Jeff Gould
October 3, 2008

Standards, open standards and double standards

In my last post I took Big Blue to task for its announcement that it intends to wage war against Microsoft in the world’s standards bodies. The motivation for this bellicose declaration was IBM’s stinging defeat last Spring in its battle to prevent the International Organization for Standardization (ISO) from ratifying Microsoft’s de facto office document standard (OOXML).

IBM charges that Microsoft won at the ISO only because it packed the national standards organizations that make up the ISO membership with its pals.

But the thing that galls me about IBM’s position – and the reason I wrote my post – is not its goody-two-shoes stance about lobbying. No, it’s the flagrant hypocrisy behind this whole open standards campaign. In a nutshell, Big Blue conspicuously fails to practice what it preaches.

Click to read more...

More articles by Jeff Gould, CEO & Director of Research, Peerstone Research

Search

Want to host a Solution Center on Interop News?
For more information, Click Here.

Recommend Microsoft versus Salesforce-Google (Email)

This action will generate an email to the person below recommending this article. Your email address, and the email address of the person you are sending this article to, are not logged by our system.

EmailEmail Article Link

The email sent will contain a link to this article, the article title, and an article excerpt (if available). For security reasons, your IP address will also be included in the sent email.

Article Excerpt:
By John Foley (Information Week)
Microsoft senior VP Chris Capossela was spitting bullets yesterday when asked about the recently announced Salesforce For Google (NSDQ: GOOG) Apps. "Opportunistic," "uninteresting," and "publicity stunt" were just some of the terms he used to describe the competitive move.
Microsoft is scheduled to make its Dynamics CRM Online generally available this spring. More than 100 customers are using that service under an early access program.
In other words, Microsoft is making progress on the software-plus-services front, and it can do something that Salesforce-Google can't: Give customers their choice of premises-based applications, hosted apps, or a mix of the two.


Article Link:
Your Name:
Your Email:
Recipient Email:
Message: