock ticker - is too un-geeky. Everyone on the site understands "M$". What other criteria do you need?

  123. ISO won't die--it's just another garbage standard. by WebCowboy · · Score: 1

    IS is just following tradition of other standards entities like IEC and ECMA.

    Take a look at the IEC 61158 Fieldbus standard, AKA the "ugly 8-headed beast". It is, by technical standards, an inefficient, inconsistent, complicated mess and even those who supported its ratification concede this. Basically, it takes once-proprietary protocols for SCADA/Process control/automation in verbatim and declared them standards. There is duplication, overlap, etc. all over the place.

    You basically don't try to be "fully IEC 61158 compliant"...vendors generally strive to comply with one of the eight "types". Vendors generally stick to the type they invented for the whole product line, then provide converter/bridge devices to one or more others. For example, in North America "Type 2" (ControlNet) is prevalent and is the protocol of choice for Rockwell's Allan-Bradley products since Rockwell was a leading force in its creation. Likewise in Europe (Germany especially) "Type 3" (PROFIBUS) is prevalent and used extensively in Siemens products because Siemens was a steering force in the consortium that created the protocol. Both Rockwell and Siemens create converters to other types like "Type 1" (FOUNDATION Fieldbus).

    The whole logic behind this messy standard was not to make an easy-to-follow, fully-implementable standard. The prime motivation was to eliminate trade barriers and promote interoperability (ie. now that the protocols are part of a standard one vendor cannot demand royalties from third parties that inter-operate, nor can interoperability be broken by the original vendor without losing standards compliance).

    This serves the purpose well enough, but with OOXML there is a difference: One single vendor invented the format, without any consultation with any other interested parties, and it effectively retains ownership of the format. It is possibly encumbered with patents, and its pledge not to litigate has potential conditions, especially regarding "commercial" implementations. At least with IEC 61158 all the different "types" are from many different vendors, and in most cases the creators either never "owned" the standard (for example, Siemens participated in a consortium at the behest of the German gov't) or the standard was given over to a non vendor-specific entity long before IEC 61158 was ratified (as Rockwell has done with ControlNet). And, since the standard is periodically reviewed some "types" may fall into disuse and be deprecated and new "types" added or old ones expanded to consider new technologies. I fear that OOXML as a standard is vulnerable to disrepair, and lack of wide adoption beyond MSFT because that one vendor so completely controls the standard.

  124. Why do people keep saying PDF is a standard? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It isn't - one small subset of PDF is an open standard - but the majoity of PDF programs out there do not use the standard they use more recent proprietary versions of the file format. Also PDF only guranteed forward compatibility - not backwards.

    I like th blinkers most of this community have 'well its only an open standard if it does't come from MS' is patently fatuous.

  125. ISO is dead by quincunx55555 · · Score: 1

    ISO is dead.

    Any geeks here going to trust them again?

  126. Standards are difficult but rewarding... by seanellis · · Score: 1

    I've been involved in development and implementation of international standards (admittedly not ISO, but JCP), and I agree wholeheartedly with the parent poster.

    We had a medium-sized Java package to standardize, a couple of dozen classes. It took us about a year and a half, plus an extra half a year of maintenance, clarifying those annoying little omissions that people only spot after release. The total size of the spec was under 200 pages. It was all achieved by consensus, with several competing vendors represented, and other interested parties - including users, developers, and companies who would deploy the implementations.

    Although there were some lively debates, at no point was the mood partisan, there were no "irregularities" and since consensus was the norm, issues very rarely came to even an informal vote. According to the rules, the spec could not be ratified until both a test suite and a reference implementation were delivered. In our case, these were developed completely separately from one another.

    It was all actually a very pleasant and rewarding process.

    If we had seen anything like the irregular behavior we have seen on the OOXML NBs, we would have voted off the spec lead quicker than a very quick thing. (Nothing like this happened, of course - our spec lead was and is well respected.)

    I wanted to post this to point out that spec development can be, and usually is, open, honest and friendly, even between competitors.

    I also wanted to point out that the technical side takes a long time. It took us two years to get to the point where we were completely happy with our little 200-page spec.

    I fail to see how the 6000+ pages of DIS 29500 can even be reviewed properly, let alone be swept through a standardization process this fast. Even a good spec has holes that must be patched up, and are only spotted when someone looks at them from a different angle than you. Rob Weir's excellent blog entry on defect sampling his has been linked elsewhere, and suggests that, statistically, only a small minority of the defects in the spec have actually been found.

    This, coupled with a lack of test suite or reference implementation, make it difficult for me to see how the ISO national bodies could possibly have voted anything other than "no", on purely technical grounds.

    Unfortunately, this is the argument from personal incredulity, and clearly false, because they did. I would therefore like to know why.

  127. Re:Don't panic. by uglyduckling · · Score: 1

    Yeah, I kinda knew I was setting that up, but thought we could play the 'straight guy, funny guy' routine. Slam dunk.

  128. I thought cisco did the samething? CMIIW by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is disaster... I even signed the petition in nooxml.org.
    But,CMIIW has cisco done this before?
    pushing their own standard to iso ?

  129. Re:good by Kalriath · · Score: 1

    we have to accept standards even when we don't like them. So, you'll be accepting OOXML then?
    --
    For a site about things like basic rights, Slashdot users sure do like to censor "dissent".
  130. I don't think so by cheros · · Score: 1

    MS wouldn't be playing with singularity - they'd be playing with a black hole that would zap the only remaining cash cow. That's why they basically pulled all the stops for ISO - they know time is up.

    The more I look at the risks they're taking, the more it smacks of panic. And I find that *very* interesting indeed, I wonder how long Wall Street will take to spot that. Forever, I think, MS knows very well just how easy it is to get a favourable analysts opinion, and none of them want to mention the water in the engine room because they make good money out of it.

    But I bet you quite a few have already casually ambled over to the life boats. I think it's called 'diversifying a portfolio'. God help their shares when Wall Street wakes up: brand appreciation through the floor, no viable products, antitrust is really starting to bite (they can ignore it only for so long) and with this ISO farce they have opened themselves up for massive trouble. There's only so much you can sweep under the carpet before someone noticed the bulge.

    IMHO it can't come soon enough. We need progress in IT, OLPC has shown that there's plenty of innovation waiting in the wings once MS stops it from happening.

    --
    Insert .sig here. Send no money now. Owner may sue, contents will settle. Batteries not included.
  131. Re:good by MrKaos · · Score: 1

    So, you'll be accepting OOXML then?
    Yes, but I won't like it.

    --
    My ism, it's full of beliefs.
  132. Re:good by Kalriath · · Score: 1

    Well, I was actually going for a joke, but seeing that you're not a hypocrite ruined it quite nicely. Hmmph.

    --
    For a site about things like basic rights, Slashdot users sure do like to censor "dissent".
  133. Re:good by MrKaos · · Score: 1
    --
    My ism, it's full of beliefs.