Welcome to MSDN Blogs Sign in | Join | Help

January 2007 - Posts

OpenXML links to wrap up January ‘07

I had a few interesting articles I thought folks might be interested in: Miguel de Icaza – The EU Prosecutors are Wrong Miguel has an excellent write up drilling into the details around both ODF and OpenXML. Miguel explains how the legal team representing
Posted by BrianJones | 6 Comments
Filed under:

File Formats on the Colbert Report (sort of)

There's something odd about working on a feature in Office that one of the last things any average user cares about. I talk with developers all the time about the XML support in Office and the new file formats, but most end users could care less. I see
Posted by BrianJones | 6 Comments

Webcast on Open XML development at Mindjet

A few months ago I blogged about a company called Mindjet who had built OpenXML support into their mind mapping software . It allows you to visually map out your thoughts, and then you can convert that into a Word document using wordprocessingML. Tomorrow

Explanation of the ISO “Fast-Track” process

The Fast-Track process for OpenXML is just now getting underway, and there about 6 more months of review before the ballots will be cast . I got an e-mail yesterday asking why there was only a month for ISO to review the OpenXML submission and I figured

History of office XML formats (1998-2006)

I thought it might be interesting to look at a timeline of the past 8 years or so in terms of ODF and OpenXML. I had some of this stuff noted down already and looked up a few other statistics, etc. Let me know if there are any additional things of interest

Passing the OpenXML standard over to ISO

I've been reading some pretty wild stuff lately in the blogosphere around OpenXML and its submission to ISO. If all the rumors and misinformation that's out there is to be believed: Microsoft has somehow found a way around the ISO fast track process,

Leveraging content in other formats

There is a really cool feature that we added into the WordprocessingML format that allows you to pass a file off to a consumer using alternative formats embedded within the WordprocessingML if you know that the consumer supports that alternate format.

The power of data-view separation in your documents

There is an excellent post over on the Word team blog that goes into details on how the new content controls feature (when parred with XML mapping) allows for powerful data-view separation in you wordprocessing documents. I've talked many times about

Specifying the document settings

Earlier today I got an e-mail from Max asking if I could help clarify the section of the specification that deals with compatibility settings. Max was reading a blog post from IBM, and was hoping that I could respond with my point of view. Here's the

Open XML support in older versions of Office

I was just reading this article in wired ( http://www.wired.com/news/technology/software/0,72403-0.html?tw=wn_technology_4 ) and it looks like there is still some misunderstanding about where Open XML is going to be supported. Here is the piece of the

Links - Jan 05 2007

Hope everyone had a great first week of 2007. I'm just trying to adjust to being back at work myself. Here are a handful of interesting links from the week: The enchanted office This was brought to my attention yesterday. It's a comic meant to show the

“Directions on Microsoft” Report on Open XML formats

There is a new report out from Directions on Microsoft that discusses the new Open XML formats, and the impact on Office customers. It discusses the benefits that organizations will see from the formats, as well as some deployment recommendations. Here

Using SpreadsheetML to generate rich reports of timesheet data

Happy New Year everyone. I hope everyone was able to enjoy the holiday season. I took a couple weeks off in case you were wondering why there weren't any new blog posts. While I took some time off, I did still get a chance to play around with the file
 
Page view tracker