"Remember how hard Andy worked on Massachusetts, only to see it bullied, battered, and defeated by an aggressive monopoly abuser"
Isn't it truly amazing that the world's collective voice is being hijacked by a minority group that is very well paid and very self serving? That is exactly what you'll find any time you turn your attention to technical committees (and panel chairmen in particular) that discuss OOXML around the world.As someone who has spent a great part of my life working to support open standards over the past 20 years, I have to say that this is the most egregious, and far-reaching, example of playing the system to the advantage of a single company that I have ever seen. Breathtaking, in fact. That's assuming, of course, that I am right in supposing that all of these newbie countries vote "yes."
It’s clear that whatever the vote, OOXML will not be a JTC1 standard for a long, long time, no matter what people say next week. It’s also clear that unless the process is quickly terminated with OOXML being rejected as unsuitable with comments unresolvable, it will churn on and on and on, no matter what you feel about it or the OOXML spec.
A Microsoft document format that may be adopted as an international standard this weekend is a ploy to lock in customers, who could lose control over their own data in a worst-case scenario, critics say.
A thought hit me this morning while I was reading through Microsoft's latest garbage-fodder (also known as "research") on OOXML and Sharepoint. Here is the world's largest software company taking potshots at open source, which maybe affects 0.001% of its revenues today. If that.
Now look at Oracle, SAP, IBM, etc. You won't find a single other company making a concerted effort to fight open source.