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Nairobi Open XML workshop

I just finished two days of Open XML workshops here in Nairobi, and had a great time. Kenya has a rapidly evolving software scene that was fun to see firsthand. These guys asked some questions I've never heard before, and pushed me to try some things in front of the group that I'd never tried. (All Open XML-related, of course!) Some worked, some didn't, but it was a good learning experience for all of us.

We had some attendees from the SC34 technical committee here that's reviewing the Open XML spec, and there were also some attendees who decided to get involved this week. It's great to see people with deep technical expertise and interest in the details getting involved in the standards process -- that can only make the resulting ISO standard even better.

Coincidentally (or perhaps not), IBM's local office had sent a bunch of Open XML material to members of the technical committee over the weekend, including lots of links to the Open Malaysia blog, links to IBM lobbyists, links to the contradiction comments that were filed by Kenya and other countries, and so on. I'm not sure whether all those emails helped anyone else, but they certainly helped me fine-tune some of my presentations this week.

My colleague Emmanuel Birech, who did a great job of organizing these workshops over at Torque IT, invited the local IBM rep to our workshop but apparently his schedule didn't allow him to attend. That's unfortunate, because he missed some good Q&A. He also missed my demonstration of Open XML's modular architecture, which allows for quick and reliable removal of metadata and other undesired content.

It's frustrating to come all the way to Kenya and not have much time for R&R, but we did get out to nearby Nairobi National Park for a quick tour late Sunday afternoon. Here are a few photos ...

Comments

  • Anonymous
    May 30, 2007
    It is quite interesting  to hear that IBM is still waging some kind of campaign against OOXML. Very likely that IBM is sending simular "information" to ISO related people all over the world intrying to influence ISO jct1 voting on the OOXML fasttracking standardization proces. I am interested if you did find out in Kenya how it came to pas that the Kenyan responses seem to have been written by IBM germany en the OpenMalaysia OSS blogger.

  • Anonymous
    June 05, 2007
    Some more folks posted about the Open XML formats SDK which we released yesterday as a technology preview:

  • Anonymous
    June 26, 2007
    If you couldn't make it to TechEd - or even if you did - check out Virtual TechEd . I loved attending