Re: What's a good versioning system for Office documents?

Subject: Re: What's a good versioning system for Office documents?
From: Lou Quillio <public -at- quillio -dot- com>
To: techwr-l -at- lists -dot- techwr-l -dot- com
Date: Tue, 11 Jul 2006 16:44:21 -0400

Paul Pehrson wrote:
> I'm wondering if you've considered saving your files in a non-MS format?

+1. Seriously, OpenDocument is reality, big as life. The question
is _when_, not _if_.

http://www.dwheeler.com/essays/why-opendocument-won.html

Right now the barriers to transition from MS Word format to
OpenDocument are mostly cultural: as long as there's somebody you
must obey who will ask, "Can I have that in MS Word?", it's tough to
switch over because the WYSIWYG doesn't transform _perfectly_
(mostly spacing issues in tables, headers, and footers). You want
them to see _exactly_ what you see, need to be sure of it.

Still, a lot of files are transmitted in MS Word to users who don't
need (and perhaps shouldn't have) write access. Finished documents,
after all, should have one owner. If your culture can adapt to
"source and maintain in ODF, distribute in PDF" -- which is easily
done with OpenOffice, StarOffice, and KOffice today, and with MS
Office in the future -- you'll be able to switch sooner. And in
that case there's no end to version control options that meet your
criteria.

(Note that if you're heavily invested in VBScript, you've got
another barrier: client-side scripting depends on client
capabilities, and MS Office apps are the only ones that process
VBScript. But in a world where it can't be assumed that a user's
ODF client is, say, MS Word, VBScript is toast anyway.)

Anyhow, any decision made today about a version-control scheme for
MS Office documents should acknowledge that it's a stop gap, needed
for perhaps two years at most. There's additional peril if your
solution is SharePoint, since that seeks to curtail your options in
new ways.

> Recent versions of MS Word allow you to save documents in XML formats;
> I even read recently that in the next version of MS Word, MS will
> support the open-document format used by OpenOffice, StarOffice, and
> others (through an optional, free, plug-in).

The MS Word OpenDocument add-in is here, at SourceForge:

http://sourceforge.net/projects/odf-converter

Note that it's quite beta and useful only to testers of Word 2007.
The OpenDocument Foundation has designed its own conversion add-ins
for MS Word versions dating back to Word 97, which are in late testing:


http://www.oreillynet.com/xml/blog/2006/05/odf_never_mind_we_have_the_plu.html

LQ

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Follow-Ups:

References:
What's a good versioning system for Office documents?: From: Edgar D' Souza
Re: What's a good versioning system for Office documents?: From: alackerson
Re: What's a good versioning system for Office documents?: From: Edgar D' Souza
Re: What's a good versioning system for Office documents?: From: Paul Pehrson

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