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Happy 3rd Birthday To OpenOffice.org

Milo Fungus writes "OpenOffice.org is three years old today. The birthday page links to interviews and information about OpenOffice.org's push to schools, which is led by Ian Lynch of the Marketing Project. As a happy and satisfied user, I say 'Happy Birthday' with vigor and gusto." Gift idea: give a copy of OpenOffice.org to your boss tomorrow.

269 comments

  1. PHB news by JamesP · · Score: 1

    Now that they are getting coached, they will probably know why they shoud opt for it.

    Or maybe not...

    --
    how long until /. fixes commenting on Chrome?
  2. Birthday Wish by trippinonbsd · · Score: 3, Funny

    They should wish to lose some weight this year...

    1. Re:Birthday Wish by Doomrat · · Score: 4, Funny

      They should wish to lose some weight this year...

      Happy Girthday.

    2. Re:Birthday Wish by AKAImBatman · · Score: 1

      > They should wish to lose some weight this year...

      Forget that. Memory is cheap. I'm wishing for an early native OS X build. Maybe a little help from the CinePaint project could make it happen?

    3. Re:Birthday Wish by QuantumG · · Score: 1
      Memory is cheap

      And loading is slow...

      --
      How we know is more important than what we know.
    4. Re:Birthday Wish by ducomputergeek · · Score: 2, Informative
      For once I wish people would keep things efficent. Just because we can make things bloated with everything under the sun doesn't mean we should.

      On a bigger note, they have made a lot of improvements in the past 3 years from Star Office to 1.1 today. Its well on its way and usable, but still there are some things that can be worked on, like getting it to load faster.

      --
      "The problem with socialism is eventually you run out of other people's money" - Thatcher.
    5. Re:Birthday Wish by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh please, oh mighty programmer, tell us how we're all wrong, and our piggy ways should be abandoned. You are the one true programmer!

      I bet nobody else is trying to be efficient, and write sloppy code, eh?

    6. Re:Birthday Wish by Scalli0n · · Score: 1

      Oh man you really bitchslapped whoever it was that said "Memory is cheap".

      Anyway, it's the type of lameass shit that says "Memory is Cheap" then writes inefficient code Microsoft-style. That person needs to stay the fuck away from a computer for the rest of their life.

      --
      Sig & Below
      Yuck Fou
    7. Re:Birthday Wish by AKAImBatman · · Score: 1

      I'd still rather get a port to OS X first. The loading time doesn't bother me much. I just leave it up if I need it.

    8. Re:Birthday Wish by nordicfrost · · Score: 1
      Forget that. Memory is cheap.


      Yeah, well, memory is cheap. My time isn't. I opened OO Write on an older Debian-running computer and it used just over a minute to open. Hate to say it, but Word used round 20 seconds when Windows was installed. Once running, everything is snappy though.

      The sad thing is that it contributes to a bad image of the whole suite. I know that it is a very good suite, but my friend doesn't and the long load time makes him believe it isn't.

    9. Re:Birthday Wish by ducomputergeek · · Score: 1

      Look at Blender vs. 3D studio or Lightwave. Both of which are about 100MB compaired to the 8MB of Blender, yet they can perform roughly the same functions.

      --
      "The problem with socialism is eventually you run out of other people's money" - Thatcher.
    10. Re:Birthday Wish by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Most algorithms are based around the fact that there is a tradeoff between memory usage and execution time. Because my time is actually worth something, I would rather trade off the former, but I guess anal retentive fuckwits like you have nothing better to do than count your bits.

    11. Re:Birthday Wish by AKAImBatman · · Score: 1

      Pre-load it. At least on Windows, you can run the little OpenOffice starter program that keeps it in memory. I run it on my Windows box to keep my wife happy (she gave up on M$ Office after it crashed for the umpteenth time). As far as she's aware, there's no difference in speed. I'm sure you could get the soffice executable doing *something* non-obtrusive on a Linux box. Besides, if it was loaded once, it should load faster the next time due to the libraries being in memory.

    12. Re:Birthday Wish by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Somehow I doubt you've used those products if you said something that ignorant.

    13. Re:Birthday Wish by __past__ · · Score: 1
      And it has improved! I don't even have to recompile my kernel any more to build the FreeBSD port like I had for 1.0, because compiling an Office suite obviously requires some more radical settings than the vanilla kernel, perfectly suitable for huge database or file servers running stable under high load while staying responsive for interactive use, can provide.

      They could at least get rid of the useless splash screen that makes /all/ of your virtual desktops unusable while that piece of "enterprise quality" code takes as long to boot up as it took Don Knuth to implement TeX.

    14. Re:Birthday Wish by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >> They could at least get rid of the useless splash screen that makes /all/ of your virtual desktops unusable while that piece of "enterprise quality" code takes as long to boot up as it took Don Knuth to implement TeX.

      soffice -h # :-)

      Choose one:

      -minimized
      -invisible
      -nologo

    15. Re:Birthday Wish by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Normally I wouldn't respond to that kind of a post since your insult did nothing to really offend me. But I thought I'd take the time to tell you how immature you are. It's really sad that you need to get your rocks off by trying to make other people feel upset about personal attacks. You are such a childish fool to think that this strategy would even make a dent in a reasonably mature person like myself. So I will tell you that I am not offended and I feel kind of sorry for you actually. It sounds like you have a very small life with little to offer. I don't know what combination of life circumstances led you to such a position, but you really should try to overcome it and grow up. There is no joy in being a child forever.

      That's why I can just let your comment slide off of me as easily as an oaf (like yourself) on ice. I feel no offense and really have no particular reaction at all to your comment since it has absolutely no bearing on the reality of my life. You are simply some sad, lonely little person living a very pathetic and laughable life. You apparently need the attention of others in order to feel any self worth. This is why you cannot say anything that would truly affect me in any way.

      In fact, it's quite surprising that I've even responded to you because I originally thought of not responding to you. Then I thought better of it and decided to take the high road and be open and honest with you in the hope that your life may be enlightened by one who is more of an adult than you are. That is why I've bothered to respond. *I* AM a mature adult with self worth and self love who knows the truth and isn't upset by words written by some unknown prankster at the other end of a wire. I feel good about myself and know that I am a good and kind person deserving of the love that is given to me by my friends and family. You, on the other hand, are alone and unloved and not worthy of any attention at all. That is why I am writing this. To make you aware of how low your existence is and how much better it could be if only you were to mature to even just beneath my level of maturity.

      I sincerely hope that you have learned something from this post and will seriously reconsider posting such things in the future. Also keep in mind that any negative response you make to this post will have no effect on me since I will just ignore it. However, it is my deepest wish that you will come away from my words, with a roadguide that will put you in a place where you are happy.

    16. Re:Birthday Wish by Brandybuck · · Score: 1

      I'm gaining weight, but I can always move into a larger apartment, so who cares?

      --
      Don't blame me, I didn't vote for either of them!
    17. Re:Birthday Wish by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      JESUS will sayve yuo! I have seen teh light heelsahlluha!

    18. Re:Birthday Wish by 13Echo · · Score: 2, Informative

      OO.o loads in 4 seconds on my Athlon 1400 on Slackware 9. If you haven't tried version OpenOffice.org 1.l yet, it's highly suggested. There are so many improvements to it, it's hard to believe it's the same program. Not only is it *much* faster, but there are lots of enhancements to features and such. I love the new "Export to PDF" feature (no worries about someone viewing a file intact). The UI is faster. Everything has improved greatly.

      If OO.o keeps on getting this much better with each release, it's soon going to become that greatest Office program around (sadly, it's still lacking database software, unless you count StarOffice's ADABAS package). I've already shown a few people the greatness of OO.o. Many people that I know have switched to OO.o from expensive commercial products.

    19. Re:Birthday Wish by b17bmbr · · Score: 1

      it's getting so much better though. on my P3 933/512 running RH9, 1.0.X loaded in about 15 seconds. now 1.1 loads in about half that time. that is without preloading anything. if they preloaded some things, it'd be much faster. it'd be nice if we could say, hey, get it to load in 10 seconds on a pentium 120 with 32mb ram, but you know what, hardware IS cheap, and even a refurb'd dell on ebay can run it great. evrything has a cost. you want features, you gotta pay for them somehow. i'd say, all in all, OO.org is one helluva piece of software. i've been using it regularly since i think build 638. the only thing i'd wish for (and don't shoot me for saying this), is a forms based database like access. but, this is a small need.

      --
      My problem? I was perfectly gruntled, until some numbnuts came by and dissed me.
    20. Re:Birthday Wish by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Awesome. You're such a mature adult that you have to keep repeating it over & over & over in a futile pathetic attempt to convince even yourself. YHBT, YHL.

    21. Re:Birthday Wish by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      And loading is slow...

      Not only loading, but downloading. How long do you think it would take to download 65 megs over a 24000 bits/sec dialup (i.e. mine)? I bet Mr. Memory Is Cheap has broadband, too.

      I even tried downloading the .ZIP to my shell account, where I could hopefully unzip it and delete all the crap I didn't want. Even this didn't work, because I went over my disk quota. Wadding everything into a single, gigantic file is convenient for some people, but it just doesn't work for me. (MinGW is worse, because their single, gigantic file is an .EXE file. I can download it to my shell account, but I can't unzip it.)

      Someone...please...release an OpenOffice Lite.

      Incidently, is the software actually called OpenOffice.org, or does everyone tack on the ".org" TLD out of habit?

    22. Re:Birthday Wish by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      dude!
      3d studio kills blender almost in every aspect, correct me if i'm wrong, but how do you get network rendering to work on blender??

    23. Re:Birthday Wish by Spoing · · Score: 2, Informative
      ...sadly, it's still lacking database software, unless you count StarOffice's ADABAS package.

      Adabas is just a database backend and not very important, though I admit it would be nice to bundle one of the existing open source backends just to remove the need to fetch and install one.

      Backends that are currently supported by both StarOffice and OpenOffice include MySQL, Postgress, and any data source exposed by ODBC 3.0, JDBC, ADO, dBase, or if you want to go low tech flat CSV files.

      When most people say they want an Access-like tool, they mean a frontend, something that OpenOffice and StarOffice already have.

      To help you out, the main database section of OpenOffice.org has atips and tricks section.

      Then, there are the forums that have some very interesting threads on the subject...

      ...such as this handy little link

      --
      A firewall can not protect you from yourself. Turn off what you do not need. Do not use the firewall to do your work.
    24. Re:Birthday Wish by AKAImBatman · · Score: 1

      > I bet Mr. Memory Is Cheap has broadband, too.

      Yep.

      > I even tried downloading the .ZIP to my shell account,
      > where I could hopefully unzip it and delete all the crap I
      > didn't want.

      Good luck. The zip file contains a large number of archive files. i.e. There's nothing to delete. Besides, what would you delete? It's an integrated office suite. The only things you can get rid of and still get it to run are language packs and a few small utilities (such as Palm support).

      > Wadding everything into a single, gigantic file is
      > convenient for some people, but it just doesn't work for
      > me.

      If I might make a suggestion, a cdrom of OOo would go a long way toward solving your problem. Not sure where in the world you are, but they seem to be pretty cheap.

      > (MinGW is worse, because their single, gigantic file is an
      > .EXE file. I can download it to my shell account, but I can't
      > unzip it.)

      Cygwin lets you pick and choose your components. Besides, the Cygwin GCC is easier to use than MinGW.

      > Incidently, is the software actually called OpenOffice.org,
      > or does everyone tack on the ".org" TLD out of habit?

      Strangely enough, it is actually part of the name. My W.A.G. (Wild Ass Guess) is that OpenOffice is too generic to trademark. Alternatively, Sun may have thought the name to be "more hip" or something.

      Oh, and BTW. Memory *is* cheap. :-P

    25. Re:Birthday Wish by AKAImBatman · · Score: 1

      > t is little wonder that this is your lot in life. Someone as
      > generous and kind as I am is yet rebuffed by another one
      > of your outbursts. This is further proof that you are the
      > child and I am the adult.

      A pseudo-delusional state in which a superiority complex is maintained via the use of eloquent speech as a shield against reality.

      Fascinating.

    26. Re:Birthday Wish by Karma+Star · · Score: 1

      I'd like to congratulate the Red Sox on their win tonight. Fuck the Yankees, those goddamn cockgobblers. 2-2: stick that up your fuckin ass. yanktard whore.

      --
      Me email iz skyewalkerluke at microsoft's free email service.
    27. Re:Birthday Wish by Bishop923 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Hey, a Jetta costs $15,000 vs the $80,000 of a Porsche 911, yet they can perform roughly the same function...

    28. Re:Birthday Wish by $andeep · · Score: 1

      on my P4,1Gb ram, OO loads under 6 seconds :-)

      --
      gravity is a myth, earth sucks
    29. Re:Birthday Wish by eurostar · · Score: 1

      I just wish it had the app building possibilities, and the speed of applixware.

    30. Re:Birthday Wish by AvantLegion · · Score: 1
      There it is. It's the sluggish performance that keeps OpenOffice from being "all that it can be".

      But I'm impressed with how far it has come. I wish for increased performance and an OS X native build.

    31. Re:Birthday Wish by bigsteve@dstc · · Score: 1
      Nonsense!! The two main functions of a Porsche are:
      • to say "I've got more money than you losers", and
      • to pull more chicks!!
    32. Re:Birthday Wish by gad_zuki! · · Score: 1

      >They should wish to lose some weight this year...

      Actually they've lost tons of weight.

      My first experiences with OO were with a single "master app" that took quite a while to load and used plenty of RAM. I recently had time to play with 1.1 and found that they've finally seperated the apps a la MS office and the boot times are within a very acceptable range, even on a modest system.

      Here's to the OO diet. I heard it killed Atkins.

    33. Re:Birthday Wish by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      db.no! db.no! db.no!

    34. Re:Birthday Wish by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Here's to the OO diet. I heard it killed Atkins.

      No... it was the Atkins diet that did that.

    35. Re:Birthday Wish by MouseR · · Score: 1

      Hey, a Jetta costs $15,000 vs the $80,000 of a Porsche 911, yet they can perform roughly the same function...

      Yeah. Except the babe in the second car is worth $65,000 more.

    36. Re:Birthday Wish by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Yeah, well, memory is cheap. My time isn't. I opened OO Write on an older Debian-running computer and it used just over a minute to open

      Did you check the ooqstart-gnome or oooqs-kde Debian packages?

    37. Re:Birthday Wish by water-and-sewer · · Score: 1

      Faster still is the new trial version of Sun Staroffice 7, which is roughly on par with OO.o 1.1rc3

      Don't know what they did, but it is without a doubt faster. I'm thinking of shelling out the $70 to get it.

      Most important part of the fight is now: zealots, go out into the world and promote OO.o as obnoxiously as you can (not on Slashdot, please: we're already aware of it).

      --
      If this were Usenet, I'd killfile the lot of you.
    38. Re:Birthday Wish by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Mr. Scalli0n,

      I'll make poop and you eat it. Your beath smells like poop. Your teeth are brown because you ate my poop. Your tongue looks like a turd.

      Love,
      A miscreant hooligan

    39. Re:Birthday Wish by AKAImBatman · · Score: 1

      > My life is a picture perfect illustration of a life well
      > rendered. At the age of 20, I reached a level of maturity
      > far beyond that of my peers.

      And I was programming at 8, consulting at 16, married at 19. What's your point?

      > With that said, let it be known that I have won (yet again)
      > another war of words and come out the unchallenged
      > victor.

      You know, this is rather amusing to watch. I'm younger than you by far, and even I know that you lost the moment you replied to that troll.

      "Answer not a fool according to his folly, lest thou also be like unto him." -Proverbs 26:4

      > Please feel free to challenge me, but be aware that if I do
      > not answer, it is because I have grown tired of playing
      > these silly games with a band of miscreant hooligans.

      Then why indulge in them in the first place? Oh, that's right. You were mad at me for daring to suggest that an OS X version is more important than continuing to reduce the footprint. Without even analyzing my statement, you ran off half-cocked and mired yourself with the scum of the earth.

      > However, I do respond if only to make the world a better
      > place to live. It is my duty to help my fellow man reach
      > his potential.

      Oh, give it a rest, will you? You are striving toward nothing but a poor attempt to save face.

      > Maturity wins out over childishness and I still have no
      > hard feelings about what was said because I am certain
      > that it does not impact my life in any significant way.

      Dear Lord, you are naive. These people are more likely possessed than simply acting out of immaturity. They hate you, they hate me, and the only way to change them is to convince them to part with that which drives them.

    40. Re:Birthday Wish by bhtooefr · · Score: 1

      In other words, you want Sun to tell the OOo team how they got StarOffice 7 so damn fast, right? (BTW, my Celery 466 with 256MB RAM couldn't handle OOo 1.1RC3, but SO7 works GREAT)

    41. Re:Birthday Wish by bhtooefr · · Score: 1

      Better yet, try SO7. It's free for educational use, and it runs GREAT (Cel466 w/256MB RAM and P4-2.2 w/256MB RAM, both with Windows 2000). Same feature set as OOo 1.1, but MUCH faster.

    42. Re:Birthday Wish by BrokenHalo · · Score: 1
      to pull more chicks!!

      If you're that desparate to meet up with chicks, I would recommend enrolling in some sort of biological sciences degree. "Pulling" them is another matter, though. I didn't say dumb chicks :-)

    43. Re:Birthday Wish by bhtooefr · · Score: 1

      If you're a student or teacher at a K-12 or university, it's free. Hopefully OOo 1.2 will be as fast as SO7 (that is, Sun will tell the OOo team what the heck they did).

    44. Re:Birthday Wish by ducomputergeek · · Score: 1
      The Blender Network rendering program:

      http://www.flyingsnail.com/reppu.html

      But then again we also have a cluster of Blade Servers and we can run 1 process of blender per CPU. Each blade has dual Xeons, so blade 1, CPU 1 renders frames 1 x 250, Blade 1, CPU 2 renders 251 - 500, Blade 2-CPU 1, 501 - 750, etc. etc.

      Then on smaller jobs, we just use the reppu network rendering program for blender through our older ALPHA and Solaris boxes.

      --
      "The problem with socialism is eventually you run out of other people's money" - Thatcher.
    45. Re:Birthday Wish by AKAImBatman · · Score: 1

      Probably the same way that Netscape 7 outperformed Mozilla. They turned off debugging and turned on optimizations. Like Mozilla, OOo is happy if they get a debug build. A release build takes FOREVER (I know, I've tried). What Sun does, is they tweak the code and compiler settings, throw some serious Sun hardware at it (16 procs, 8 gigs of RAM maybe?), and get it compiled before the cows come home. The OOo guys are busy developing and don't really have time to do this (yet, anyway).

      Another difference may be that Sun uses better compilers (Intel CC and Forte/SunONE CC) thus producing better output than GCC.

    46. Re:Birthday Wish by curri · · Score: 1

      It is OpenOffice.org, because somebody else had trademarked the name OpenOffice :)

      check:
      http://www.openoffice.org/FAQs/faq-other .html#6

    47. Re:Birthday Wish by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Dude:

      You know, this is rather amusing to watch. I'm younger than you by far, and even I know that you lost the moment you replied to that troll.


      "Answer not a fool according to his folly, lest thou also be like unto him." -Proverbs 26:4

      Follow your own damn advice. I can't see how you DIDN'T see that this was a troll. You really must be out to lunch.

  3. And still no native OS X offering... by Alex+Reynolds · · Score: 0, Redundant

    Seems like Sun is doing what it can to keep it that way too. What a shame...

    -Alex

    1. Re:And still no native OS X offering... by sould · · Score: 2, Interesting
      Still no native Aqua offering


      Time for you to start coding dude!


      Happy Birthday OO! You rock!

    2. Re:And still no native OS X offering... by Bishop923 · · Score: 5, Informative

      No... The Mac OS X Porting group specifically said that the only reason they haven't been able to port to Cocoa is that they need to change several of the Graphics APIs owned by different parts of the project.

      Since some of these APIs are being revamped anyway(for all platforms), they feel it best to wait until they are finalized, or at least fleshed out enough to allow porting work to begin. This has the two fold advantage of:
      A: They will have some say in the new APIs so MacOSX Concerns can be taken into account
      and
      B: They wont have to waste tons of time porting over obsolete code that will have to be changed anyway.

    3. Re:And still no native OS X offering... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      well - instead on whining, why don't you get involved in coding?

    4. Re:And still no native OS X offering... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Seems like Sun is doing what it can to keep it that way too. What a shame...

      It's a shame that nobody can do anything about it. Hmmm. Think think think. Who can help make a native OSX version just a little bit more possible. Who has the motivation? Do you know anyone Alex?

    5. Re:And still no native OS X offering... by foonf · · Score: 1

      There's no native GTK or Qt port either. It hasn't been rewritten in Java yet, or ported to the Mozilla framework. I even have my doubts about how "native" the win32 version is. The point is, its a huge and ponderously monolithic piece of software. It was built using its own UI system and never designed to render widgets using anything else, and some of the controls it uses I doubt have equivalents in most other toolkits. Sun can't even make a version of StarOffice that looks consistent with their own "Java desktop" Linux distribution. Now apparently someone is working on an Aqua, but you can't seriously expect Sun, whatever you think of them, to fund the port themselves, and you should appreciate the technical obstacles the people who are porting it face when considering how long it is taking.

      --

      "(Man) tries to live his own life as if he were telling a story. But you have to choose: live or tell." --Sartre
    6. Re:And still no native OS X offering... by AKAImBatman · · Score: 1

      You don't really understand the problem. You see, OpenOffice does not run as a GUI program on OS X like it does on Windows and Unix. Instead, the user first has to launch an X11 server (something most users don't have), then run OpenOffice as a command line program that connects to the X server. While it works, it has ZERO integration with the system and is only viable for geek users who know what they're doing. Normal OS X users cannot use OpenOffice.

    7. Re:And still no native OS X offering... by __past__ · · Score: 1
      The FreeBSD port isn't that impressive either, currently. And it's very existence is due solely to the great volunteer work of the porters, there doesn't seem to be much effort from the OOo team itself to make their software more easily portable.

      Just one more example of Suns idea of portable software, Java is another one: Works on any platform as long as it's Windows, Solaris or Red Hat.

    8. Re:And still no native OS X offering... by Frymaster · · Score: 1
      x11 will be part of the panther install process. it will be an optional install, but at least end users will be able to get an xwindow server from their 10.3 install cd instead of having to muck about with fink to get one.

      additionally, apple is promising that x11 will be "fully" integrated with aqua, viz. you can copy and paste between the two window managers.

      now that makes openoffice viable for dad.

    9. Re:And still no native OS X offering... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Just one more example of Suns idea of portable software, Java is another one: Works on any platform as long as it's Windows, Solaris or Red Hat.

      You do realize that you don't have a effen clue, don't you?

    10. Re:And still no native OS X offering... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Red Hat?

      You mean Linux/x86.

      I am still waiting the one for Linux/powerpc... It is only a recompile away...

    11. Re:And still no native OS X offering... by debrain · · Score: 1

      I've gathered that native porting will happen around 2006, with OpenOffice 2.0. Seems like a long time for it to happen, but I think it's the right thing to do, given their limited manpower.

    12. Re:And still no native OS X offering... by __past__ · · Score: 1

      I am aware that both OOo and Java work on more platforms than this, if that's what you mean. It's just not that Sun would really care, and it shows.

    13. Re:And still no native OS X offering... by Second+Vampyre · · Score: 0

      Because users like software, not developing it? I know this must be hard for Mr Uber Leet AC to understand.

    14. Re:And still no native OS X offering... by nonameisgood · · Score: 1

      It's about FREE, not free. Show me a product as good as MS Office, for Mac OS X, and I'll buy it. I may hate MS's business strategy, but Office has the market because it's a real product...not a dream or an "also ran".

      Give us a product we can use to do all the things we need to do as well as MS Office, and we'll buy it. Don't forget compatibility, since we have to communicate with the real world - which includes exchanging documents.

      OO is telling Mac users that we should use Open Office, but we have to wait until 2005 or later..f'ckoff.

      I'm not a programmer, or I _would_ help. I'm an engineer. I need to use the product, not talk about it or write it. Put up or shut up. While you're at it, fix that bloat problem - thin is in.

      --
      Faith is the very antithesis of reason, injudiciousness a critical component of spiritual devotion. Jon Krakauer
    15. Re:And still no native OS X offering... by shellbeach · · Score: 1

      I'm not a programmer, or I _would_ help. I'm an engineer. I need to use the product, not talk about it or write it. Put up or shut up. While you're at it, fix that bloat problem - thin is in.

      Well, then, good for you. So don't use OOo - nobody's forcing you to. No reason to start thinking it's all one big insult directed at you ...

      Personally, I find OOo very useful and I'm extremely happy that it exists.

    16. Re:And still no native OS X offering... by soullessbastard · · Score: 1

      I'm not quite certain where you're getting your launch information from...ever since the initial Alpha release OOo OS X X11 has shipped with AppleScripts that allow a single double-click to launch both the X server and application, no command line needed. Each copy now ships with Terry Teague's Start OpenOffice.org applet that does this as well as provide Finder document associations for double clicking documents directly and also drag and drop font conversion. If you're a geek who wants to start it from the command line, you can, but steps have definitely been taken to make it accessible to people who have no clue what a Terminal is. ed

    17. Re:And still no native OS X offering... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, the current FreeBSD port works fairly nicely (although admittedly via local patches in the FreeBSD ports tree).

      It's pretty clear from the OpenOffice.org porting list that there is much more effort behind the MacOS X port than the FreeBSD port.

      Yet the FreeBSD version works much better than the MacOS X version I'm currently running (but there have been patches to fix the problems with quartz-wm that I haven't built with, yet), and picks up more fonts (for some reason, the MacOS X version picks up fewer fonts that it'll use).

      On the other hand, the MacOS X version uses subpixel rendering for anti-aliasing, the FreeBSD version doesn't (the local Xft/fontconfig settings on both machines have it enabled). I haven't figured out why this is, yet.

    18. Re:And still no native OS X offering... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Thin is in? And you use OS X, perhaps the most bloated and slow mainstream operating system around? Hint: try getting OS X to run on a sub-100 MHz box. If you can do that, it won't be pretty. OS X is cool in places, but it's a huge, sluggish beast and doesn't compare to BeOS or Linux (with Fluxbox etc.) in terms of "thin" being "in".

    19. Re:And still no native OS X offering... by David+Gerard · · Score: 1

      OOo 1.0 and 1.1 for Linux both work wonderfully on FreeBSD with linux_base-7 installed. I use the Linux binary on my FreeBSD box at home.

      --
      http://rocknerd.co.uk
    20. Re:And still no native OS X offering... by gsdali · · Score: 1

      I'm happy with it so far, although obviously it would be great not only fully Aqua compliant but with a full OSX look, feel and human interface. Open source software always falls down at the human interface hurdle. One thing that can be said for office v.X is that the interface is not only very good but the first office since 5.1 to have a truly Mac OS Human interface. Open source projects need to have teams dreaming up pleasant, simple, clear interfaces that are compliant with the expectations of the users of the various platforms that the software will end up on.

    21. Re:And still no native OS X offering... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Are you seriously trying to justify the bloat of an office suite by comparing it to an OS?

  4. Better gift idea by 192939495969798999 · · Score: 1

    Get your boss to an OpenOffice.org pitch party -- "if they are innundated by advertisements, they will come!"

    --
    stuff |
  5. A great service to OSS by SargeZT · · Score: 2, Interesting

    It's nice to have a realistic alternative to MS Office. I've tried many OSS Office Alternatives, and this is by far the best of them all. Happy Birthday!

    --
    And why did you staple the trout to the RAM?
    1. Re:A great service to OSS by twistedcubic · · Score: 1

      I know that OpenOffice is an whole suite, but as far a word processing goes, I think Abiword 2.0 is not worse than OO. I recently had to open up a .doc file and edit it, and I found Abiword 2.0's menu items much, much easier to find (like overstrike, for instance) compared to OO's which were hard as hell to locate. Also, Abiword 2.0 rendered the file more correctly than OO. By the way, I use the latest versions of each. Lastly, Abiword's UI is prettier. However, I do realize that the point of OO is to be a MS Office clone/replacement.

    2. Re:A great service to OSS by segment · · Score: 1

      I recently had to open up a .doc file and edit it, and I found Abiword 2.0's menu items much, much easier to find (like overstrike, for instance) compared to OO's which were hard as hell to locate.

      I'm sorry to be the bearer of bad news, but OO didn't purchase their SCO license which means any program written that calls main() will not function properly. If you act now however, I will gladly send you a SCO license formatted as an mp3 document via p2p to po the RIAA for the introductory low price of 3 joonix shell accounts. Supplies are limited

    3. Re:A great service to OSS by Trolling4Dollars · · Score: 2, Insightful
      I use Wordpad. Fast, stable, and has every fucking feature 99% of the population needs.

      I love pointing this out... the troll has a point. Most people don't need anything beyond simple text entry, spell checking, bold, italic and underline. When you write a paper for school or work, it's not supposed to be interesting looking, it's supposed to have CONTENT. That's what a lot of people seem to NOT understand these days. With all the options for fonts, graphics and color text, the message is getting lost in the medium.

    4. Re:A great service to OSS by 00420 · · Score: 1

      Most people don't need anything beyond simple text entry, spell checking, bold, italic and underline. When you write a paper for school or work, it's not supposed to be interesting looking, it's supposed to have CONTENT

      I agree with you mostly. However, I usually use Word for school because it has a grammar check, and me's grammar not always perfect is. (not that Word's is either, but if you use it sensibly it can help you).

      However, ignoring the lack of grammar check I do prefer Open Office. (It is especially usefull for links to .doc files, as I don't really trust Word enough to let it access the internet).

    5. Re:A great service to OSS by cerberusss · · Score: 1
      Most people don't need anything beyond simple text entry, spell checking, bold, italic and underline.

      I doubt this very much. I think that most people use only a couple of features, but nevertheless, they all use other features. If what you're saying was really true, then why would big word processors be so popular?

      --
      8 of 13 people found this answer helpful. Did you?
    6. Re:A great service to OSS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Most people don't need anything beyond simple text entry, spell checking, bold, italic and underline.

      So newer versions of OO have spell checking? I'll have to check that out.

      When you write a paper for school or work, it's not supposed to be interesting looking, it's supposed to have CONTENT.

      If it's a paper for school maybe it's supposed to have references, as footnotes? If it's for work maybe form is as much a concern as content. For instance I draft a few affidavits, and they have to have a facing page in two column format, and formatting, such as the size of the left-margin and even the line leading is actually prescribed by statute.

      Depends on where (or if) you work I guess.

    7. Re:A great service to OSS by madfgurtbn · · Score: 1

      Wordpad is utterly crippled. While you are absolutely correct that 80% of users use 20% of the featues of a good wordprocessor, I can't imagine anyone being happy with WordPad. It doesnt' even do double spacing.

      Can you imagine the evil laugh in Redmond the day they thought of crippling the double space feature? I've had a couple users who created long documents in wordpad by hitting the return key at the end of every line. Try making major edits or format changes to that document later... bleh... double bleh... bleh bleh bleh.

      I have a small stack of cd's with OOo and Moz for Windows on them which I hand out to those poor bastards who live in a world of crippled word processors and popups.

      Happy Birthday OOo! 1.1 rocks. Microsoft has to be hearing the drums in the distance now.

      On Slashdot you hear about it every time some company installs a couple Linux servers (although recently it's been more like countries, which is nice). I'm waiting to hear about major corporations making the switch to OOo.

      --
      Send lawyers, guns, and money. Dad, get me out of this.
    8. Re:A great service to OSS by Trolling4Dollars · · Score: 1
      If what you're saying was really true, then why would big word processors be so popular?

      One word: marketing

      People have been convinced that they NEED word processing. Personally, I only know one person who actually makes a lot of use of a word processor at home. And that's only because he's a paper freak. My wife doesn't do any word processing at home. Neither do my parents or her parents. One of my friends who is back in school at 32 got Office XP just this year. But he's made it through the first year and a half with just Wordpad. In fact, if you ask most people what word processor their bundled computer from Dell or HP came with, they will tell you "Ummm... Microsoft Word" even if they have Wordperfect. Most people can't even tell the difference. To them "MS Word" = any wordprocessor. I've even seen people call Wordpad "MS Word".

      If there are so many people out there who actually use these features, then they must just like to play dumb considering how many people don't seem to even be familiar enough to tell the difference. It's all marketing. Microsoft Word is such a prevalent brand in the minds of most users, that they assume any word processor is Microsoft Word. These are the same people who, upon finding out that you don't use MS Windows on your PC, exclaim, "But, but, but... What DO YOU run if you don't use Windows??!" Just a lot of really strong PR and advertising. And all that takes is a lot of money. No talent or quality required.

    9. Re:A great service to OSS by Trolling4Dollars · · Score: 1
      If it's a paper for school maybe it's supposed to have references, as footnotes? If it's for work maybe form is as much a concern as content. For instance I draft a few affidavits, and they have to have a facing page in two column format, and formatting, such as the size of the left-margin and even the line leading is actually prescribed by statute.

      I made it through school with an Atari ST 1024 running 1ST Word and a Canon Injet Printer. There were no font selections, or color or options for multicolumn layout. And this worked for me from 1988 when I started to 1994 when I was done (yeah yeah... six year plan and I dropped out for a year because school was intensely boring). Just because other folks were using laser printers and typsetting on Macs for their papers didn't mean that I had to. I got plenty of decent grades and they weren't affected by the layout. That's the way it SHOULD be. If you want to be judged on layout, take a graphic design course (that's what I did). If you want to be judged on intellect, then do your homework and focus on the content (I also did that).

      No job should require layout to be a part of writing documents until the very end. That's what a graphic artist or possibly a secretary are for. Why should someone doing work that isn't related to the creative (DTP) or the mundane (columns for legal papers, etc..) have to bother? The biggest problem I have with word processors is that they get in the way of thinking. There are so many distractions that keep people from actually thinking about the flow of what they are trying to say. Take those away, and intellectual content quality will increase. Leave the formating to the very end.

    10. Re:A great service to OSS by pmz · · Score: 1

      When you write a paper for school or work, it's not supposed to be interesting looking, it's supposed to have CONTENT.

      That still won't stop a grade school teach who doesn't know how easy fancy text these days from giving an "A for effort" to a kid whose project consists of only eye-candy. We have to be careful what rewards we give our kids these days, because, often, it doesn't take much effort to look good.

    11. Re:A great service to OSS by Trolling4Dollars · · Score: 1

      Precisely my point. Eye-candy shouldn't factor into grading in an English class, a history class or for that matter any class that isn't art or graphic design.

  6. But, I don't have a boss by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You insensitive clod! I was laid off months ago.

    1. Re:But, I don't have a boss by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You insensitive Soviet, I am a Clod!

    2. Re:But, I don't have a boss by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You insensitive Clod, I am a... um... nevermind..

  7. Only 3! by LinuxLuvr · · Score: 1

    3 years old. Wow, how did they do all that in three years?

    --

    Microsoft Works: Oxymoron of the year. ~ ^.^

    1. Re:Only 3! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because Sun gave them the code to StarOffice 5.x, which is what open office is based off.

    2. Re:Only 3! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because they started with the source to an existing proprietary office suite, StarOffice. Sun bought it, and opened (most of) the source. This was not built from scratch.

  8. 3rd birthday? Interesting. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No wait, the other thing:

    Tedious.

  9. Re:When ... by The+Analog+Kid · · Score: 1

    My mom can use the Ximian OpenOffice Version, it's open office, just nicely polished, there is even a 1.1 version, now.

  10. Slightly off topic... just slightly by ctwxman · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    When poster Milo Fungus wrote, "As a happy and satisfied user, I say 'Happy Birthday' with vigor and gusto," he probably wasn't aware that Happy Birthday (the song) is NOT in the public domain. Yes, Milo, if you sang it in pulic, you owe the public performance rights!
    This seems like the perfect urban legend, but it's not. Check out the Snopes explanation for the rest of the st.... Oops, don't want Paul Harvey suing me.

    1. Re:Slightly off topic... just slightly by swordgeek · · Score: 1

      OK, that was a bad troll. You're right on the copyright on the song, but where is there any indication--even a HINT--that he sang the song in public? There isn't.

      --

      "People who do stupid things with hazardous materials often die." -- Jim Davidson on alt.folklore.urban
  11. Happy Users! by Chordonblue · · Score: 1

    It was quite a change for our school to completely move to Open/StarOffice two years ago, but I'm glad we did it now.

    Happy Birthday and best wishes!

    --
    "...Well, there's egg and bacon; egg sausage and bacon; egg and spam; egg bacon and spam; egg bacon sausage and spam..."
    1. Re:Happy Users! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Cheers to you OpenOffice, I use you every day!

      1.1 works much better, along with the PDF exporting!

      OO saved me a ton of money for my business.

      -Best Wishes

      Happy User

    2. Re:Happy Users! by Chordonblue · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      This is Slashdot, right? I'm sorry, I have to ask because you mentioned the need for CONTENT. This is a 'Happy Birthday' article for Chrissakes you fucking anonymous troll.

      Tell me oh great one, just what kind of post were you expecting - I mean other than the shit you spew you fucking waste. Go ahead and reply with a REAL account next time and we'll 'talk'; otherwise have nice big cup of STFU.

      --
      "...Well, there's egg and bacon; egg sausage and bacon; egg and spam; egg bacon and spam; egg bacon sausage and spam..."
  12. WOW! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    And I thought the C-64 article was a snoozer.

    1. Re:WOW! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hey, at least you don't have moderator points to get rid of...

  13. Gift Idea? Right! by ezh · · Score: 1

    Gift idea: give a copy of OpenOffice.org to your boss tomorrow.

    - Mr. Burns, I've got a a present for you, sir! It's just like Microsoft Office, but free and almost works.

    - Smithers, help me to slap this guy! SSHLAP! Once more! SSHLAP! Now both of you! SSHLAP-SSHLAP!! Now give me a taste! SSHLAP! Now both of you again! SSHLAP! SSHLAP!

  14. *raises a paw* by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Happy Birthday OpenOffice! I just switched a few weeks ago, after becoming fed up with people telling me piracy was bad, and a 300 dollar price tag on an Office suite. OpenOffice ROCKS. Props to anyone and everyone to try it, buy it, love it. -- Satisfied Undergrad at the University of Alaska Fairbanks

    1. Re:*raises a paw* by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I hear Alaska is a nice country.

    2. Re:*raises a paw* by JCMay · · Score: 1

      Martin Luther was a monk. Later in life he did marry. Shoot, there even was a Martin, Jr. I didn't think there would be!

      Here I was going to go off on a rant and make fun of you're historical inaccuracy and how dumb you were, and you had the audacity to be right! Darn.

    3. Re:*raises a paw* by bigredmed · · Score: 0

      Ditto from the Cornhusker state. A new Linux user, myself, I love the user interface and the ease of saving files in various formats. Even on my old beater machine at home, OO keeps up with MSO-XP that needs a faster machine to run. Complete props to all at OO.org! Happy 3rd and many more.

  15. oo by culov · · Score: 1

    oo owns.

  16. If you really want it.. by QuantumG · · Score: 1

    Get a bunch of your hippy MacOS mates together and pay someone to develop it. Oh, you wanted it for free.. silly me.

    --
    How we know is more important than what we know.
    1. Re:If you really want it.. by Kenja · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Wanting stuff for free is a licensed trademark of the Linux Liberation Army.

      --

      "Have you ever thought about just turning off the TV, sitting down with your kids, and hitting them?"
    2. Re:If you really want it.. by Trolling4Dollars · · Score: 1
      Get a bunch of your hippy MacOS

      Sir! I take offense to that! As a GNU/Linux hippy, I must say that "hippy" is a word squarely aimed at our platform. Please get your countercultures straight! ;P

  17. Vigor and gusto? by SunPin · · Score: 1

    Ok... if *anyone* used the phrase "vigor and gusto", how long would it take to get marked as a troll?

    To stay on topic, to get 90% of Microsoft Office features and usability in just three years *is* pretty amazing. Or maybe M$ just sucks and OO serves as proof positive that Microsoft Office has always been a scam first and a productivity package second.

    --
    Laws are for people with no friends.
    1. Re:Vigor and gusto? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ya, but openoffice is too S L O W. OfficeXP is light-years ahead in the speed department. Although bravo for the features in such a short time.

    2. Re:Vigor and gusto? by JohnFluxx · · Score: 1

      By Vigor, I first thought he was talking about clippy - then I remember that was for vi.

      http://vigor.sourceforge.net/screenshots/

    3. Re:Vigor and gusto? by afidel · · Score: 1

      Obviously you weren't using computers routinely before Office came out. The entire idea of using COM to link the distinct parts of the Office "suite" together was quite inventive and REALLY improves some peoples productivity (being able to retrieve data from the DB into the spreadsheet, manipulate the data and output the results into a wordprocessing doc was the only thing that made my job triaging helpdesk tickets possible). Beyond that it was a huge profit win for MS because they could convince companies to buy the whole suite at a reduced price, not realizing that overall they were probably paying 60-70% more than if they just bought people the apps they needed (the power users who use Office's cross-app features are probably only 30-40%, my previous comments notwithstanding).

      --
      There are 4 boxes to use in the defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, ammo. Use in that order. Starting now.
    4. Re:Vigor and gusto? by SunPin · · Score: 1

      I understand your point but I don't see how it is "obvious" that I allegedly wasn't using computers before office came out. I'm not sure how you interpreted that.

      Anyway... Microsoft Office hasn't been knocked off my system the way IE has. There's too many annoying things about OO that keep me from completely converting. For example:

      When you copy text out of OO and paste it into an editor like EditPad or Notepad, it converts ordinary double quotes into single quotes. That REALLY sucks if you had any kind of code in your document. How OO could be unfriendly to coders that need to write documents is beyond me. Maybe I'm missing what option shuts that off but, as it stands, I think it's a bug.

      Printing envelopes is an f'n chore with OO. It's nowhere near as intuitive as M$ here.

      Bottom line: I write a lot of letters to military friends, I'd rather have the envelope stuff take care of itself instead of opening a new window. Also, code sometimes ends up in my documents and I have a reasonable expectation that the code will not get fucked on a simple cut n paste.

      OO is getting close though. Couple more years. Maybe less. For me, anyway. For most people, it's ready to go now.

      --
      Laws are for people with no friends.
    5. Re:Vigor and gusto? by pavon · · Score: 1

      They didn't implement it in three years. A german company called Star Division started it in the mid 80's. It was purchased by Sun in 1999 and released open source three years ago.

      So while the open source comunity has done a ton to improve it since then, it - like mozilla - is in large part a gift to the community, which we gladly embraced.

    6. Re:Vigor and gusto? by rmohr02 · · Score: 1

      Well, Netscape released the source to their product, but then nearly all of it was scrapped and reimplemented with XUL in mind.

    7. Re:Vigor and gusto? by shaitand · · Score: 1

      "the power users who use Office's cross-app features are probably only 30-40%"

      *cough* 5% *cough*

      You seriously overrate the average office user. Most of them are still struggling with the mouse. And very rare indeed is the user who knows keystroke commands, that alone I'd say is far less than your 30-40% mark. Actually moving data between the office apps (beyond cut and paste) is WAAAY beyond 95% of office users easily.

      P.S. You can import/export to/from most types of databases from OO. Just not MS Access.

    8. Re:Vigor and gusto? by afidel · · Score: 1

      Actually the fact that copy and paste works seemlessly through COM IS the big advantage that office made possible. Before that you would have had to save to some intermediary format and then imported and reformatted the data. The fact that those Office users can just copy and paste the data is what made Office so special when it was first introduced. Btw I would never overestimate the average office users, I have to support them all the time.

      --
      There are 4 boxes to use in the defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, ammo. Use in that order. Starting now.
  18. Vigor? by cperciva · · Score: 1

    As a happy and satisfied user, I say 'Happy Birthday' with vigor and gusto.

    Has someone ported Vigor to OpenOffice now? I thought it was only available on vi ports.

  19. Yeah by Aphex+Junkie · · Score: 0

    I doubt my boss knows what an MBR is, much less how to set up linux and run openoffice on it.

  20. TALK ABOUT SHAMELESSLY FELLATING OPEN SOURCE!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Personally, I secretly hump open source.

  21. StarOffice 7 by rmohr02 · · Score: 1

    On a related note, StarOffice 7 comes out tomorrow. It's a free download for educational use.

  22. Spread the word at your school or university by bigberk · · Score: 3, Informative

    Since students and academic folk are poor anyway, and nobody wants to steal from Microsoft, tell others at your school or university about OpenOffice.org.

    I've convinced a couple professors to link to the projects from their web page. Hell, I learned about OpenOffice from school myself. It's a great place to spread awareness of this Office alternative.

    1. Re:Spread the word at your school or university by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >and nobody wants to steal from Microsoft

      Ha. Ha. Ha.

      Keep dreaming.

    2. Re:Spread the word at your school or university by flacco · · Score: 1
      nobody wants to steal from Microsoft

      Well, not their shitty software, but i wouldn't mind absconding with a chunk of that $41B they've got lying around in the bank from extorting customers.

      --
      pr0n - keeping monitor glass spotless since 1981.
    3. Re:Spread the word at your school or university by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      You have to remember that, for some reason which I still do not fully understand, Nick at OpenOffice.org has a "thing" about SMT.

      He seems to think that its supporters think it is the greatest thing since sliced bread (or whatever the British equivalent of that expression is - I love Nick's expressions like that!) and he seems to be over-reacting to say that it is useless.

      I think most of its proponents at OpenOffice.org think it is a useful thing to have in ones tool kit, and helps some in many frequently occurring cases, but is not the answer to all problems. Nick does make some good points, however, IMO, he is missing some as well. In the meantime, SMT for OpenOffice is a non-starter.

    4. Re:Spread the word at your school or university by typhoonius · · Score: 1

      nobody wants to steal from Microsoft

      I know you're being at least a little sarcastic there, but I think a lot of people like the idea of getting a $500 office suite for free. I mean, how many people do you know who have a pirated installation of Photoshop, AutoCAD, 3D Studio Max, Flash, etc.? How many of those actually know how to use either program on a advanced level?

      On some bizarre level, OO.o is almost too inexpensive. It's hard telling people to use some office suite they've never heard of, and the fact that it's free gives people the idea that it's cheap.

      I love the thing though. Burning OO.o CD-Rs for folks is definitely the best way to spread the word around, since once people actually know that it exists as a viable alternative, it sort of legitimizes it for them.

    5. Re:Spread the word at your school or university by fermion · · Score: 1
      Most schools are a lost cause. The BSA scares the shit out of them. Most the staff they can afford can install MS software and nothing else. The inability for schools to make effective decisions is shown by the fact that they exclusively use and design for IE, even though IE is more likely to present offensive material to the child. The school response is not installing a browser that can protect the child from popups, cookies(which no child at any primary or secondary school has any legitimate need for) and malicious controls, but to install filters and punish the child if offensive material inadvertently appears.

      In most educational institutions MS is practically giving away their software. I predict a time when the only cost will be support contracts. MS knows on which side their bread is buttered. MS knows that schools do not have the resources to mess with anything that even appears complicated. MS knows that teachers don't care what computer is in a classroom, as long as it works. MS knows that software is worthless to most end users, and therefore is providing licensing avenues through education and corporations so people can pay the desired price.

      The only time that MS has been displaced is when the BSA comes in a threatens an audit or MS screws the customer through licenses. The reality is for most schools OO.o would probably be more expensive than MS Office.

      I use OO.o because I can no longer get office for free. Even the $150 educational price is more than it is worth.

      --
      "She's a scientist and a lesbian. She's not going to let it slide." Orphan Black
    6. Re:Spread the word at your school or university by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      It's a great place to spread


      I know many a coed who agrees...and yes I'm do get women...I don't really like Slashdot. I'm on your side.

    7. Re:Spread the word at your school or university by pavon · · Score: 1

      This is a wonderful idea. Our ACM chapter used to have a linux day every year, where we would set up demonstrations of the cool stuff you could do with linux, give out linux CD's and even install linux on the first X people to bring their computer down.

      But this would be applicable to all the students on campus, not just the adventurous. Handing out CD's with Mozilla and OpenOffice to incomming freshman would be a great way to get word out about freedomware. In addition, helping people with their computers is a great way to meet cute freshman girls :)

    8. Re:Spread the word at your school or university by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No need to be foulmouthed about it.

    9. Re:Spread the word at your school or university by lnoble · · Score: 1

      I've been burning copies of the 1.1 iso and am about to start giving them out randomly whenever I'm in our general computing center. People love anything thats free. I ask for a voluntary 50 cent donation though, to recoup the cost of the cd and burning time. I suggest every student here start doing this. OpenOffice.org has some good marketing downloads too, and if you have a cd printer you can make it look very professional when it comes to the package.

    10. Re:Spread the word at your school or university by morie · · Score: 1

      I did. I work at universities as a project manager. Last project was a quicky, 1 month. The university is all MS, but I decided tot use OOo instead, since waiting for the IT dept. to get me MS Office (as I should have according to them) would have taken the whole month. After a month, I handed in a cd containing teh pdf's of all my finished work, .doc/.xls files to satisfy my boss, and .sxw and .sxc files as the original files. I included the OOo 1.1 install + spelllcheck so people could edit those. My boss and some others were very interested!

      --
      Sig (appended to the end of comments I post, 54 chars)
    11. Re:Spread the word at your school or university by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I do use OO.org at university. However, I still occasionally need to revert to excel:
      1) I cannot make charts were I can select standard errors manually, you can only set it to the same (absolute or relative) value for all datapoints. This is soooo stupid, and useless for science.
      2)There is no solver function in the spreadsheet.

      For 1, I can use scigraphica on linux, which is not as nice as origin yet, but it is getting there (and it is more stable)
      For 2 I do not have an alternative yet. Even gnumerics solver cannot handle non-linear models.

    12. Re:Spread the word at your school or university by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > freshman girls

      A wonderful phrase. It sums up everything that is wrong with American English.

  23. But tomorrow may rain by Eberlin · · Score: 1

    so I'll follow the SUN?

    Do I like SUN for sponsoring and helping develop OOo or do I hate them for supposedly backing SCO, keeping Java "proprietary," creating the Mad Hatter "Java Desktop" and having an overall lukewarm attitude towards Linux?

    Either way, many thanks to the folks of OOo -- they're a heuuuuge factor in making my laptop functional and productuve...and MS-Free.

    1. Re:But tomorrow may rain by geekoid · · Score: 1

      "...supposedly backing SCO..."

      Maybe you should reserve your 'hate' for SUN until you know what the circumstances are?

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
  24. Three cheers for by ciaran_o_riordan · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Three cheers to SUN for being one of the few companies to "get" Free Software licensing. I think it was the then CEO, at a gnome confernce:
    "I have three letters to describe our licensing scheme: G - P - L!" [to much applause]

    Here's the original announcment.

    Ciaran O'Riordan

    1. Re:Three cheers for by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, the exact words of the CEO were:

      I have five words for you: "I love this office suite, YEEEEEEAH!"

      He then retreated to gasp for air, drenched in his own sweat.

    2. Re:Three cheers for by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Good post.

  25. Gift idea? by PissingInTheWind · · Score: 2, Funny

    Gift idea: give a copy of OpenOffice.org to your boss tomorrow.

    Yeah, I'll just burn the web site on a cdrom.

    --

    A message from the system administrator: 'I've upped my priority. Now up yours.'
    1. Re:Gift idea? by general_boy · · Score: 1

      Well, OpenOffice.org is in fact the product name too.

      It's one way to get the web site name out there...

    2. Re:Gift idea? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      OpenOffice.org is the name of the software too - it was a (legal) deal to avoid confusion with a previous product named OpenOffice.

    3. Re:Gift idea? by VikingBrad · · Score: 1
      OpenOffice.org is the name of the software and the website.

      Somebody in Germany owned the trademark OpenOffice and that is why they don't officially refer to the software as OpenOffice.


      Cheers
      VikingBrad

  26. Maybe... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Is giving OpenOffice to your boss anything like giving Herpes to your boss?

  27. If Sun becomes disinterested in OO by ezh · · Score: 1

    Just wondering if Sun ever becomes disinterested in continuing its OpenOffice efforts, for instance, by striking a deal with M$ to use its Unix version of MS Office (assuming there is gonna be one).

    Would they just kiss all their open source efforts good-buy, like AOL did to Mozilla?

    1. Re:If Sun becomes disinterested in OO by swordgeek · · Score: 1

      Sun has little on their agenda that's higher in importance than hurting Microsoft. I don't think you'll see this happen.

      --

      "People who do stupid things with hazardous materials often die." -- Jim Davidson on alt.folklore.urban
    2. Re:If Sun becomes disinterested in OO by Doomdark · · Score: 1

      Well, even if that happened (not very likely due to a deal with MS, but could happen due to cost savings that analysts have touted or something), it wouldn't be an end to the world... just like Mozilla seems to be doing quite ok without AOL, perhaps OO could survive ok without its sugar daddy. :-)

      --
      I like paying taxes. With them I buy civilization -- Oliver Wendell Holmes
    3. Re:If Sun becomes disinterested in OO by ezh · · Score: 1

      Would Mozilla be 'quite ok' as you are saying? It still burns that $2M fat given to it by AOL, but what happens when the money run out? Support for 40 highly skilled full-time developers could cost you dearly. Plus the equipment, bills, etc. I suspect that by giving away $2M to Mozilla Foundation, AOL just gave its yearly spending on Mozilla in advance not to be bothered with it ever again.

    4. Re:If Sun becomes disinterested in OO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Very unlikely, StarOffice is one of the things which actually bring money into Suns cash register.
      You won't believe it but they sold Star Office around 40 mio times worldwide.

      It might rather happen that Sun becomes a Software company only :-)

    5. Re:If Sun becomes disinterested in OO by Doomdark · · Score: 1
      I admit I have no inside info on Mozilla's situation, but it seems to be there are a few Open Source projects that are doing quite ok; I'm mostly thinking of various Apache (and Apache Jakarta) projects.

      It's different for projects that start being funded by a company though, I guess. Nonetheless, although scope and scale of project may shrink, anything that's truly useful (which I consider both Mozilla and OpenOffice to be), I doubt they'll just completely disappear for god.

      --
      I like paying taxes. With them I buy civilization -- Oliver Wendell Holmes
  28. Re:The most trolls ever... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yeah, and there is no need to bash OpenOffice. 1.0.x sucked ass, probably the worst office suite out there. 1.1 is however, one of the best. Everything from weird font rendering issues that were fixed, the cursor being change, to the pdf export ... It's great.

  29. Wow! Three years to get it right by swordgeek · · Score: 1

    So three years ago OpenOffice.org was founded from the released ashes of StarOffice5.2.

    Now three years later, with OO1.1/SO7.0, we have the first broadly acceptable product fit for the general public. It feels like three years of hell, but really that's pretty impressive.

    Congrats OO, and keep moving forward!

    --

    "People who do stupid things with hazardous materials often die." -- Jim Davidson on alt.folklore.urban
  30. great suite... by Yaa+101 · · Score: 1

    Everybody that got a system redo by me got a copy of open office, doesn't matter if the OS was Windows or Linux...
    No complaints after explaning that 99% of their friends doc's can be opened, which is better than MS office self...
    At first all were amazed how this was posible, after convincing that they would have a office suite for no money that didn't fell of a truck and would not give any guilt feelings or hungry licencencing dogs... they fell for it and still use it up to date, all of them...

    I run a small consultancy and design firm and noticed that GPL is great for end users, just as envisioned...
    One way or the other we are all end user, like our great encesters with stone akses we need those tools to survive in the future...

  31. 3rd Party To Buy OOo? by subk · · Score: 1

    Am I the only dyslexic fool who saw this and read "Happy Third Party to Buy OpenOffice.Org" ??

    --
    Now, if you'll excuse me, I have backups to corrupt.
    1. Re:3rd Party To Buy OOo? by krumms · · Score: 1

      Am I the only dyslexic fool who saw this and read "Happy Third Party to Buy OpenOffice.Org" ??

      Good God ... I hope so.

  32. Enjoy it while it lasts by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


    looking at Suns stock price they need all the help they can get, Scott even offered it up to Ellison (oracle) and he didnt want it.

    oh how the mighty have fallen, who would of thought egh

  33. Sun gave them a huge head start by gotr00t · · Score: 1

    Because of the fact that they were literally handed the source to StarOffice 5.0, they immediately had on office suite to distribute. Though they did do a great job with improvements and smoothing out the quirks of staroffice (the "integrated' scheme of 5.x annoyed me terribly), they did not create all of openoffice in just 3 years. (note that the binary is still called soffice)

    1. Re:Sun gave them a huge head start by AKnightCowboy · · Score: 1
      Because of the fact that they were literally handed the source to StarOffice 5.0, they immediately had on office suite to distribute. Though they did do a great job with improvements and smoothing out the quirks of staroffice (the "integrated' scheme of 5.x annoyed me terribly), they did not create all of openoffice in just 3 years. (note that the binary is still called soffice)

      Is it? Under Debian it's just openoffice (or ooffice). Anyway, I wonder how much of the original code they're still working with or if they decided to do a Mozilla-esque rewrite. Was StarOffice as horribly coded as Netscape was thus requiring many parts of it to be completely redone to ever hope of producing a maintainable version?

    2. Re:Sun gave them a huge head start by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No as far as I know given the history of this thing, there never was a complete rewrite, the reason is, that the codebase, although huge is quite excellent.

      You have to imagine a compontent oriented system which basically tries to map an entire OS infrastructure. In the core the system still uses the StarView library which somehow went under, although being the best multiplatform lib for C++ around 93 or so.

      Above that the application suite is located with a full component model which can be mapped onto others (ActiveX in Windows for instance, OpenDoc on Mac....)

      And above that the apps are located, the concepts are very similar to KDE, and now wonder many of the KDE developers were former StarOffice developers who basically redid the concepts but avoided some of the mistakes StarOffice made around 92 or 93. But basically the codebase itself has been grown for almost 13 years now.

  34. Well... by Fnkmaster · · Score: 0, Troll

    I, for one, welcome our new OpenOffice.Org masters. Now if they could just get rid of the "dot org" in their name so it wasn't a mouthful of marbles, maybe we could actually pitch this product to our friends.

  35. Possibly more generally useful in Panther... by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

    I believe Panther ships with the X11 server by default, so it might be possible to put together a nic script for OS X users that would launch the X11 server and then Office. That's at least a little better as you can start with the assumption they have X11 and do not have to get it...

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
  36. Huh? How about 7 years old + ??? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Um, er, I was using StarOffice about seven years ago ... on an OS/2 computer.

    The age of the underlying code is a more interesting statistic, from my perspective.

  37. Imagine a world.. by QuantumG · · Score: 1
    where you can go into WalMart and buy a copy of OpenOffice off the shelf. Inside you find a card with a 1900 number on it that you can call for technical support. Also included is a few flyers for local open source development shops where you can get bugs fixed or features added.

    People are so used to buying software and saying "yep, it sux, but there's nothing I can do about it" that they don't even seek out maintenance. Can you imagine buying a car and saying "yeah, the brakes squeek a bit, but I'll just wait until the next upgrade and hope that someone fixes it". It doesn't even make sense! Yet that's what people do with software -- whine to everyone who'll listen (except the proper channels of course) and hope that someone will fix the bug they need fixed or add the feature they want written.

    --
    How we know is more important than what we know.
    1. Re:Imagine a world.. by Second+Vampyre · · Score: 0

      Are you aware the OOo Writer, under development for THREE YEARS, is unable to remember what view it used last? I mean, every damn Windows program, from shareware archivers to Microsoft's Office Suite can do this. It's as basic as remember what coordinates the window was at last. Truly, OOo is a worthless piece of shit.

  38. It's been three years... by Nephroth · · Score: 0, Insightful
    ...and on some systems it's finally finished loading!

    Go ahead fanboys, rate me down, but GNU is bloated, OpenOffice is bloated, and Windows is bloated. Don't try to deny it.

    --
    Our greatest enemy is neither a single man, nor is it a nation, it is, as it has always been, our own greed.
    1. Re:It's been three years... by t_allardyce · · Score: 2, Interesting

      True but the latest release loads allot quicker, still makes me want to hit something though :( Apart from that its excellent, I dont even bother using pirate MS Office anymore!

      --
      This comment does not represent the views or opinions of the user.
    2. Re:It's been three years... by MGS+Hartman · · Score: 1
      Open Orrifice? WHAT? Do me a favour ...

      And it's roUnin, not 'ronin'.

    3. Re:It's been three years... by MGS+Hartman · · Score: 1
      Who said that? Who the fuck said that? Who's the slimy little communist shit twinkle-toed cocksucker down here, who just signed his own death warrant? Nobody, huh?! The fairy fucking godmother said it!

      roUnin.

    4. Re:It's been three years... by sh10051 · · Score: 1

      openoffice bloated? not quite, there's no animated paperclip to start with if they fix the load time, the suite rocks. as it is now, its great.

    5. Re:It's been three years... by Nephroth · · Score: 1

      Really? well it says right here on page 185 of the Random House Japanese-English English-Japanese dictionary:

      Ronin, n. (Kanji spelling) 1.Masterless samurai. 2.unemployed person. 3.High school person who has not yet passed a college entrance examination.

      (Random House Japanese-English, English-Japanese dictionary / Compiled by Nakao Seigo. 1997 Random House, Inc. New York NY. ISBN# 0-679-78001-7)

      Actually there is an accented 'o' in there, but I'm unable to render that character as well, so I guess that you're technically correct that I misspelled it.

      --
      Our greatest enemy is neither a single man, nor is it a nation, it is, as it has always been, our own greed.
    6. Re:It's been three years... by geekoid · · Score: 0

      "GNU is bloated"

      How is that possible?

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    7. Re:It's been three years... by Nephroth · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Simple, while open source code, garners stability from being examined and evolved by many programmers. GNU code has a nasty habit of picking up large numbers of undocumented and otherwise unecessary "features" that are conducive to its relative slowness. Also GNU is a broken Unix standard, things designed to the GNU specification are not necessarily compliant in Unix (which Linux does seek to replicate) Take a look at popular GNU applications such as EMacs, EMacs is quite possibly the largest simple text editor ever concieved, it is practically its own operating system and that's hardly necessary. EMacs is like using an atomic bomb to get rid of a tree stump. Like it or not, though Linux has a good deal of stability, it's quite sluggish in many aspects and will continue to be until some standardized Linux is created (IE Linus stepping forward and saying "this is Linux, all Linux has these" and sets forth a set of applications and features, the option to add more in various distros would still be there, but they would all be based off the standard)

      --
      Our greatest enemy is neither a single man, nor is it a nation, it is, as it has always been, our own greed.
    8. Re:It's been three years... by MGS+Hartman · · Score: 1
      I have a KANA dictionary and it is written RO U NI N.

      Q E D.

    9. Re:It's been three years... by Nephroth · · Score: 1

      Of course you realize that this decision is a moot point, as depending on what romanization system you use it is spelled either way. The dictionary you are using uses the older format, the dictionary I am using uses the newer format. Both renderings, however, are indeed acceptable.

      --
      Our greatest enemy is neither a single man, nor is it a nation, it is, as it has always been, our own greed.
  39. Re:The most trolls ever... by westyvw · · Score: 1

    Well, I wouldnt go so far as to say the older version sucked ass, but the new one is nice. I dont have any idea why people think Word is any better. I own my own business, and all I use is Open Office, and I even OWN MS Office, but I see no need to use it. I really think these people who say that MS is so much better actually dont do much more then simple formatting anyways.

  40. Plea for Help by Short+Circuit · · Score: 1

    Unfortunately, Microsoft has this thing called the MSDN Academic Alliance.

    Students and staff of associated educational facilities get Microsoft software for the "price of media and shipping."

    That means all programming students can get Visual Studio Pro for $5, and CIS students (and maybe others) can get WinXP for just as cheap.

    The college where I'm a student worker has signed up for it. We're teaching C#, Visual C++, and VB.net, all through Visual Studio. All computers on campus run WinXP Pro. (Except for some machines in IT, which run Novell on Linux)

    I'm make everyone I know aware of RHCT and RHCE, to try to get more UNIX around, but I'm afraid I'm not in any position to push. Write an email to them and tout further Linux curriculum and usage, will ya?

    1. Re:Plea for Help by linux_student · · Score: 1

      I am a Computer and Informantion Technology(CIT) student at Indiana University/Purdue University at Indianapolis and we have the same deal... Office XP & VS.NET 2003 for $35, and WinXP Pro for $10. Office XP & VS.NET can also be downloaded from the school's software site free of charge(If you have a big enough pipe to handle it). Unfortunately, our CIT dept. has gone to hell with the inundation of M$ software, it seems that almost nothing is taught about IT outside the windows world.(groans...) LS

    2. Re:Plea for Help by rmohr02 · · Score: 1

      Since I'm in the CIS department at my school, I get all that stuff for free. However, I don't take advantage of it (though I might take advantage of Windows Server 2003).

      Also, all the CIS computers are thin clients that connect to one of 10 or so Solaris servers. Needless to say, we don't teach C#, VC++ or VB.

  41. Better Logo needed. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    (o)(o)

  42. Own UI system by Latent+Heat · · Score: 1
    If Open Office uses its own UI system, shouldn't that make porting easier? For example, if something is tied to the Windows API, porting can be a real pain because you have to find equivalent ways to do things in other systems, and the Windows calls can be sprinkled throughout the code. If it uses its own UI and renders its own widgets, it seems that all you need to do is to port versions of the UI modules to the different systems and then it would target its own UI. You describe Open Office as being its own Java, and the way you port Java is to have the Java VM implemented in the different places.

    What else is known about its private UI setup?

    1. Re:Own UI system by EelBait · · Score: 1

      The problem is an app needs to use the host OS in order to be useful. Things like the clipboard or drag-and-drop are best done by the host OS.

      The other problem with providing your own UI system is that it looks totally wrong on a given host. The current Windows-ish fugly look of OO is a real show stopper for me.

      There are also certain widget behaviors that are required by a given host. For instance, closing a window should not shut down an app unless it's a single-window app that has no function without the window. In OO, closing the preview window shuts down the app! That is so wrong.

      Consistency in UI is paramount. You can't have most apps act one way, and one app be totally different. Indeed, the biggest complaint I have of both Windows or Gnome or KDE are the inconsistencies among all the different apps. Dialog boxes, keyboard shortcuts, gestures -- all need to be consistent across all apps or the user gets jolted.

  43. Nobody? by nurb432 · · Score: 1

    Well then why is the project getting millions of downloads?

    Quite a lot of nobodys there..

    --
    ---- Booth was a patriot ----
  44. Happy indeed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I've used StarOffice before (when it was totally free), i didnt like it.. but i also had no use for it. It was too ugly and buggy .. i then got AbiWord which was nice looking but super buggy (random closes, unable to open files even though they arent corrupt)

    A few weeks ago I began writing a screenplay and was looking for a free screenplay writing application.. Thanks to google I found a nice screenplay macro package (forum about it) for OpenOffice.org. I downloaded OOe and its really great. I havent found any bugs and it looks better than staroffice =P

  45. Sorry.. by QuantumG · · Score: 1

    the Apple freaks were there first. They took the hippy by the horns and rode him long before Stallman.

    --
    How we know is more important than what we know.
  46. .ORG to stay! by mabhatter654 · · Score: 1

    It's really a part of the name. Somewhere in the depths of the PTO there's a company with OpenOffice trademark name. So, they keep the .org to stay out of trouble!

  47. 99% by ishmaelflood · · Score: 1

    "99% of their friends doc's can be opened, which is better than MS office self...

    Oh really

    Are you seriously claiming that 1% of MS Office docs cannot be opened by MS Office?

    I open between 1 and 10 Office documents every day sent to me by someone else. In the last year perhaps ONE of those failed to open, ie more like 0.1% failure rate.

    Also, OO cannot handle Excel spreadsheets properly. I am not going to waste my time replotting every graph just because some programmer can't be bothered to write an import filter that works.

    1. Re:99% by jrockway · · Score: 1

      It's your $899 you pay for Office. OO is $0.

      --
      My other car is first.
    2. Re:99% by ishmaelflood · · Score: 1

      and my time is 150 bucks an hour charge out rate. Figure that out over a year, even if we pay that much for a seat of Office, which I strongly doubt.

  48. You can even buy it cheap.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ..by looking here:

    CDROM Vendors.

    I'm on that list, but that's why I'm posting this anonymously.

  49. 20 million+ downloads by verbatim_verbose · · Score: 1

    from http://stats.openoffice.org/spreadsheet/index.html

    There have been over 20 million downloads of OpenOffice... not bad!

    1. Re:20 million+ downloads by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's all from one guy because their website keeps dropping connections.

  50. You don't use spreadsheets much by ishmaelflood · · Score: 1

    Sorry, all these Word users may well be happy (I use Editpad, I'm an engineer not a secretary) but OO's spreadsheet is slow, unreliable and incompatible.

    1. Re:You don't use spreadsheets much by westyvw · · Score: 1

      Yesterday I did use a spreadsheet, and I often do. Incompatiable with what? Itself? Excell? Nope I havent had a problem. Slow? Not at all. Unreliable? hasnt been for me.

    2. Re:You don't use spreadsheets much by ishmaelflood · · Score: 1

      Incompatible with Excel, eg charts don't plot correctly when imported.

      Slow to load (Excel opens in 5 seconds, OO in 30seconds plus), and slows down when spreadsheets get large. I can see it is ok for budgets and so on, but for big projects it just dies on its feet.

      Unreliable - when it gets slow it tends to lock up.

      If you have an ftp address I can send you equivalent Excel and OO spreadsheets. I will be interested to hear if there is something intrinsically wrong in my comments. FWIW this big project was started in OO and I had to switch to Excel to get it to solve in a reasonable amount of time.

  51. Last night my Supervisor... by skank · · Score: 2, Funny

    was asking for a crack for MS Office, because his trial version was about to run out (I didn't even know MS Office had trial versions), so I sent him a link to OpenOffice.org. Today he came in and was extremely happy. He said it installed with no problems, let him open all of his existing .doc files, and the look and feel was easy to get used to. I work for a Cable ISP, and my Supervisor is one of those guys who gets nervous when you say IP address, so he's not very technically inclined... He was very impressed with thee software, and could not believe he got a free program to run on windows that did not turn his computer into a adware box. He said that if there were any complaints, it was that it would take a bit to learn the features provided by openoffice that are missing from that other office suite. All in all, he is a very happy man, and I'm happy, because it always helps to make your boss happy for a while. Thanks OpenOffice!

    1. Re:Last night my Supervisor... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      sounds like you work at comcast

  52. Happy B-Day! by winstarman · · Score: 1

    Here's another happy OpenOffice user! R-

    --
    Hard loop..... huh?

    Dynamic Designs
    1. Re:Happy B-Day! by coder101 · · Score: 1

      I was wondering if any other apps use the OpenOffice.org widgets for their buttons, scrollbars, etc.

  53. Used at a Law Office by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    We switched our law practice to Linux (Suse) almost a year ago. Critical to that was OpenOffice. If you want a testimonial from a group of power users of OpenOffice try lawyers.

    The computers now work all the time; they don't crash and our core business is being done without interruptions from computer problems.

    MS doesn't seem to understand that this is the minimum standard that must be met before looking at extra "features". After 6 months it was not even the remotest thought from anyone in the office to go back to MS.

  54. People like it! by Twintop · · Score: 1

    Both my girlfriend and I are poor, starving college students. I'm C.S. Major who switches between Windows and Red Hat on a pretty constant basis, so I use OpenOffice.org to avoid conflicts in file types (like using Office XP) for projects/papers/assignments. She, on the other hand, doesn't even have Office 97 and is very involved with clubs and groups, as well as taking 18 credits this semester. I gave her a copy of OpenOffice.org v.1.1 (I think it was rc3) about a month ago, and WHAM! She's hooked. She absolutely loves it, and it runs beautifly on her older machine (PII-233, 96MB Ram, Win98). She's given the CD I made for her with the install stuff to her friends with similar needs, and no complaints have made their way back to me (yet). OOo really is awesomeness! ^^

    1. Re:People like it! by kurt.griffiths · · Score: 1

      I hear ya. My wife and I have WordPerfect, which we like better than Word for most things. However, the rest of academia is hooked on MS Office, and WordPerfect 9 (the version we have) does a poor job converting back and forth between WP and MS formats. Luckily we discovered OOo last year and have been happily communicating with classmates and professors ever since!

    2. Re:People like it! by Daengbo · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Yeah, we just started distributing Windows versions of two Thai OO.o derivatives and Mozilla Firebird on the CD we give out free for our Gimp classes. The response was pretty good.

  55. Better yet - try GNOME Office! by Ars-Fartsica · · Score: 1

    Abiword and Gnumeric are faster (MUCH faster) and better looking with native Gnome2 integration.

    1. Re:Better yet - try GNOME Office! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      Bullshit - straight from Abiword - it is not yet ready for the real world of everyday business users.

      http://www.abisource.com/twiki/bin/view/Abiword/ Fa qMicrosoftWordDocuments

      Presently, AbiWord can open basic Microsoft Word documents well.

      However, if the document has complicated tables, embedded spreadsheets, and so forth, then it might not work as expected. Developing good MS Word filters is a very difficult process, so please bear with us as we work on getting Word documents to open correctly. If you have a Word document which fails to load, please open a Bug and include the document so we can improve the importer.

      AbiWord can currently save in the MS Word ".doc" format, but by doing this you only save in .rtf with a .doc extension to exploit a mis-feature of MS-Word. Yes, this is cheating, but it is better than nothing and almost nobody will notice.

    2. Re:Better yet - try GNOME Office! by settantta · · Score: 1

      Yeah, sure. That's assuming you are weird enough to actually *like* the Gnome interface and widget set. Gnome has the most butt-ugly look and feel I've ever seen, and it's a PITA to configure...

      At least OpenOffice.org has a good-looking UI.

  56. cheers to open office by neonprimetime · · Score: 0

    i raise my glass for a toast

  57. SMT? by Doomdark · · Score: 1

    Just curious... what does "SMT" mean in this context?

    --
    I like paying taxes. With them I buy civilization -- Oliver Wendell Holmes
  58. what should be their next top priorities... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    table handling. This along with styles and stylesheet handling *AND* revision marks. They should be able to import and deal *CORRECTLY* with MS Word97 (and MSW2K and...) documents that make heavy use of tables and styles for formatting.

    What is keeping me from switching from WinWord97 to OpenOffice.org is the fact that I still cannot import my CV (Curriculum Vitae -- what yanks call "resume") in it, because I use tables extensively. OpenOffice.org seems to have all the bells and whistles that I might need, but from my personal experience it cannot deal gracefully with tables. Maybe it does when you start your document from scratch inside it, but I do not have the time nor the patience to re-create my CV. I want to simply have OO.org import it and be done with it.

    I do not think that OO.org should go after all the obscure features that 99% of the world will not use, but should concentrate on making what I call "core/essential features" (tables, styles, revision marks, etc.) work flawlessly. Maybe I've been unlucky (or dumb, whatever), but these "core/essential features just didn't work right for me. Let's hope that in the next version the OO.org developers do get them right.

  59. Re:The most trolls ever... by Doomdark · · Score: 1
    I'm curious as to how a page with a few links to OpenOffice propaganda is newsworthy, nobody uses OpenOffice.

    Perhaps you haven't realized this, but of people who read Slashdot, significant percentage does use OpenOffice, or at least some other Open/Free Office suite. And that's why it is fairly newsworthy.

    --
    I like paying taxes. With them I buy civilization -- Oliver Wendell Holmes
  60. Pity it's useless for many academics... by zed2 · · Score: 1

    I really wish they would hurry up and fix the word count so you could count selections and count (or not count) footnotes. Unfortunately its pretty useless for many academics and postgrads until it lets you do this.

    I just find it amazing that such an essential feature has still not been addressed despite many bug reports and feature requests.

    I'm looking forward to 2.0 where apparently this is being addressed.

    1. Re:Pity it's useless for many academics... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Will you stop with the Trolling already?

      How many places on the Net are you going to whine about this "essential feature not being addressed"?

      Btw Office 2003 still can't export to PDF. I really do find it amazing that such an essential feature STILL has not been addressed.

      Unfortunately its pretty useless for many academics and postgrads until it lets you do this.

    2. Re:Pity it's useless for many academics... by zed2 · · Score: 1

      In retrospect "useless" is a bit harsh, lacking in full functionality would be more accurate. I think OO is a really good alternative to MS Office and has some great features which I miss when I use MS Office, and I'm hugely impressed by how much 1.1 improved over 1.0,

      So Happy Birthday to OO.org and many more to come I hope!!

    3. Re:Pity it's useless for many academics... by whereiswaldo · · Score: 1

      I really wish they would hurry up and fix the word count so you could count selections and count (or not count) footnotes. Unfortunately its pretty useless for many academics and postgrads until it lets you do this.

      I find it amazing that you did not read the FAQ:

      http://opensource.mimos.my/fosscon2003cd/extras/ oo o_ufaq.html#Writer0

    4. Re:Pity it's useless for many academics... by zed2 · · Score: 1

      I find it amazing that you link to the faq but have not read it...
      quote:
      5.2. Is there a word count feature for a selection of text?
      Currently, this does not exist.

    5. Re:Pity it's useless for many academics... by whereiswaldo · · Score: 1

      I read the FAQ item, but must admit I missed the "selection" bit of the original post.

      Doesn't matter though - what you want to do can be accomplished easily with a macro.

  61. Re:Eh... by Doomdark · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    Boooo - ring. I enjoy good trolling like the next slashdotter, but yours was just flaccid and stale. Visit FC and learn some trolling basics, and only then come back, kiddo.

    --
    I like paying taxes. With them I buy civilization -- Oliver Wendell Holmes
  62. Abiword experiences from last weekend. by harikiri · · Score: 2, Informative

    As recently as last weekend, I emerged abiword 2.0 (on my gentoo desktop), and tried to open my resume (in .doc format) that I've constantly been updating over the years.

    Go to open it.. crash.

    In addition, I was getting strange refresh issues with Abiword (had to scroll up and down the page to get it to properly display edited text - ie, deleted words werent getting deleted from the screen).

    Yes Abiword is attractive-looking (way less visual clutter than alternative office suites), but because of the issues I described above, I won't be using it anytime soon.

    --
    Man watching 6 MSCE's around a sun box, looks alot like the opening scene's of 2001:space odyssey...
  63. Great compliment by Microsoft by bogie · · Score: 3, Interesting

    http://www.eweek.com/article2/0,4149,1331169,00.as p

    "Addressing several thousand attendees at the Worldwide Partner Conference, he took a swipe at Linux, open source and StarOffice, saying, "they simply accept the view that what they have is good enough. That view does not foster innovation. Being where we were with Office 1997 is not good enough for us," he said."

    Microsoft admitting that OO is already equal to something they spent millions and millions on and also happens to be much more widely used than Office XP is the best thing they could have said.

    I mean that. Office 97 is still very popular. One of the biggest challenges MS has is moving people off that since many businesses find that Office 97 is all they need. The fact they think OO has met the quality level that most of world thinks is "good enough" is excellent news.

    Congrats to the OpenOffice.org team and thanks to Microsoft for the marketing material.

    --
    If you wanna get rich, you know that payback is a bitch
    1. Re:Great compliment by Microsoft by pmz · · Score: 1

      Office 97 is still very popular.

      While this is definitely due to it being good enough for most people (and for me, too), we also have to consider the timing relative to the economy. Office 97 and Office 2000 were probably purchases in massive quantities during the climb up towards the 2001 peak, and Office XP simply came too late. Now, not only does Microsoft have to battle the current sluggish economy, but they are also battling the amazing economy of four years ago. This is the perfect opportunity for OpenOffice.org and StarOffice to gain their market penetration.

  64. Re:And it still feels like its 3 years too late! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Give up ok?

    Go suck a cock, ok?

  65. Shady Office by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What are the goals of creating open office?
    To create a great product to sell on the mass market?
    To teach people how to program office type software?
    To take money away from an unpopular company by mimicking it's products and destributing freely?

    If opensource was done the way id does it I'd be all for it but this program is the devil.

  66. I am downloading it now. by alfredo · · Score: 3, Funny

    You know I love them, I'm on a dial up connection.

    --
    photosMy Photostream
    1. Re:I am downloading it now. by rmohr02 · · Score: 1

      Try a CD. They're not that expensive, and may well be worth it if you're on dialup.

  67. Sorry, but I'm not yet willing to switch by Ivan+the+Terrible · · Score: 1

    I would really like OO to displace MS Office, but my experience is that there are too many glitches when sharing *.doc and *.ppt files for OO to be a realistic alternative to MS Office. Sometimes what I get is wildly off (e.g. a 6 page OO doc becomes a 9 page Word doc; tables disappear; deleted text reappears, etc.)

    My reality is that many people send me MS office files, and the translation back and forth must be perfect for me to abandon MS Office. If I didn't work with MS files, and I could use OO exclusively, I would have switched a long time ago.

    So, in the meantime I use MS Office with CrossOver Office, and I don't have any problems.

    1. Re:Sorry, but I'm not yet willing to switch by whereiswaldo · · Score: 1

      I would really like OO to displace MS Office, but my experience is that there are too many glitches when sharing *.doc and *.ppt files for OO to be a realistic alternative to MS Office.

      Unfortunately, that is the situation I am in as well. My resume is based on the simple Word 97 template and it doesn't display properly in OO Writer. I tried updating my resume 6 months ago in OO but then it didn't look right in Word. :(

      Thankfully this is the only document I have to pass around, so I do use OOo for many of my personal documents.

    2. Re:Sorry, but I'm not yet willing to switch by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But what on earth are you doing, storing such important stuff as your resume in 'Word 97 template' format?

      Use Word for quick letters etc. Use Quark for anything involving proper layout tasks. Use HTML for stuff that _needs_ to be kept for a long time. Really, I'd be more inclined to hire a guy who made a clean and simple HTML resume than some guy messing around with proprietary file formats.

    3. Re:Sorry, but I'm not yet willing to switch by whereiswaldo · · Score: 1

      But what on earth are you doing, storing such important stuff as your resume in 'Word 97 template' format?

      It's *based on* the template, not saved as a template.

      Use HTML for stuff that _needs_ to be kept for a long time.

      I tried that, but I didn't find the results pleasing enough. Plus, some places specifically request a Word document.

      I'd be more inclined to hire a guy who made a clean and simple HTML resume than some guy messing around with proprietary file formats.

      Sounds like you'd be hiring a high school student anyway, which I am not. Besides, I don't need to mess around with the proprietary format - there's an interface for editing it called Word. ;) But seriously, OOo can easily import my Office 97 document anyway in a pinch, so I know I'll never be stranded. And BTW, I don't plan on ever upgrading MSOffice either.

  68. Latex-Openoffice by sewagemaster · · Score: 1

    Once openoffice has latex exporting support or import, as they said they're going to have in future releases, it's game over. i'll completely wipe out my M$office warez on my comp...

    1. Re:Latex-Openoffice by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's a strange reason. MS Office does not have Latex export, but still you are going to keep it until OOo has Latex export?

  69. Calc needs work.... by torok · · Score: 1

    Calc still can't stand up to hammering by engineers and data analysis folk (it's got some major problems), but the word processor is top notch. I look forward to its complete domination by OOo 1.2! Happy birthday OOo!

  70. There is a proper word count for OOo by prunesqualour · · Score: 1

    There is in fact a perfectly good word count macro that does everything people keep asking for. It's here, in a .sxw file that installs it, with a bunch of other stuff. If you don't trust self-installing macros (and you shouldn't), just read all the code and copy and paste over what you want.

    What the project needs just as much as evangelism is people who will do bug triage join the qa project for that and python hackers. Since version 1.1, you can write extensions for OOo in Python.

    --
    OOo word count at http://www.darwinwars.com/lunatic/bugs/oo_macros.h tml
  71. Problems with openoffice by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1
    In my opinion, OpenOffice, like Microsoft said, at the Level of Microsoft Office 97, and in some cases only 95. Here is the COMPREHENSIVE list of features that are MISSING in OpenOffice 1.1 that i concider essential to use Microsoft office. I have looked far and wide for these features, but they don't exist.
    • Format painter, a features SO useful that I can't live without it. The so called "fill format" is a entirely different thing, I need a format painter!
    • Wordart! I need to add headings and stuff! I don't abuse it like certain people do, Its really useful when you use it right!
    • Speed! The new openoffice is no faster, they just change everything around. It appears faster, by jumping from the splash screen to the window faster, but the real slowdown occurs when you open a document!
    • Support for the selection column. The selection column is a thin hidden area that allows you to select text quickly. The mouse cursor faces the other way, and its one click to select a line, double click to select the paragraph, and tripple click to select the document! So useful, yet openoffice dosen't have it
    • Keyboard shortcuts for entering special characters. For example press ctrl+',e to get a acute e as used in cafe (slashcode dosen't like them either, probably becasue of the lack of unicode support in perl).
    • Make Impress remember the slide titles when saving in ppt formats, propeitery or not
    • Don't crash when I drag and drop stuff from the file manager! If I drag and drop a txt, jpg, gcx file I expect it to decide what it is, and if it not designed to handle it, don't crash!
    • Support for the "format zapper" shortcut. This removeds all formatting such as underline, strikethrough, bold etc in just "One" shortcut, ctrl+space!
    • Decen't help system! Microsoft's non paper clip help system is very useful, the OpenOFfice ones are hard!
    • Shrink to fit! This allows you to shrink your document so it takes less space on paper! Good for when you want to print of lot of stuff but don't want to waste ink
    • Put the features people want on the toolbars, and make customising the toolbars A LOT easier! The current implementation sucks!
    • Make it less fugly! How about being able to ajust to the actual theme of qt/gtk instead of just imitating the colours and fonts
    That is just a small selection out of Hundreds that are missing. Just like Graphics profressinals shun the gimp, Office professials shun Openoffice! Its the fact that microsoft has took so much time and listening to feedback, to make a offce suite back in 1996, that still can't be matched in 2003! And Office 2000, XP and 2003 are in a completley different game than Openoffice!
  72. +5 FUNNY by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    my thoughts exactly.

  73. LOL by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is why I read at -1. Priceless gems like this make my day. YHBT. YHL. HAND.

    1. Re:LOL by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Amen brother! -1 is where all the fun is at.

  74. Varying mileage by BrokenHalo · · Score: 1

    I don't know how you you do that on your P3. On this 1 GHz Athlon, OpenOffice 1.1 takes just over 22 seconds (no preloads). Seems a lot of that time the disk drive is working quite hard, though, so that might be part of the problem. On my 2.3 GHz P4 OpenOffice, loads in just under 5 seconds. That is easily comparable to MS Orifice on the Dell P4s under XP at my university.

  75. Compare apples to apples... by BrokenHalo · · Score: 1
    The grandparent poster's gripe about the size of OpenOffice is just being plain damn silly. It is perfectly possible to download a 70 Mb file on a 56K connection. I have done it countless times, though thankfully I don't have to now. All it takes is a little organisation.

    Considering the value he gets from that download (by comparison with MSOffice, for which he has to pay $BIGNUM), I would say that's a pretty good return on the investment of time (during which, of course, he can always go to bed).

  76. Screaming Missing Feature by Mirk · · Score: 1
    I have a lot of respect for what the OpenOffice people (and before them, StarOffice) have done, but I would like OO about a billion times more than I do if only it would let me do:
    $ oowriter --printImmediatelyAndExit foo.doc
    and
    $ oowriter --convertToHtml foo.doc > foo.html

    I'd say these two operations cover maybe 80% of all my OpenOffice use (and I doubt that is an unusual usage pattern). It sucks that I have a crank up a big, ugly, desktop-dominating GUI app just to do that.

    --

    --
    What short sigs we have -
    One hundred and twenty chars!
    Too short for haiku.
  77. Spreadsheet:s by Knights+who+say+'INT · · Score: 2

    As an academic economist that uses MS Excel and Maple on a regular basis for number crunching and data presentation, I'd say that Excel might be the only reason why I haven't either switched to [Free/Net/Open]BSD or to a Mac yet. Excel is an amazingly powerful tool for both business automation and statistical/econometric work. Have any among you switched from heavy Excel use to heavy OpenOffice work? How good is its set of readymade tools for statistic work (specifically, crunching up histograms from lists of data), numeric solving and graphs? Can it come up with candlestick charts, smoothened XY plotted charts, nonlinear regression on the charting GUI? Does it even have a correlation function? Excel goes as far as having a Beta function. I know most of those things can be easily written in a spreadsheet. Uh, I know some of these things can prolly be read on the documentation or just tried out, but I'm sure there are a lot of features I'm forgetting about. Unlike word processing (and I've given wysiwyg editors for LaTeX altogether), this is the kind of software where creeping feature-itis actually increases use value more than computer bloat. So, um, essentially, how have your switching experiences been with Excel and OO?

  78. Still waiting for the OS X version.. by Clith · · Score: 1

    Looks like there's still a ways to go though.

    --
    [ReidNews]
  79. Re:wordpad - and OO? by frostman · · Score: 1

    Funny, I use WordPad a lot too. I bet a lot of 'doze users do.

    Since I can easily change the font, and change it on different bits of text, I find it's perfect for:

    1. Anything I need to quickly write & print but still want pretty.

    2. Printing Web content (since I have yet to find a browser that prints well). Select in news page, copy, paste into WordPad, select all, Ariel/9, print! Saves TONS of paper and eyewear.

    3. Important documents that don't need fancy pagination but DO need to be easily converted to ASCII - such as a press release you want to both e-mail and fax.

    4. Things that need to be highly-compatible .DOCs. I have yet to see Word fail to read WordPad-created content, but the reverse is quite common.

    So here's a question about OpenOffice: does it include a WordPad equivalent?

    --

    This Like That - fun with words!

  80. Old hardware keeps on going.(Layout 8000) by erikkire · · Score: 1

    At work (a newspaper layout and prepress department) we use Layout 8000, a program that is written in MS-Dos and talks to a UNIX server, for arranging the ads on the page. It receives a file of ads called "the manifest" from the data entry department, on a PC-based network, and creates a file that can be read by a Quark Xpress extension on a Mac network by the art department. The PC's that Layout 8000 runs on are kind of old. Nothing wrong with that, since they work. The original version of Layout 8000 was called Layout 80. I forget whether this is because it was written in 1980 or because it ran on the 8080. The screen is a grid of ASCII characters forming boxes to approximate the look of ads on a column grid. (Upright spears, horizontal bars, etc.) It has crudely window-like menus done in the same way. It uses the mouse. You have to be careful because the mouse interface is quirky. In menu mode, where you choose what to lay out, print it out, etc., you navigate with the arrow keys, and you must not use the mouse at all because it reads the mouse movement as a sequence of arrow keys that will take you in out-of-control directions and at best log you out. In layout mode, if you click on a word on the screen it pretends you just typed that word, and this makes it easier to do some things because you don't have to retype serial numbers of ads. Don't push down "num lock" or else it will read the mouse as if it were a sequence of digits and make a mess. Idiosyncratic quirky commands you have to type, et cetera. It took me months to learn it, but I have a secure place at work partly because I've gotten good at it.

  81. WARNING: Install can delete your home directory by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I had the misfortune of losing my home directory due to a bug in the installer. The issue is as follows.

    OpenOffice.org creates a symbolic link to the user's home directory. This link is buried 2 directories deep in its own configuration directory.

    When you run the setup program it offers you the option to delete the old version of OpenOffice. I accepted this.

    When it reaches the symbolic link, IT FOLLOWS IT to your home directory and continues deleting there.

    I lost a hell of alot of unbacked up work, so watch out for this!