Document Interoperability Initiative Drives Development of New Tools


LONDON, May 18 /PRNewswire/ --

- Fraunhofer FOKUS and industry experts collaborate to help organisations 
test and verify conformance with standardised document formats; updates to 
additional translator projects unveiled.

The variety of software programs and document formats in the market can
make it difficult for organisations to exchange data among disparate systems.
For example, to carry out their public service, communicate with citizens and
operate efficiently, most government employees need to access, read and edit
multiple types of documents. International standards for document formats are
an important step toward providing individuals and organisations with this
kind of document interoperability, but the creation of standards is just the
beginning.

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In fact, technology industry experts participating in an ongoing series
of Document Interoperability Initiative (DII) forums concluded that document
interoperability would be enhanced through an independent tool and website
that allows for the testing and validation of documents created by
implementations of the IS29500 and ECMA-376 standards. Today, Fraunhofer
FOKUS, a leading German research institute, detailed its plan to build such a
document format test library and validation tool. Carried out in
collaboration across the industry as a result of the DII forums, the
Fraunhofer FOKUS project will help organisations and industry players
determine whether documents have been developed based on the internationally
standardised formats ISO/IEC 29500 (Office Open XML) and ECMA-376 (Ecma
Office Open XML). Making this determination will help organisations ensure
that their users can easily access and exchange data between documents, which
will help improve their overall efficiency. Microsoft Corp is supporting
these activities both as a development partner and through project funding.

"The introduction of open standards like ISO/IEC 29500 is the first step
toward a new era of document interoperability, but we have no guarantee that
any implementation of the standard is correct unless we develop a way to test
its output," said Klaus-Peter Eckert, senior researcher at Fraunhofer FOKUS.
"Creating these tools will not only ease the effective exchange of data
today, it will also improve long-term benefits for data archiving."

Fraunhofer FOKUS detailed its project plans at a DII global forum in
London on 18 May. It included discussions on the operation of the project,
how vendors and other interested parties can participate, and the expected
development path for the project over the coming months. This event is the
eighth in a series of events throughout the world that have brought
implementers, customers, standards professionals and document-format
technical experts together to identify tools and techniques for achieving
improved interoperability between implementations of popular document format
standards.

Updates to Other Technical Tools Deliver Improvements to Document
Interoperability

These forums continue to yield practical results. Updates to several
existing interoperability solutions were also unveiled today, including tools
for developers and users, from browser plug-ins to APIs.

- Open XML Document Viewer v1.0 released, including new Opera plug-in.
This tool provides direct translation for Open XML documents (.DOCX) to HTML,
enabling access to Open XML documents from any platform with a web browser,
including many mobile devices. The project already includes a plug-in for
Firefox, Internet Explorer 7 and Internet Explorer 8, and now also offers a
plug-in for Opera, allowing users to view Open XML documents (.DOCX) within
the Opera browser on Windows and Linux platforms without the need to install
Microsoft Office or other productivity products. More information can be
found at http://www.codeplex.com/OpenXMLViewer.

- Beta availability of Apache POI 3.5 - Java API to access information in
the Open XML Format. This software development kit (SDK) for Java developers
interested in working with Open XML documents is now available for the beta
version of Apache POI 3.5 beta 5. The beta version offers extended support
for XLSX, and improved support for DOCX and PPTX. More information can be
found at http://poi.apache.org.

- Availability of support for .XLS and .PPT file formats for the Office
Binary to Open XML Translator. This project, which originally went live in
February 2008 (http://blogs.msdn.com/brian_jones/archive/2008/02/15/binary-
documentation-doc-xls-ppt-and-translator-project-site-are-now-live.aspx) with 
support for the Word binary format (.DOC), now supports Word (DOC), Excel 
(XLS) and PowerPoint (PPT) binary formats and combines software tools and 
guidance to show how documents written using any of these formats can be 
translated into the Open XML format. The translator enables users to more 
easily access existing content in the binary formats and translate it into 
Open XML and other formats such as OpenDocument Format (ODF). More 
information can be found at 
http://blogs.msdn.com/interoperability/archive/2009/05/11/binary-to-open-
xml-b2x-translator-interoperability-for-the-office-binary-file-formats.aspx.

- Improvements to the Open XML-ODF Translator. This translator improves
interoperability between the ODF and the Open XML formats, and as part of the
continual evolution of the project offers improvements in the quality and
completeness of translation. The translator will continue to be the solution
for Microsoft Office 2003 and Office XP users who want to edit ODF documents;
Service Pack 2 of the 2007 Microsoft Office system includes built-in support
for documents of version 1.1 of the ODF. The translator is designed to be
interoperable with various desktop suites, and can be used with Novell
OpenOffice to add read, edit and write support for Open XML documents. More
information can be found at http://odf-converter.sourceforge.net.

"The collaborative work being done through the Document Interoperability
Initiative is invaluable to the evolution of these document translator
projects," said Doug Mahugh, lead standards professional for the Microsoft
Office Interoperability team. "Document interoperability is about people and
companies dedicated to working together - over the long haul - to solve
customer issues."

"At Microsoft, we will continue to champion increased openness through
access to our products and collaboration with others to build
interoperability solutions that can be applied to real-world problems," said
Jean Paoli, general manager for Interoperability Strategy at Microsoft.
"Greater interoperability fosters choice and flexibility for customers, which
we believe will fuel technology innovation and economic growth."

About the Document Interoperability Initiative

The Document Interoperability Initiative is a global programme of
technical vendor discussions, labs and solution-enablement programmes to
increase interoperability between document format implementations across a
range of formats, applications, platforms and devices. This initiative is
open to any vendor that wants to collaborate with the community to identify
and address interoperability issues between different implementations of
document formats.

The DII forum in London, 18-19 May 2009, is the eighth meeting in an
ongoing series, which began last year. At these events, participants have
studied and tested document format interoperability in a variety of
scenarios, such as mobile platforms, accessibility technology and document
management by IT administrators. Additional DII document interoperability
events are currently planned for the coming months in Beijing and Berlin.
Further information on these and past events can be found at
http://documentinteropinitiative.org.

About Microsoft

Founded in 1975, Microsoft (Nasdaq: MSFT) is the worldwide leader in
software, services and solutions that help people and businesses realise
their full potential.

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