[dundee] Fwd: [UKUUG] Please help prevent Microsoft creating a
bad ISO standard
Lee Hughes
toxicnaan at yahoo.co.uk
Wed Jan 24 09:56:04 GMT 2007
Wow, your a lucky man, you get to hack around with linux all day and
get paid, could'nt think of a better job to be doing really :-).
As for kick starting the lugg, good news, we've formed a linux soc at
abertay, so you lot should be able to tagg along to meetings etc etc,
when we get the up and going. I purpose and Informal meetup maybe next
wensday if people can make it.
I'll let you know what we've having a meeting.
As for this Lug, does anyone know how I can update the website with
stuff, is the lug head person still AWOL?
hello are you there????
;-)....
laters,
Lee
Martin Habets <errandir_news at mph.eclipse.co.uk> wrote: Hi all,
Please have a look at the mail below and contribute if possible.
I have accepted a job in Bristol with ST Microelectronics as a Software Micro
Architect, and will move down there tomorrow. It will be primarilly
writing/managing Linux kernel drivers for digital set-top boxes.
It's been fun while it lasted! Best of luck kick-starting the LUG :)
Cheers,
--
Martin
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
30 years from now GNU/Linux will be as redundant a term as MERT/UNIX is
today. - Martin Habets
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
--- Alain Williams wrote:
> Date: Mon, 22 Jan 2007 19:26:46 +0000
> From: Alain Williams
> To: members at lists.ukuug.org
> Subject: [UKUUG] Please help prevent Microsoft creating a bad ISO standard
>
>
> Summary
> The document format used by OpenOffice.org and other applications is an ISO standard.
> An open standard has been needed in this area for many years to allow competition
> and for a range of tools to be developed that all use a common data format. Until the
> ISO standard all we had (in the main) was de-facto proprietary binary standards.
>
> The ISO standard is now seen as being under threat from a competing standard proposed by ECMA
> based on Microsoft Office Open XML. We think that you may want to object and if you read below,
> you can find out why and how.
>
> You must act by Friday 26 January.
>
> Detail
>
> An open standard (ISO/IEC 26300:2006) for document formats is currently
> implemented by a number of office software suites, probably the most
> notable of which is OpenOffice.org
>
> Microsoft played little or no part in the ISO/IEC 26300:2006 process and
> subsequently made its own proposal to ECMA (European Computer
> Manufacturers' Association) for 'Office Open XML'. That was approved by
> ECMA and then submitted to ISO/IEC for ratification as an independent
> standard on a fast-track process. A 30-day contradiction period is now
> running which terminates on 5th February.
>
> The fast-track proposal severely overlaps the existing ISO standard and
> apparently contains numerous technical issues which deserve serious
> consideration. There does not appear to have been any effort at providing
> a gap analysis to see where the existing standard does not provide support
> for proposals in the ECMA document and hence no corresponding effort to
> produce a single combined standard to meet the needs of both parties. The
> presence of more than one standard covering the same areas will inevitably
> lead to confusion amongst users of standards.
>
> Any voting national body (of which the British Standards Institute, BSI,
> is one) can register a contradiction with ISO/IEC to cause the fast-track
> proposal to be blocked and for a resolution phase to begin.
>
> We have written to the BSI on behalf of UKUUG requesting that they
> register a contradiction. It is our belief that the more people who write
> to them, the more the effect will be.
>
> We urge any UKUUG member with an interest in this area to read
> http://www.grokdoc.net/index.php/EOOXML_objections and then to register
> their view with the Chairman of the BSI panel looking into this area:
> Francis Cave , objections MUST be received
> by 26th January to have effect.
>
> To object to the fast-track procedure is not necessarily to object to the
> proposal itself but it will at least cause a pause for thought and may
> give time for more detailed scrutiny of the 6,000 page document.
>
> If you do wish to object, please read the objections document and then
> write to Francis Cave (copy-and-paste from this letter would be a bad
> plan) requesting that the BSI formally object to the fast-track proposal.
>
> --
> Alain Williams
> UKUUG Chairman
> #include
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