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Microsoft wants open sourcers to write an OOXML translator

17 Jan 2008 | 02:08 GMT

By Egan Orion

Doomed to fail

MICROSOFT PLANS an open source project to write a translator from binary document formats into Office Open XML (OOXML) formats.

The project will kick off February 15th at Sourceforge, said spokesvole Brian Jones, the head chief program manager for Microsoft Office, at a press briefing Tuesday.

Rather than being licenced under either of Microsoft's so-called "open source" licences approved last year, the software produced by the project will fall under the Vole's all-time favorite BSD licence. The BSD licence allows anyone, including Microsoft, to take source code proprietary with no compensation to the authors.

Microsoft will make documentation on OOXML formats available under its Open Specification Promise wherein the Vole promises not to take legal action against those who use a covered specification.

One has to wonder where Microsoft thinks it's going to find anyone competent who's willing to write open source BSD licenced code that can only benefit the Vole itself, without any compensation except a promise not to get sued. µ

L'INQ
Eweek

© 2007 Incisive Media Investments Ltd. 2007

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