Microsoft Open Standards for Office

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Category : Business Topics

Microsoft has recently announced that it is opening standards for it’s Microsoft Office file types. Remember this conversation on college:

“RJ (this maybe you)! I can’t open my term paper. I just got home and just wanted to print it. What do I do!?!?”

RJ says, “What program are you working in?” (RJ already knows the answer to the question”.

“Microsoft!”

RJ responds, “What did the icon say?”

“Microsoft Works”

“Exactly”

This wasn’t just a problem with Microsoft Works but any program that wanted to open Microsoft Office (Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Access, Publisher) file. So, why will MS open standards now? I have no idea. Maybe they’ve seen the recent success of open standards. Maybe they want to start painting the “Evil Picture” of Google. It’s easy to hate the big guys. A lot of people hate Wal-Mart, Microsoft, or any other company that has a large market share. But, Google has somehow avoided this hatred. That’s a whole different study.

Maybe MS is being forced to open standards by litigation. I just thought it’s interesting that they’ve just decided to open standards.

Comments (4)

*sigh* … they haven’t. It’s all just a bunch of crap to tell non-technical people how “open” and friendly they are.

The reason programs can’t open Microsoft files, is becaue it is filled with a bunch of undocumented garbage. Their new “open” format just throws it all into XML with proprietary tags which no one, other than microsoft, can easily determine the meaning.

OpenOffice is able to open the majority of Microsoft files with a few formatting problems because of the lack of documentation outside of Microsoft. It will be no different with this new “open” format.

That’s my take …

Hi! I heard, that as it was expected, Microsoft on Thursday released the last publicly-available preview to Office 2007.

Microsoft Office 2007 Beta 2 Technical Refresh, which weighs in at 495MB from the Redmond, Wash. company’s Download Center, had been anticipated for weeks by testers. Users must have Beta 2 of the upcoming application suite already installed on their systems, said Microsoft, which is taking advantage of the situation to also test the Office 2007 patching technology and back end support.

Technical Refresh (TR) is the only version of Office 2007 that will run properly under Windows Vista Release Candidate 1 (RC1), the nearer-to-final test edition of the operating system Microsoft released to the public last week.

Although the TR is free of charge to Beta 2 users, “anyone not currently on Beta 2 will need to download Beta 2 before they are able to download the Technical Refresh,” said a Microsoft spokesperson. “So those customers will have to pay $1.50 to download the beta first.”

Microsoft slapped the download fee on Office 2007 Beta 2 early last month after more than 3 million had grabbed the preview. Then, it called the $1.50 charge “a cost recovery measure.”

The TR includes performance improvements, bug fixes, fit and finish enhancements, and according to Jensen Harris, a lead program manager on the Office team, more than 1,000 changes to the Office interface’s newest graphical element, the Ribbon. “The UI [user interface] is now totally feature complete, and you will see only cosmetic differences between B2TR and the final version in most areas,” Harris wrote Wednesday in a blog entry.

Microsoft has set prices for the new application suite, but has been coy about a launch date, saying only that it plans to put the program in corporate users’ hands by the end of this year, and ship it to others in early 2007. Last month, Amazon.com began taking pre-orders for the product, and listed January 30, 2007 as the ship date.

Office 2007 Beta 2 Technical Refresh can be downloaded from this page on the Microsoft site.

Hi everybody!

Can the open source software movement defeat (or severely cripple) Microsoft in the marketplace?

This is exactly what I expected to find out after reading the title Microsoft Open Standards for Office. Thanks for informative article

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