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The Norwegians still get it! - Surfer dudes go with Ogg
By Rick JelliffeSeptember 28, 2009
These all seem the right way to do things: a user decides what it needs for specific uses, is pragmatic or generous about timing, and doesn't exclude any of the technical eco-systems from equal participation. I think it also represents a real challenge to the software vendors: starting 2011 they will have to compete on features, quality and support, not file format: they won't have the supposed lock-in to benefit or excuse them from providing value.
Experiments with numbering and horizontal rule in AbiWord - Grumpy old guy thinks word processing was better 15 years ago
By Rick JelliffeSeptember 1, 2009
One thing it demonstrates, I think, is the fallacy that presentation-driven user interfaces are easier to use or implement than structured document editors: and they look like becoming adequate for interchange only with great difficulty. Show me the tags!
Key Fraunhofer study released on ODF and OOXML
By Rick JelliffeAugust 21, 2009
It says "It may be concluded that many of the functionalities, especially those found in simpler documents, can be translated between the standards, while the translation of other functionalities can prove complex or even impossible." I say "The lack of support for plurality almost guarantees acrimony, and winners and losers."
Simplistic conversion from word proccessor formats to plain text is unsafe - OOXML, ODF, HTML
By Rick JelliffeAugust 17, 2009
There are a number of ways in which text can be introduced, changed or disappeared, though each format will have a different mix of possibilities.
Should OOXML be a national standard? - Strict OOXML: probably not; Transitional OOXML: surely not?
By Rick JelliffeAugust 11, 2009
There is no inconsistency in ajudging that a particular technology would be usefully written up as an international standard but yet not appropriate for a national standard.
Microsoft's proposed resolution to EU on competition
By Rick JelliffeJuly 28, 2009
I like the clearer and more objectively verifiable commitments.
Documents as miniature websites? - Plus: Legislation needed to protect and promote FOSS
By Rick JelliffeJuly 22, 2009
The most likely future for documents and their formats, is that each document will start to look/act/be implemented more and more like a tiny, self-contained website. There is a flip-side: as documents become more like tiny websites, the desktop application will become more become more like a browser with an internal web-server.
Open Formula zero-ing in - Oh baby its a wild world...
By Rick JelliffeJuly 20, 2009
What does the Open Formula draft say about the kind of interoperability it is aiming to provide? Here are some of the relevant extracts, for a taster
Survival of the fit-for-purposest
By Rick JelliffeJune 25, 2009
At first I was afraid, I was petrified
ODF Plugfest
By Rick JelliffeJune 16, 2009
I am looking forward to seeing the report from the ODF Plugfest 2009. The Dutch government is doing everyone a great service in organizing this.
Groklaw is on-message
By Rick JelliffeJune 14, 2009
Waiting on this wintery Sydney day for my flatmate's Chinese roast pork knuckle with bamboo to cook, I thought I'd check up on a suspicion that had formed in my mind: had Growlaw ever published anything on OOXML/ODF recently that was not just Big Blue's message of the week?
Open Standards are no silver bullet
By Rick JelliffeJune 14, 2009
A new academic paper looking at running code and open standard says "A running code requirement would have led Massachusetts to defer adopting ODF"
The conspiracy to save ODF from being so crappy
By Rick JelliffeJune 11, 2009
To see Alex and my comments as part of some denial of service attack on ODF is laughable; indeed to see the volume of what we write as a sign that there must be some large team behind us (or even that we are in some way co-ordinated) is I suppose something we should take as a compliment.
Supporting degradation: towards a workable Open Packaging standard
By Rick JelliffeJune 1, 2009
I think we are missing, or have now arrived at the stage where we need, a way to declare relationships between different namespaces in standard XML documents. This needs to be part of a broadly-based open packaging standard.
Tracing through a page-break style-inheritance problem with Office 2007 SP2 ODF
By Rick JelliffeMay 27, 2009
In which I open the ODF 1.1 spec in Office 2007 SP2, immediately discover a bug with page breaks, trace it through the standards, find a workaround, then find the standard is not as clear as it should be.
The limits of standards in OOXML and ODF office suites
By Andy OramMay 20, 2009
Nobody expected Microsoft to make its proprietary OOXML format really work with products that support ODF. But an office suite has to hook into a huge number of outside pieces in its environment. We're just going to have to live with a fuzz factor.
Where everyone knows your name: ODF 1.1 formula support in Office SP2
By Rick JelliffeMay 8, 2009
Aslightly interesting standards aspect to the ODF 1.1 interoperability problems that MS Office SP2 is caught up in. To my mind either the problem is in the short term only and intrinsic to the ODF feature, or the problem does not lie with Microsoft for making their choice, nor with other implementers for making their choices, but with the ratty choice of markup used for this feature in ODF 1.n itself.
SmartArt and OpenOffice.oo
By Rick JelliffeMay 6, 2009
I was happy to see Thorsten Behrens' blog entry SmartArt Import and More. Thorsten works on the graphics engine for OpenOffice's presentation application Impress.
The big fish swallow the little fish: Adobe's FXG and MicroSoft's OOXML
By Rick JelliffeMay 6, 2009
Adobe's FXG seems to be to PSD what OOXML is to .DOC: a re-factoring of a middle-aged binary format in XML with a focus on fidelity rather than elegance. My working model is that we need to think of the de-proprietarization of market-dominating technologies in the intensely pragmatic model of a sequence of bigger fish swallowing smaller fish: a sequence of consolidation of dialects, modularization of parts, then adoption into pluralistic frameworks and Adaptability Standards, allowing user selection of winning mini-technologies. Each stage of which will take at least a major software release cycle.
Blue Sun? What an IBM acquisition of Sun means for software
By Kurt CagleMarch 24, 2009
However, Sun's software side of the acquisition ledger, especially by IBM, has been rather oddly overlooked, given that it will likely have major implications for software development and cloud computing for years. Sun's software holdings cover five primary areas - Java, Solaris, mySQL, Open Office, and Sun's recently acquired QLayer cloud infrastructure. Understanding how IBM could potentially ramp up (or destroy) each of these gives some interesting insight into the real value of IBM's potential software acquisitions.
Master Blaster
By Rick JelliffeMarch 20, 2009
Peter Sefton has had a great series of blog entries in which he has managed to blast almost everyone in the office document space:
Document security and macros
By Rick JelliffeFebruary 26, 2009
One of the big selling points of descriptive markup is that it is safe. If you use a binary format (or a macro-enabled file) you can have a security problems. I think ODF needs to take a leaf out of OOXML's book here, and at least adopt the convention where the normal extensions must be opened by conforming applications with macro- and script- and event- disabled. Security is so important, that it should be part of ODF 1.2 rather than a next-generation ODF issue.
First draft of ODF 1.2 out
By Rick JelliffeFebruary 17, 2009
ODF editor Patrick Durusau has announced the availability of the first committee draft of ODF 1.2 Part 1. I think it is really good to have the two conformance levels. However, they won't do what some people may want them to do.
Conformance classes should mirror stakeholder usage clusters
By Rick JelliffeFebruary 4, 2009
It seems that both ODF and OOXML have reached the stage where the killer bee of conformance is buzzwording itself around the ears of the various committees. ... So what do I mean by a stakeholder usage cluster? From the vendor/developer side, you have needs for different levels of development effort. From the user side, you have needs for reliable interchange at different levels of complexity
ISO standard 'office' formats overpromise compatability?
By Rick JelliffeNovember 22, 2008
A friend in the industry who works with ODF gave me a heads-up about a new Gartner report, available on Microsoft's site which he describes as "delusional". Of the three pages, I pretty much agree with their first and third pages. Towards the middle it gets a little, err, nutty to me.
Fake real-time blog from Document Interoperability Initiative 2 at Redmond
By Rick JelliffeOctober 29, 2008
Can Microsoft's idea of "document archetypes" and "interoperable templates" be ramped up to provide a fresh new approach to both better document interoperability and better descriptive markup?
Trying to figure out where Open Formula fits in
By Rick JelliffeOctober 24, 2008
OpenFormula actually defines an exchange formula language which has explicit delimiters, but also allows (and partly defines) application-specific user interface languages, which allows spaces and other delimiters. An ODF spreadsheet that used IS29500 syntax when saved, even if it didn't follow full Open Formula, would not be conforming.
Is ODF the new RTF or the new .DOC? Can it be both? Do we need either?
By Rick JelliffeOctober 22, 2008
Is ODF the new RTF or the new .DOC? Can it be both? I suggest that perhaps the looming challenge for document standards is not in deciding or developing perfect formats, but in integrating the packaged world of documents with the fragmented world of web resources. ...First, a potted history of the document format landscape over last 25 years...
Ken Krechmer's Adaptability Standards
By Rick JelliffeOctober 10, 2008
I think Ken Krechmer's Adaptive Standards pre-suppose the kind of frameworking and support for modularity and plurality that I have been banging on about for the last decade. An interesting recent quote from him.
The state of the art?
By Rick JelliffeSeptember 12, 2008
The problem is that the bottom line for document interoperability is not the format, but the feature match of the applications. The only way ever to get reliable, bottom-line interchange (enough fidelity that no semantics are lost, with graceful degradation) is by restricting feature use.
The Education of Gary Edwards
By Rick JelliffeSeptember 8, 2008
One of the more interesting characters in the recent standards battles has been Gary Edwards: he was a member of the original ODF TC in 2002 which oversaw the creation of ODF 1.0 in 2005, but gradually became more concerned about large vendor dominance of the ODF TC frustrating what he saw as critical improvements in the area of interoperability.
Is Office Suite Markup worth the trouble?
By Simon St. LaurentAugust 25, 2008
In his Extreme "first person" talk yesterday, Patrick Durusau asked some of the right questions about the recent explosive battles over standardizing XML generated by Microsoft Office and OpenOffice.org. I can't share his conviction, though, that getting through this firefight...
The challenge of validating XML-in-ZIP file in place: how to do it with Schematron
By Rick JelliffeAugust 11, 2008
Thoughts on Schematron headers for processing ODF and OOXML, with a C# URL Resolver that handles ZIP files like some Java resolvers. The new XML-in-ZIP documents present a new challenge: constraints that formerly would have been kept in a single document are now split into multiple documents. When the basic information is kept in a single XML file, validation is reasonably straightforward.The current range of schema tools support these kinds of intra-document invariants quite well. But no document is an island, so Schematron also supports a range of intra-document constraints, but it may be time to enhance it to support the XML-in-ZIP issues better.
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