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[XML-DEV Mailing List Archive Home] [By Thread] [By Date] [Recent Entries] [Reply To This Message] Washington Post column on Ballmer
In today's Washington Post, in an admiring column on Microsoft's CEO Steve Ballmer (cf. http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A19908-2000May6.html), David Ignatius writes: Ballmer hopes to build Microsoft's new identity partly around a computing language known as XML. Invented several years ago by two Microsoft technologists, it allows easy exchange of information among different devices, across the Internet (Washington Post, May 7 2000, pB7). Does this misrepresentation matter? It scares me. Until that point, I was reading the article sympathetically, reflecting that Ballmer may actually be seeking to change, for the better, the way Microsoft works with its partners, competitors and customers, as Ignatius suggests. Then I come across this, and wonder who believes it. The troubling part is that, if Microsoft actually believes it invented this technology, that implies that they regard it as something they can change in spite of the commitments of the rest of us. (We, after all, share no claim to it.) If this standard is corrupted (and I'm not so concerned about the wars over schemas, as long as the syntax and low-level data models/APIs stay cross-platform and application-independent), the evolution of the Internet as an open medium will be set back indefinitely, and Microsoft will have missed the chance of a lifetime--denying it to the rest of us while doing so. They can corrupt the standard simply by assuring that "XML" means different things to different developers, nullifying the W3C specification that describes it and trademarks the name. As for Ignatius--well, it's pathetic. Apparently he did no research to balance Ballmer's spin. (Mr. Ignatius, XML is a "profile" or sub-specification of an international standard for data formats that has existed since the 1980's, and which Microsoft ignored all these years in favor of locking its customers into its own software packages, such as Word, Excel, etc. XML wasn't "invented" by any two people, although both Sun and IBM could, for different reasons, claim credit more legitimately than MS for its development. Some skeptics believe that Microsoft, having ignored or abused standards in the past, now embraces this one as an advance-guard move towards commandeering the Internet and locking us into Explorer, Outlook etc.) Respectfully, Wendell Piez Shepherdstown, WV ====================================================================== Wendell Piez mailto:wapiez@m... Mulberry Technologies, Inc. http://www.mulberrytech.com 17 West Jefferson Street Direct Phone: 301/315-9635 Suite 207 Phone: 301/315-9631 Rockville, MD 20850 Fax: 301/315-8285 ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Mulberry Technologies: A Consultancy Specializing in SGML and XML ====================================================================== *************************************************************************** This is xml-dev, the mailing list for XML developers. To unsubscribe, mailto:majordomo@x...&BODY=unsubscribe%20xml-dev List archives are available at http://xml.org/archives/xml-dev/ ***************************************************************************
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