Open XML: Can a 6,000-page History Book Become a Standard?
- Dr. Roy Schestowitz
- 2007-01-05 08:12:53 UTC
- Modified: 2007-01-05 08:12:53 UTC
BoyCottNovell has taken special interest in Microsoft's use of Novell to empower support for its
so-called standard, Open XML. You may wish to read the following long writeup from Rob Weir. He
calls Open XML a "DNA sequence".
This is a running criticism I have of Microsoft's Office Open XML (OOXML). It has been narrowly crafted to accommodate a single vendor's applications. Its extreme length (over 6,000 pages) stems from it having detailed every detail of MS Office in an inextensible, inflexible manner. This is not a specification; this is a DNA sequence. For example, take this part of the OOXML "Standard":
2.15.3.6 autoSpaceLikeWord95 (Emulate Word 95 Full-Width Character Spacing)
This element specifies that applications shall emulate the behavior of a previously existing word processing application (Microsoft Word 95) when determining the spacing between full-width East Asian characters in a document's content.
[...]
2.15.3.26 footnoteLayoutLikeWW8 (Emulate Word 6.x/95/97 Footnote Placement)
This element specifies that applications shall emulate the behavior of a previously existing word processing application (Microsoft Word 6.x/95/97) when determining the placement of the contents of footnotes relative to the page on which the footnote reference occurs. This emulation typically involves some and/or all of the footnote being inappropriately placed on the page following the footnote reference.
Other related critiques:
Comments
shane
2007-01-05 08:33:43
r@dix
2007-01-05 17:32:26
Well, at least that one made me laugh :)) It's not a bug - it's a feature. :)
shane
2007-01-05 17:45:32