• On TV.com: THE GIRLS NEXT DOOR photos

November 21, 2005 10:04 AM PST

Writely warms to OpenDocument

  • Font size
  • Print
Related Stories

OpenDocument format gathers steam

November 10, 2005

IBM, Sun to create 'OpenDocument Foundation'?

November 1, 2005
The company behind Web-based word processor Writely announced on Monday that it will handle documents saved in the OpenDocument format.

Writely was launched by privately held Upstartle in August of this year as a Web site to store, edit and share word processing documents.

The site allows people to upload Microsoft Word documents, which are converted to HTML. The company intends to support Adobe Systems' PDF and RTF as well.

On Monday, Upstartle said that users can also upload OpenOffice documents onto Writely. OpenOffice is an open-source desktop productivity suite that uses the OpenDocument document formats.

Users can also convert documents stored on Writely and save them as OpenDocument and Word files, according to Upstartle, a four-person outfit based in Portola Valley, Calif.

The company chose to support OpenDocument because of customer requests, said Sam Schillace, Upstartle co-founder. Writely has several tens of thousands of users, he said.

The Writely Web site saves documents in XHTML format. Because OpenDocument is based on XML, "it's a very easy translation," Schillace said.

OpenDocument has been gathering more support from software vendors other than Microsoft in the past few months.

IBM, Sun Microsystems, Google and Adobe, for example, are developing OpenDocument-based products or committing resources to organizations dedicated to OpenDocument.

Microsoft intends to accommodate OpenDocument in its dominant Office suite via third-party products rather than native file format support.

See more CNET content tagged:
Writely, OpenDocument Format, OpenOffice, word-processor, IBM Corp.

Add a Comment (Log in or register) 3 comments
What Should Be The IT Industry's Focus!...
by Captain_Spock November 21, 2005 11:56 AM PST
Open Document (On OpenDocument that is based on XML) or (from a "Banking Technology" Standpoint -- OpenDoc as a way of building compound documents with collections of small, portable components called Parts. These parts reside in Containers, and you can put any type of part into any kind of container. Learn only one text-editing part and you can put it into any document container you please. The same goes for spreadsheet parts, or graphics parts, spellchecking parts and so on")???
Reply to this comment
Stealers
by November 21, 2005 1:55 PM PST
So THIS is where MS is getting the idea for the "ribbon" interface in Office 12.

Aww, and I almost thought it was original.
Reply to this comment
Good for them
by Arty Choke November 21, 2005 2:08 PM PST
I have been using OpenOffice.org for 2 years, It works well with MySQL, and the newest version is much faster. Ditch Office!
Reply to this comment
advertisement

Latest tech news headlines

Resource center from CNET News sponsors
Aligning CIO & CEO visions
What CIOs need to know

Click Here!
It's a simple truth. The closer you and your CEO see things, the greater your chance for success. Our exclusive report can help you get there—and help your business grow. Get the report featuring the views of 765 CEOs on innovation. learn more

Click Here!
What CEOs think: Innovation Insights for CIOs

Learn How CIOs can deliver strategic success for their enterprises

The New CIO: Beyond Technology

Learn how CIOs become heroes

Podcast: Chris Gorog of Napster

Learn about the impact of technology in strategy execution

The future of the Enterprise

Read more about tomorrow's organization

CIO Vision Series:Innovating within a retail industry disrupted by the Web

Video: CIO of Virgin Entertainment Group, Robert Fort

RSS Feeds

Add headlines from CNET News to your homepage or feedreader.

More feeds available in our RSS feed index.

Markets

Market news, charts, SEC filings, and more

Related quotes

IBM (-0.92%) -0.71 76.73
Sun Microsystems (1.55%) 0.05 3.27
Microsoft (-1.88%) -0.36 18.75
Dow Jones Industrials (-1.69%) -141.45 8,234.79
S&P 500 (-1.68%) -14.20 831.02
NASDAQ (-1.19%) -17.21 1,428.35
CNET TECH (-2.16%) -22.57 1,022.44
  Symbol Lookup
advertisement

Inside CNET News

Scroll Left Scroll Right