On 15/03/2014, Jim Seymour <jseym...@linxnet.com> wrote: > On Sat, 15 Mar 2014 03:25:43 -0700 (PDT) > Pedro <pedl...@gmail.com> wrote: > >> nabbler wrote >> > Please go to m$ and ask if m$office is compatible with the ODF >> > standard of LO >> >> THAT is exactly the problem! There should never be an "ODF standard >> of LO". > [snip] > > I read that as "compatible with the ODF standard, as implemented in > LO." I.e.: LO uses the ODF standard. Does MS Office? > > Did I read that wrong? Or does LO not properly implement the ODF > standard? >
It seems that only yourself and IV (in terms of responses, of course!) understood correctly. Once again, these types of questions expose a strategic weakness of those seeking to see open source software increase in popularity. The original question asked whether LO is compatible with m$, hence the reciprocal question as the answer. It is not known why the original poster (HB) asked this (silly) question: is (s)he an m$ fan, read elsewhere that LO is "compatible" with m$ the therefore concludes that LO is a m$ to create perfect m$ documents without having to pay the m$ tax ("licence fee")? If the answer is (hopefully) no, then the poster should ask LO about compatibility with m$, but instead compatibility with odf (and also ask m$ the same question!). If the original poster and other m$-fans want perfect m$ documents (a laughable concept, considering the poor quality of m$o, but that's another discussion), they should please stop complaining, stop asking and simply pay for a legal copy of m$!!! LO is not an m$-clone! It (rightly) has nothing to do with m$! The native file format of LO is odf, _not_ m$!!! It was amazing to read that there should never be an odf standard, because LO is so perfect with the rapid introduction of gratuitous new features (10-year bugs? Who cares about quality, when we have a new feature to rush out now!). This is the exact strategy of m$, netscape, etc. in the past: embrace (the standard); extend (the standard); extinguish (kill the standard!). Apparently, Oasis are at fault for being slow, methodical and serious about standards development (by definition, a rigourous, tedious and necessarily time-consuming job); therefore LO should continue to "improve". As commented elsewhere, such an opinion is ignorant of the concept of the standard development process... If the default behaviour of LO is to produce documents _beyond_ the current odf standard, it's a bad idea, equivalent to the "extend the standard" mentality as described previously. If LO wants to see the development of odf (not necessarily the increase in LO usage: the two objectives are not equal!), so that the strategic benefit of true document compatibility is maintained, the odf standard must be the default. Users must then be made aware of any non-standard features (writing a list of these "new features" in the "release notes" is not enough and merely an expedient action). Those interested in the odf standard for future document compability and flexibility want to be able to write an odf text document today in lowriter, an openformula compliant ods spreadsheet tomorrow in localc and be able to use (in theory, not confirmed) odf-compliant gnumeric, or abiword, or kwrite, etc. 10 years from now to open those documents. Otherwise, what is the purpose of the odf standard? -- To unsubscribe e-mail to: users+unsubscr...@global.libreoffice.org Problems? http://www.libreoffice.org/get-help/mailing-lists/how-to-unsubscribe/ Posting guidelines + more: http://wiki.documentfoundation.org/Netiquette List archive: http://listarchives.libreoffice.org/global/users/ All messages sent to this list will be publicly archived and cannot be deleted