News
OASIS seeks specs for office app integration
- By Michael W. Bucken
- November 27, 2002
The Boston-based OASIS consortium (http://www.oasis-open.org) has formed a
technical committee charged with creating an open, XML-based file format
specification that officials promise will allow communication between office
applications from multiple vendors.
The so-called Open Office XML Format Technical Committee includes officials
from a variety of companies, including Arbortext, Boeing, Corel, Drake Certivo
and Sun Microsystems. The unit is charged first with creating standardizing data
for content creation and management applications, said committee Chairman
Michael Brauer of Sun. Subsequent phases of the effort will look to simplify the
exchange of data between different XML applications, including business
processes, Web services, databases, search engines and the like.
Their work will be suitable for documents containing text, spreadsheets,
charts and graphs, and will retain high-level information for editing, Brauer
said.
''Our goal is to achieve consensus on an open standard that will protect
content -- whether it is an 800-page airplane specification or a legal contract
-- from being locked into a proprietary file format,'' Brauer said.
OASIS officials said Sun has agreed to contribute the XML file format
specification utilized in the OpenOffice.org 1.0 project to the new OASIS
Technical Committee under reciprocal royalty-free terms. Sun describes
OpenOffice.org as an Open Source office productivity suite that can work
transparently with various file formats to document sharing by users of varying
office suites.
About the Author
Mike Bucken is former Editor-in-Chief of Application Development Trends magazine.