Microsoft's
campaign to standardise its Office OpenXML file format took a hit today when a
US committee voted against approving the format and supporting it for approval
by the
International
Organization for Standardization (ISO).
The motion required approval from nine of the 16 voting organisations
comprising the
International
Committee for IT Standards. Eight voted in favour of approving OpenXML,
while seven voted against.
The
Institute
of Electronics and Electrical Engineers abstained from the vote, claiming
that its members could not reach a consensus.
Members voting in favour of approving OpenXML for standardisation included
Apple,
Intel and
HP.
Among those voting 'no' were
Lexmark,
Oracle and
IBM, which backs
the rival ODF file format.
The ODF and OpenXML camps have been engaged in a
bitter
fight over standardisation. ODF was approved last year by the ISO.
The approval is important because it plays a key role in winning over the
various government bodies that are currently seeking to adopt a single file
system for all official documents.
Two major US government offices fell on opposite sides of the debate. The
Department
of Homeland Security (DHS) voted in favour of approval, while the
Department
of Defense (DoD) voted against.
"Despite the international controversy between ODF and Office OpenXML, the
DHS sees reason for both of these standards to coexist as approved ISO
specifications," said the DHS.
"The document data models are each peculiar to the legacy formats and carry
different strengths and weaknesses in their specifications."
The DoD disagreed, saying that OpenXML had security and compatibility
concerns. "The DoD position is based on the requirement to resolve existing
comments and further develop/mature the present state of the standard," said the
department.
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