French Government IT Directorate Supports ODF, Rejects OOXML
jrepin writes: The final draft version of the RGI (general interoperability framework), still awaiting final validation, maintains ODF as the recommended format for office documents within French administrations. This new version of the RGI provides substantiated criticism of the OOXML Microsoft format. April thanks the DISIC (French Inter-ministerial IT directorate) for not giving in to pressure and acting in the long-term interest of all French citizens and their administrations. As Wikpedia notes, OOXML (Office Open XML) is not to be confused with OpenOffice.org XML.
(Also on the open-source office-document format front, OpenSource.com has taken a look at five open alternatives to Google Docs.)
A sudden outbreak of common sense. The question remains, what would it take for the US to follow suit? Is it even possible to break Microsoft's stranglehold all these years after the illegal monopoly ruling?
Calling OOXML a "standard" was always a bad joke.
Way too much crap of "must work like this proprietary project", and too many uses of other proprietary things.
How the hell ISO allowed it to ever be identified as a standard still perplexes me.
Which means it's good when people see OOXML for what it is -- a proprietary format, which is inadequately documented, and has things which limit other people from using it.
Even Microsoft doesn't adhere to any standard interpretation of OOXML, because there isn't one.
Lost at C:>. Found at C.
Mais, chose surprennante, ils ont pris le choix juste. Quele miracle!
Ça aurait été vachement mauvais de choisir Microsoft.
Get free satoshi (Bitcoin) and Dogecoins
Ici on fucking parlez le fucking English.
Can you translate that? I don't speak French.
(-1: Post disagrees with my already-settled worldview) is not a valid mod option.
One difficulty I run into constantly with OpenOffice and Libre Office is that you can't just drag an image or another file and have it embedded in a document. It is a huge shortcoming IMHO, as it is used all the time by people I work with that use MS Word. Is that just a shortcoming of the particular application I am using on the particular OS or is that shortcoming inherent in the XML format?
Laws are rules for the court, but merely a bottom bar to hit for life. Think beyond laws in your actions always.
MOO-XML
en ligne traducteur de langue , fuck oui !
Ici, putain d'enculé, nous parlons le putain d'enculé d'anglais.
I'm working in a public research institute in France, and all ODF files that are mailed are blocked. Our mail provider is microsoft 365. The ports are blocked in order to force OWA protocols. A real nightmare for Linux users :-/
First post females dogs, your excrement were second rate anyway.
Ici on parle anglais--- dans une très mauvaise façon.
OOXML is a standard, only in that it's a standard operating procedure of its owner. Lock 'em in or lock 'em out.
... who weren't even able to teach the computer to match a closing brace to an opening one.
Result: an over-verbose, unreadable and error-prone monstrosity
of a data-structure.
Next they will be requiring us to write in French. When will it end?
Maltese Falcon?
And this time, they have nukes.
>"As Wikpedia notes, OOXML (Office Open XML) is not to be confused with OpenOffice.org XML."
And don't think Microsoft didn't make that ridiculous name for the *exact* purpose of confusing consumers between the two.
It's nice that a government pushes for open standards, and if it gets widely used, maybe it will somehow help development.
But in the meantime, there is still no decent writing tool for our current needs.
When I need to write something, it usually doesn't need to be printed on A4 (or Letter) paper. It is to be viewed on some digital display. And it does't need to be pixel-precise. Just well structured to be understandable. So the natural format would be HTML with CSS, which has become a universal format that can be displayed on anything, and can even be searched as plain text with grep and the like when needed.
But there is no word processing program that produces sane HTML/CSS. The real word processing programs which have all the features and tools to help for writing produce totally insane HTML. The HTML tools are designed for programmers or "web designers" (whatever that really is these days), not for plain writing of content. In the end, I often just send an HTML email done in Thunderbird, or I use Amaya, and mostly a plain text editor with a browser window to re-read it. The alternative is to write in MS Word or Libre/OpenOffice, and produce a f*ing PDF.
I have been longing for a modern "Ami Pro for HTML/CSS" for the last 15 years...
I knew the guy who worked on the Microsoft legal team who came up with the idea to use accessibility as a reason that ODF should not be a standard in Massachusetts. Of-course he's since-then been furloughed by Microsoft. So much for selling-out freedom for a little personal security.
ODF doesn't preclude an accessibility-capable editor, and it's a real format (not 90% too big and full of ambiguity like OOXML), and not changing every release.
Science & open-source build trust from peer review. Learn systems you can trust.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?...
Upward mobility is a slippery slope - the higher you climb the more you show your ass.
It's france...no one gives a shit
https://www.youtube.com/watch?...
Get free satoshi (Bitcoin) and Dogecoins
But extremely cowly owl to choose ODF.
On y va, qui mal y pense!
That's 'ici on fucking parle', please write it out a few hundred times on the walls of Paris. I'm not even going to start on hamsters, breath etc. etc. I have too much dignity.
On y va, qui mal y pense!
It's been a bad week for Microsoft.
1) Firing over 12,000 employees (20,000+ in total) with more coming
2) Flushing 7.6 Billion down the toilet
3) Countries rejecting their garbage.
That's really 'fuck ouais' giving you 'fuck yeah' in Metropolitan French, anyway.
On y va, qui mal y pense!
Billy Birmingham quote for the win!
Political debates have me rolling my eyes so much I think I got optical whiplash. I should sue. - Foamy The Squirrel
One difficulty I run into constantly with OpenOffice and Libre Office is that you can't just drag an image or another file and have it embedded in a document
I do that all the time. I have standardized our (small) company on LibreOffice and we use it for our manufacturing work instructions. We put pictures into these all the time and typically do it with drag and drop. Not sure what you are doing differently that would cause it to malfunction but the functionality is there and does work.
It is a huge shortcoming IMHO, as it is used all the time by people I work with that use MS Word. Is that just a shortcoming of the particular application I am using on the particular OS or is that shortcoming inherent in the XML format?
Hasn't got anything to do with the file format.
ISO/IEC publishes latest version of OpenDocument Format as International Standard 26300:2015
http://www.opendocsociety.org/news/26300_2015-published/
OpenDocument pages from OASIS and ISO/IEC:
https://www.oasis-open.org/committees/tc_home.php?wg_abbrev=office
http://www.iso.org/iso/home/store/catalogue_ics/catalogue_detail_ics.htm?csnumber=66363
Documents available for free on the following webpages from OASIS and ISO/IEC:
https://www.oasis-open.org/committees/tc_home.php?wg_abbrev=office#technical
http://standards.iso.org/ittf/PubliclyAvailableStandards/
The OpenDocument v1.2 documents from both organisations (OASIS and ISO/IEC) should be identical