Tuesday, April 22, 2008

Microsoft Office 2007 and OOXML

Source: CNET News

Microsoft Office 2007"Word documents generated by today's version of Microsoft Office 2007 do not conform to the Office Open XML standard under development by the International Organization for Standardization, according to tests run by a document standards specialist."

It comes to no surprise to many of us that the Microsoft giant follows it's own path, practically ignoring standards and regulations. Well, it's a giant, after all. But the ones that eventually suffer are the end users. After paying an enormous sum for the Microsoft Office 2007 software package, you have the unpleasant surprise that it doesn't work well with other similar software. The standards are in place for a reason. Just imagine what the world would be without them. The thing that really surprises me is that Microsoft, although they are under a lot of investigations from so many international or European organizations, they still do things their own way.

Even if I'm not a big user of the documents, they are very often used in office activities across the world. The fact that there are free alternatives out there, like Open Office or even the online Google Docs, people prefer the commercial versions. I remember a few days ago a friend of mine bought a new computer and it had Windows Vista pre-installed. He was so happy that he had this beautiful operating system, but that soon ended as soon as he had to install his other software. The confirmation dialogs brought him to the edge of insanity. But that's another story. He then needed a good text editor and a spreadsheet editor. He opted for Microsoft Office 2007 although Open Office is completely free and more than capable of handling the job. His decision was based on the fact that he "heard more people talking about Microsoft Office that Open Office". I guess this kind of thinking is what keeps Microsoft going despite their continuous rules breaking actions.

That aside, we'll just have to wait and see how this issue will be resolved. After all, you can't claim to handle certain file types if you don't respect the standards internationally accepted.