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StarOffice 8 in July

McSpew writes "Sun Microsystems plans to release StarOffice 8 in July. Can this mean that OpenOffice.org 2.0 will be ready in the same timeframe?"

3 of 34 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Staroffice and OO.org by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative

    Sort of. You could think of their relationship as being similar to the one between Red Hat and Fedora.

    Star Office = Open Office + some proprietary add-ons and a business-friendly support plan

    This is why the submitter speculated that this new major StarOffice release would beckon a new major OO.o release. This is probably true, as both of these new versions have been sitting in beta for weeks/months and are certainly ready at this point.

  2. Windows binaries by DamienMcKenna · · Score: 4, Informative
    the 2.x betas are not provided as binaries

    You obviously haven't looked very hard, they are all released in binary format on their mirror sites.

    Damien
  3. The significance of StarOffce/OO.org by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative

    For those not in the know, OO.org/StarOffice are instrumental in unseating Microsoft's monopoly regarding Office. Microsoft Office literally costs hundreds of dollars, and for what? A so-so word processor, an often misused presentation program, an awful calendar program, a weak database, and probably the real star of Office is Excel.

    Given the expense of MS Office, OO.org and StarOffice offer a _real_ alternative for an insignificant faction of the cost. StarOffice is now integrated at no cost into Solaris 10. OO.org is the de facto office suite on Novell and Red Hat. Millions of people use OO.org. One by one whole companies are switching over.

    Everyone should at least try the next major versions of OO.org/StarOffice. I've found that they really are an adequate replacement for Office. I even use StarOffice to make simple web pages, resumes, mailing labels, etc. Odds are, if you haven't tried it, that you could start using it as a drop in replacement for Office right away.

    The sore losers in all this, of course, are the people who used Microsoft's proprietary automation system, Visual Basic. You should probably stick with Office, then, because that's what lock-in is all about.