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Subject:Re: Open doc format From:Andrew Plato <gilliankitty -at- yahoo -dot- com> To:"TECHWR-L" <techwr-l -at- lists -dot- raycomm -dot- com> Date:Thu, 28 Nov 2002 12:30:17 -0800 (PST)
"Jan Henning" wrote
> That may be true of some open standards that are designed by committee.
> But that is not the case with all such standards. And indeed there are
> many very successful open document formats, e.g., MP3, Tiff, and XML.
Yes, and some of them took forever to get there. In many cases, things like MP3
were just one implementation that gained popularity and as such became a
standard.
Market-driven standards are always the best because they respond to the actual
want of the market. Committees are notorious at producing tepid standards that
include too many compromises. Many companies put out standards with the hope
they will become adopted. Sometimes this works (.doc) sometimes it fails
(RealAudio).
> > Microsoft and others have long since moved ahead with their own
> > implementations.
>
> Which has advantages and disadvantages. Swift implementation can be one
> such advantage (although it should not be forgotten that there are also
> companies with large committees). Low quality can be a disadvantage.
> The Word document format (.doc) is a good example: It structural
> shortcomings have long since greatly reduced its reliability and
> stability.
...and that does not seem to be bothering the market. .doc is phenomenally
successful as a format. When the markets are left to do their job, people
choose what they want.
The other thing to consider is that most people don't need or care for all the
advanced features that some tech writers demand. Tech writers comprise a very
small chunk of the market, and as such, products are not always made or
marketed for them. What a few tech writers deem as "low quality" or "structural
shortcomings" are of no consequence to the rest of the planet.
Andrew Plato
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