Barr: What's up at the OpenDocument Foundation? - Linux.com - 0 views
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The OpenDocument Foundation, founded five years ago by Gary Edwards, Sam Hiser, and Paul "Buck" Martin (marbux) with the express purpose of representing the OpenDocument format in the "open standards process," has reversed course. It now supports the W3C's Compound Document Format instead of its namesake ODF. Yet why this change of course has occurred is something of a mystery.
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More bad information, accusations and smearing innuendo. Wrong on the facts, Emotionally spent on the conclussions. But wow it's fun to see them with their panties in such a twist.
The truth is that ODF is a far more "OPEN" standard than MS-OOXML could ever hope to be. Sam's Open Standards arguments for the past five years remain as relevant today as when he first started makign them so many years ago.
The thing is, the Open Standards requirements are quite different than the real world Implementation Requirements we tried to meet with ODF.
The implementation requirements must deal with the reality of a world dominated by MSOffice. The Open Standards arguments relate to a world as we wish it to be, but is not.
It's been said by analyst advising real world CIO's that, "ODF is a fine open standards format for an alternative universe where MSOffice doesn't exist".
If you live in that alternative universe, then ODF is the way to go. Just download OpenOffice 2.3, and away you go. Implementation is that easy.
If however you live in this universe, and must deal with the impossibly difficult problem of converting existing MSOffice documents, applications and processes to ODF, then you're screwed.
All the grand Open Standards arguments Sam has made over the years will not change the facts of real world implmentation difficulities.
The truth is that ODF was not designed to meet the real world implmentation requirements of compatibility with existing Microsoft documents (formats) and, interoperability with existing Microsoft Office applications.
And then there are the problmes of ODF Interoperability with ODF applications. At the base of this problem is the fact that compliance in ODF is optional. ODF applications are allowed to routinely destroy metadata information needed (and placed into the markup) by other applications.<b