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By Jennifer Jones
Posted on ZDNet News: Jun 2, 2006 7:07:00 PM

Microsoft is making changes to the next versions of both Office and Windows as part of an effort to head off a legal challenge from Adobe Systems.

Microsoft said earlier Friday that it expects an antitrust suit from Adobe after months of negotiations in which the companies failed to reach an accord.

The software maker is unilaterally making changes to both Office 2007 and Windows Vista in an effort to assuage some of Adobe's concerns. More important, the move is an attempt to lower the chances that an injunction could stop Microsoft from shipping those products.

"We don't want anything to stand in the way of customers getting their hands on the product," Microsoft Vice President Chris Capossela told CNET News.com in a telephone interview on Friday. "We certainly are trying to be a good partner here."

Microsoft has already had to delay the release date for Windows Vista several times because of technological hurdles. The current plan is to finish development of Office in October, and Vista by November, in order to have a mainstream launch of the products in January.

related story
Microsoft, Adobe squabble over PDF
Companies brace for European antitrust battle.

The company is making two main changes. With Vista, it plans to give computer makers the option of dropping some support for XPS, Microsoft's fixed-format document type that some have characterized as a PDF-killer. Under the changes, Microsoft will still use XPS under the hood to help the operating system print files. But computer makers won't have to include the software that allows users to view XPS files or to save documents as XPS files.

That said, Microsoft doesn't expect many computer makers will choose that option.

"We think it will be rare, because there is value and customers want it," group program manager Andy Simonds told CNET News.com. History may be on Microsoft's side here. The company was ordered by the European Union to offer a version of Windows without a built-in media player. However, manufacturers have shown little or no interest in selling PCs based on the stripped-down operating system.

On the Office side, Microsoft plans to take out of Office 2007 a feature that allows documents to be saved in either XPS or PDF formats. However, consumers will be able to go to Microsoft's Web site and download a patch that will add those capabilities back in.

If customers do that, it will essentially make Office 2007 work the same way as it has in current test versions, including the Beta 2 release that Microsoft made publicly available last week.

Customers will have to go through extra work, though, as they need to both download code and install it before adding back the options.

"It's clearly not as customer-friendly as we would like it to be," Capossela said. Microsoft announced plans for the PDF-saving option in October.

Even if customers don't download the add-on for Office, those running Vista may still be able to save their documents in the XPS format, provided their computer maker has not stripped out Vista's own XPS abilities. In Vista, the print driver can save all files in the XPS format.

Forrester analyst Kyle McNabb said that Microsoft's move to make PDF saving an add-on to Office 2007 won't be a major blow to the new software. "Having to download it and add it will not kill Office 2007," McNabb said. Consumers "will be disappointed, yes, but it won't prevent Office 2007 from moving forward."

Simonds, whose unit develops XPS, said that customers want the fixed document type and doesn't see the additional hurdles hurting XPS' ability to become a universal file format. "We think that value will sort of transcend any of this," he said.

But it will be an added hurdle, Capossela acknowledged. "Clearly, it introduces a barrier, in that customers have to go through another step to make this capability possible," he said.

Adobe developed PDF but has made much of its core technology an open standard. It offers its own PDF reader software for free, while charging for the Acrobat software that creates PDF files. Microsoft maintains that its plan to incorporate a PDF-saving option was on solid legal ground, noting that rivals such as Corel and Sun Microsystems already include such options in their office software products.

McNabb said that regardless of the latest moves, PDF is still the dominant player in the market.

"There is more demand for PDF than XPS," McNabb said. "Even if Microsoft makes XPS free and native (to Office) and users have to download PDF, it will only have a marginal impact on XPS adoption. The market wants PDF."

CNET News.com's Dawn Kawamoto contributed to this report. Microsoft is making changes to the next versions of both Office and Windows as part of an effort to head off a legal challenge from Adobe Systems.

Microsoft said earlier Friday that it expects an antitrust suit from Adobe after months of negotiations in which the companies failed to reach an accord.

The software maker is unilaterally making changes to both Office 2007 and Windows Vista in an effort to assuage some of Adobe's concerns. More important, the move is an attempt to lower the chances that an injunction could stop Microsoft from shipping those products.

"We don't want anything to stand in the way of customers getting their hands on the product," Microsoft Vice President Chris Capossela told CNET News.com in a telephone interview on Friday. "We certainly are trying to be a good partner here."

Microsoft has already had to delay the release date for Windows Vista several times because of technological hurdles. The current plan is to finish development of Office in October, and Vista by November, in order to have a mainstream launch of the products in January.

related story
Microsoft, Adobe squabble over PDF
Companies brace for European antitrust battle.

The company is making two main changes. With Vista, it plans to give computer makers the option of dropping some support for XPS, Microsoft's fixed-format document type that some have characterized as a PDF-killer. Under the changes, Microsoft will still use XPS under the hood to help the operating system print files. But computer makers won't have to include the software that allows users to view XPS files or to save documents as XPS files.

That said, Microsoft doesn't expect many computer makers will choose that option.

"We think it will be rare, because there is value and customers want it," group program manager Andy Simonds told CNET News.com. History may be on Microsoft's side here. The company was ordered by the European Union to offer a version of Windows without a built-in media player. However, manufacturers have shown little or no interest in selling PCs based on the stripped-down operating system.

On the Office side, Microsoft plans to take out of Office 2007 a feature that allows documents to be saved in either XPS or PDF formats. However, consumers will be able to go to Microsoft's Web site and download a patch that will add those capabilities back in.

If customers do that, it will essentially make Office 2007 work the same way as it has in current test versions, including the Beta 2 release that Microsoft made publicly available last week.

Customers will have to go through extra work, though, as they need to both download code and install it before adding back the options.

"It's clearly not as customer-friendly as we would like it to be," Capossela said. Microsoft announced plans for the PDF-saving option in October.

Even if customers don't download the add-on for Office, those running Vista may still be able to save their documents in the XPS format, provided their computer maker has not stripped out Vista's own XPS abilities. In Vista, the print driver can save all files in the XPS format.

Forrester analyst Kyle McNabb said that Microsoft's move to make PDF saving an add-on to Office 2007 won't be a major blow to the new software. "Having to download it and add it will not kill Office 2007," McNabb said. Consumers "will be disappointed, yes, but it won't prevent Office 2007 from moving forward."

Simonds, whose unit develops XPS, said that customers want the fixed document type and doesn't see the additional hurdles hurting XPS' ability to become a universal file format. "We think that value will sort of transcend any of this," he said.

But it will be an added hurdle, Capossela acknowledged. "Clearly, it introduces a barrier, in that customers have to go through another step to make this capability possible," he said.

Adobe developed PDF but has made much of its core technology an open standard. It offers its own PDF reader software for free, while charging for the Acrobat software that creates PDF files. Microsoft maintains that its plan to incorporate a PDF-saving option was on solid legal ground, noting that rivals such as Corel and Sun Microsystems already include such options in their office software products.

McNabb said that regardless of the latest moves, PDF is still the dominant player in the market.

"There is more demand for PDF than XPS," McNabb said. "Even if Microsoft makes XPS free and native (to Office) and users have to download PDF, it will only have a marginal impact on XPS adoption. The market wants PDF."

CNET News.com's Dawn Kawamoto contributed to this report.

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Legacy Rules
So all the millions and billions of PDF files already out there won't need to be read any more? Wake up to the issues, they are about open file format standards, and long term access, not about MS st... (Read the rest)
Posted by: bigpicture Posted on: 06/29/06 You are currently: a Guest | | Terms of Use
Cry me a river Adobe  csa0307 | 06/02/06
PDF is crap FLASH paper is the real deal  jimk_z | 06/02/06
It won't matter  TheHonestTruth | 06/02/06
Another browser war  genkuro | 06/02/06
Continued dominance  TheHonestTruth | 06/03/06
PDF is Ubiquitous  GeneBuettner | 06/05/06
Re: Could Care Less  NoBigDeal_67 | 06/05/06
Could you waste 30 seconds...  DCMann | 06/06/06
Legacy Rules  bigpicture | 06/29/06
Well DUH...  cornfreak | 06/03/06
Who cares?  Suicida| | 06/04/06
It seems to me ....  TheHonestTruth | 06/02/06
Slightly incorrect  Slamlander | 06/04/06
Try again  TheHonestTruth | 06/05/06
POSSIBLE threat  Robert Crocker | 06/02/06
Bzzzt, wrong...  No_Ax_to_Grind | 06/02/06
With MS stretching everything to the legal limit to gain a competitive  DonnieBoy | 06/02/06
Ok Bill O'Reilly  BFD | 06/02/06
Isn't the rule for open-source...  s_gamgee | 06/03/06
Why yes, Sam, it is...  dave.leigh@... | 06/03/06
That's not strictly true  Slamlander | 06/04/06
Bzzzzt......wrong  magpie_z | 06/04/06
Not at All!  GeneBuettner | 06/05/06
Message has been deleted.  djc1309@... | 06/03/06
Message has been deleted.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 06/02/06
Does that mean...  John L. Ries | 06/02/06
You are right, I appologize  No_Ax_to_Grind | 06/02/06
Message has been deleted.  barsteward | 06/03/06
Message has been deleted.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 06/03/06
Message has been deleted.  Cayble | 06/02/06
Message has been deleted.  GeneBuettner | 06/05/06
What is really happening.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 06/02/06
That's Microsoft's version, but what is REALLY happening...  Langalibalene | 06/02/06
Read the link, the blogger is taking a W.A.G.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 06/02/06
Clueless? W.A.G?  babar77 | 06/02/06
So, would yuo like me to do the same.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 06/02/06
No_Ax_to_Grind takes issues with Microsoft personally.  B.O.F.H. | 06/02/06
And you hang on my coat tails at any chance.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 06/03/06
You're so full of it you're not even funny  itanalyst | 06/04/06
I read both links and  djc1309@... | 06/03/06
But no-one does  barsteward | 06/03/06
So much for claims that PDF is an OPEN standard.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 06/02/06
Much better to use Offcie XML  No_Ax_to_Grind | 06/02/06
XML?!  Stuka | 06/02/06
Then please go use something else  No_Ax_to_Grind | 06/02/06
:o)  barsteward | 06/03/06
the issue with opendoc  rock06r | 06/04/06
You're right  danformen@... | 06/02/06
It is an open standard created by Adobe  ibabadur1 | 06/02/06
What in gawds name are you talking about?  No_Ax_to_Grind | 06/02/06
Your NICK lies  Slamlander | 06/04/06
Keep your ignorance to yourself.  Fujikid2 | 06/04/06
you forget..  barsteward | 06/03/06
A lot of standards have policing  babar77 | 06/02/06
Bzzzzt, WRONG  No_Ax_to_Grind | 06/02/06
thats only because its at the  barsteward | 06/03/06
So what?  No_Ax_to_Grind | 06/03/06
So...  zkiwi | 06/03/06
Yes to each question.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 06/04/06
Ok, so you are delusional  zkiwi | 06/04/06
Let me make it real simple, just for you.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 06/04/06
'Improving' Java is exactly what Sun took MSFT to court over.  Slamlander | 06/04/06
Yeah, and where is Sun now?  No_Ax_to_Grind | 06/04/06
You're ignoring the facts  zkiwi | 06/04/06
Your "facts" are nothing but opinion.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 06/04/06
So...  zkiwi | 06/04/06
What a pity...  zkiwi | 06/03/06
Bzzzt... Still wrong.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 06/04/06
Bzzzt! Wrongo!  Slamlander | 06/04/06
So then you agree they are going to court?  No_Ax_to_Grind | 06/04/06
"Open" has to be more than talk.  dw808303 | 06/02/06
Don't pass judgement yet  dragosani | 06/02/06
Adobe is the one hiding, call them...  No_Ax_to_Grind | 06/02/06
Which is the smart and correct thing to do  dragosani | 06/05/06
Remember when innovation made $ ??  danformen@... | 06/02/06
Software companies have grown up  dragosani | 06/02/06
MORE frickin' confusion in the Marketplace -- GREAT  999ad@... | 06/02/06
Rep has declared war...  Mike Cox | 06/02/06
Is it war, or...?????  SC-man | 06/02/06
6.0 - Last week  djc1309@... | 06/03/06
What do you have against PDF?  Slamlander | 06/04/06
6.0 --- no, an 8.5 is now good  30bob1 | 06/05/06
PDF  Calm_Down | 06/02/06
MS Just trying to grow biz  OneWhoKnowsIt | 06/02/06
Yes, PDF vs XPS is what is dealying Vista.  michael_t | 06/02/06
Pdf from Office  INGOTIAN | 06/02/06
Adobe NEEEDS competition!!!!  daver_z | 06/02/06
Ah yes, antitrust. It benefits the consumer. Oh wait...  PB_z | 06/02/06
This is just their game, nothing to see  CobraA1 | 06/03/06
PULEASE get someone to explain what the article said.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 06/03/06
yeah, it's about thwarting an Adobe lawsuit (nt)  CobraA1 | 06/03/06
Use pdf creator for print to/saving pdfs  Boot_Agnostic | 06/03/06
Adobe is shooting their own foot.  dave.leigh@... | 06/03/06
Well...  zkiwi | 06/04/06
PDF is only as open as Adobe chooses.  cornfreak | 06/03/06
And every government using it should remember that.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 06/03/06
Hey fool...  zkiwi | 06/03/06
Fool? Is your mom here too?  No_Ax_to_Grind | 06/04/06
So...  zkiwi | 06/04/06
PDF is only...  barsteward | 06/04/06
Anti Trust  Gregory.J.Bradley@... | 06/04/06
MSFT makes a frontal assault on yet another industry segment  Slamlander | 06/04/06
Gawd I hope you are right!  No_Ax_to_Grind | 06/04/06
If they'd have listened  Slamlander | 06/04/06
Reply to Ax_To_Grind  ds2719 | 06/04/06
You need to define everyone.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 06/04/06
No problem.  professordnm | 06/04/06
Adobe is full of liars  ChazzMatt | 06/04/06
Of course they are liars.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 06/04/06
Liars?  zkiwi | 06/04/06
Your grasping at strws to defend liars.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 06/05/06
It's a pity that...  zkiwi | 06/05/06
wrong  ChazzMatt | 06/05/06
Strong words with no real proof  middy | 06/05/06
proof is in the quote I posted.  ChazzMatt | 06/05/06
Vista changed in wake  not of this world | 06/04/06
Office PDF would be the end for Adobe.  Fujikid2 | 06/04/06
Upgrade to OpenOffice.Org  DontFeedTrolls | 06/05/06
Barrier to entry and hurdles...  MacCanuck | 06/05/06
PDFs advantages  dragonbite | 06/05/06
... and why is this a surprise?  LoganTheJuiceWeasel | 06/05/06
re: ... and why is this a surprise?  middy | 06/05/06
IT Marketplace = Spectator Sport  with_respect@... | 06/05/06
I don't understand....  rglad@... | 06/05/06
Well...  zkiwi | 06/05/06
Interesting information....  Confused by religion | 06/05/06
exactly.  ChazzMatt | 06/05/06
Adobe says one thing, but does the opposite  ChazzMatt | 06/05/06

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