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Microsoft Office Open XML gets ISO go-ahead

Microsoft Office Open XML gets ISO go-ahead

By:  Shane Schick  On: 01 Apr 2008 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

Canada officially disapproved of the software giant’s efforts to turn its document format into a worldwide standard, but the vote went the other way. ISVs sort through the pros and cons

Microsoft Corp. on Wednesday said its successful efforts to win ISO approval for its XML-based document format will bring benefits to enterprise IT managers, while supporters of the rival Open Document Format saw little but confusion and incompatibility ahead.

The International Organization for Standardization (ISO) announced that its members have approved adoption of a draft standard based on Microsoft's Office Open XML (OOXML) document format . Microsoft has been trying to get ISO approval for OOXML ever since the Commonwealth of Massachusetts and the Belgian government decided to mandate the use of Open Document Format (ODF), an ISO standard supported by IBM Corp. and Sun Microsystems Inc. and used in software such as OpenOffice.

The standard was approved by 86 per cent of all countries voting, and by 75 per cent of those countries participating in JTC1, the joint committee of the ISO and the International Electrotechnical Committee that organized the vote, according to a number of sources. To pass, it required the approval of 75 per cent of all countries voting, and 66 per cent of those countries participating in the committee, known as P-members.

Canada was among the eight P-member countries who voted “disapproval” in the process.

John Weigelt, Microsoft Canada’s CTO in Mississauga, Ont., said there were 79 comments raised to the company from Canada, which were all addressed by the time the ISO balloting occurred. Although there is still a two-month window to appeal the vote until June, Weigelt said there will be a continued focus from Microsoft on improving the standard as it gets adopted by customers.

“In Canada, we placed a lot of importance on giving comments back to the project editor that they could action,” he said. “Instead of saying that something didn’t make sense, we would say, perhaps if you did X, Y and Z (it would improve). We spent a lot of time doing that kind of work.”

Doug Heintzman, director of Lotus strategy for IBM Software Group, immediately decried Microsoft’s OOXML victory, calling the specification “rife with errors” and a lot of lingering questions about intellectual property of documents based on it. He wasn’t surprised Microsoft won out, however.

“The system is designed to approve things,” he said. “This particular specification presented the community with some really significant challenges because it had never dealt with the kind of politics and money and lobbying that were invested in it.”

Previously in ComputerWorld Canada

Format wars: Redmond vs. Big Blue


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Shane Schick Shane Schick is the Editor-in-Chief of IT World Canada. Follow him at Twitter.com/shaneschick, Facebook.com/Shane.Schick.Media or myi.tw/ShaneSchickGoogle.

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