[ossig] Microsoft to have native support for ODF!

Hasannudin Saidin hasan at my.ibm.com
Thu May 22 11:53:57 MYT 2008



Breaking news!
- Microsoft Office 2007 Service Pack 2 will add native support for ODF 1.1.
- And Microsoft will join the ODF Technical Committee in ODF.

SDTimes article:
-- http://www.sdtimes.com/content/article.aspx?ArticleID=32228
(Below, text of the SDTimes article.)

Early reactions:

- Bob Sutor: "Microsoft says they will support ODF natively, join OASIS ODF
committee?"
-- http://www.sutor.com/newsite/blog-open/?p=2297

- Andy Updergrove: "Microsoft Office 2007 to Support ODF - and not OOXML"
--
http://www.consortiuminfo.org/standardsblog/article.php?story=20080521092930864


And be proud -- Malaysia contributed to bring Microsoft to this point.

Hasan.

===================================

SDTimes: http://www.sdtimes.com/content/article.aspx?ArticleID=32228
AS OF 5/21/2008 1:09PM EST

Office 2007 won't support ISO's OOXML
By David Worthington

May 21, 2008 ? For customers expecting an ISO-conformant Office Open XML
(OOXML) in Microsoft Office, the wait will continue: Microsoft will not
implement the standardized version of its own document format until Office
14 ships. Meanwhile, a service pack due in 2009 is expected to expand the
formats supported by Office 2007.

Today, Microsoft announced that it was making new commitments to document
interoperability within its Office product line for Windows. Office 2007
Service Pack 2 will add native support for OpenDocument Format (ODF) 1.1,
PDF 1.5, PDF/A and XML Paper Specification, an XML-based fixed-document
format created by Microsoft.

Microsoft did not say in the announcement whether the Macintosh editions of
Office would support any additional document formats. Office 2004 for Mac
still lacks a full implementation of the Ecma 376 version of OOXML that
Microsoft introduced with Office 2007.

In a surprise move, the company also announced that it intends to
participate in the OASIS ODF working group and the corresponding ISO/IEC
Joint Technical Committee 1 Subcommittee 34 working groups for ODF, as well
as the ISO Technical Committee 171 working group for PDF, said Doug Mahugh,
senior product manager for Microsoft Office.

He added that Microsoft would also introduce an API to allow developers to
plug their own converters for formats, such as ODF, into Office to make it
the default conversion path. ODF 1.1 was chosen over the ISO-standard ODF
1.0 as a practical decision based upon interoperability with existing
implementations, Mahugh explained.

"It's the de facto version," said Jason Matusow, senior director of
interoperability at Microsoft. "We have to look at the development
investments companies are making."

Members of Microsoft?s Interop Vendor Alliance, including Linspire, Novell,
Turbolinux and Xandros, are collaborating with Microsoft on document
interoperability, and Microsoft sponsors a SourceForge project to the same
end.

However, the company is not quick to embrace its own creation. Mahugh

stated that Microsoft would not implement the final ISO version of OOXML
until Office 14 ships at an unstated date in the future. This variant of
OOXML was designated ISO/IEC 29500 at the time it was certified as an ISO
International standard in April.

"One way to look at it is the prioritization of formats," Mahugh explained.
"We reach a point in time where we have to decide whether to continue to
invest in a previous version [of Office] or to cut the cord and move
forward."

ODF support was a priority for Microsoft, Mahugh noted, adding that "real
world" customers say that there is a pressing need for PDF support. "At
this point there are no products using [ISO/IEC 29500] in the marketplace."

Microsoft has yet to publicly discuss a timeline for Office 14, but one
analyst believes that it can?t come too soon.

"Customers that are expecting true document fidelity from XML-based,
ISO-standard document formats will continue to be disappointed," said
Michael Silver, a Gartner Research vice president. Silver observed that the
most compatible formats to use today are Microsoft?s legacy binaries, and
he believes that Microsoft will be unlikely to convince customers to move
to OOXML in the foreseeable future.

-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: http://mncc.com.my/pipermail/ossig_mncc.com.my/attachments/20080522/2289a18e/attachment.html 


More information about the ossig mailing list