Graphics Tools - Publish.com
Publish.com Ziff-Davis Enterprise  
SEARCH · ONLINE MEDIA · MOBILE · WEB DESIGN · GRAPHICS TOOLS · PRINTING · PHOTO · TIPS · OPINIONS
Home arrow Graphics Tools arrow Is OpenXML for Real?
Is OpenXML for Real?
By Jason Brooks

Rate This Article:
Add This Article To:
Opinion: Microsoft will actually open OpenXML because the move clearly benefits Microsoft.

I was pretty impressed when, just before Thanksgiving, I came across a Financial Times article reporting that Microsoft was pledging to open up the specifications for its Office file formats, although those specs wouldn't be available for 18 months or so.

That story wasn't quite right, but, in the Financial Times' reporter's defense, neither was the press release that Microsoft issued that day.

Right up top, the release read: "Microsoft Corp. today announced it will take steps to offer the file format technology behind billions of documents to customers and the industry as an international standard." The rest of the story, as Paul Harvey would say, is that the formats that Microsoft is opening are its new, XML-based Office 12-to-be formats, the ones that don't yet exist in a shipping product, let alone in billions of documents.

A bit of time has passed now since Microsoft made the announcement, and in the meantime, my belly's grown plump with turkey and gravy, and my temples are bulging with all the commentary and gushing and snideness I've read regarding this topic.

To sum up, Microsoft has pledged not to sue developers who use the firm's new OpenXML technology, modifying the terms under which it is offering OpenXML enough (apparently) to render the format amenable to GPL'd development.

Microsoft drops the Office open standard ball. Click here to read more.

Also, OpenXML is slated for submission to and subsequent standardization by Ecma International. Also, Microsoft has said that it will "make available tools to enable old documents to capitalize on the open standard format."

Now come the questions. First, and most importantly, can we trust Microsoft to actually open OpenXML? Well, Larry Rosen, one-time general counsel and secretary of the Open Source Initiative, has reportedly said that so far, Microsoft's pledges look solid.

Rosen's a shrewd guy who, yes, wrote the book on open source, or at least wrote a book on open source, and if his opinion at this point is positive toward Microsoft's move, then that gives me some confidence.

Also, the Ecma standardization tack brings to mind Microsoft's standardization moves with regard to C#, which has been fruitfully embraced by the folks from Mono, the open-source .Net implementation that now drives many cool open-source applications, including the little Tomboy Notes application to which I'm very attached and into which I'm now typing this column.

While Microsoft hasn't embraced Mono—and, recently, rather lamely barred a Mono Birds of a Feather event from inclusion in Microsoft's Professional Developer's Conference—Microsoft hasn't shut it down, either. Again, so far, so good.

The main reason why I'm inclined to believe that Microsoft will allow OpenXML actually to be open is that the move clearly benefits Microsoft.

Next Page: Bay State turns its back on MS.

Massachusetts' decision to standardize on the OpenDocument Format, and, by extension, away from Microsoft Office, posed a real threat to Microsoft, and not just because it could mean fewer license dollars from the Bay State and from other organizations.

Frankly, Microsoft isn't going to be able to avoid at least some reduction in market share, particularly since, moving forward, the file format playing field will grow much more level.

The bigger danger that Microsoft faces regarding Massachusetts and ODF is the chance that our Redmond Officemasters might be ejected from the office file formats leadership position that they've battled so ruthlessly to attain.

Microsoft can still lead, but because of the world's growing appreciation for free and open standards, Microsoft has to lead in a different way.

GPL 3.0 beckons open-source community. Click here to read more.

The firm needs to look no further than Adobe and PDF to see that offering up a format with full specs and assurances that anyone can build products to read and write the format doesn't equal surrender. Enabling and convincing others to embrace your format isn't a loss, it's a win.

I've seen a lot of commenters ask, "Why doesn't Microsoft just support ODF?" The answer is obvious—embracing ODF would mean embracing a format that was designed without Microsoft's products in mind.

Sure, Microsoft was invited to participate in ODF, but why do that when it could design a format focused on its own needs, without meddling from rivals?

OpenXML was designed around preserving the data and formatting expressed in Microsoft's baroque binary formats. This is definitely an important design goal, and certainly the most important goal for Microsoft to achieve, because so many documents out there already exist in these formats.

Does this mean curtains for ODF, and that OpenXML will reign supreme? Probably not. OpenXML will have the advantage of shipping along with the market leader, but ODF enjoys broader support, and what appears to be a cleaner and more forward-looking design.

I really have no idea which format will end up on top, if either will, or if we'll end up with some merged standard set of formats. Frankly, as long as the apps I use can read and open either format well, I don't really care.

Is Microsoft telling the truth about open standards? Click here to read more.

Sure, Office 12 isn't going to support ODF, but Office 12 won't run on my computer, anyway.

It would've been great to see Microsoft go all out and open up its binary formats as well, but I'll take what I can get.

OpenOffice.org, and all of Office's other rivals, have long been chasing Microsoft's formats. It appears that Microsoft's move to XML, coupled with appropriately open licensing, will yield more innovation and interoperability for all. For that, I'm cautiously thankful.

Way to go, Massachusetts.

Senior Analyst Jason Brooks can be reached at Jason_brooks@ziffdavis.com.

Check out eWEEK.com's for Microsoft and Windows news, views and analysis.


Discuss Is OpenXML for Real?
 
>>> Be the FIRST to comment on this article!
 

 
 
>>> More Graphics Tools Articles          >>> More By Jason Brooks
 


Buyer's Guide
Explore hundreds of products in our Publish.com Buyer's Guide.
Web design
Content management
Graphics Software
Streaming Media
Video
Digital photography
Stock photography
Web development
View all >

ADVERTISEMENT


FREE ZIFF DAVIS ENTERPRISE ESEMINARS AT ESEMINARSLIVE.COM
  • Dec 10, 4 p.m. ET
    Eliminate the Drawbacks of Traditional Backup/Replication for Linux
    with Michael Krieger. Sponsored by InMage
  • Dec 11, 1 p.m. ET
    Data Modeling and Metadata Management with PowerDesigner
    with Joel Shore. Sponsored by Sybase
  • Dec 12, 12 p.m. ET
    Closing the IT Business Gap: Monitoring the End-User Experience
    with Michael Krieger. Sponsored by Compuware
  • Dec 12, 2 p.m. ET
    Enabling IT Consolidation
    with Michael Krieger. Sponsored by Riverbed & VMWare
  • VTS
    Join us on Dec. 19 for Discovering Value in Stored Data & Reducing Business Risk. Join this interactive day-long event to learn how your enterprise can cost-effectively manage stored data while keeping it secure, compliant and accessible. Disorganized storage can prevent your enterprise from extracting the maximum value from information assets. Learn how to organize enterprise data so vital information assets can help your business thrive. Explore policies, strategies and tactics from creation through deletion. Attend live or on-demand with complimentary registration!
    FEATURED CONTENT
    IT LINK DISCUSSION - MIGRATION
    A Windows Vista® migration introduces new and unique challenges to any IT organization. It's important to understand early on whether your systems, hardware, applications and end users are ready for the transition.
    Join the discussion today!



    .NAME Charging For Whois
    Whois has always been a free service, but the .NAME registry is trying to change that.
    Read More >>

    Sponsored by Ziff Davis Enterprise Group

    NEW FROM ZIFF DAVIS ENTERPRISE


    Delivering the latest technology news & reviews straight to your handheld device

    Now you can get the latest technology news & reviews from the trusted editors of eWEEK.com on your handheld device
    mobile.eWEEK.com

     


    RSS 2.0 Feed


    internet
    rss graphic Publish.com
    rss graphic Google Watch

    Video Interviews


    streaming video
    Designing Apps for Usability
    DevSource interviews usability pundit Dr. Jakob Nielsen on everything from the proper attitude for programmers to the importance of prototyping in design to the reasons why PDF, Flash and local search engines can hurt more than they help.
    ADVERTISEMENT