also @ TechSpot: Weekend Open Forum: Most memorable videogame boss fights

Microsoft claims ODF is "too slow" for use

By

On May 26, 2006, 11:00 AM EST

Despite ODF's recent acceptance as one industry standard, Microsoft has been fighting tooth and nail to get their version accepted in its place, Office Open XML. This time, they are coming out and and claiming that OpenDocument is just plain too slow to be considered for use. To me, that seems a bit on the desperate side, and more of an attempt to simply discredit ODF rather than show the advantages Open XML might have. Others had similar things to say:

"There's simply no Open XML product on the market yet, to compare performance," Marcich said. "ODF is supported and implemented not just by OpenOffice, but by multiple applications including StarOffice, IBM Workplace, KOffice, Abiword/Gnumeric and Google Writely. All these applications have different performance behaviors."
Of course, there's no reason why both standards can't be accepted and implemented. However, it's unlikely that MS would be happy with dual standards.

Related Stories

No tags on this story

User Comments (2)

Post a comment
DragonMaster
on May 26, 2006
4:32 PM
Slow? How can you compare!All I can say is that saving an M$ Word document with OpenOffice takes more time than saving in the OpenDocument format. It's normal, it has to convert it. The next Office is supposed to support ODF I think? Well if Microsoft told this because the next Office beta was slower to open ODF than Office documents, it's mostly because of the conversion.

Reply

ThomasNews
on May 27, 2006
8:26 AM
Microsoft have a plug-in for converting ODF. They've not said whether they plan on releasing it though.The performance claims might be fair enough, but then again PCs are always increasingin performance so it's a moot point.I think they'd also find that games perform differently on different PCs. Does this mean the game is slow also?

Reply

Browse more commented news

Post a new comment

Guest user

To post as an anonymous
user click here
.

Members

If you are a TechSpot member,
please login first.


By signing up you gain complete access to the TechSpot community. Join thousands of computer and technology enthusiasts that contribute and share knowledge in our forum. Post messages, get a private inbox, upload your own photo gallery and more.

Subscribe to TechSpot

Get free exclusive content, learn about new features and tech breaking news.