Apr
23
Posted on 23-04-2008
Filed Under (Microsoft, Open Source) by italovignoli on 23-04-2008

“There’s free software and then there’s open source”, he suggested, noting that the company gives away its software in developing countries. With open source software, on the other hand, “there is this thing called the GPL, which we disagree with”.

Open source, he said, creates a license “so that nobody can improve the software”.

He is Bill Gates, reported by Wired.

If open source software doesn’t improve, then I would like to understand why the beta of IE8 emulates the behaviour of Firefox, and not vice versa.

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Apr
18
Posted on 18-04-2008
Filed Under (Interoperability, Open Source) by italovignoli on 18-04-2008

Ray Ozzie, Microsoft’s Chief Software Architect, while speaking today at the annual conference of the company Most Valuable Professional, has given some perspective about the relationship between Microsoft and open source, as reported by Todd Bishop. What I see as a dangerous problem, especially when you look at interoperability between applications and file formats (especially ODF and OOXML), is the fact that Microsoft ignores the open source community.

If we look at OpenOffice.org, the three markets where the open source office suite is competing most successfully with Microsoft Office are probably Germany, France and Italy, followed by other European markets like Spain and the Netherlands. In Italy, where I have the updated numbers, we are hitting today - maybe while I’m writing this post - one million downloads since January 1st, 2008 (over 350.000 since the announcement of OOo 2.4 in late March). Although we don’t have Microsoft figures for Office 2007, we estimate a maximum of 1.8 million licenses sold in 2008.

I already know the reply: “You can’t compare licenses with downloads…”. Of course, gentlemen, but do you really think that one million downloads in slightly over one hundred days (at an average of over 9,200 downloads per day) still equals to a few thousands users? Do you really think that a small bunch of people, just the same small bunch of people, can get all these downloads? Come on, we’ve other stuff to do. Please, be realistic. We’re eating your pie, quickly. We’re hungry.

I don’t know the figures for Germany and France, but I’m quite sure that they are even better than those for Italy. The results in these markets are mainly due to the daily activity of the local community, while Microsoft - with the exception of Italy, where Associazione PLIO is recognized and respected - apparently ignores the reality. I am sure, for instance, that Microsoft’s Document Interoperability Initiative would greatly benefit from the involvement of the open source community.

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Mar
25
Posted on 25-03-2008
Filed Under (Open Source) by italovignoli on 25-03-2008

Some key findings:

  • Approximately 81 percent of respondents feel the economy’s turbulence is “good” for open source software
  • Respondents revealed that the top three factors that make open source software attractive include:
    • lower acquisition and maintenance costs
    • flexibility/access to libraries of community-developed code
    • freedom from vendor lock-in
  • More than 55 percent of respondents believe that in five years 25-50 percent of purchased software will be open source vs. proprietary
  • The Web Publishing/Content Management market is expected to be most vulnerable to disruption by open source in the next five years
  • Respondents expect the Security Tools be least vulnerable to disruption by open source in the next five years

The full survey results can be downloaded from here.

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Mar
15
Posted on 15-03-2008
Filed Under (Interoperability, Open Source, OpenOffice.org) by italovignoli on 15-03-2008

The change has been announced last week, but I think it’s important to read Simon Phipp’s comments on its relevance.

This quote sums it up:

OpenOffice.org’s license will change to LGPLv3 as part of a broader set of changes intended to improve the OpenOffice.org community for everyone. Those changes also include a switch to the latest version of the standard Sun contributor agreement, with an addendum specifically tailored to the needs of the OpenOffice.org community. There’s increased latitude for documentation writers to publish their work on OpenOffice.org. And in future, plugins for OpenOffice.org may host their source code directly on the community site without copyright being shared, helping collaboration within the community.

In order to understand the complete picture about software patents and all the related issues I think it’s important to read what Simon has written in may 2007 about patent covenants.

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Mar
03
Posted on 03-03-2008
Filed Under (Interoperability, Open Source) by italovignoli on 03-03-2008

Reprinted from the Open Source Initiative web site:

The Requirement

An “open standard” must not prohibit conforming implementations in open source software.

The Criteria

To comply with the Open Standards Requirement, an “open standard” must satisfy the following criteria. If an “open standard” does not meet these criteria, it will be discriminating against open source developers.

  1. No Intentional Secrets: The standard MUST NOT withhold any detail necessary for interoperable implementation. As flaws are inevitable, the standard MUST define a process for fixing flaws identified during implementation and interoperability testing and to incorporate said changes into a revised version or superseding version of the standard to be released under terms that do not violate the OSR.
  2. Availability: The standard MUST be freely and publicly available (e.g., from a stable web site) under royalty-free terms at reasonable and non-discriminatory cost.
  3. Patents: All patents essential to implementation of the standard MUST be licensed under royalty-free terms for unrestricted use, or be covered by a promise of non-assertion when practiced by open source software.
  4. No Agreements: There MUST NOT be any requirement for execution of a license agreement, NDA, grant, click-through, or any other form of paperwork to deploy conforming implementations of the standard.
  5. No OSR-Incompatible Dependencies: Implementation of the standard MUST NOT require any other technology that fails to meet the criteria of this Requirement.
  6. Technorati Tags:
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Mar
03
Posted on 03-03-2008
Filed Under (OpenOffice.org) by italovignoli on 03-03-2008

Developer’s Guide is now in the Wiki

The OpenOffice.org Developer’s Guide is now available online in the OpenOffice.org Wiki. The main purpose of moving the guide into the wiki is for maintenance reasons and the hope to get more contributions. We also hope to get a localized version of the guide to reach more users/developers all over the world.

http://blogs.sun.com/GullFOSS/entry/developer_s_guide_is_now

Users demand support for OpenOffice.org

QualityLogic, a provider of leading-edge QA and QC test tools and services for the imaging and telecom industries, has released test files for the first of several planned applications found in OpenOffice.org 2. Test files are now available for “Writer” and “Draw”. “Impress” is in development, and additional applications are planned. QualityLogic has been developing test files for popular Windows applications for over 20 years. These files are used by printer companies to ensure compatibility between their printers and the applications their customers use, and by software companies whose applications convert one file format to another. They are also used by Fortune 1000, government, education and healthcare companies to help make printer and software purchasing decisions. The popularity of the OpenOffice.org office suite has created a need within these companies for sophisticated test files similar to those QualityLogic has developed for Windows applications.

http://blogs.sun.com/dancer/entry/users_demand_support_for_openoffice

New StartCenter replaces StartModule

After a hectic week of discussion, implementation and rewriting we now have a new initial window when you start OpenOffice.org without a document. This up to now brought up a large window (so large because it defines the size of the document that will replace it) in “battleship gray” as some call it. On most platforms you don’t see this window so often, because system integration will usually leave you with an application window (Writer, Impress, Calc, …) instead. On Mac however the so called StartModule is the norm rather than the exception. So we put a long planned overhaul of the StartModule in motion. The first plan was to use a dialog replacing the StartModule, however that would lead to questions about modality, startup and exit behavior due to the modal event loop and similar issues.

So in the end we decided to improve the existing StartModule instead, turning it into the new StartCenter. The StartCenter contains a host of labeled buttons (natively themed where available of course) that allow the user to create a new document or open an existing one. It also shows the same menu entries as before, so additional features like the recent file list are still available.

http://blogs.sun.com/GullFOSS/entry/new_startcenter_replaces_startmodule

Impressive Eye Candy: 3D OpenGL Transitions

PowerPoint’s old push-down transition has done its 15 years of service, and it’s time for it to retire. Do the sleepy faces in your meetings agree? OpenOffice.org Impress 2.4 has the answer in the form of ten 3D OpenGL-rendered transitions:

  • Flipping tiles
  • Outside turning cube
  • Revolving circles
  • Turning helix
  • Inside turning cube
  • Fall
  • Turn around
  • Iris
  • Turn down
  • Rochade

http://www.oooninja.com/2008/02/eye-candy-3d-opengl-transitions-impress.html

PDF/A Support in OpenOffice.org

The first release candidate for OpenOffice.org 2.4 has just been released. One of the key new features is the built-in PDF/A export capability. The new Chart features are very cool as well! Please check if the release candidate is good enough for being promoted to a final version!

http://blogs.sun.com/dancer/entry/pdf_a_support_in_openoffice

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Mar
03
Posted on 03-03-2008
Filed Under (Interoperability, Open Document Format) by italovignoli on 03-03-2008

Matthew Aslett of The 451 Group comments about the Geneva BRM. He is probably confused as much as I am, but he reports a number of opinions (including those that I’ve mentioned in my previous post).

I point out Matthew’s last two paragraphs:

Admittedly I am quoting selectively, but you have to wonder whether a “standard” that has been through a process that divides opinion so much is worthy of the title, whatever the result. The most damning indictment, in my personal view, comes from Yoon Kit of the Malaysian delegation:

We eventually found out that if any changes affected current implementations it would certainly be rejected. This seriously compromised any elegant solutions, and it forced us to be mindful of the “existing corpus of documents” in the wild. I don’t believe that that should be our problem, but there was a large and vocal voting bloc which would oppose any changes to the spec which would “break” Ecma 376. […]

From my informal talks with Sam Ramji of Microsoft I’ve understood that the company has already started working at the code of Office 2007, in order to make the product more interoperable. This is confirmed by the following statement, which is included in the press release distributed on February 21 to support the conference call with Steve Ballmer, Ray Ozzie, Bob Muglia and Brad Smith (you know, they use Excel to sort the list alphabetically ;-), and the software includes a non standard “hierarchy filter”):

Enhancing Office 2007 to provide greater flexibility of document formats. To promote user choice among document formats, Microsoft will design new APIs for the Word, Excel and PowerPoint applications in Office 2007 to enable developers to plug in additional document formats and to enable users to set these formats as their default for saving documents.

As a logical consequence, once ECMA has started the standardization process for Microsoft OOXML it should have been clear that the process itself could have asked for substancial amendments to the document format, and that refusing or opposing such changes would have been simply not coherent with the process.

Therefore, I’m quite surprised for Yoon Kit statement, because - if completely true (the only problem I see is the language one, as writing in English when it’s not your mother tongue is a daily challenge) - it goes not only against the principles of the standardization process but also against any reason.

The fact that during the BRM there were substantial changes to the specifications seems to be confirmed by this short sentence from Microsoft James Matusow (which I find otherwise biased, and this is the reason why I decided to ignore his post before):

After 5 months of ongoing communications about the dispositions with NSBs around the world, the constructive, positive adoption of changes to the specification was the outcome of the BRM.

This sounds logical to me. And it sounds logical that Microsoft is going to implement the changes once they have been approved, although this doesn’t mean that OOXML - once all the changes have been implemented - it’s going to be an interoperable standard, as the changes - many of them - are just one of the necessary steps in the right direction.

I’m puzzled and confused… Any help?

UPDATE: ECMA has issued a press release about the Ballot Resolution Meeting, with a couple of paragraphs which clarify the outcome of the BRM:

The final DIS 29500 text includes updated dispositions to a number of key comments, such as multi-part standard; transitional vs. strict conformance classes; more strict date system in spreadsheets based on the ISO standard; flexible units of measurement and very significant advances in accessibility, internationalization (BiDi) and multi-platform support.

Several of the issues which will not be reflected into the final DIS text have been deferred to consideration during the maintenance phase, which, if the standard is approved would be managed by ISO/IEC JTC 1 with the active collaboration of Ecma International.

Although I understand that a huge effort has been put by all the participants in order to get to this stage, I think that this is a result that doesn’t allow the standardization of OOXML, as there are still several issues unresolved.

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Feb
29
Posted on 29-02-2008
Filed Under (Desktop Linux) by italovignoli on 29-02-2008

I was a little bit surprised when I looked at the Best Buy web site: Microsoft Office Home and Student 2007 Windows and Norton AntiVirus 2008 Windows are both listed as accessories for the Asus EEE PC, which runs a dedicated version of Xandros Linux. Apart from the platform compatibility (just a minor issue) both software exceed the hardware specifications of the small PC (a very good product, by the way).

I have a question: would you buy any IT product from such an incompetent retailer?

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Feb
28
Posted on 28-02-2008
Filed Under (Open Document Format) by italovignoli on 28-02-2008

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Donec tincidunt semper ligula. Mauris ac pede vel neque vulputate euismod. Mauris scelerisque ipsum a massa. Morbi mollis, nulla non aliquet consectetuer, tellus nunc facilisis nulla, non faucibus metus erat vel magna. Phasellus pellentesque eros sit amet erat.

Phasellus aliquam orci. Duis varius neque condimentum sem. Quisque condimentum nibh vitae tellus. Proin ac enim eu urna ullamcorper suscipit. Curabitur gravida sem non magna. Morbi dignissim scelerisque enim. Nulla porta nibh ut felis. Mauris commodo lorem vel elit.

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Feb
27
Posted on 27-02-2008
Filed Under (OpenOffice.org) by italovignoli on 27-02-2008

OSS Groups

FSFE News: http://www.fsfeurope.org

IDABC: http://europa.eu.int/idabc/en

Linux OS Blog: http://linux.wordpress.com

No OOXML: http://www.noooxml.org/start

OASIS Press: http://www.oasis-open.org/news/index.php

ODF Alliance: http://www.odfalliance.org/blog/index.php

Open Doc: http://opendocument.xml.org

OSA Blog: http://blog.opensolutionsalliance.org/

OSI Blog: http://opensource.org/blog

OSI News: http://opensource.org/aggregator

OpenOffice

Charles Shulz: http://standardsandfreedom.net

Discovering OOo: http://openoffice.ozlady.com

Eric Bachard: http://eric.bachard.free.fr/news/

Erwin Tenhumberg: http://blogs.sun.com/dancer/

GullFOSS: http://blogs.sun.com/GullFOSS/

John McCreesh: http://www.mealldubh.org

Louis Suarez-Potts: http://ooo-speak.blogspot.com/

Malte Timmermann: http://blogs.sun.com/malte/

Pavel Janik: http://blog.janik.cz

Solveigh Haughland: http://blogs.sun.com/oootnt/

Analisti

Alex Fletcher: http://alexfletcher.typepad.com/all_bets_off/

Anne Manes: http://apsblog.burtongroup.com/

Caos Theory: http://blogs.the451group.com/opensource

Craig Roth: http://knowledgeforward.wordpress.com

Gordon Haff: http://www.cnet.com/8300-13556_1-61.html

Guy Creese: http://creese.typepad.com/pattern_finder/

James Governor: http://www.redmonk.com/jgovernor

Michael Coté: http://www.redmonk.com/cote

Stephen O’Grady: http://redmonk.com/sogrady

Vinnie Mirchandani: http://dealarchitect.typepad.com/deal_architect/

OSS Press

Desktop Linux: http://www.desktoplinux.com

eWEEK Linux: http://www.eweek.com

Groklaw: http://www.groklaw.net

InfoWorld OSS: http://weblog.infoworld.com/openresource/?source=rss

ITtoolbox: http://blogs.ittoolbox.com

Linux News: http://lxer.com/

Linux Watch: http://www.linux-watch.com

LWN: http://lwn.net

NewsForge: http://www.linux.com/feature

O’Reilly Blogs: http://weblogs.oreilly.com/

O’Reilly GMT: http://www.oreillygmt.co.uk/”

O’Reilly Radar: http://radar.oreilly.com/

OSS Watch: http://www.oss-watch.ac.uk/rss/

The Pulse: http://www.pulseofoss.com

ZDNet OSS: http://blogs.zdnet.com/open-source

Microsoft

Brian Jones: http://blogs.msdn.com/brian_jones/default.aspx

Gray Matter: http://blogs.technet.com/gray_knowlton/default.aspx

Jason Matusow: http://blogs.msdn.com/jasonmatusow/default.aspx

Mary Jo Foley: http://blogs.zdnet.com/microsoft

Microsoft Clips: http://www.mclips.it/default.aspx

Port 25: http://port25.technet.com/default.aspx

OSS

Alan Lord: http://www.theopensourcerer.com

Alex Fletcher: http://alexfletcher.typepad.com/all_bets_off/

Amanda McPherson: http://www.linux-foundation.org/weblogs/amanda

Andy Astor: http://andyastor.blogspot.com/

Andy Updegrove: http://www.consortiuminfo.org/standardsblog

Anthony Gold: http://anthonygold.blogspot.com/

Arnaud Le Hors: http://lehors.wordpress.com

Benjamin Horst: http://www.solidoffice.com

Bob Sutor: http://www.sutor.com/newsite/blog-open

Christopher Keene: http://www.keeneview.com/

Derek Rodner: http://rodner.blogspot.com/

Digital Divide: http://digitaldivide.garuti.it

Doug Levin: http://bduck1.blogspot.com/

Finalmente Libero: http://finalmentelibero.ning.com

Gianugo Rabellino: http://boldlyopen.com

Glyn Moody (1): http://opendotdotdot.blogspot.com/

Glyn Moody (2): http://www.linuxjournal.com/blogs/glyn-moody

GNUband: http://www.gnuband.org

Ian Howells: http://blogs.alfresco.com/ianh

Ian Murdock: http://ianmurdock.com

IBM Linux: http://www.ibm.com/press

James McGovern: http://duckdown.blogspot.com/

Jason Stamper: http://www.businessreviewonline.com/os/

Jeff Waugh: http://perkypants.org

Jim Kern: http://www.linuxwins.com

John Cherry: http://www.linux-foundation.org/weblogs/cherry

Jonathan Schwartz: http://blogs.sun.com/jonathan/

Leif Lodahl: http://lodahl.blogspot.com/

Marco Caresia: http://www.didawiki.org/wordpress

Mark Hinkle: http://socializedsoftware.com

Mark Radcliffe: http://lawandlifesiliconvalley.blogspot.com/

Mark Shuttleworth: http://www.markshuttleworth.com

Matt Asay: http://blogs.cnet.com/8300-13505_1-16.html

Open Malaysia: http://www.openmalaysiablog.com/

Palle Pedersen: http://www.inside-open-source.com/

Rob Weir: http://www.robweir.com/blog/

Roberto Galoppini: http://robertogaloppini.net

Sam Hiser: http://fussnotes.typepad.com/plexnex/

Savio Rodriguez: http://saviorodrigues.wordpress.com

Seeing Both Sides: http://bostonvcblog.typepad.com/vc/

Shaun Connolly: http://connollyshaun.blogspot.com/

Simon Phipps: http://blogs.sun.com/webmink/

Stephen Walli: http://stephesblog.blogs.com/my_weblog/

The Pulse: http://www.pulseofoss.com

Walt Hucks: http://lnxwalt.wordpress.com

Zack Urlocker: http://www.theopenforce.com

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