MESSAGE
DATE | 2006-06-02 |
FROM | Ruben Safir
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SUBJECT | Subject: [NYLXS - HANGOUT] PDF Poison
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Microsoft to Drop PDF Support in Office By Nate Mook, BetaNews June 2, 2006, 5:40 PM
Amid threats of a lawsuit from Adobe, Microsoft acknowledged Friday that it would remove support for saving files in PDF from Office 2007, as well as dropping its own rival format XPS from the productivity suite and Windows Vista.
The changes follow a breakdown of talks between the two technology giants after Microsoft announced last year it would include native PDF publishing with the release of Office 2007. The feature has long been a top request from customers, the company said at the time, and other office suites have the capability.
But Adobe was unhappy with the move and a dispute has been brewing for four months, Microsoft's lead counsel Brad Smith said Friday. Although PDF claims to be an open format and is integrated into OpenOffice and Apple's Mac OS X operating system, Adobe apparently sees Office 2007 as a real threat to its business.
Adobe wants Microsoft to charge for the feature, which the Redmond company has refused to do. Smith said Adobe threatened to file an antitrust suit in Europe, and his company was preparing for that eventuality. Now, however, Microsoft says it will make the feature available through a downloadable add-on.
"PDF is usually viewed as an open standard and there are other office suites out there that already support PDF output. I don't see us providing functionality that's any different from what others are doing," remarked Microsoft's Office Open XML format lead Brian Jones in a blog posting.
"This really is one of those cases where you just have to shake your head. Adobe got a lot of goodwill with customers, particularly in government circles, for making PDF available as an open standard. It’s amazing that they would go back on the openness pledge."
In addition, Microsoft will drop support for its own fixed-layout format known as XPS from Office and offer an XPS-free version of Windows Vista to OEMs that request it. Windows Vista includes XPS -- formerly code-named "Metro" -- as part of the Windows Presentation Foundation. The company will host a session on using Vista as a document platform at TechEd 2006 in Boston on June 12.
However, it is unlikely many computer makers will opt for the XPS-free option. European computer makers have balked at Windows XP N, a special version of Microsoft's flagship operating system that strips out Windows Media Player. When running a standard Vista install, Office 2007 will have the "Save as XPS" feature.
Some analysts have remained skeptical that Microsoft's side is the full story. Adobe has yet to comment on the matter, and may not publicly if it indeed intends to file a lawsuit.
"I had no idea that Adobe carried such swath it could force Microsoft to raise Office prices," chided Jupiter Research senior analyst Joe Wilcox. He noted that Microsoft is clearly using the media to push its position that if it cannot use PDF freely, then Adobe's format must not be open.
"Whatever occurred in private between the two companies, Microsoft is aggressively taking a very public PR position. I see Microsoft as trying to make this a debate about formats and the openness of PDF. Microsoft claims new Office formats are open, but some governments--Massachusetts, for example--disagree."
Already, industry groups have come out in support of Microsoft, and customers have expressed their dismay at Adobe's actions.
“If recent reports are accurate, Adobe is turning PDF from an open standard into a double standard. It seems their new position is that the PDF standard is now open for some to implement, but not all,†commented Jonathan Zuck, President of the Association for Competitive Technology (ACT).
"The Commonwealth did pick PDF as an open standard. Microsoft could gain favorable position with Massachusetts or other governments by launching a FUD campaign that portrays Adobe as exacting a double standard with respect to PDF openness," added Jupiter's Wilcox.
Microsoft's Jones said he hopes Adobe realizes it has made a mistake and, "that they probably shouldn't try to sue people for using an open file format." Microsoft has pledged not to go after anyone that implements its Office Open XML formats, which are currently being certified as a standard by Ecma.
"If you're like me and think this is just a bad thing all around, you should let them know," Jones wrote. With no lawsuit filed just yet, Adobe could still give into the public pressure and forge an agreement with Microsoft.
"The worst thing Adobe could do is not respond," said Wilcox. "The company needs to tell its side of the story, before Microsoft's version is seared in the public consciousness." Add a Comment (9 Comments)
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By iamtux posted Jun 2, 2006 - 6:47 PM
How is it possible that Linux, Mac OS X and OO.O has PDF creation abilities, but they go ballistic when MS wants to put it into Office?! It just doesn't make any sense. If something is open source, let it stay open to everyone. Morons. Score: 0 By gawd21 posted Jun 2, 2006 - 6:28 PM
Good! PDFs are over sized and just suck! Score: 0 By rijp posted Jun 2, 2006 - 6:40 PM
That's like saying ZIP files are bloated and contain too much data.
That doesn't make any sense. It depends on who is create the PDF files. If you include pictures, RTF, lots of formatting, and its extremely large, then yeah, they are over sized..
PDF serve a very useful purpose, read me's are easier, since you can't modify the original contents.. easily.
PDF's are a good way to transport simple info, but ANYONE can fill up a bucket with unneed stuff and make it too heavy to carry, that's NOT the bucket's fault. Score: 0 By ggvrsn posted Jun 2, 2006 - 6:18 PM
hmm, isnt it weird that M$ is backing off, after avoiding to backoff after 4 months of negotiations and now when they try to go to court, they backoff anyway? hmm, I suspect, M$ was about to do something behind Adobes back, which is more than what meets the eye, that could probably be why they are backing off. I never liked MS Office, but truth be told, I like to UI for Office 2007, but I am not getting rid of OpenOffice any time soon ( been a user since version 3.x, wont move off of it). -GGR Score: 0 By rijp posted Jun 2, 2006 - 6:43 PM
*hmm, isnt it weird that M$ is backing off, after avoiding to backoff after 4 months of negotiations and now when they try to go to court,*
Uh..yeah, duh, that's called "negotiating". They couldn't come to terms, Adobe threatened to sue, Microsoft tried to continue on, and hopefully restart the talks, Adobe wanted to make it clear they were serious, so they sued, now Microsoft is dropping the PDF support, Adobe get's their way, end of suit.
Except now Adobe won't get a penny for their content. They could have licensed the PDF for like 10 bucks a OS copy, but they were greedy and wanted like 50, so, now they get zip.
Who loses in the end? Adobe... the fools. Score: 0 By jbaltz69 posted Jun 2, 2006 - 5:52 PM
That sucks, Adobe is a resource hog and having it integrated into Vista would have been nice. Hopefully they will come to some technology licensing agreement and it will becomer reality. Score: 0 By The Man posted Jun 2, 2006 - 5:49 PM
WOW
that was nice of MS.... they must be up to something :-o Score: 0 By rijp posted Jun 2, 2006 - 6:16 PM
Yeah, like tired of getting sued.. Its not up to something, they want to suit to go away. Score: 0 By drumcat posted Jun 2, 2006 - 5:43 PM
Pow!!
That's the sound of Adobe shooting itself in the perverbial foot. Score: 0
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