Two Open Document Standards Better Than One? 308
tsa writes "Microsoft says that the consumers should have the choice between multiple open standards for documents." From the article: "Microsoft's Yates said that OpenDocument and Open XML come from very different design points. 'In the future at some point there will be convergence,' he said. In the near term, the transition period from proprietary document formats to Open XML-based ones will be 'messy and complex,' he added. 'Competition between standards we believe is a very good thing.'"
Divide and conquer (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Divide and conquer (Score:5, Insightful)
That's not precisely what they are saying. They are saying that competition on standards is good, which is a far cry from saying competition based on implementation is good.
Honestly, we should not have to deal with competition with standards. What's their to compete on if everyone agrees this is a standard? This is only a concept that is big because MS likes to fuck with standards ( embrace and extend ).
What they are trying to do is create an enviroment where PHB feel they have to go with the safe option. And no one ever got fired for going with MS.
Re:Divide and conquer (Score:3, Interesting)
Hopefully one of the things that comes out of this is that large IT-consumers, like the State of Massachusetts, will learn how the process of developing and open standard really works, and what's open and what's not open. Hopef
Re:Divide and conquer (Score:5, Funny)
-Jesus
Re:Divide and conquer (Score:5, Insightful)
So you're suggesting that we should infer goodwill from Microsoft's imperfections? That they could have destroyed Linux and Apple any time they liked, but they withheld their hand becuase they're nice people?
I have to say that doesn't sound like the Microsoft I've come to know and loathe. Should we also infer that they put all those bugs in on purpose so other OSes won't feel bad abut themselves?
Seriously if people continue to just bash microsoft hear then it shows they are no better then the funded surveys that microsoft does to prove they are better except you guys
So like, if I criticise Microsoft, I'm just as bad as they are, yeah? So if I say, Microsoft are untrustworthy hypocritical greedy grasping anti-competitive and morally bankrupt, that means that I am also untrustworthy hypocritical greedy grasping anti-competitive and morally bankrupt, made so purely by the act of saying so. Is that right?
Wow.
So, presumably, if I say the Pope is a catholic, that would make me a catholic too.
Maybe I should stop using the toiletary habits of bears for emphatic confirmation. I mean, it's not as if there's a decent sized wood anywhere near where I live. Talk about getting caught short...
Re:Divide and conquer (Score:4, Interesting)
And while it's somewhat hypocrical, it does make sense from the "we want all the money" point of view.
Re:Divide and conquer (Score:5, Insightful)
Complex document format conversion is lossy. Imagine converting a MS Word document to a TIFF image. OK, you'd lose some things (like page breaks) but you could do it. Now imagine trying to convert back to .doc from TIFF. You could sort of do it with OCR, maybe you could automatically recognize noncharacter regions and convert them back to images, but there's no way it would reclaim the structure of the document not to mention change tracking, comments, self-updating cross references, links to embedded spreadsheets, document-specific word lists for the spellchecker...
Two word processor formats will be much more similar than .doc and TIFF, but the same problem exists to a lesser degree. Document formats are not supersets of each other! At some level there are basic incompatibilities.
Re:Divide and conquer (Score:4, Informative)
ODF is flow based a-la HTML.
DOCX is record based a-la files generated by Write (.wri) & WinWord' text changes stream.
Application of styles is very different. Even if conversion of text can be made, conversion of styles is almost impossible. In DOCX styles are more or less inlined - ODF was redesigned by OASIS with styles to be more like HTML+CSS.
Basicly, M$'s concept boils down to "anything can occur anywhere in document". ODF hence standard is more strict.
Additionally M$ has special support for ActiveX: embedded objects will be stored as binary dump in middle of XML documents. (E.g. all pictures and files inserted from outside in M$ universe are ActiveX objects.) I'm not sure who ODF pares with embedded content, I can only hope OASIS - unlike M$ - have put XML to good use. After all, unlike M$, ODF includes vector and raster graphics too.
(*) http://www.groklaw.net/article.php?story=20051125
Re:Divide and conquer (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Divide and conquer (Score:2)
the old saying goes.. (Score:5, Funny)
Re:the old saying goes.. (Score:5, Funny)
Or the other variation of that, "standards are great, there are so many to choose from."
Re:the old saying goes.. (Score:2, Funny)
not everyone can have standards (Score:2)
A man with 2 watches (Score:2)
Re:the old saying goes.. (Score:2)
Re:the old saying goes.. (Score:3, Insightful)
In my several years of professional IT, I've been shocked (and, at times, guilty as well) by how many times smart
Re:the old saying goes.. (Score:2)
I'm confused (Score:4, Insightful)
Isn't that like having competing monopolies?
Regardless, competetion in standards is only good for a short period of time, after that there is a waste of man hours on one project to the detriment of whatever the standard is for.
Re:I'm confused (Score:2, Insightful)
That's right - who could possibly need more than one standard?
Just as there's only one graphics-file format... GIF! I mean bitmap... or was that JPEG? Oh, PNG - that's the one! Except for the nuts using TIFF or RAW...
Re:I'm confused (Score:4, Insightful)
Multiple ideas can be thought of as a "standard", they just aren't necessarily compatible. PAL vs NTSC, 120 volts vs 220 volts, AC/DC, DVD-R vs DVD+R, Letter size vs Legal vs Postcard. They're all standards, all used for various purposes, and sometimes (DVD-R vs DVD+R) interchangable. As long as a lot of people conform to using it (not necessarily ALL people), it can be deemed a standard. Multiple standards can be a good thing. Of course, multiple standards can also be a bad thing, as it leads to unneccessary incompatabilities.
Of course! (Score:5, Insightful)
Since they haven't done that yet, the rest is just speculation. It looks like legal issues will be keeping the Free world on OpenDocument for the foreseeable future.
Re:Of course! (Score:5, Informative)
They've promised to create exactly that perpetual license, and there's pretty much no question at this point that they will indeed do so. The problem is this: Their proposed format sucks, and ECMA probably won't do anything about it.
Compared to ODF, the format Microsoft is proposing is vastly less suitable for XMLT transforms. It fails to leverage preexisting standards, so other implementations can't take advantage of existing code to render and manipulate SVG, MathML and the like.
Please see the OpenDocument Fellowship's introduction [opendocume...owship.org] to the technical merits of Microsoft's proposed format to better understand the extralegal objections to the same.
Re:Of course! (Score:4, Insightful)
Will I what? Welcome them to the competition? Sure! That's not the same as blindly adopting their proposal.
I've upped my standards... (Score:5, Funny)
Now that is funny!! (Score:2, Insightful)
If Microsoft had to actually compete, they would cease to exist.
http://religiousfreaks.com/ [religiousfreaks.com]Re:Now that is funny!! (Score:2, Insightful)
More importantly, isn't that the entire reason for a "standard"? So you don't have competing formats? Hence the use of the word "standard". Maybe he needs to look up the definition of standard (and, while he's at it, oxymoron).
Re:Now that is funny!! (Score:2)
I'm not saying that's what's happening here, but I'm quite surprised that everyone here seems to think that competition is evil, just because MS is the competition.
Take USB 1.0 vs. Firewire for example. Would we have seen USB 2.0 as soon as we did if Firewire didn't offer "faster competition" to USB 1.
Re:Now that is funny!! (Score:3, Interesting)
Perhaps they will leverage their monopoly to cause an inferior open format to win. It goes like this.
1. Government and some industry requires open format support in word processing application.
2. Microsoft proposes terrible open format that is vastly inferior to word doc.
3. Microsoft
Re:Now that is funny!! (Score:2)
Microsoft does compete - every time they release a new Windows/Office version they have to compete against the installed base of older Windows/Office versions.
Re:Now that is funny!! (Score:2)
I'd find this more insightful if Microsoft's monopolies weren't de-facto.
Re:Now that is funny!! (Score:2)
Nonsense is right. (Score:4, Interesting)
It was PC vs. Apple, which means that Apple competed against all the PC manufacuers. As to the office stuff, MS gave away office forever until they had. It was all subsidized by MS's owning the DOS/Windows monopoly.
So, no, MS is not a competitive company.
Re:MS is competing... and winning... (Score:5, Interesting)
Most MS critics are not upset because MS is winning, but because MS is using unfair and illegal means in order to win.
People have chosen to use MS software and they have chosen to give MS a majority market share.
You mean: PC manufacturers have chosen to bundle Windows and Office on every system they sell, not giving a rebate to consumers who want a new PC without Windows+Office. Having Windows+Office preinstalled on every new system gave MS a majority market share.
Joe Average will reason that, having already paid for the pre-installed software, he is going to use that software instead of buying and installing alternative software - after all, the only software Joe Average installs on his PC is the software that get's automatically installed when you surf to the wrong websites with IE as your browser.
Please stop parroting the MS marketing speak; MS Office isn't running on most PC's because the consumers chose to use it, but because the PC manufactures preinstalled it.
Re:MS is competing... and winning... (Score:3, Insightful)
You would not believe how hard it is these days to get a laptop without an operating system preinstalled. There are precisely two companies doing this in the whole of the UK, compared to several hundred (rough estimate) laptop+windows vendors/resellers.
Re:MS is competing... and winning... (Score:4, Insightful)
Sir, offering discounts to manufacturers who install Windows exclusively is emphatically not mafia-like activity.
Nope, it's a normal business practice.
However, monopolists are barred from many normal business practices, for good reason. This is one that Microsoft should not be allowed.
Good idea? (Score:5, Funny)
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Re:Good idea? (Score:5, Funny)
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<p class=MsoNormal>Hehehe. Good One.</p>
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offtopic? Surely you jest (Score:4, Insightful)
MS strategy (Score:2, Insightful)
Just excellent (Score:2, Funny)
Also known as "StirStick of Muddy Water +5"
So much for historians trying to figure out the years 2006 to 2012... How very non-altruistic of Microsoft. How very against the basic tenets of Information Systems.
Competition (Score:5, Insightful)
From past experience, Microsoft only believes this when the leading standard is someone elses. Once Microsoft's standard holds the most mindshare/marketshare, then they don't like competition anymore.
Just what I've observed
Re:Competition (Score:5, Insightful)
1) We will sooner curl up, die, and/or join the open source movement before letting a non-MS Office document standard become any sort of official or de facto standard.
2) There will be two incompatible standards in popular use. Yes, that does defeat the entire purpose of standards in the first place, but you have to realize that we're Microsoft and that we will never stop pushing our own solutions, even if they're inferior, evil, or expensive. Even if everyone on the planet rejects them, it will not hinder us. But we will succeed eventually.
3) Our standard will converge with the competition's in response to market forces. And if the market doesn't force it, we will, and we'll just make it sound like we didn't.
4) We plan to be in charge of this convergence. And by "converge," we mean "effectively replace that one with ours." We'll be in full control of the result.
Last time I checked... (Score:2, Insightful)
For who? (Score:5, Insightful)
Yeah, for microsoft.
You can expect this kind of horse shit from MS because they are on the weak end of the document format wars. Allow me to explain:
Competition between programs is a very good thing. No arguments. Standards are just that, standards. There has already been a shake down period, and people have agreed this is an agreed set of rules. Hence, "standard". By instigating a whole new standards "war", they hope to create confusion and chaos. And those of you who work with PHB already know the next bit: They panic and go with the safe option.
Fuck 'em. I hope against logic that they get eaten alive on this one.
Codebase is the real problem (Score:3, Interesting)
Basically the only innovation to Office in the last 4+ years has been in the UI, and I don't think that is an accident. An interface just issues commands to the document engine, so it's fai
Re:For who? (Score:3, Insightful)
Competition between standards we believe is a very good thing.
Competition between the English and the metric systems, for example, has provided an endless stream of benefits [bbc.co.uk] over the years.
And while we're at it, the different standards for power plugs and telephone adapters are really great, too, stimulating the ingenuity of international travelers everywhere, and doubtless provide jobs and livelihoods for tens of thousands of adapter manufactures around the world.
Re:For who? (Score:5, Insightful)
Then you don't work in IT. I would further say you don't work with computers much on a day to day basis.
No one cares about OS except linux zealots and and a few governments looking to save a few pennies by using an inferior product
Try not to drool to much on yourself, it really undermines your credibility.
Let me paint you a picture. You are the IT head of a state ( lets say California ). You see Mass moving to open-office due to concerns about document formats. A year goes by, and they report an enormous budget savings due to no MS tax on their office suite.
Now, do you a) Stay with MS, and have to deal with corporation crap regarding their document formats and pay for the privledge? Or do you b) investigate costs associated with moving to open office?
Try not to drool on yourself while you think about this.
Re:For who? (Score:2)
Would you like to see my resume, smartass?
Why yes. Yes I would.
If anything, I'd say that you don't work in IT. A real IT person doesn't use such juvenile phrases like "MS Tax".
Oh? I would argue that you haven't met many people in the field then. MS tax is a perfectly valid description of a forced update model. Sure, PHB may use different words ( longer and more meaningless, generally ), but the essence is the same.
So yes. Pleas
Re:For who? (Score:3, Informative)
Too funny to be true. (Score:2)
Are microsoft sending themselves up?
This reminds me of the old joke about the advantages of standards, that there are so many to choose from.
That old joke was supposed to be in the Tanenbaum book, but I couldn't find it in the 3rd edition. Was it removed? Or can someone give me a reference for this?
"The nice thing about standards is that there are so many to choose from. And if you really don't like all the standards you just have to wait anothe
Open XML? (Score:5, Funny)
It's just marketing BS. Bleh!
Re:Open XML? (Score:2)
Open Standard? (Score:3, Insightful)
The process was, this is the standard.
Microsoft's bastardization of the word 'OPEN' (Score:5, Insightful)
Like in this article for example [eweek.com].
QUOTE:
Thanks to Microsoft, users will face the "unsavory prospect of two supposed standards. The truth is that only one of them is free of intellectual property encumbrances. Only one reflects multivendor support, and only one reflects openness. That standard is OpenDocument Format,"
Not again... (Score:5, Insightful)
Embrace: Do a complete reversal; say that open standards are a great idea, far better than our own proprietary asshattery.
Extend: So yeah, we're all about open standards now and look we've got our own version OpenXML. It's obviously better (or at least that's what people will believe thanks to our unstoppable marketing department) so we'll add extra tags and change the format of existing ones. Oh by the way, this means that only Microsoft products will create this and only Microsoft products will understand this but that's not our fault, honestly.
Extinguish: Well everyone seems to be using our version of the open document format since 90% of all computer users use our software so only masochists use that 'other' standard. We'll repeatedly change the standard by making each version of our software understand only a new version of it. After everyone is frustrated by the lack of stability in a so called standard, we'll do another 180 and point out how much better and stable closed source/standards are and move everyone back to safe, trustworthy Microsoft standards that Just Works(tm).
Thanks for playing!
OK, but if it's kosher XML (Score:3, Insightful)
Been here before (Score:2)
It's Beta vs. VHS all over again.
Or HD-DVD vs. BluRay for those of you with short memories.
Missing the point? (Score:2)
How about Microsoft instead making it easier for everyone and joining forces with IBM, Adobe, Corel, and Sun among others behind OpenDocument, and trying suggest improvements to it to do whatever they so badly need to make their own format for?
You know the old saying... (Score:2)
"Never attribute to malice what can be adequately explained by incompetence?"
Lemme put it this way: this cannot be adequately explained by incompetence.
They're not simply missing the point, they're brushing it aside as they forge ahead with their own plans to convolute the "OpenDoc" information space. Then, when everyone's confused, they try to make theirs look as good and reliable as possible compared to that other, "lesser" standard to snatch what market share they can.
They get their all-important
Re:Missing the point? (Score:2, Insightful)
MS craftier than you think (Score:5, Interesting)
I get the impression that Word looks for OpenOffice and if it finds it decides to go ahead and open the document!!!!
Re:MS craftier than you think (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:MS craftier than you think (Score:2)
Re:UMMM??? (Score:4, Insightful)
Maybe I can spell it out using nice, short little sentences for you.
See, the interesting part comes from the change in Word's behaviour upon installing OpenOffice. That wasn't so hard, was it?
Re:UMMM??? (Score:3, Interesting)
I try to open an MS document now it does open using Word except it does ask me to license the product.
When compared to the previous sentence:
I used Word until the trial period expired then when I could no longer open documents...
we see that the interesting part here was the change in behavior from not opening documents to opening documents. It does still ask him to license the product (which it probably did during the
Re: (Score:2, Interesting)
Microsoft loses first battle, goes for #2 (Score:2)
Translation: We at Microsoft were really disappointed when we heard the State of Massachusetts was not 'agile' and were not going to 'realize their full potential' by going to the Open Document
For Some Definition of "Open" (Score:5, Insightful)
Multiple, competing open standards are fine, and being open it is usually not too difficult to translate between them. Unfortunately MS's "Open XML" standard is not open, so they are not really giving us the choice they are claiming. Open XML is format that is patented and that is licensed with a variety of important restrictions. For example, only the current version is covered by the license, it expires immediately should a new version come out. According to the letter of the license this means the benefits of backwards compatibility and even the ability to distribute a program from one day to the next are subject to MS's whim. Should MS release a new version that is intentionally broken, they could legally restrict competitors from continuing to sell or even give away a word processor.
Redistribution is completely forbidden by the licensing, leading many to believe that it was specifically designed to exclude GNU licensed applications, like Open Office, their primary competitor. How can anyone call "Open XML" and open format when the license under which that format is offered means it can't be implemented by OpenOffice?
All of this is MS marketing FUD. Closed is open. Bad is good. Ha ha we made it really hard for you to explain shit to your managers by naming our product the opposite of what it is. This is like GM calling the next iteration of their traditional cargo van "Hybrid Luxury Mobile" despite it not having a hybrid engine or any luxury features. Don't fall for their crap.
Re:For Some Definition of "Open" (Score:2)
So, for example, if Sun decided they didn't like the direction of OpenDocument 1.1, they could stop participating and then sue anyone for "suddenly discovered" patents.
Additionally, the "
Re:For Some Definition of "Open" (Score:5, Informative)
find it interesting that you are so meticulous about interpreting Microsoft's license, yet you seem to ignore entirely Sun's license and patent covenent which contains very similar "loopholes". For instance, Sun's patent covenent promises not to sue anyone *SO LONG A SUN IS PARTICIPATING* in that version of OpenDocument.
First, MS has applied for and been granted patents on the format itself in multiple jurisdictions. Sun has not patented the Open Office format. The license you are referring to discusses technologies that may be utilized by the format, not the format itself. Second, Sun has promised not to sue anyone for using any of their patents that might cover technology in the Open Office spec, because that is what OASIS requires. It does not imply that any such technologies exist. Third, regarding the participation clause, no company in their right mind would cede all their patent rights for all technology arbitrarily. The participation clause allows Sun to decline the option to participate in a new version of the standard, thus preventing someone from arbitrarily inserting random patented technology in a new version of the spec, and thus gaining access to any of Suns patents, license free.
There is a big difference between an agreement that says if any patents conflict with a format they won't be enforced and a patented format, licensed with restrictions. There is a huge difference between the ability to not release a new version of a format from patent protection and the ability to arbitrarily rescind a license to a format. If Sun decided not to participate in a future version of Open Office any company that has implemented old versions are still free to do so and new programs are free to implement them for backwards compatibility. If MS releases a new version of the "Open XML" spec no one is free to keep distributing old word processors or implement new word processors that can use that format for backwards compatibility, save at MS's whim. If you don't see the practical difference then you're either dense or being paid not to see it.
So, for example, if Sun decided they didn't like the direction of OpenDocument 1.1, they could stop participating and then sue anyone for "suddenly discovered" patents.
Sun can only sue if they have patents covered by a new version of the spec that they are not implementing (none are known) and if other companies then go ahead and implement that spec. The reason for this restriction on their patent protection license was already explained above.
Additionally, the "openness" of something has nothing to do with whether or not it's GPL compatible. There are many open source (and even Free, according the Free Software Foundation) licenses that are not GPL compatible. The Mozilla Public License, for instance.
You're confusing "open" and "open source." Open source means you can view the code. Open means the format is unencumbered and freely implementable by all. An open standard is one that can be implemented by anyone. A closed standard is one that must be licensed and is subject to restrictions. The Open Document standard is open. No license is needed to implement it, and the various companies that submitted the standard have pledged that if any of their patents cover items within it, they won't enforce them (to prevent submarine patenting). MS, on the other hand, admits to having patented the "Open XML" spec, and further has placed restriction on how that spec can be used (singling out certain software licenses for specific exclusion).
I'm also skeptical that Sun's license is GPL compatible either, since they impose the additional requirement of granting Sun reciprocal patent rights (explictly Sun, not necessarily others), which violates the "no additional restrictions" clause of the GPL.
A document format cannot be (by definition) GPL compatible. The GPL covers source code and redistribution of binaries. That is copyright law, not patent law. Nothing prevents GPL programs from implemen
"Competition between standards we believe..." (Score:2)
apparently he never owned a betamax.
Re:"Competition between standards we believe..." (Score:2)
apparently he never owned a betamax.
or had an 'Apprentice' TV show that was recently cancelled.
Am I the only one... (Score:2, Insightful)
...that thinks two competing document standards isn't a good thing? Yes, I know all the arguments about the competition spawning features and a better product and quite frankly I don't really believe them. As far as I am concerned it will just lead to a situation where I am always playing off the benifits and draw backs of the two formats and trying to guess which one a potential client will want. At least at the moment it's a no brainer. Send it in the latest .doc format or .pdf depending on whether you wa
Re:Am I the only one... (Score:2)
Oh, you mean like it has been in the past, and sometimes is even now?
I use Firefox for most standards-based HTML sites, and IE for those sites which demand it
Differences in standards. (Score:2)
Narf.
ROFLMAO (Score:2)
After: "Two open standards are better than one".
C'mon, Steve, you can do better than that.
Brought to you by Faux News... (Score:2)
Written by Jim Prendergast, executive director of Americans for Technology Leadership. Microsoft Corporation is a founding member of ATL.
This article is filled with so much bullshit it's difficult to know where to begin rebutting it:
OpenDocument applications would have to be built from the ground up.
Pure FUD. Applications already exist that implement OpenDocument. In fact, OpenOffice is mentioned in the article right in the next paragraph! Anyways, adding a ne
Re:ROFLMAO (Score:2)
Choosing between STANDARDS is not.
Microsoft 'believes'?? (Score:2)
What is being said and what is being demonstrated are two completely different things. Do I need to go into detail able how ferociously they fight and undermine the use and deployment of non-proprietary software and data solutions? (Even to the point of having laws created and changed and having decision-making power shifted from experts to politicians?
Obligitory Animal Farm quote. (Score:2)
Grind, grind, grind (Score:5, Informative)
I guess all the rest of us can do is plot our course - in this case OpenDocument - and stick to it through thick and thin.
Microsoft will contine to wriggle and bluster around this for months and months. It's part of the game. There's no point wasting any more energy on the subject. Microsoft would like nothing more than to exhaust people they will always regard as competition.
Two Standards? (Score:2, Interesting)
Read Groklaw's example of "recipe with marzipan" (Score:2)
It goes like this.
MS has a recipe with marzipan as an ingredient.
MS allows us to use this recipe for free.
But MS does not tell us what kind of marzipan is used for this specific recipe.
==> We are allowed to use this recipe but can not use this recipe because we don't have all the details about all ingredients.
Competition between standards is a very good thing (Score:2)
So is learning to admit defeat when beaten by a superior standard.
The race is already over and Microsoft is begging for a restart.
Pair of standards (Score:2)
You know, like when she forgets to do the laundry, it's ok, but when YOU forget, it's hell to pay.
That 'pair' of standards...same as they've done all along.
There Are Two Standards (Score:2)
There are two standards already. ODF and PDF.
Re:There Are Two Standards (Score:2)
Groklaw article (Score:2, Informative)
Protect the Lock-In (Score:2)
open OpenDocument documents (Score:2)
If they don't add quicly import/export features, MS Office will become irrelevant. Not because it is a bad product but because their users will be unable to open the documents they receive. Because companies/agencies are switching massively (from what I can see).
Mars... (Score:2)
NASA Proved Two Standards are Bad (Score:3, Insightful)
Competition between standards: good?!? (Score:5, Interesting)
Competition is good. Standards are good. Competition between standards: very bad.
"And we go round and round and round in the circle game."
competition (Score:3, Insightful)
What a ridiculous statement.
If there are multiple standards then there is no standard by definition.
Competition between products using a common standard is a good thing.
Unintended side effects for Microsoft (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Blah blah from MS (Score:2)
Have you ever saved a word document as an html document in Microsoft Word?
I call that output mshtml!!!
Yes, and they even broken the "export" tool (Score:2)
Unfortunately, that tool now doesn't work as it once did. I used a newer version the other day, and still got about 100 lines of crud t
Re:Blah blah from MS (Score:2)
Do not mix the presentation into the content.
Next time when you'll try integrating Word html into an existing website, "congratulate" Microsoft on making this task an easy one.
Re:Blah blah from MS (Score:3, Insightful)