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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.

10 of 435 comments (clear)

  1. 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).

  2. 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).

  3. 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.

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

    Approval was not won, approval was purchased.

  5. 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
  6. 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
  7. 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.
  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: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.

  10. 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.