IBM's decision to join
OpenOffice.org is expected to increase
support for the Open Document Format (ODF) as the file format of choice, at the
expense of Microsoft’s Open XML (OOXML) standard.
ODF, the format supported by OpenOffice, is an open standard for document
formats and lets different vendors compete on functionality and price, explained
Marino Marcich, the executive director of the ODF Alliance. OOXML’s features and
functions are limited in their support of third party vendor’s products, tied to
Microsoft platforms and the standard is principally a single vendor format, he
added.
IBM joining OpenOffice will increase the choice for end-users choosing an ODF
supporting application, said Marcich. “A more functionally rich product will
provide better support and further choice for organisations and governments
around the world that are moving to ODF,” he added.
Laurent Lachel, a senior analyst at Ovum, said that the IBM move, although
too late, is crucial for the open-source project to gather momentum and for ODF
to maintain a strong stance against OOXML.
“OpenOffice needs all the resources it can gather to pose a threat to
Microsoft Office,” Lachel said. Microsoft, through its collaboration of
services, integration with SAP and innovation, has reached a domain OpenOffice
still has yet to achieve, he added.
Adam Jollans, the open-source strategy manager for IBM, pointed to the large
investment IBM made in Linux ten years ago, which he said accelerated prospects
for the open-source operating system. IBM joining the OpenOffice community will
have a similar effect in leveraging support for OpenOffice technology and the
ODF standard, he argued.
Marcich pointed to two other announcements made in the last few weeks that
show ODF's growing acceptance: Sun's ODF-supporting StarOffice suite will be
distributed through Google Pack, and CapGemini's agreement to provide
ODF-supporting Google Apps Premier Edition to its corporate clients. “It was a
very good month for ODF and the Alliance,” he said.
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