RedOffice 4.0 Beta Updates OpenOffice UI
Johannes Eva writes "As IBM Lotus Symphony shows its first public version 1.0, the Chinese OpenOffice.org derivative RedOffice offers the first beta of its new version 4.0.
The open source RedOffice gets a new UI inspired from Microsoft Office 2007, with a vertical 'ribbon.'
Is this the future of OpenOffice.org?"
Oh dear. More evidence for the Microsoft "fact"-sheet that open source is indeed communism.
http://www.johannes-eva.net/images/2008_05_27_redoffice_review/2008%2005%20-%20RedOffice%20-%20Screenshot%208%20Format%20Templates.png That text in French says "One should eat the cat hot. When it's cold it's disgusting..." Whatever happened to the "quick brown fox?"
Do it yourself, because no one else will do it yourself. [beta blockade 10-17 Feb]
User: Arrgghh!!!
My blog
An article written in English showing a Chinese program being installed on a French OS.
I'm sure the new UI is fantastic, based on the eight-by-ten colour glossy photographs
with circles and arrows and a paragraph on the back of each one explaining what each one was.
Makes me want to install RedOffice and blog about it.
And then three people do it, three, can you imagine, three people installing RedOffice and blogging about it.
They may think it's an organization. And can you, can you imagine fifty people a day,
I said fifty people a day installing RedOffice and blogging about it.
And friends they may thinks it's a movement.
(Apologies to Arlo)
"If we knew what it was we were doing, it would not be called research, would it?" - Albert Einstein
Forget thrust, drag, lift and weight. Airplanes fly because of money.
The server is bleeding bad. Less then 20 Posts and its already down. Be Kind and use the cache
Procrastinating life a way at a rapid rate of speed.
So many people have thanked me for installing OpenOffice.org to replace the totally unusable MS Office 2007, that I really hope this remains a Chinese feature.
MS Office 2007 ribbons is the best thing MS could have done to promote OOo adoption. We should all send 'thank you' letters to uncle Steve for that.
Excuse me, but please get off my Pennisetum Clandestinum, eh!
So removing people's monetary incentives to work harder or learn difficult skills is not a problem? You must have a lot of faith in people's unselfishness.
Your naive outlook makes you a perfect target for domination. ;)
Seriously? This China related alarmism on Slashdot is really saddening
"Thanks for all the money you paid to us. We've used it to buy off ISO among other things" -Microsoft
Back when I tried the Alpha version of Lotus Symphony, I really liked the UI and the fact that I could import WordPro documents (as we're standardized on *shudder* Lotus WordPro here at work). What I didn't like was that Symphony would change all OpenOffice.org file associations to itself when it was installed and every time it was run. There was no option to leave the file associations alone. (Much less an opt-in to change them in the first place.)
Since then, I've kept a wary eye on Symphony. Their latest release notes state: "It is now supported to change the file types to be associated with IBM Lotus Symphony during installation." In addition, the notes talk about a "File Type Associations panel." Hopefully, this means that they realized the error in the Alpha version and have made the file associations opt-in both on install and on program launch.
(If anyone knows for sure, I'd be happy to hear what the latest version does with file type associations.)
My sci-fi novel, Ghost Thief, is now available from Amazon.com.
P.S. - I *do* have a lot of faith in people's selfishness. And I like it when I can plainly see that their selfish motives will compel them to do something that benefits me.
When someone says "I want to give you free money for no apparent reason," I see no reason for them to be so selfless and I am suspicious. When someone says "I want to do the dirty work of fixing your car in exchange for big bucks," I understand their motives and think it's safe to trust them.
I know some wonderfully unselfish people, but when dealing with strangers, I do not assume that they're wonderfully unselfish. Do you?
Okay, we're going a bit offroad here. Medics were paid more (in a way or another) even in the communist states. :D.
The fundamental difference between capitalism and communism was that capitalism was an ecosystem with different needs and actors, each pulling for its own side, and this combined "pulling" made the system reach a stability (it's a natural stable system).
Communism, on the other hand, called for totally arbitrary pre-planning of economy (you couldn't really go and tell people "do what the fuck you want"), which were the infamous Quinquennial plans of the Soviets.
The communist approach did had one highlight: the quick electirifcation and modernization of Russia. However, on the other hand, any single mistake from the "big bosses" in the Kremlin had catastrophic consequences.
With a capitalist system, we can afford having completely dumb leaders
nbody2002:If you can read this you may be addicted to the internet
Just to nitpick, capitalism works just in a lack of scarcity. DRM and DMCA is a government and legislation thing - capitalism is an economic system.
Traditional Adam-Smith-Invisible-Hand-esque capitalist economics say MP3s should be free.
DATABASE WOW WOW