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Study Says OOXML Unsuitable For Norwegian Government

angry tapir writes "Microsoft's XML-based office document format, OOXML, does not meet the requirements for governmental use, according to a new report published by the Norwegian Agency for Public Management and eGovernment (DIFI). The agency wants to start a debate over the report as part of its work on standards in the Norwegian government. (As we discussed a week ago, Denmark has already decided to choose ODF over OOXML.)"

2 of 145 comments (clear)

  1. Re:And? by PitaBred · · Score: 4, Informative

    Were you not around when Microsoft bribed and stacked the ISO meetings when voting for OOXML as a "standard"? Not only that, but it doesn't pass any kind of rigorous review as a standard... it is all but an XML representation of the original .doc format, just re-jiggered around, and is so convoluted that nobody but Microsoft has a hope of actually interoperating with it properly. And by the time someone might do so, they've got the next version out.

    Seriously, just google around a bit:

    http://arstechnica.com/old/content/2008/10/norwegian-standards-body-implodes-over-ooxml-controversy.ars
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Standardization_of_Office_Open_XML

  2. Re:What's in a name by AntiDragon · · Score: 4, Informative

    Check out http://noooxml.wdfiles.com/local--files/arguments/TheCaseAgainstOOXML.pdf for an interesting breakdown of the problems with MS OOXML.

    For example one setting is defined as "useWord97LineBreakRules"

    The standard defines implementing this thusly:

    “To faithfully replicate this behavior, applications must imitate the behavior of that
    application, which involves many possible behaviors and cannot be faithfully placed into
    narrative for this Office Open XML Standard. If applications wish to match this behavior,
    they must utilize and duplicate the output of those applications.”

    I'll leave describing why this makes fully implementing the "standard" as an excercise to the reader!

    --
    "...So I hung back and lurked. For 18 months. Can't beat a good old-fashioned lurking."