2011.10.03. 12:39 keltezéssel, Ian Lynch írta:
On 3 October 2011 10:40, RGB ES<[email protected]>  wrote:
2011/10/3 Ian Lynch<[email protected]>

A logical technical need could be
to develop ODF rendering and editing in web browsers.

Something like WebODF?
http://www.webodf.org/
They even have an app on android market to display ODF documents on smart
phones (I never used it: my cell phone is only useful for phone calls...)
Yes I have it on my phone, but I don't use desk based files for
information very much mainly direct in web pages. WebODF is a good
start. Just seemed that If ODF was an official part of HTML 5 it would
get increasingly wide support and so would help strategically with
marketing.  OASIS should be the focus but the more support from a wide
range of organisations, the more likely it is to happen.
No that way.
If I know correctly the ODF among others, uses HTML, XML and other standards, see normative references in ODF 1.2: http://docs.oasis-open.org/office/v1.2/cos01/OpenDocument-v1.2-cos01-part1.html#__RefHeading__1414984_253892949 It uses the latest issued version HTML 4.0, if the HTML 5 is out, the HTML 5 version can be used in ODF, when the OASIS TC creates new ODF version, or reviews 1.2.
That means no such possibility in marketing.
Zoltan


Reply via email to