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May 21, 2008 12:00 AM

Microsoft Opens Up Office to New Document Formats

Windows IT Pro
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In the strongest sign yet that Microsoft has given up its stranglehold on office productivity document formats, the software giant today announced that it will enhance Microsoft Office with native support for competing formats. The change will first arrive in Office 2007 Service Pack 2 (SP2), due in early 2009, and will be implemented directly into the next major Office version, currently codenamed Office 14. Additionally, Microsoft has pledged to become more active in relevant document format standards bodies and working groups.

With regards to compatibility, Microsoft will add native support for Open Document Format (ODF) 1.1, Portable Document Format (PDF) 1.5 and PDF/A, and the XML Paper Specification (XPS). These formats will be treated as first class formats beginning with Office 2007 and can be configured as the default document format used in applicable Office applications.

"We are committed to providing Office users with greater choice among document formats and enhanced interoperability between those formats and the applications that implement them," said Microsoft senior vice president Chris Capossela. "By increasing the openness of our products and participating actively in the development and maintenance of document format standards, we believe we can help create opportunities for developers and competitors, including members of the open source communities, to innovate and deliver new value for customers."

Microsoft currently offers an Open XML-ODF translator via SourceForge.net and will continue supporting that so that user of older Office suites--Office 2000, XP, and 2003--can access and use ODF documents. The company also says it will join the Organization for the Advancement of Structured Information Standards (OASIS) technical committee to help guide the direction of future versions of ODF and will participate in the ISO/IEC working groups for ODF, Open XML, and document interoperability.

Microsoft's Office document formats were once seen as one of the company's "crown jewels," but in a recent briefing with the company, I was told that Microsoft now considers its Office applications, and not the document formats, as the place to innovate in this space. "We're opening up innovation at the application level," Doug Mahugh, a senior product manager for Microsoft Office, told me. "The value of the discussion is not the formats; it's in the tools that are solving problems for customers."

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Comments
  • Joe
    4 years ago
    May 27, 2008

    @MysterMask

    AHAHAHAHAHA!

    don't make me laugh myself silly here.

    Rational Rose, the IBM software, is just a joke as far as your comparison goes. first off, it's designed for software development process management, making it an apples-to-oranges comparison. it's like comparing Expression Design to Adobe Photoshop.

    Visio is extremely easy to use, regardless of the version. drag-and-drop options make it dead simple to create complex diagrams, and it's the most commonly used IT resource planning and visualization tool used in the market today.

    XP

  • MysterMask
    4 years ago
    May 26, 2008

    "Infopath, Visio, and a host of other Office "

    *urks*
    You talking about junk software, you know. I distinctely remember Visio (or rather: what MS made of it after they bought it). Never seen a visualizing program with such a bad interface, unreliable export behaviour and a rather strange feature mix (did they really though anybody was going to use it as Ration Rose replacement?). Thank god Mac alternatives are way better ...

  • Joe
    4 years ago
    May 26, 2008

    "Office [for Mac] is no substitute." is the correct response.

    of course, on a Mac you don't get Infopath, Visio, and a host of other Office programs. the majority of options listed on the Acrobat page you referenced are included in Office 2007, sorry to say many of which are included in the base applications such as Word. Office 2004 and the recently released 2008 don't have many of those features though, so you can go back to your snarky Mac-only attitude, but us Windows users know better.

    XP

  • Lotsa
    4 years ago
    May 25, 2008

    you're kidding, right? 95% of that stuff is already accomplished through Office natively, and is maintained in the target PDF document by the current exporter! where have you been?

    I've "been" using Acrobat since version 1.0, thankyouverymuch. Office is no substitute. But it's interesting that you marketing approach seems to be that it's "good enough". Which it isn't, sorry.

  • MysterMask
    4 years ago
    May 24, 2008

    Guess MS found out that it's easier and faster to implement ODF than make their own format ISO compatible (since not even MS implements the ISO standard based on OOXML).

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