OOXML gains compatibility via ISVs

By Victoria Ho, ZDNet Asia
Tuesday, May 27, 2008 10:48 AM

Now that Microsoft's OOXML (Office Open XML) has been ratified as an ISO standard, third-party effort to support the document format has been ramping up.

While many third-party document editors support ODF (Open Document Format), widely regarded as OOXML's main competitor, developers appear to be taking a pragmatic approach to supporting OOXML, largely putting it down to customer demand and market forces.

Online office suite, Zoho, is in the midst of implementing an OOXML import filter. Currently, its word editor is only able to export in the format. Zoho supports importing and exporting in ODF.

Raju Vegesna, Zoho evangelist said in an interview with ZDNet Asia, Zoho received a "decent set of requests for [OOXML format] .docx".

"It took us a few months to implement OOXML. It's a work in progress. We have a team focused on this compatibility of different formats," said Vegesna, adding that Zoho intends to implement OOXML support in the suite's spreadsheet and presentations applications.

Open source document editor, AbiWord, is building an OOXML import/export filter.

The AbiWord team said, of OOXML, in an interview with Red Hat Magazine: "It’s just another file format we have to support, with all its good and bad parts. In the end, it doesn’t matter a single bit if it’s ISO approved or not.

"Millions of people around the world [use] Microsoft Office and thus create documents that people expect us to support...As Microsoft Word 2007 will start being used more and more, the number of .docx documents floating around the net will pick up dramatically. Our users will expect us to be able to handle those," said an AbiWord developer.

Google, which has an online office suite called Google Docs, appears to remain opposed to the OOXML format, but remained vague on its plans to support the format, when ZDNet Asia inquired.

Zaheda Bhorat, open source program manager at Google expressed disappointment in OOXML's ISO ratification and pointed to "numerous technical issues" outstanding, and said, of OOXML: "Along with much of the global technical community, we maintain our belief after technical analysis that OOXML would be an insufficient and unnecessary standard."

Other examples of third-party applications which have released OOXML-supporting filters are Novell's latest edition OpenOffice and Corel WordPerfect Office X4.

Sun, too, is developing an OOXML import filter. The open office proponent has maintained support for ODF on its blog saying: "Does the development of OOXML import filters mean that we have changed our mind regarding ODF?...No. We strongly believe ODF is the only file format that provides the level of interoperability and choice of products that our customers want."

Microsoft has recently announced it will support ODF in Office Service Pack 2 for Office 2007, due in the first half of 2009, and build ODF support into the next major version of office, code-named Office 14.


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Poorly written article IMO
Let's clarify a few points here :
1- OOXML is still not an ISO standard. South-African standards organisation has filed an appeal and ISO will have to ignore it and/or Microsoft will have to bribe/intimidate them to revert their position.
2- Final/approved specifications for this proposed standard have not been published yet so I don't see how somebody might start implementing the new standard. Strangely, not even those who voted to approve tha standard could not see these specs so I wonder what were they voting on.
3- Office 2007 does not support this ISO standard and Microsoft shows no plans for the moment to implement it, so where those thousands of .docx documents will come from ?. Who, how and why will produce those documents ? It's weird that customers want to save files into a format nobody knows what it looks like.
Posted by NI on Thursday, May 29 2008 01:19 AM

Great Article IMO
Let's clarify a few points here :
1 - No one cares if OOXML is a ISO standard or not. A standard is what ever the world ends up using the most.
2 - ISO file format Standards who needs them, as long as file formats are well documented and are based on XML this all we need.
3 - Finally to all the ODF Zealots, get a life and get over it OOXML is here to stay.
Posted by anonymous on Friday, May 30 2008 07:03 AM

Well, ...
1 - Governments and Public administrations, being leading customers, care.
2 - There are many people who oppose to OOXML being well documented. Note, OOXML is not equal to the XML file format Office 2007 is using.
3 - Haven't you read Microsoft's latest press release[1]? While ODF support will be introduced with Office 2007 SP1. OOXML, as specified in ISO/IEC DIS 29500, will never ever be part of Office 2007. You will have to wait for Office 14, maybe until 2010. How can something be 'here to stay', if it's not even there??? ;-)

[1] www.microsoft.com...
Posted by Peter Junge on Friday, May 30 2008 12:07 PM

So much disinformation
I've read comment from OpenOffice.org developers that import for OOXML is being done and that OOXML is the default format of Office 2007. Both statements are incorrect. No one can implement DIS 29500 as it has not even been published yet. Work is being done on an Office 2007 import for OOo. It would be nice of the OOo developers could help stop spreading this disinformation. MIcrosoft, as pointed out in an above comment, has announced that OOXML implementation will have to wait for the next version of Office.

DIS 29500 was originally based on the Office 2007 format, however it has changed since then. Probably will change even more if it gets through the appeals process. Microsoft may not be able to implement that version.
Posted by anonymous on Monday, June 02 2008 07:35 AM

Re: So much disinformation
Good point. Indeed OOo is not implementing OOXML as in ISO/IEC DIS 29500, but the Office 2007 file formats. At least not everyone is unclear about it, see:
blogs.sun.com...
Posted by Peter Junge on Monday, June 02 2008 09:19 AM


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