OOXML and Mono: Not So Different After All
- Dr. Roy Schestowitz
- 2008-05-27 14:23:01 UTC
- Modified: 2008-05-27 14:23:01 UTC
A fairly intriguing analysis which was posted just 4 days ago
delves into the tricks Microsoft might be playing at the moment and also makes a comparison to Mono.
I’m sure that Microsoft will try to gain some advantage from OOXML, as broken as it is. They could try to reproduce what they managed to do with .NET and CLR by standardizing and opening only a subset of the .Net API , thus letting Novell create a very limited .Net implementation, Mono. Regardless of what the future options could be, the OOXML standardization will prove to be the single most destructive episode of the standardization history.
Another good analysis of Mono's goals you will find
here.
Please consider
contacting your national standards body, asking it to usher the complaint from South Africa. If bodies are not pushed to do so, laziness will defeat true need. As
another quick reminder (this time from Linux Journal):
The deadline for countries to file — listen up standards bodies — is Thursday the 29th.
Other than South Africa, according to current reports, no country has yet filed an appeal. Prodding might help.
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Comments
AlexH
2008-05-27 14:37:51
"Analysis" probably isn't the right word.
Roy Schestowitz
2008-05-27 16:09:46
Legal limitations and technical limitations are both worthy of consideration.
As as off topic remark, I notice that you are the main maintainer who hacks on Novell's Hula. May I suggest the possibility that you have a sentimental attachment to Novell and are therefore biased/passionate? Moreover, if I dare ask you this, do you endorse the Microsoft/Novell deal? I just wish to resolve who is who.
AlexH
2008-05-27 17:37:53
Talking again of factual inaccuracy: no, I'm not the "main maintainer of Novell's Hula", and the link you've given isn't to Hula, it's to Bongo. Novell's Hula is called Messaging Architect's M+ Netmail these days, and that's not something I have any involvement in whatsoever.
But, y'know, you'd know all this if you'd actually taken me up on my original offer to tell you what did happen with Novell...
AlexH
2008-05-27 17:41:54
Basically, it doesn't affect me. If I got worried about every patent cross-licensing deal out there I wouldn't get much done, tbh.
gggggg
2008-05-27 18:43:53
How about affecting the way use and distribute them.
How about the way that people that develop, use and distribute them.
It's just because care enough about those in the past that you can use them, with those rights that you care so little about.
Besides that, your logic is hilarious.
"Quite easy to point out those areas in Mono which provide features not found in .net (Gtk#, Cecil, Gendarme, the POSIX/UNIX classes, Addins, etc. etc.)"
So they weren't stopped from adopting further NET technologies because they created their own. That's exactly the reason. What you shown proves the man right.
The reason or one the reasons that Mono was created was provide an easy and fast to run NET based windows applications on Linux. How easy can that be if they have to rewrite most of their applications.
I know of one case where the developers simply wrap their application with WINE like Google did with Picasa. A "NET application". So much for cross-platform development.
Where're the big .NET applications that were created to run on both platforms or that were converted to run Linux.
Where're the Linux Mono applications that run on windows without Mono making use of the NET framework.
So much for the myth of cross-platform development and deployment of the NET technologies.
So, you don't mind. Right, that's why you take every opportunity to come here spread disinformation. About OOXML, about Mono, etc...
You're an idiot. You would be a good sidekick to that supreme Win-Troll by the name of "Moshe Goldfarb"
Alex H.
2008-05-27 20:28:15
Which statements of mine are actual misinformation, as opposed to just opinions you disagree with?
Roy Schestowitz
2008-05-27 23:04:51
I wrote "main maintainer who hacks on Novell’s Hula" (to make Bongo, which I think would be a wonderful project and I wish you success), not "main maintainer of Novell’s Hula”." You misquoted me.
The point I was making is that code you started with came from Novell, so I expect you to be protective of Novell.
Roy Schestowitz
2008-05-27 23:07:27
There's no “Moshe Goldfarb”. That's just one nym among hundreds or thousands that Gary M. Stewart (Flatfish), a Microsoft Munchkin, has been using for over a decade. He picked the name “Moshe Goldfarb” (a holocaust survivor) to do his more recent trolling and escape some people's filters.
AlexH
2008-05-28 06:58:11
I started hacking on Bongo because the project was shafted by Novell. Why on earth would that make me protective of Novell?
Please don't call Bongo "Novell's Hula". It's not. The initial version we forked was never released by Novell as "Hula", and is nothing like the "Hula" that got included in e.g. Debian and Ubuntu.
Roy Schestowitz
2008-05-28 08:12:52
Miles
2008-05-28 15:17:49
But since we are discussing biases... Roy, you seem very biased against Novell, even when other companies that you praise are just as bad if not worse than Novell.
Roy Schestowitz
2008-05-28 15:24:35