Microsoft's bid to get its Open XML formats recognised as an international
standard faces a delay for at least three months and could fail altogether, it
emerged today.
The British Standards Institute, which represents the UK with the
International Standards Organisation, has issued what is called a "
contradiction" to Microsoft's specification.
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And it is just one of many national bodies that had until today to contradict
the application, which was being fast-tracked following its endorsement by the
European Computer Manufacturers' Asoociation (ECMA).
Proponents of the rival Open Document Format, which is already an ISO
standard, had called on
the BSI to raise objections. Among other reasons, it said there was no point
in having two document standards.
ISO standardisation is a two-stage process, and objections at this stage
refer to the process itself – that is, whether it should be fast-tracked or
whether it should go forward at all.
A spokesman for the BSI could give no details of the organisation's
contradiction but he said it meant the next stage of the application would not
proceed for 90 days, because ISO has to consider the submissions from member
countries.
The application could be rejected at this stage, or during the next phase
when details of the 6,000-page specification are being considered. But if the
objections are minor, of course, Open XML could sail through to standardisation.
Microsoft stands to lose lucrative government contracts if its bid for
standardisation fails.
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