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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 claims that it has made 98 per cent of the changes to OOXML that were suggested as part of the ISO process. Tom Robertson, Microsoft’s general manager of Interoperability and Standards, noted that the national bodies decided to break the specification up into parts that refer to different document formats, such as text or spreadsheets, and parts that deal with backwards-compatibility, a major sticking point for users. He also maintained that users will be able to use both OOXML and ODF, but for different purposes.

“This is a complex technology, that’s just the nature of it. That doesn’t mean it shouldn’t be standardized,” Robertson said. “What is important is that specification be in a form that makes it as easy as possible to work with as an independent software vendor.”

Heintzman rejected Microsoft’s argument about providing a choice of standards. “That provides absolutely no value for consumers,” he said. “When I go down to the local Circuit City, I don’t want to choose between Blu-Ray and HDD, I want to choose between Sony and Panasonic. The underlying standard should be completely obscured to me.”

Francis Dion, a Microsoft ISV partner with Toronto-based Xpertdoc, said OOXML will close the gap between what IT departments have had to do with documents and what users want to do themselves. Xpertdoc offers a product called Xpertdoc Studio that generates Word documents. He said companies often struggle over how to create everything from invoices to documents for regulators, a problem he likened to the Y2K issue for banks in the 1990s.

“If you ask an IT person to come up with a report, they have a specific idea is that what is. They might use Crystal Reports or some other special IT-centric solution,” he said. “If you ask anyone else, it’s Microsoft Word (they want) and they’ll start typing.” OOXML will offer such organizations more consistency, he said.

The ODF camp isn’t sold. Deep Vision Inc. of Dartmouth, N.S. is a member of the ODF alliance, but its director of software engineering, Alvin Beach, said the firm often has to convert documents into a Microsoft format. Depending on how the OOXML standard is implemented, those chores could get worse, he said.

“I think that Microsoft could have not gone the standard route and it would still have been accepted as a de facto standard,” he said. “If it’s Office, people don’t like to change.”

Robertson said Microsoft doesn’t expect the ISO vote to please everyone, but urged competitors to focus more on customers than the standards themselves. “Some of this is just commercial squabbling. There are some voices in the community that will never say a kind word about Open XML because it’s not in their perceived commercial interest to do so.”










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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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