News
        
        ISO Plans To Announce OOXML Decision This Week
        
        
        
			- By Kurt Mackie
 - March 31, 2008
 
		
        The International Organization for Standardization (
ISO) plans to announce vote results  on the decision to ratify or reject Microsoft's Office Open XML (OOXML)  document format on Wednesday, April 2, 2008.  The vote on OOXML as an international standard  is reportedly too close to call. OOXML is an XML schema format for sharing Microsoft Office 2007 files.
The delay is being ascribed to a need to inform the ISO  world membership of the vote results first, according to an official ISO statement described by All About Microsoft's Mary Jo Foley. The  ISO body voted last weekend (March 29 to 30, 2008) on the whether to ratify ISO/IEC  DIS 29500, which is the official name for Microsoft's OOXML submission. 
Microsoft Corp. issued an official "no comment"  statement about the decision today through its press service.
"We respect ISO's desire to first inform its National  Body members and all the people who have worked so hard during this  process. This has been a remarkable process, involving literally thousands  of technical experts, technology consumers, and governments in 87 countries,  whose input has helped to improve Ecma's submitted Open XML standard. Out  of respect for the standards process, we will not comment before the final  results are known."
Press and blog accounts have already predicted that Microsoft's OOXML will gain ISO approval. However,  there have been allegations of voting irregularities as well. The Groklaw Web  site indicated that a formal  protest was lodged by Steve Pepper, chairman of the ISO/IEC JTC 1/SC 34 mirror committee, over Norway's vote.  It also suggested problems with Germany's  vote, although the alleged irregularity was apparently debunked, according to  the German  DIN body voting on the matter. 
In order for OOXML to be approved as an international  standard, two-thirds of the national bodies participating in ISO/IEC JTC 1 need  to vote "Yes," and the there can be no more than one fourth "No"  votes.  OOXML has already been published  by Ecma International as Ecma standard 376.
The approval of OOXML has generated enormous controversy. It  was fast-tracked through ISO/IEC, but an IT  Pro article suggested that the OOXML specification has grown to 7,000 pages  during the fast-track process. In contrast, the rival Open Document Format  (ODF) document format specification, which is already an international  standard, has just 600 pages. 
Issues of trust, interoperability and Microsoft's dominating  market share are reasons for the general skepticism over allowing OOXML to be  an ISO/IEC standard. For instance, the IT Pro article pointed to a 1998  internal e-mail from Bill Gates stating that "allowing Office documents to  be rendered very well by other peoples [sic] browsers is one of the most  destructive things we could do to the company."
Michael Desmond,  founding editor of Redmond Developer News, contributed to this article.  
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
            
        
        
                
                    About the Author
                    
                
                    
                    Kurt Mackie is senior news producer for 1105 Media's Converge360 group.