Indecision in Redmond as Web apps charge : Office 2.0 and Google Apps - 0 views
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the fact is that Redmond could own this new space if it wanted to. All it would need to do is push interoperability and integration between lightweight Web versions of Office applications and its desktop fatware. Advanced features would be absent from the lightweight versions, but the company could ensure any Office doc would load on the Web -- whatever new desktop service packs and upgrades might appear -- and online document management could be integrated with Windows for offline access.
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Great quote from Eric Knorr. He hits the nail on the head here, pointing out the problem Office 2.0 Web Apps and SaaS apps face: If these Web wonders have interoperability and high fidelity document exchange with MSOffice, their collaborative features are value added wonders for existing business processes and workgroup-workflow scenarios. If, on the other hand they lack this level of interop - integration with MSOffice documents and processes, the value add becomes a problematic split in a business process. The only way to overcome that kind of a split is to take the entire process. Which is difficult for lightweight mashup happy web wonders to do.
Which leaves each and every one of these Office 2.0 - Web 2.0 - Saas Apps vulnerable to Microsoft. As long as Micrsoft owns the interop-integration keys to MSOffice, the web wonders live a precarious life. At any time Microsoft can swoop in and take it all.
Today, the MSOffice OOXML file format displays perfectly in a browser. It's 100% web ready, but only the MS Stack of applications gets to play. Web wonders are not likely to recieve a Redmond invite now or ever.
Which brings us to the issue of the da Vinci plug-in for MSOffice. da Vinci is a clone of the OOXML plug-in for MSOffice, and fully leverages the same internal conversion process that OOXML enjoys. It can achieve the same high fidelity "round trip" conversion that OOXML is capable of. Maybe even better.
The problem for da Vinci isn't conversion fidlelity. Nor is it capturing business process important VBa scripts, macros, OLE, and security settings. da Vinci can do that just fine. The problem is that da Vinci cannot pipe MSOffice developer platform documents into ODF!! For the love of five generic eXtensions, called the iX "interoperability enhancements", which the OASIS ODF TC blew off, ODF