Update to OpenOffice 2 Released
VincenzoRomano writes "The very first update to OpenOffice 2, namely v2.0.1, has been released. Despite its version numbering, along with minor bug fixes there are a number of new features. From the update page: 'For example, it is now possible to disable and hide particular application settings, which comes in handy for central administration in networks. Plus, a new keyboard shortcut permits the user to return to a saved cursor position. The bullets and numbering feature has been expanded, and a new mail merge feature is available.' Downloads are ready in both binary formats and source code for an ever increasing number of localised languages. Go grab your version!"
Doesn't ~75mb seem a bit stupid every time there is an update?
I appreciate the info about the update, but it's not really worthy of a story posting. I am sure a bunch of games and other software had additions today too.
This is useful info though. Perhaps Slashdot could make a software update page for things like this rather than posting them on the main page. It would also avoid the inevitable dumbass comments that spring up when these things happen.
I would rather put 99% of efforts to improve compatibility with MS Office. Isn't it the only reason why 99% of people don't switch to OpenOffice ?
We complain that the marketing people took over the numbering at Microsoft and other companies--like Oracle "10g" when there was no a, b, c, d, e, or f.
Now open source is pulling the same stunts--Firefox went from 1.0 to 1.5, and OpenOffice squeezes new features into a 2.0.1 release.
Whatever happened to the standard that major feature releases increment the first number, minor feature releases increment the second number, and tweaks and bug fixes increment the third number? What is the point of numbering releases "2.0.1" if you're not going to follow the standard?
And who are the marketing people who have taken over these projects who think that version numbers are a marketing tool, and not a way to convey useful information about the extent of the changes?
Many people will call IT support to get information for such minimal changes that have big impacts.
I like to have such improvements, but only within "real" version increments.
I just read this somewhere; thought everyone might find it useful --
Go to Tools->Options->OpenOffice.org->Java and uncheck the "Use a Java Runtime Environment". (AFAIK, it doesn't break anything I use.)
That was the most boring story I've ever heard in all my life. and I'm not usually given to superlatives.
MS's automatic Bulleted lists are a damn annoying feature. #1 reason I prefer notepad as my text editor. Dont bring it to Ooffice. Dont know about you guys but I actually was taught proper formatting growing up. Which wasnt too long ago.
CS: It is all sink or swim...oh and did I mention there are sharks in that water?
I gave him a crack Office 2003 CD and told him power point was there. He said he would never use software he didnt pay for, and gave it back. So I told him to goto openoffice.org, and get the free office suite.
You offered him an illegal copy of Microsoft trash before you pointed him to openoffice.org?
What are you, new?
For security, the MD5 hash of this message and sig is 09f911029d74e35bd84156c5635688c0.
Now, come on. Your story was plausible up to then, but you blew it. 20 minutes isn't even enough to open OpenOffice, never mind download and install it...
Real Daleks don't climb stairs - they level the building.
This is useful info though. Perhaps Slashdot could make a software update page for things like this rather than posting them on the main page.
Or they could make a dedicated site with a fitting name. Freshmeat, for example.
And then they could make a slashbox for it. How cool would that be?
It would also avoid the inevitable dumbass comments that spring up when these things happen.
At your service .
I just opened a small text file with OO.org and it takes up all of 13Meg. The same file with Winword uses 34Meg.
YMMV
I don't read your sig. Why are you reading mine?
Java gets used quite a bit in OpenOffice.org. In OpenOffice.org 1.1.4 Java was used for the following:
1. The Report Autopilot
2. JDBC driver support for Java-based databases
3. XSLT filters
4. BeanShell, the Netbeans scripting language, and the Java UNO bridge
5. Export filters to the Aportis.doc (.pdb) format for the Palm or Pocket Word (.psw) format for the Pocket PC
In OpenOffice.org 2.0 Java is additionally used in
1. Many parts of Base, the new Access-like database application; in particular the file-format which is a HSQLDB database
2. The media player, which adds movie and sound clips to documents
3. Mail merges to e-mail, which also require Java Mail
4. All document wizards in Writer