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DATE | 2008-05-14 |
FROM | Mark Simko
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SUBJECT | Re: [NYLXS - HANGOUT] Microsoft GNU Pitch
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Two points:
They should do their own damn homework instead of expecting the foss community to provide the info for them.
I've begun to hear people ask me why they save a document in Word (2007), email it, and open it up with Word (2003) and all they see is gobble-de-gook. OXML just ain't compatible.
On Mon, 2008-05-12 at 21:48 -0400, Ruben Safir wrote: > Microsoft emails Blender Sunday, May 11 2008 -at- 12:52 PM EDT > > Microsoft has just approached the Blender guys, and I would assume have > or will approach other FOSS projects since we learn that Microsoft has > assigned a guy to work with Open Source projects, with a request for > information on how to make Blender run better on Windows. Here's part > of what Microsoft emailed to Blender: > > With respect to Blender, what can you tell me about your > community/user feedback that you have heard regarding file > formats? Specifically, Microsoft is slowly shifting toward a more > open standards based approach to its file formats. The ISO standard > Office Open XML is an example of the direction we are moving > towards. A good user experience of Blender on Windows is good for > your project/community and good for Microsoft. What we are trying > to understand is what file formats, which are not open or not fully > open, are impeding the optimal experience with your community. > > OOXML is an example of openness? They're kidding, right? > > While on the surface, one might think this is an example of greater > openness on Microsoft's part, I thought it would be probably a good time > to point out Microsoft's competitive strategy against Linux and FOSS. I > think this is an example of its announced strategy to "outsmart Linux", > as Ballmer put it, using "openness" -- a Brand X, tilted version of it -- > to do it. > > Here's the overarching strategy Ballmer mentioned recently: > > I would love to see all Open Source innovation happen on top of > Windows. So we've done a lot to encourage, for example, the team > building, PHP, the team building, many of the other Open Source > components, I'd love to see those sorts of innovations proceed very > successfully on top of Windows. > > Because our battle is not sort of business model to business > model. Our battle is product to product, Windows versus Linux, > Office versus OpenOffice. > > Get it? They view everything as a battle. "All Open Source innovation" > means to him, I gather, that Windows runs the applications so well, > the GNU/Linux operating system dies off. Who needs it? That's how they > think, because they don't grasp any purpose to freedom for the code or > for the end user. If you do, please watch out. The OOXML saga stands as > a perfect example of how Microsoft plays to win, by hook or by crook. It > is a "standard" that only Microsoft can fully use. That's not openness > to me. Why don't they help the OpenOffice.org guys by telling them how > to render Windows Office 2007 documents properly? Really. If openness > is the goal, how about it, Microsoft? I know. I jest. Instead, Microsoft > would like FOSS developers to cross over to Microsoft's eternally tilted > playing field and lose its competitive advantage. They want Open Source > applications to run better on Windows with the purpose of battling > against GNU/Linux and FOSS more successfully. Want to help them? > > I know. It's complex. But unless Microsoft also lets FOSS run Microsoft > applications on Linux equally well as FOSS apps on Windows, it's > not actually interoperability or openness, is it? It's a Microsoft > advantage. "Ha ha, Linux, we outsmarted you," I can imagine them > saying. Microsoft's idea of interoperability is that it runs everything > just great, your stuff and theirs, and you can't. You can run your stuff > great and their stuff in a hobbled and imperfect fashion that leads the > ill-informed to conclude that Microsoft is "better". > > There are more than just technical issues to think through, in other > words. I'm just saying consider the entire picture. Microsoft is. Here's > where, in 2002, Ballmer said Microsoft would outsmart Linux, using > increased 'openness' as part of that plan. > > The bottom line is this: if Microsoft wants interoperability, all it > has to do is follow true standards, and by that I mean ones that don't > allow proprietary extensions the way OOXML does, and open up their > APIs so everyone is on the same page. Their goal, however, isn't true > interoperability. It's to have Windows do everything, including running > Linux applications, better than anyone else. Why should you settle for > Brand X "interoperability"? > > They will very likely also use such reaching out to projects in their > defense before the EU Commission, so unless you wish to be used that way, > think deeply about your response. I understand that there is a very fine > line to be drawn, but while Microsoft says it will "outsmart Linux", I > don't believe that is possible if you stay alert. Most of the brainiacs, > in my experience, are here, not there. But because there is no central > management to plan and react to their competitive strategies, they might > be successful in their overarching aim to destroy Linux and FOSS, if no > one thinks these types of issues through carefully. Happily, Blender is > GPL'd, but so is Linux, and we saw how Novell got snookered. It's natural > to want your applications to run better on all operating systems. But > if the end result is the Extinguishing of FOSS as we know it, what have > you done? > > You will likely find the responses on the Blender list of interest, > as you follow the thread. Here's the very first comment: > > I would not touch that with a barge pole. MS XML is an example that > they are not moving on that issue, or they would support ODF, not > using dirty tactics to force an half-backed non open standard. > > They have an history to use one OSS group against another too. > > Blender is in a position where we do not depend on any MS backed > format, so I think we should be very careful to stay neutral in > those areas. > > And the next: > > Personally I don't see why specific attention should be given to > proprietary Microsoft file formats. If they continue to avoid truly > open standards and their own file formats provide a sub-optimal > experience for Windows users, then it is not the open source community > that has a problem imho. > > I don't see Microsoft making it easy for Mac, Sun, Linux etc users to > use their "file formats, which are not open or not fully open". Any > multi platform application which has support for Windows specific > file formats is going to end up with a fragmented community as data > then becomes platform specific even if the application isn't. > > Do we want to help Microsoft lock more users data to their platform, > or do we want to encourage Microsoft to truly move towards open > standards? > >
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