Meet LibreOffice Volunteer Robinson Tryon (Video)
When Slashdot's Tim Lord went to Texas Linux Fest, one of the people he met there was Robinson Tryon. He's a volunteer with LibreOffice, and in this conversation he gave us a nice look at what's going on these days with LibreOffice and its parent organization, The Document Foundation. (Alternate Video Link)
If you can't figure out your web site's font issue, how do you expect us to believe you can code a full-blown word processor?
(This: "For everyone experiencing weird font issues on our website please know we are investigating the issue since several weeks")
Does your webmaster do all your coding, as well?
Beta has them too. Instead of symols for the buttons I get hex codes, the default replacement in firefox when the font has no symbol for that char.
If you can't figure out your web site's font issue, how do you expect us to believe you can code a full-blown word processor?
If you ask me, this problem is a political problem, not just a technical one. At some point, you just have to be willing to let go of some of your Firefox users with weird fonts installed. It's not like LibreOffice can afford to rewrite Firefox from scratch.
A lot of people who do this kind of thing on a volunteer basis, are either already making a decent living wage writing software and do this in their spare time; or, they are hoping that their contributions will attract attention from corporations that can then hire them to work on the software (thus funding the development of FOSS and also furthering the company's goals by improving the software they use).
Is there a place where I can view this without installing spyware?
Doing stuff pro bono can be one of the few ways to actually get past entry level work in the industry. I do know that the people that do volunteer work on a title like this and get known, usually end up with a decent career down the line.
Of course, it makes more money instantly to make yet another app for iOS or Android... but long term, getting one's name on the list of coders on a top tier project is better for the career long term.
But in addition to word-processing, spreadsheets and presentations, my office also requires email.
It's long overdue somebody steps up to this challenge.
The site is almost unreadable in some cases (Win7/FF which is what I have to use at work): letters missing, big gaps, and a complete mess. It's obviously some horrid incompatibility with something, but the lack of QA is simply embarrassing. This has been going on for months, but as much as I've been wanting to report it, all I found is file a bug report against LO, which doesn't seem right.
--Udo.
Given the lack of a single dominant mobile office suite, there are potentially more users out there for a LibreOffice version for Android than for users of the Windows, Mac and Linux versions combined. So why's the Android version forever stuck in demoware limbo?
Someone volunteering his time on a software project this big is denied a livable wage and health insurance...LibreOffice is a major project whose charges are picked up and used by big business... If it's so in-demand, why not get paid for it?
Hi!
Good questions! You'll be happy to hear that I've just been hired by TDF as a QA Engineer for LibreOffice. I really enjoy working on the project, and now I get to do what I love...for money! :-)
--Robinson
coding is life
Woo hoo! I finally made it to the front page of Slashdot! I am feeling a bit petrified :-)
A couple of quick announcements:
Cheers,
Robinson Tryon
LibreOffice Community Outreach Herald
Senior QA Bug Wrangler
The Document Foundation
coding is life
The website looks decently fine. Plus, other open-source projects are also amazing but have shitty crappy looking websites.
Even Microsoft's operating system Metro interface doesn't look all that good, yet the proprietary MSOffice is still pretty decent.