February 12, 2004
[etech] Peace, Love and XML
Don Box of Microsoft, responsible for Longhorn Indigo (communications tech for building Web services, or “the SOAP messaging stack” that Don works on), is talking about how Microsoft is going to support standards, really this time. He says the following:
WordML, the current Word format, is optimal if you’re a Word author, but is unusable if you are trying to do interesting XML-y things with it, like write an app to process it. It’s designed to work well for Word. When Microsoft shipped it, people had a normal, human, emotional reaction: They hated it. Microsoft said that it didn’t expect you to author it, only to process it.
[A whole bunch of stuff I don’t understand it, and then:] We will be able to extend the Microsoft file system by providing our own schema. (Marc Cantor calls out that this is “really coolio, dude.”) “This isn’t just about the API. This is about data extensibility,” says Don.
Indigo is about “service-orientation” rather than object orientation. “We don’t want you to run .Net on your Linux box.”
[More stuff I didn’t understand. I’m not complaining, mind you.]
[Since I am obviously in over my head – feel free to explain it to me – I should perhaps report that both Bob Frankston and Marc Canter, off line, were favorably impressed with the direction Don sketched.]