bogi wrote:
> Shawn, It does have an effect on you as a programmer. By becoming a standard, 
> you as a programmer will have to implement code to read and write documents 
> in that format, and since a significant part of the standard involves 

Where does it say that?  Who is standing behind me with the whip to make 
me?  I have a choice if I want to do this.  A standard does not make the 
choice for me.  I would only care if I am writing code that needs to 
talk with Microsoft products and/or OOXML based products.  a) that's not 
likely (for me), and b) I can still convince people to use the easier 
(and already existing) solution.

> proprietary and patented Microsoft software and algorithms, you would have no 
> hope of producing a reasonable reproduction of the format without those 
> proprietary and closely guarded (ip) of Microsoft, and they may decide not to 
> give it to you at all, specially if you are an open source developer or 
> developing a competing application to theirs.
> Unfortunately by winning, Microsoft has destroyed the credibility of ISO as a 
> credible source of reference regarding what flies and what does not. 

I tend to agree with the rest of your comments.  The next year will be 
interesting to see what happens with the standardization process.  I 
think we'll see lots of fallout from this.  A flawed system has been 
identified, and in the nature of Open Source a better system will be 
found to minimize those flaws.  Or perhaps I have too much faith in 
humanity? :)

Shawn

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