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No-Cost StarOffice Licensing for Institutions

eugene ts wong writes: "A while ago Sun announced that it was giving unlimited donation of StarOffice to China's Ministry of Education. Well, it turns out that they announced that they are giving unlimited no-cost licenses for all education and research institutions." Many college students now get drastic discounts on Microsoft Office - but this covers a much broader range, from kindergarten up.

9 of 201 comments (clear)

  1. Institutions? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    Do /. users get free licenses then? Most of them belong in institutions...

  2. Microsoft offered the same deal... by j-turkey · · Score: 5, Funny

    Many college students now get drastic discounts on Microsoft Office

    Microsoft offered the same deal that Sun did when I was a college student -- no wait, I stole it.
    ;)


    -Turkey

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    -Turkey

  3. College students don't really get a discount by pogle · · Score: 5, Funny

    This is great news!

    Here in Maryland, the state universities pay a massive license fee that covers every student attending, so they can pay for the cost of media only ($5, real expensive cdrs). But that money comes from your tuition anyways, so the savings are all only perceived...better off using StarOffice, and dropping that license, and saving some of that tuition money for better purposes (I want the old studen center made into a lasertag arena personally, but other improvements could apply too).

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  4. Go Sun GO! by G00F · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Its nice seeing Sun take the ball and run, even though some of their thigns arn't making sense. (like the new cost of Solaris) I do like how Sun creates cross platform/os/network things. I just hope they keep them open once all the MS monopolies are broken and they have the lead.

    This is a really good stratigy to moving(breaking MS "other" monopoly) into business. Open source/free program that can do most things Staroffice can, staroffice being a more polished product with more features being charged a low amount, but giving free to all places that where people would be inclined to bring it into a place where it could make money.

    I haven't used the new star office yet, but I do know that the old one had major flaws with office files.(saving) Also, it has some anoying features I have to fight with, and can't find the options to. But other than that, its a very nice product.

    --
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  5. Re:Why? by moonbender · · Score: 5, Informative
    StarOffice has some features that were left out of OpenOffice because they rely on proprietary code.
    This is the part of the official FAQ pertaining to this:
    Q. What are the differences between StarOffice 6.0 software and the OpenOffice.org 1.0?

    A. StarOffice 6.0 softwre is a commercial product aimed at organizations and consumers while OpenOffice.org 1.0 is aimed at users of free software, independent developers and the open source community. StarOffice includes licensed-in, third-party technology such as:

    Spellchecker and thesaurus
    Database component (Software AG Adabas D).
    Select fonts including Windows metrically equivalent fonts and Asian language fonts
    Select filters, including WordPerfect filters and Asian word processor filters
    Integration of additional templates and extensive clipart gallery

    In addition to product differences, StarOffice offers:

    Updates/upgrades on CD
    Sun installation and user documentation
    24x7 Web based support for enterprises and consumers
    Help desk support
    Warranties and indemnification guarantee Training
    Professional services for migration and deployment

    For more information on components and services available for the OpenOffice.org product, visit http://www.openoffice.org site.
    The main difference is probably the thesaurus and the database. OpenOffice has its own free spellchecker, don't know if it's as good or better than the proprietary one.
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  6. Excellent, but one issue still for Sun to address: by afflatus_com · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Firstly, this is excellent news.

    However, one thing that Sun must still address is how to increase their adoption in the corporate sector.

    The reason why colleges are requested to stock Microsoft Office is that is what the businesses use to whom they are applying for jobs.

    My last university, McMaster University used to stock nothing but Corel office (cheaper, helped to support a local business), but in about 1997, they bowed to student pressure to replace it with MS Office since the commerce/science/arts/etc students wanted to have the "strong proficiency with advanced Word/Excel/PowerPoint/Access" on their resumes to compete for their jobmarkets.

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  7. Try it, you'll like it. by Futurepower(R) · · Score: 4, Informative


    If you haven't tried Star Office or Open Office, try Open Office. It's free. It's excellent. Of the free word processors, it seems to be the best.

    I've had a lot of problems with Microsoft Word being quirky. Sometimes Microsoft Word will move a footer to the top of the following page, for example. I don't have a huge amount of experience with Open Office, version 1.0 was released on May 1, I think, but it doesn't seem quirky.

  8. So, let me get this straight... by Bowie+J.+Poag · · Score: 4, Funny



    ..StarOffice WAS free... but now its no longer free, so now it's free instead.

    I'm telling you, Sun's "Insanity First!" initiative is REAL! When you people start believing me? I was right about Katz being a mad-libs Perl script, wasnt I? :)

    Cheers,

    --
    Bowie J. Poag

    1. Re:So, let me get this straight... by happyclam · · Score: 4, Interesting
      ..StarOffice WAS free... but now its no longer free, so now it's free instead.

      I'm telling you, Sun's "Insanity First!" initiative is REAL!

      Actually, it's terrific. Here's why: The major barrier to adoption of free software in institutions is fear: fear of using something unsupported, fear of having to maintain it themselves, fear that it won't work, fear that it's got back doors in it... we've all heard that "no one ever got fired for buying IBM."

      So Sun has this great product that they can't give away for free because it comes from free software roots. So what do they do? Start charging for it. This legitimizes the product in the minds of the PHBs, small as those minds are. Then they say they'll give it away for free if you qualify in some way. So the PHBs all scurry around to see whether they qualify, and when they figure out they do, they jump at this terrific discount from a well-known, strong company.

      Having served time in the marketing end of software, I know that "Insanity First" is often the only way actually to succeed.

      --
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