MS-OOXML conversion hoax
greve
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Monday 16 July 2007
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Microsoft has been quite busy signing up various associates such as
Novell,
Xandros,
Linspire
and Turbolinux
to work on its MS-OOXML converter. This was somewhat surprising.
To make myself clear: It was no surprise that Microsoft would try
to enroll the help of other companies to make its proprietary format
seem more interoperable than it is. It also came as no surprise that
some companies were interested enough in improving their cash-flow
balance to agree promoting the Microsoft agenda. What came as a
surprise was the unquestioning acceptance of the possibility to
achieve full interoperability through a converter when Microsoft had
already stated that it did not support the Open Document Format (ODF)
because it wanted features that ODF did not have.
Ignoring for a moment the point that ODF does not have those
features because Microsoft remained a passive observer of the Open
Document Format (ODF) standardisation process -- something they could
change with the investment of participating in two telephone
conferences -- there is a striking weakness to the idea of
conversion.
So I wrote a guest commentary for Heise.de, titled "The Converter Hoax"
which is online now. The core sentence is probably this one:
If these converters were actually able to do what they
promise to do, they would be unnecessary.
The converters ultimately establish a one-way street into vendor
lock-in on MS-OOXML, so they end up helping promote lock-in and
dependency instead of supporting interoperability and freedom of
competition.