Friday, June 03, 2005
My name is Troy and I am...
This morning at 4:00am the baby woke early and my wife told me to go continue sleeping in another bed while she tended to him. As I walk (stumble?) to the other room I pass my computer, so I check my RSS feeds and e-mail.
Sad.Sad.Sad. I am sure that even the people of the world that have RSS running through their veins during the day (Scoble are you there?) have better things to do at 4:00am
Hello, my name is Troy and I am an information addict.
Sad.Sad.Sad. I am sure that even the people of the world that have RSS running through their veins during the day (Scoble are you there?) have better things to do at 4:00am
Hello, my name is Troy and I am an information addict.
Thursday, June 02, 2005
New MS Office document format is open XML
Apparently the next Microsoft Office for Windows and Mac is going to use an open XML based document format. As Brian outlines:
- Open Format: These formats use XML and ZIP, and they will be fully documented. Anyone will be able to get the full specs on the formats and there will be a royalty free license for anyone that wants to work with the files.
- Compressed: Files saved in these new XML formats are less than 50% the size of the equivalent file saved in the binary formats. This is because we take all of the XML parts that make up any given file, and then we ZIP them. We chose ZIP because it’s already widely in use today and we wanted these files to be easy to work with. (ZIP is a great container format. Of course I’m not the only one who thinks so… a number of other applications also use ZIP for their files too.)
- Robust: Between the usage of XML, ZIP, and good documentation the files get a lot more robust. By compartmentalizing our files into multiple parts within the ZIP, it becomes a lot less likely that an entire file will be corrupted (instead of just individual parts). The files are also a lot easier to work with, so it’s less likely that people working on the files outside of Office will cause corruptions.
- Backward compatible: There will be updates to Office 2000, XP, and 2003 that will allow those versions to read and write this new format. You don’t have to use the new version of Office to take advantage of these formats. (I think this is really cool. I was a big proponent of doing this work)
- Binary Format support: You can still use the current binary formats with the new version of Office. In fact, people can easily change to use the binary formats as the default if that’s what they’d rather do.
- New Extensions: The new formats will use new extensions (.docx, .pptx, .xlsx) so you can tell what format the files you are dealing with are, but to the average end user they’ll still just behave like any other Office file. Double click & it opens in the right application.
I think that this is exactly what the FOSS crowds have been asking for, but I think that they have seriously underestimated how difficult it is to compete with Microsoft even if the playing field is level.
[Updated: Just fixing up my HTML]
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