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		<title>The Linux.com chat files: Jeff Waugh on &quot;Poop&quot; and &quot;Pita&quot;</title>
		<link>http://www.noooxml.org/forum/t-30201/the-linux-com-chat-files:jeff-waugh-on-poop-and-pita</link>
		<description>Posts in the discussion thread &quot;The Linux.com chat files: Jeff Waugh on &quot;Poop&quot; and &quot;Pita&quot;&quot; - Jeff Waugh believes: &quot;comments provided via the ISO process can be acted upon by microsoft to &#039;improve&#039; the format, to increase the likelihood of it being accepted&quot;</description>
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		<lastBuildDate>Mon, 06 Sep 2010 16:20:55 +0000</lastBuildDate>
		
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				<guid>http://www.noooxml.org/forum/t-30201#post-76732</guid>
				<title>The Linux.com chat files: Jeff Waugh on &quot;Poop&quot; and &quot;Pita&quot;</title>
				<link>http://www.noooxml.org/forum/t-30201/the-linux-com-chat-files:jeff-waugh-on-poop-and-pita#post-76732</link>
				<description></description>
				<pubDate>Fri, 07 Dec 2007 11:53:43 +0000</pubDate>
				<wikidot:authorName>podmokle</wikidot:authorName>				<wikidot:authorUserId>3547</wikidot:authorUserId>				<content:encoded>
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						 <p>As some guys found out the <a href="http://www.linux.com/var/uploads/File/ooxml-odf-irc-log.txt">transcript of the Linux.com chat</a> was incomplete. The second part is more insightful. What strikes me most is Jeffs argument: "comments provided via the ISO process can be acted upon by microsoft to 'improve' the format, to increase the likelihood of it being accepted". It reminds me of radical left wing critics of our political systems that find it so corrupt and broken that they refuse to participate in any pragmatic approach to improve it according to their political preferences. The assumption is that pragmatism plays in the hands of your opponent. I believe that is merely a popular excuse for inactivity or unability. So when the argument was right, why does Microsoft fiercely resist comments and is afraid of resolutions for these?</p> <p>A statement as clear as "MS delivered OOXML to ECMA as-is MS make the decisions about changing it we're drilling for docs" was missed which lead to a lot of confusion in the Gnome user community. According to some unconfirmed rumours a popular SCO case blogger was so pissed that the person considered to switch from Gnome to another Desktop environment. I find it nice that the Gnome Foundation "drilled" Microsoft for more documentation. But maybe that was soo wrong, too? What if the <a href="http://www.noooxml.org/rice-pudding">amount of documentation</a> helped them to sell their "standard" to ISO?</p> <blockquote> <p>21:45 &lt; lirelent&gt; it's the feedback being done that I don't think is<br /> necessary for FLOSS to compete or even to interoperate<br /> 21:45 &lt; lirelent&gt; which is proven by the success of interpreting the<br /> binary formats<br /> 21:45 &lt; jdub&gt; heh<br /> 21:45 &lt; jdub&gt; you say that<br /> 21:45 &lt; jdub&gt; without having suffered through reverse engineering them<br /> 21:45 &lt; jdub&gt; :-)<br /> 21:46 &lt; lirelent&gt; that's true<br /> 21:46 &lt; lirelent&gt; but the point remains<br /> 21:46 &lt; lirelent&gt; it does work<br /> 21:46 * so_solid_moo saw not long ago that the ooxml spec. had helped<br /> decode more of the binary formats<br /> 21:46 &lt; jdub&gt; would've been nice to have docs for it<br /> 21:46 &lt; jdub&gt; and for smb/cifs<br /> 21:46 &lt; lirelent&gt; and OOXML documentation, no matter how crappy (excuse<br /> the french) will make that process less painful<br /> 21:47 -!- roblimo is now known as roblimo-nap<br /> 21:47 &lt; lirelent&gt; and that still doesn't require any feedback from<br /> anyone in the FLOSS community to MS<br /> 21:48 &lt; jdub&gt; not into the format (which no one has)<br /> 21:48 &lt; jdub&gt; but in order to get documentation, we have<br /> 21:48 -!- roblimo-nap<br /> [~<span class="wiki-email">ten.nozirev.w-lsd.lfpmat.53-53-001-17-loop|nibor#ten.nozirev.w-lsd.lfpmat.53-53-001-17-loop|nibor</span>] has left #linux.com<br /> [Ex-Chat]<br /> 21:48 &lt; jdub&gt; <strong>jody has been a nice little PITA to them</strong> :-)<br /> 21:48 &lt; lirelent&gt; by providing feedback about the weak points of the<br /> standard, you /might/ help FLOSS, but you definitely WILL help MS<br /> 21:49 &lt; jdub&gt; but again, that is not what is happening in TC45-M<br /> 21:49 &lt; lirelent&gt; I don't like the cost-benifit of that<br /> 21:49 &lt; jdub&gt; that *is* what is happening with the ISO process though<br /> 21:49 &lt; jdub&gt; and, oddly enough, that's where everyone else is<br /> participating :)<br /> 21:50 &lt; jdub&gt; in many ways, our work has assisted the arguments made<br /> during the ISO process<br /> 21:51 &lt; lirelent&gt; could you elaborate on that?<br /> 21:52 &lt; jdub&gt; <strong>comments provided via the ISO process can be acted upon by</strong><br /> <strong>microsoft to 'improve' the format, to increase the likelihood of it</strong><br /> <strong>being accepted</strong><br /> 21:52 &lt; jdub&gt; <strong>our tc45-m involvement has been about drilling them for</strong><br /> <strong>documentation, not improvements to the standard</strong><br /> 21:53 &lt; lirelent&gt; how is that NOT happening in the TC45-m<br /> 21:53 &lt; jdub&gt; through demands for that documentation, we've assisted<br /> some of the arguments about why ISO shouldn't accept OOXML<br /> 21:53 &lt; lirelent&gt; but if the add documentation doesn't that improve the<br /> standard<br /> 21:53 &lt; jdub&gt; (such as complexity of the standard, which is an important<br /> issue locally for me)<br /> 21:53 &lt; jdub&gt; <strong>MS delivered OOXML to ECMA as-is</strong><br /> 21:54 &lt; jdub&gt; <strong>MS make the decisions about changing it</strong><br /> 21:54 &lt; jdub&gt; <strong>we're drilling for docs</strong><br /> 21:54 &lt; jdub&gt; <strong>such that the specification is more complete</strong><br /> 21:54 &lt; jdub&gt; <strong>not that it is better</strong><br /> 21:54 &lt; lirelent&gt; isn't more complete, better though?<br /> 21:54 &lt; jdub&gt; that said, MS may change things as a result of ISO<br /> responses… so, irony :-)<br /> 21:55 &lt; jdub&gt; well, it depends on what you value in the specification<br /> 21:55 &lt; jdub&gt; <strong>more complete documentation of a pile of poop doesn't make</strong><br /> <strong>the poop better</strong><br /> 21:55 &lt; jdub&gt; it just details the level of poop<br /> 21:55 &lt; lirelent&gt; true<br /> 21:55 &lt; jdub&gt; <strong>if the poop is sufficiently poopie, ISO participants won't</strong><br /> <strong>accept it on ISO's terms</strong><br /> 21:56 &lt; lirelent&gt; but I've had some interaction with IETF and they don't<br /> seem to care if the protocol is poop, as long as its spec is complete<br /> 21:56 &lt; lirelent&gt; but I concede that ISO might have different standards</p> </blockquote> <p>To foster desktop competition I may add some words from a <a href="http://aseigo.blogspot.com/2007/09/open-xml-loses.html">post of Aaron Seigo from the KDE project</a> posted after the September ballot.</p> <blockquote> <p>With a global community made aware of the issues, contributing to the solutions and communicating broadly even the most competitive and powerful of companies are finding it difficult to tread on our freedom and get the world to buy into their lies.</p> <p>Yo everyone who supported "open" xml in the free / open source community (unfortunately there were some, including some fairly well known people), I really urge you to seriously think about your position on this matter. the name "open xml" is a lie because it isn't open (there have been more than enough highly technical articles written debunking that issue thoroughly), it's a danger to true file format standardization efforts (e.g. ODF) and an unnecessary complication for office apps in general.<br /> ..<br /> To everyone who spent days, weeks and months of their lives exposing "open" xml for what it truly is: congratulations, thank you and you have my deepest respect and gratitude. People from around and even outside the community rallied to make this happen.</p> </blockquote> 
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