April 1, 2008 9:56 AM PDT

Office Open XML is an ISO standard: Now what?

It's all over except the press release. But in other ways, it's just the beginning.

After a document appeared on Tuesday showing that Office Open XML (OOXML) gained enough votes to be ratified as an ISO standard, Microsoft on Tuesday confirmed the result.

The company's bid--started in 2005--to make the Open XML file formats international standards has succeeded, barring any last-minute changes. The ISO (International Organization for Standardization) is scheduled to issue the official communiqué on Wednesday.

Once final, ISO/IEC certification means that development of the specification, officially called Draft International Standard (DIS) 29500, will be done by members of the ISO, an international organization with representatives from over 100 countries.

On a technical level, changes proposed during the standardization process will need to be incorporated into Open XML, which is now the default document format in Microsoft Office 2007.

In the near term, that means Microsoft, Novell, and other companies that have software that works with the file formats will need to update their products. As the specification evolves in the future, these companies are expected to conform to the changes.

There remains distrust of Microsoft's efforts to promote interoperability between its products and others, including open-source software. But ISO ratification is a significant step towards Microsoft's pledge to support standards, said Peter O'Kelly, an analyst at the Burton Group.

Open XML will now be subject to more scrutiny on a technical level and people can feel less apprehensive about any possible legal entanglements from writing software based on the specification, he said.

"A lot of people continue to believe that Microsoft hasn't changed its modus operandi and the onus is on Microsoft to very clearly demonstrate a track record," O'Kelly said. "It's not like 1998. They really are enlightened about the importance of standards."

Asked what impact the ISO status would give Open XML, standards expert Jan van den Beld who now works for the pro-Microsoft industry group CompTIA, said "not much at the very moment."

Government customers and large corporations that favor certified standards now have a choice, he said. "It certainly is one less barrier to doing business in an environment that otherwise would be difficult," van den Beld said.

Not buying it
But many people committed to standards, including open-source advocates, are certain to be dismayed by the ISO ratification.

A number of national standards bodies voted "no" in the Open XML vote or abstained even after a Ballot Resolution Meeting (BRM) in February, which was meant to resolve technical issues. The tally shows that 75 percent voted to approve with 14 percent voting against.

A representative from Standards Norge, Norway's standards body has lodged a complaint over how the voting was conducted but a reversal to a "no" vote does not look like it will affect the overall result.

IBM executives lobbied heavily against the standards bid, arguing that Open XML was redundant with the OpenDocument Format (ODF) standard, technically flawed, and not sufficiently "open." A spokesperson declined to comment before the official ISO announcement.

A few days before national standards bodies were to submit their votes, the Free Software Foundation issued a legal analysis saying that the legal protections on Open XML were not to be trusted.

Some issues raised in the long-running debate seem intractable.

Microsoft executives and others have said that different "standards" suit different purposes, while others claim that multiple standards for the same purpose is wrong.

The episode has also stirred up intense anti-Microsoft sentiment.

The editor of the ODF specification, Patrick Durusau, lobbied for Open XML ISO approval to improve interoperability with ODF. At one point, he said that businesses opposed to Open XML were operating with "spite as a business strategy."

One of the most common complaints was that Microsoft and Ecma--the standards body that controls the specification--sought ISO status through its accelerated Fast-Track process, which made thorough examination of the 6,000 specification challenging.

Standards expert and ODF advocate Andrew Updegrove predicted on Tuesday that there will be a thorough review of the entire process.

"Clearly some changes need to be made in how the process works, so that the next time such an important and commercially strategic standard is processed, the process works better than this," he said.

Recent posts from News Blog
Woman to virtual ex: 'I won't be ignored!'
Swiss secret sauce to power green choppers
iLink to deliver answers to military online communities
Vonage names new CEO
T-Mobile 'Gekko' officially reveals itself as T-Mobile Sidekick
Add a Comment (Log in or register) 39 comments (Showing first 20 comments)
The next step . . .
by rcrusoe April 1, 2008 11:19 AM PDT
is probably more well deserved scrutiny by the EU.
Reply to this comment
Next step - address untoward Armonk?
by cmwendy April 1, 2008 11:38 AM PDT
Jan van den Beld - the guy who brought seems to indicate that "other companies" should look in the mirror:

http://www.crn.com/software/207001046?_DARGS=/article/rating/showPoll.jhtml#community
Reply to this comment
I wish this was an April Fool's Joke
by hellsyes April 1, 2008 11:57 AM PDT
Sadly, it's not.
Reply to this comment
Happy April Fools!
by hawkeyeaz1 April 1, 2008 12:00 PM PDT
After all, that is what the entire ISO process of MSOOXML 'standardization' is. And we will wait to see hwo closely Microsoft adheres to the 'standard'.
Reply to this comment
Maybe the world takes over MS?
by Tony McCune April 1, 2008 12:04 PM PDT
MS has been trying to take over the world for a while. Maybe it's the old Matrix scene where Neo jumps into the agent and takes it over. We've been holding off on dynamic transformation of OOXML presentations on DigitalChalk. Maybe this will break things loose on innovation with the risk reduced.
Reply to this comment
As I've said before...
by ivorycruncher April 1, 2008 12:38 PM PDT
Even open source needs competition to maintain a healthy level of innovation. One single set of office document formats would be wide open to bloat and stagnation. Having two fully open and competing sets of standard formats, each with its pros and cons, should keep things interesting. Whatever Microsoft's intentions are, they have at least attempted a step in the right direction. I'm sure further scrutiny will follow, and it should, given their track record. But I do think that good things will come from this. Maybe not today, or tomorrow, or even next week. But over the next year or two, things may start to get very interesting, especially if Microsoft makes even more moves towards being open.

I understand that the thought of the enemy trying to switch sides makes a lot of people sick and/or suspicious, but I think for the moment they should have the benefit of the doubt. This is a big first step, so let's just see where things go from here.
Reply to this comment View all 5 replies
Now we have a real standard based on W3C
by robvme April 1, 2008 2:09 PM PDT
I for one am glad that this has been established as a standard. For the Microsoft haters, you got what you want. An open standard. Open Document Format just doesn't cut it when it comes to the web. So we need a competing standard based on what many people use already. And because it is now a standard, it is governed by a third party. ODF was a OpenOffice only format and does not work well with the Compact Document Format whereas OpenOfficeXML creates a web and data consumable format. Today, it is a better format. Now, with two competing formats, there will be innovation and third party participation and who's to say what will come out of it next. At least now you have a choice.
Reply to this comment View all 5 replies
Fooled again
by t8 April 1, 2008 2:37 PM PDT
Microsoft has fooled the world again. And on April Fools Day of all days.

Your all so dumb.
Reply to this comment
Only one thing left to do
by The_Decider April 1, 2008 2:56 PM PDT
Disband the ISO.

Its credibility is gone.

MS leaves nothing but destruction in its wake.
Reply to this comment View reply
Free Software Foundation opinion worthless
by ancre007 April 1, 2008 3:14 PM PDT
Given the Free Software Foundation's huge anti-Microsoft bias, how can their so called 'legal analysis' be considered anything more than a marketing brochure furthering their anti-Redmond stance? CNET must report on objective opinions regarding such an important topic, not positions of people with a 30-foot axe to grind.
Reply to this comment View reply
Inaccurate Headline
by aureolin April 1, 2008 4:28 PM PDT
The headline should read "Office Open XML is an ISO Standard: So What?"
Reply to this comment
April Fools!
by Dalkorian April 1, 2008 5:23 PM PDT
If this was an April Fools joke, I would feel better about it. But in
fact it doesn't seem to be, which means nothing more than the ISO
has been caught on the street corner prostituting itself. I hope they
at least enjoy the screwing that micro$loth is giving them!
Reply to this comment
Please use the correct name.
by ralfthedog April 2, 2008 9:35 AM PDT
It is not the ISO. The correct name is MSISO.
Reply to this comment
Micro$oft & Interoperability? what a joke!
by jerrymacGP April 2, 2008 6:18 PM PDT
Not being a computer scientist, much of this discussion is over
my head. But one user-level point that really amuses me is that
files created by Office 2007 apps, such as Word documents
(.docx), Excel spreadsheets (.xlsx), and PowerPoint (.pptx),
cannot be opened with older versions of Office, such as 2003. I
am currently taking a evening University class, and many of my
classmates have had trouble exchanging documents between
the "old Word" and the "new Word". But, my Apple iWork '08
applications (Pages, Keynote, and Numbers) will read all those
Office 2007 documents. Micro$oft has more interoperability with
one of its major competitors than with itself! And, iWork has also
maintained backwards-compatibility with the legacy AppleWorks
application.

There are certainly some really strange goings on down there in
Redmond, WA.
Reply to this comment View reply
Office Open XML is an ISO standard: Now what?
by AppleSuxLeo April 3, 2008 10:47 PM PDT
Wow...and I thought Apple set the standards with iWork ! LOL bwahahahaha.
Reply to this comment
 See all 39 Comments >>
Powered by Jive Software
advertisement

About News Blog

Recent posts on technology, trends, and more.

Add this feed to your online news reader

News Blog topics

Latest tech news headlines

Featured blogs

advertisement
advertisement

Inside CNET News

Scroll Left Scroll Right