Microsoft publishes documentation on how it plans to implement support of the OASIS Open Document Format Version 1.1 in Microsoft Office 2007 Service Pack 2 when it becomes available in 2009. Microsoft says it will deliver similar notes on how it will support Open XML in Office in the near future.Microsoft has published documentation on how it plans to implement support
of the OASIS Open Document Format Version 1.1 in Microsoft Office 2007 Service
Pack 2 when it becomes available in 2009.
Doug Mahugh, senior project manager for Office interoperability at
Microsoft, said the goal is to support interoperability among office
productivity applications. Microsoft announced its plans to support ODF earlier
in 2008, and this documentation represents the software giant's first concrete
step toward fostering true interoperability. Mahugh said similarly detailed
documentation on Microsoft's implementation of Open XML in Office are
forthcoming.
"The goal here is transparency of our implementation," Mahugh said
in an interview with eWEEK. "We've committed to do the same for other
document formats."
In a news release, Microsoft said:
These implementation notes offer a
comprehensive guide on how Microsoft is implementing ODF and Open XML within
its flagship Microsoft Office suite. These notes, available at no charge on the
Document Interoperability Initiative (DII) site,
www.documentinteropinitiative.org, will be useful to developers seeking to
enhance the interoperability of their solutions with Microsoft products.
"This is an extremely valuable
contribution to the pursuit of grounded, practical interoperability among
applications," said Dennis Hamilton, document-system interoperability
architect. "This step raises the bar for transparent disclosure of how
standard formats are supported at a detailed level."
In the same release, Mahugh said, "By publishing notes on how we are
implementing file format standards in Microsoft Office, we are providing
details that others can use as a reference point for their own applications. We
encourage other companies to take similar steps to help achieve greater
interoperability across the industry."
Mahugh said the overall goals of the effort are threefold: to promote shared
stewardship, transparency and collaboration.
In terms of shared stewardship, Mahugh said Microsoft is committed to being an
active participant in the evolution of ODF and Open ISO/IEC.
There also will be transparency in how vendors approach the implementation
of standards in their own products, and collaboration "with other vendors
to identify and resolve real-world issues among implementations, and build
tools and solutions to improve interoperability over time." Mahugh added
in the release, "Events such as the DII
workshops around the world enable technical vendor discussions, labs and solution-enablement
programs that help vendors develop solutions for effective data exchange
between product implementations of document format standards."
Microsoft's implementation notes include details on implementation
decisions, details on additional data written into files and details on
implementation variances, Mahugh said.
"There are some things we do in Office that are just not in ODF,"
Mahugh said. "In these document format standards it's common for the
standard to allow for a wide set of capabilities. For instance, the ODF spec
allows for huge page sizes; Office has smaller page sizes. Also, on font
weight, Office has regular or bold, but the ODF spec allows for many
gradations. So we map that to normal or bold. We try to make it easy for implementers
to use. We provide a lot of detail, and a level of information and detail that
is unprecedented in a document format."
More information about the ODF Implementers Notes can
be found at the DII site at the DII site.