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Google Docs Replaces OpenOffice In Ubuntu Netbook Edition

uneuser writes "Digitizor reports that the Ubuntu developers have dropped OpenOffice from the default installation of Ubuntu Netbook Edition (UNE) 10.04 and replaced it with Google Docs. Documents in Ubuntu Netbook Edition will now be opened in Google Docs by default."

22 of 298 comments (clear)

  1. Remember folks, it's a NETbook. by BlueKitties · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I think this is good, it leaves more space on your already small disk to do other things. This is a net-oriented device, afterall. If you want a full-fledged computer, then get a full-fledged computer. This sounds exactly like what a NETbook should do.

    --
    "Sorrow is better than laughter, for by sadness of face the heart is made glad." [Ecclesiastes 7:3]
    1. Re:Remember folks, it's a NETbook. by ipX · · Score: 5, Insightful

      This is a net-oriented device, afterall.

      Yes, with terrible wireless reception. :P

      If you want a full-fledged computer, then get a full-fledged computer

      It's more like... if you want full functionality, install the package yourself?

    2. Re:Remember folks, it's a NETbook. by Darkness404 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The thing is, I don't see really any benefit for this. Google docs doesn't exactly offer more features, most netbooks come with at least 20 gigs of storage (even the SSD based ones) and performance is only increasing. It might have made sense for some of the early netbooks, but with faster and faster netbooks, I just don't see the point.

      --
      Taxation is legalized theft, no more, no less.
    3. Re:Remember folks, it's a NETbook. by Daengbo · · Score: 4, Interesting

      It's also strange to switch from Google to Yahoo! (search) and OO.o to Google Docs in the same release.

    4. Re:Remember folks, it's a NETbook. by nmb3000 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      This is a net-oriented device, afterall. If you want a full-fledged computer, then get a full-fledged computer. This sounds exactly like what a NETbook should do.

      Except that netbooks are also designed to be ultra-portable. Unless you're always around an available wireless access point, not having office productivity software installed might be pretty annoying on that flight, bus trip, on the road, visiting family, etc.

      If these NETbooks had some kind of always-available Internet access (say a 3G modem or something else) then I'd probably agree with you, but unfortunately lots of people use these devices while not online. I'm not sure this decision makes a lot of sense given the way the devices are actually used, their misleading name notwithstanding.

      --
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      /)
    5. Re:Remember folks, it's a NETbook. by ozmanjusri · · Score: 4, Insightful
      Google docs doesn't exactly offer more features

      For many people in the netbook market, that IS a feature.

      --
      "I've got more toys than Teruhisa Kitahara."
    6. Re:Remember folks, it's a NETbook. by Darkness404 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The netbook market is comprised of about three types of people

      A) People who go "Oooohhhhh look a cheap device that runs a real OS for hundreds less than a "real" computer" (this is most people.
      B) People who go "Ooooh this is tiny I can take this on vacations/business trips/etc" (this is some people)
      C) People who go "Oooh this cheap thing is going to be online 24/7, never going to be offline and I want to run no local apps on its 160 gig HDD!" (just about no one)

      --
      Taxation is legalized theft, no more, no less.
    7. Re:Remember folks, it's a NETbook. by Darkness404 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Because it is a good money maker for Google. Release an OS for free with good support, mine user data, boost user stats of Google's programs. Profit.

      Plus, it doesn't require much work (basically they can take Linux and Android experience and rework it) and Google has the name that everyone knows (compare how many people know Google's name compared to Ubuntu, Red Hat, Debian, etc.) so they can market it to device makers.

      --
      Taxation is legalized theft, no more, no less.
    8. Re:Remember folks, it's a NETbook. by rtb61 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      5 types of people.

      D) People who need a cheap portable 2nd computer that wont be too painful when they drop it, step on it, run it over, spill coffee on it, one they expect to replace about once a year. Hmm, I wonder if they will start selling netbooks as an option without any drive at all so you simply plug your old drive from your dead unit into it, maybe a 2nd drive slot.

      E) Millions and millions of school children, similar to 'D' but not the same.

      --
      Chaos - everything, everywhere, everywhen
    9. Re:Remember folks, it's a NETbook. by hairyfeet · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I agree with you and go one step further...if all they cared about was the space why not go with Abiword? It is small and light, thus great for Netbooks, runs on all the major OSes, again great because if one likes it they can use it at home as well as on the road, and gives you a full featured word processor without the bloat.

      Who knows, maybe Google cut them a check. But it seems to me Abiword would be a better fit for a netbook than Google Docs. Can anyone tell us how Google Docs runs on ultra low powered devices like low end netbooks? Because I have run Abiword on machines as low as 400MHz and it was quite snappy and very comfortable to work in.

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    10. Re:Remember folks, it's a NETbook. by techno-vampire · · Score: 4, Funny
      Its not practical that it does not even have a grammar check.

      Not everybody needs a mechanical grammar checker. In your case, however, I can see how that's a concern.

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    11. Re:Remember folks, it's a NETbook. by priegog · · Score: 5, Informative

      And to be perfectly honest (anal) about it, you CAN turn on "offline mode" in google docs so that you can access your files offline and create new ones. So, on the contrary to most people here, I don't quite disagree with the "online" side of it, but rather, with the "Google" side of it. Sure, probably everyone on /. has a Google account, but most normal people don't. My granny certainly doesn't (she has hotmail like most of the "vanilla" computer users out there), and she just bought her second netbook. Why should she be forced to create an account with some company to be able to use the office suite? I do agree with the people here who were suggesting abiword, if hdd space and cpu power REALLY were the reason Oo got shafted. This will just hurt Ubuntu

  2. how odd by wizardforce · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The developers have been removing applications that are irrelevant on a netbook.

    and

    While new ones have been added to provide better netbook functionalities:

    gbrainy added (gbrainy is a brain teaser game)

    Openoffice is "irrelevant" on a netbook but a game most /.ers have probably never even heard of made the cut? Something is wrong here.

    --
    Sigs are too short to say anything truly profound so read the above post instead.
    1. Re:how odd by FlyingBishop · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Just for the hell of it, I opened up a terminal and typed `sudo apt-get install gbrainy.`

      If the program represented a significant change in space, it would have asked me if I wanted to.

      Need to get 363kB of archives.

      There are single fonts in OpenOffice that take up more space than that. Ubuntu installs it for me without even checking to see if it's okay, because installing it takes less time.

      I do think it would be a good idea to include Abiword, but I really don't care about OpenOffice. Both MS Office and OpenOffice need to die. They're huge resource hogs, and most of their resources are devoted to finding new ways to make my documents display differently every time someone opens them.

  3. why? by dirtyhippie · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Openoffice takes about 350MB of space, so it is a significant proportion of an ubuntu install, but c'mon. Despite the name "netbook", these devices in my experience spend a significant amount of time offline. This is bizarre choice - more discussion is here: http://ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=1399012

  4. Stupid!! by linuxgurugamer · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The net isn't everywhere. Sometimes people use the computer/netbook in places where there is no network access. So what is going to happen in these cases? It sounds like to me that those people will be SOL, unless they were savvy enough to have installed OpenOffice themselves.

    I use Ubuntu professionally, as well as CentOS & Fedora. By constantly changing the application mix they will discourage people from using Ubuntu because of future incompatibilities.

  5. What is a netbook? by sakdoctor · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I don't even know what a netbook is now. At the start they were defined by their tiny form-factors, low-ish power-consumption.
    The revolutionary part was the LOW price. Sony VAIOs of similar size had been around for absolutely ages, but those were just shit, overpriced laptops.

    Then microsoft moved in and netbook grew in size and power. I think my early eeepc IS a netbook, and despite the 600px screen height, I run stock Ubuntu rather than a netbook specific edition.
    Running open office has never been a problem, so I don't see the point in getting all cloud dependent for nothing.

    1. Re:What is a netbook? by PopeRatzo · · Score: 4, Insightful

      a 12 inch netbook costs $500

      A "12 inch" netbook? I think if it's that big it's not really a netbook.

      I'll make up a rule: The biggest screen a netbook can have is 10" maybe 10.1".

      too low of price for most to be bothered with them.

      I bet the computer industry loves you. "Say, this netbook is not expensive enough for me to bother with!"

      --
      You are welcome on my lawn.
  6. Why does OpenOffice need 350MB, anyway? by Animats · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Why does OpenOffice need 350MB, anyway?

    • Why is "soffice.exe" 7MB in size? It's just the launcher. The work is done in "sdraw.exe", "swriter.exe", etc.
    • Why is there also "soffice.bin", another 7MB?
    • Does OpenOffice have to have its very own full Python installation? It's only used for scripting OpenOffice from your own applications; OpenOffice itself doesn't need it.
    • Is the whole Java/UNO system, for scripting OpenOffice from Java, really used much?
    • OpenOffice has about 100 DLLs, doing who knows what. How many of those are really used?
    • In fact, most users don't need any of the Java stuff. It's mainly for the OpenOffice database engine, and you're probably not running a relational DBMS on your netbook.

    OpenOffice could probably be brought down below 100MB for netbooks without much work.

  7. So it's now a closed-source distribution? by Hurricane78 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Because as far as I know, Google Docs is not only closed-source and proprietary. It’s one step worse: It’s not even controlled by you, as it’s on another computer.

    No, it being a netbook is not making it OK, that it is only accessible when you have reception. “Netbook” is just a (marketing) name. It’s still just a small computer. It still has to be able to perform normal things without an Internet connection.

    This, to me, is one step worse, than replacing OOo by MS Office. At least with MS Office, your private data won’t be sold of to anyone, and you can still cut the connection.
    Were they drunk? Was someone payed?

    To me, this takes Ubuntu NE out of the equation for all possible uses.

    root@livecd ~ # emerge world

    --
    Any sufficiently advanced intelligence is indistinguishable from stupidity.
  8. Bradley was spot-on... by Qubit · · Score: 5, Insightful

    What the everlasting f*ck, guys?

    Here, let me go dig up the Ubuntu motto or whatever you're calling it now.

    The Ubuntu promise

    Ubuntu will always be free of charge, along with its regular enterprise releases and security updates...Ubuntu core applications are all free and open source. We want you to use free and open source software, improve it and pass it on.

    So they took a Free Software application out and replace it with a non-Free application from Google. What a great idea!

    Although an office suite isn't necessary for one to run Ubuntu, being able to create and consume office documents is admittedly a very common task. Making UNR able to interoperate "right out of the box" seems like a very high priority.

    Bradley Kuhn was spot-on when he recently said "It seems clear that one of Canonical's top goals is to convince every Ubuntu user to rely regularly on new proprietary software and services". Bradley's solution to the problem? Go back to Debian.

    My experience with Ubuntu has been, on the whole, a rather pleasant one, so I wish that Ubuntu would find a better solution to this problem. OOo might take up a certain amount of space on netbooks, sure, so perhaps they should install a stripped-down package that doesn't install extra fonts until you need them. Or maybe just prompt the user during the install, letting them know how much space OOo will take up?

    I've been willing to deal with non-free drivers and binary blobs in the past, as that has sometimes been the only way to get key parts of my system up and running. But when the only limitation to using a completely Free program is a few hundred MB of disk space, in nearly all cases one could (and should) just get a little more disk.

    Software Freedom is worth it!

    --

    coding is life /* the rest is */
  9. Wow, complete Slashdot article based on blueprint by Pecisk · · Score: 4, Informative

    For those who want to know: Launchpad blueprints are ideas converted in subprojects. For example, there have been thousand blueprints which while have been completed, have never been implemented.

    So first - no official announcement in mailing list, no blog post, but a *blueprint* is a basis of the whole fact in this blog (which is full of ads and snags). Impressive.

    https://blueprints.edge.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+spec/mobile-lucid-arm-webservice-for-office

    Wow, first of all, it's for ARM UNE (small subvariant of Ubuntu Netbook Edition), implementation is not started yet and motivation is more clear than ad-riddened blog wrote - OO.o is simply slow on ARM. Yes, you can try to use Abiword, but I think it is not tweaked to run ARM too.

    --
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