Originally posted by d000hg
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Microsoft has been facing increasing pressure from governments and agencies that have insisted on standards compliance for their software. Microsoft executives confirmed that the move would help the company win contracts from public authorities that want software based on open standards.
"We have a few barriers [with government contracts]," says Alan Yates, general manager for Microsoft Office. "It will give governments more long-term confidence."
"We have a few barriers [with government contracts]," says Alan Yates, general manager for Microsoft Office. "It will give governments more long-term confidence."
The Office XML formats received standards status from ECMA International as ECMA-376 in December 2006; this enabled them to be fast-tracked through ISO/IEC, where an amended version finally received International Standard status as ISO/IEC 29500:2008 in November 2008, and was then formally adopted as ECMA-376 Second Edition in December 2008.
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