User: jpmcc   
Date: 2009-06-15 17:00:45+0000
Modified:
   marketing/www/planet/atom.xml
   marketing/www/planet/index.html
   marketing/www/planet/opml.xml
   marketing/www/planet/rss10.xml
   marketing/www/planet/rss20.xml

Log:
 Planet run at Mon Jun 15 18:00:13 BST 2009

File Changes:

Directory: /marketing/www/planet/
=================================

File [changed]: atom.xml
Url: 
http://marketing.openoffice.org/source/browse/marketing/www/planet/atom.xml?r1=1.1994&r2=1.1995
Delta lines:  +28 -28
---------------------
--- atom.xml    2009-06-15 11:00:41+0000        1.1994
+++ atom.xml    2009-06-15 17:00:41+0000        1.1995
@@ -5,10 +5,30 @@
        <link rel="self" 
href="http://marketing.openoffice.org/planet/atom.xml"/>
        <link href="http://marketing.openoffice.org/planet/"/>
        <id>http://marketing.openoffice.org/planet/atom.xml</id>
-       <updated>2009-06-15T11:00:26+00:00</updated>
+       <updated>2009-06-15T17:00:26+00:00</updated>
        <generator uri="http://www.planetplanet.org/";>Planet/2.0 
+http://www.planetplanet.org</generator>
 
        <entry>
+               <title type="html">New Features in 3.1 as video!</title>
+               <link 
href="http://ooomarketing.blogspot.com/2009/06/new-features-in-31-as-video.html"/>
+               
<id>tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4887643299605448632.post-6793350226421939452</id>
+               <updated>2009-06-15T17:00:24+00:00</updated>
+               <content type="html">See the new features of OpenOffice.org 3.1 
in a convenient video: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V4ARctdsAtM - thanks to 
Carl and Rosana for their great production!&lt;div 
class=&quot;blogger-post-footer&quot;&gt;&lt;img width=&quot;1&quot; 
height=&quot;1&quot; 
src=&quot;https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/4887643299605448632-6793350226421939452?l=ooomarketing.blogspot.com&quot;
 /&gt;&lt;/div&gt;</content>
+               <author>
+                       <name>floeff</name>
+                       <email>[email protected]</email>
+                       <uri>http://ooomarketing.blogspot.com/</uri>
+               </author>
+               <source>
+                       <title type="html">OpenOffice.org Marketing Blog</title>
+                       <subtitle type="html">News and interesting stories 
about OpenOffice.org and other open source solutions.</subtitle>
+                       <link rel="self" 
href="http://ooomarketing.blogspot.com/feeds/posts/default"/>
+                       <id>tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4887643299605448632</id>
+                       <updated>2009-06-15T17:00:24+00:00</updated>
+               </source>
+       </entry>
+
+       <entry>
                <title type="html">New: OOo-DEV 3.1.1 Developer Snapshot (build 
OOO310_m13) available</title>
                <link 
href="http://blogs.sun.com/GullFOSS/entry/new_ooo_dev_3_111"/>
                <id>tag:google.com,2005:reader/item/7dc2f4f19d6c62ef</id>
@@ -28,7 +48,7 @@
                        <title type="html">jpmcc's shared items in Google 
Reader</title>
                        <link rel="self" 
href="http://www.google.co.uk/reader/public/atom/user/06203502505240591501/state/com.google/broadcast"/>
                        
<id>tag:google.com,2005:reader/user/06203502505240591501/state/com.google/broadcast</id>
-                       <updated>2009-06-15T11:00:16+00:00</updated>
+                       <updated>2009-06-15T17:00:16+00:00</updated>
                </source>
        </entry>
 
@@ -52,7 +72,7 @@
                        <title type="html">jpmcc's shared items in Google 
Reader</title>
                        <link rel="self" 
href="http://www.google.co.uk/reader/public/atom/user/06203502505240591501/state/com.google/broadcast"/>
                        
<id>tag:google.com,2005:reader/user/06203502505240591501/state/com.google/broadcast</id>
-                       <updated>2009-06-15T11:00:16+00:00</updated>
+                       <updated>2009-06-15T17:00:16+00:00</updated>
                </source>
        </entry>
 
@@ -144,7 +164,7 @@
                        <title type="html">jpmcc's shared items in Google 
Reader</title>
                        <link rel="self" 
href="http://www.google.co.uk/reader/public/atom/user/06203502505240591501/state/com.google/broadcast"/>
                        
<id>tag:google.com,2005:reader/user/06203502505240591501/state/com.google/broadcast</id>
-                       <updated>2009-06-15T11:00:16+00:00</updated>
+                       <updated>2009-06-15T17:00:16+00:00</updated>
                </source>
        </entry>
 
@@ -207,7 +227,7 @@
                        <subtitle type="html">News and interesting stories 
about OpenOffice.org and other open source solutions.</subtitle>
                        <link rel="self" 
href="http://ooomarketing.blogspot.com/feeds/posts/default"/>
                        <id>tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4887643299605448632</id>
-                       <updated>2009-06-15T11:00:22+00:00</updated>
+                       <updated>2009-06-15T17:00:24+00:00</updated>
                </source>
        </entry>
 
@@ -277,7 +297,7 @@
                        <title type="html">jpmcc's shared items in Google 
Reader</title>
                        <link rel="self" 
href="http://www.google.co.uk/reader/public/atom/user/06203502505240591501/state/com.google/broadcast"/>
                        
<id>tag:google.com,2005:reader/user/06203502505240591501/state/com.google/broadcast</id>
-                       <updated>2009-06-15T11:00:16+00:00</updated>
+                       <updated>2009-06-15T17:00:16+00:00</updated>
                </source>
        </entry>
 
@@ -401,7 +421,7 @@
                        <title type="html">jpmcc's shared items in Google 
Reader</title>
                        <link rel="self" 
href="http://www.google.co.uk/reader/public/atom/user/06203502505240591501/state/com.google/broadcast"/>
                        
<id>tag:google.com,2005:reader/user/06203502505240591501/state/com.google/broadcast</id>
-                       <updated>2009-06-15T11:00:16+00:00</updated>
+                       <updated>2009-06-15T17:00:16+00:00</updated>
                </source>
        </entry>
 
@@ -421,7 +441,7 @@
                        <title type="html">jpmcc's shared items in Google 
Reader</title>
                        <link rel="self" 
href="http://www.google.co.uk/reader/public/atom/user/06203502505240591501/state/com.google/broadcast"/>
                        
<id>tag:google.com,2005:reader/user/06203502505240591501/state/com.google/broadcast</id>
-                       <updated>2009-06-15T11:00:16+00:00</updated>
+                       <updated>2009-06-15T17:00:16+00:00</updated>
                </source>
        </entry>
 
@@ -465,24 +485,4 @@
                </source>
        </entry>
 
-       <entry>
-               <title type="html">Trips: China, Japan</title>
-               <link 
href="http://ooo-speak.blogspot.com/2009/05/trips-china-japan.html"/>
-               
<id>tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4649039904546083564.post-6139785145424705872</id>
-               <updated>2009-05-24T15:47:00+00:00</updated>
-               <content type="html">&lt;br /&gt;9 June sees us fly to London, 
where Tina will do research on India and Victorian England. A lot of Victorian 
Indian material is sequestered in the British libraries/museums; not a 
surprise. We'll probably still make a trip to India for more research, esp. in 
Jaipur. But for now, it's London, and this is good: I love London.  While 
there, we'll be seeing the new production of Ph&amp;#x00e8;dre with Helen 
Mirren, and probably a lot of other shows. I just wish it were all cheaper. For 
us poverly Canadians, the pound weighs nearly twice our loonie, so going out 
for, say, pizza, means that that humble pie has suddenly transformed itself 
into a lordly dish. Good thing about the current recession, though: things are 
litte brighter for the willing traveller, and our hotel, the Hoxton, in 
Shoreditch, is tr&amp;#x00e8;s cool and even better than that, given the rates 
we were able to get.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;23 June: I fly to Tokyo via Beijing 
to meet with IPA representatives to discuss contributing to OpenOffice.org. 
Japan has long been a promise and a problem. Good-Day, Inc., of Osaka has 
contributed substntially for almost as long as OOo has been around. Indeed, 
much of the localization effort (to Japanese) is due to their team, and I thank 
Maeda-san and his company, along with Nakata Maho, for their unstintinting 
contributions to developing the code into a qualified appication suitable for 
enterprise use.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;But Good-Day is fairly alone in this 
endeavour. To be sure, there are many individuals and small groups who have 
made and who make OOo a player in Japan. But there are not enough, and that's a 
shame. It's a shame because the alternative--proprietary licensed 
material--places public and private corporations in a terrible bind of dependng 
their own quotidian activity on the health and interest of a very remote 
company.  Their choice, I suppose. But is it of the people who elected the 
representatives to government? I wonder. I also wonder whether the 
recession--which, incidentally, has highlighted the economic consequences of 
dependency like no other lesson could--will change the view on forging 
sustainable and local works, such as OpenOffice.org in Japanese, for the 
Japanese market, supported by Japanese companies, and so on. To me, the choice 
seems plain. And if there are deficiencies in OOo for the market, then let's 
work on them. I would guess that it would be cheaper to resolve these than 
continue to pay, for god knows how long, the effective tax levied by 
proprietary companies for code that is as essential as ink and paper to the 
daily running of civil life.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;So, I am optimistic about 
this meeting and hope that it opens the door to many others, with IPA, other 
government groups, and with more Japanese companies, some of them already 
deploying OOo and profiting from it. But these I shall not name here do not 
contribute back to the project. They thus weaken it.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br 
/&gt;China, and in particular Redflag 2000, have strongly supported OOo 
development. Indeed, the government (or at least a facet of it) has gone on 
record endorsing and pushing Foss. Redflag, which hosted the superb OOoCon last 
November in Beijing, where the company is located, has placed a lot of 
developers on the task of developing the code for the market. But, it too, is 
somewhat alone, an odd point, given the situation, but one I expect will change 
in the very near future. Of course, investing in OOo or any large Foss project, 
is a lot like (read: identitical to) investing in a company: you don't do it 
unless you have some assurance of its economic and intellectual viability. 
Judding Foss projects has proved notoriously difficult in this regard. What 
ruler do you use? Hits per page? Downloads? Bugfixes? All are suspect, as none 
is nicely equivalent to the usual business metrics, which can be translated to: 
Money in hand. So it sounds good--but that's not enough---to say that OOo has 
been downloaded about 200M times and that tens of millions use it and some even 
on a daily basis. Show me not the code but the money here, for the question 
inevitably comes down to, How do you survive, as a project?&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br 
/&gt;Of course, the answer to that is easy, and oddly has nothing to do with 
altruism. It has rather everything to do with self intererst and the calculus 
of markets and enterprise politics. And it has to do with the interest value of 
the shown code to individuals and groups. OOo, as I realized on my first day 
back in October 2000, is immensely interesting and potentially disruptive in a 
way few other applications are or can be. For it is a set of tools that give 
users and developers the wherewithal to produce a range of documents, not just 
&quot;office&quot; ones, and the open standard(s) it uses further grant an open 
window to the range of Web apps that other suites cannot take advantage 
of.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;But back to China. The immediate reason for the trip 
is &lt;a 
href=&quot;http://ooo-speak.blogspot.com/feeds/posts/default&quot;&gt;COPU's&lt;/a&gt;
 annual event, this year in Beijing at the end of June. The event is both 
theatrical and, in part for that reason, qutie important. As well, it gives us 
participants a chance to meet ex camera with those we would probably miss. And 
that alone is worth the ticket.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;div 
class=&quot;blogger-post-footer&quot;&gt;&lt;img width=&quot;1&quot; 
height=&quot;1&quot; 
src=&quot;https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/4649039904546083564-6139785145424705872?l=ooo-speak.blogspot.com&quot;
 /&gt;&lt;/div&gt;</content>
-               <author>
-                       <name>oulipo</name>
-                       <email>[email protected]</email>
-                       <uri>http://ooo-speak.blogspot.com/</uri>
-               </author>
-               <source>
-                       <title type="html">ooo-speak</title>
-                       <subtitle type="html">Mostly on OpenOffice.org, FOSS, 
and everything else.</subtitle>
-                       <link rel="self" 
href="http://ooo-speak.blogspot.com/feeds/posts/default"/>
-                       <id>tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4649039904546083564</id>
-                       <updated>2009-06-12T23:00:18+00:00</updated>
-               </source>
-       </entry>
-
 </feed>

File [changed]: index.html
Url: 
http://marketing.openoffice.org/source/browse/marketing/www/planet/index.html?r1=1.2001&r2=1.2002
Delta lines:  +16 -15
---------------------
--- index.html  2009-06-15 11:00:41+0000        1.2001
+++ index.html  2009-06-15 17:00:41+0000        1.2002
@@ -36,8 +36,23 @@
 <a href="rss20.xml"><img src="rss2.gif" alt="Link to RSS 2 feed" /></a>
 </div>
 
-<p><em>Bloggings on marketing topics by project members - see <a 
href="#disclaimer">disclaimer</a>.<br />Last updated: June 15, 2009 11:00 AM 
GMT</em></p>
+<p><em>Bloggings on marketing topics by project members - see <a 
href="#disclaimer">disclaimer</a>.<br />Last updated: June 15, 2009 05:00 PM 
GMT</em></p>
 
+<h2>June 15, 2009</h2>
+<h3>
+<a href="http://ooomarketing.blogspot.com/"; title="OpenOffice.org Marketing 
Blog">
+OOo Marketeers</a>&nbsp;:&nbsp;
+<a 
href="http://ooomarketing.blogspot.com/2009/06/new-features-in-31-as-video.html";>
+New Features in 3.1 as video!</a>
+</h3>
+<p>
+See the new features of OpenOffice.org 3.1 in a convenient video: 
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V4ARctdsAtM - thanks to Carl and Rosana for 
their great production!<div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width="1" 
height="1" 
src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/4887643299605448632-6793350226421939452?l=ooomarketing.blogspot.com";
 /></div></p>
+<p>
+<em><a 
href="http://ooomarketing.blogspot.com/2009/06/new-features-in-31-as-video.html";>by
 floeff ([email protected]) at June 15, 2009 05:00 PM GMT</a></em>
+</p>
+<br />
+<hr />
+<br />
 <h2>June 12, 2009</h2>
 <h3>
 <a href="" title="jpmcc's shared items in Google Reader">
@@ -412,20 +427,6 @@
 <br />
 <hr />
 <br />
-<h3>
-<a href="http://ooo-speak.blogspot.com/"; title="ooo-speak">
-Louis Suarez-Potts</a>&nbsp;:&nbsp;
-<a href="http://ooo-speak.blogspot.com/2009/05/trips-china-japan.html";>
-Trips: China, Japan</a>
-</h3>
-<p>
-<br />9 June sees us fly to London, where Tina will do research on India and 
Victorian England. A lot of Victorian Indian material is sequestered in the 
British libraries/museums; not a surprise. We'll probably still make a trip to 
India for more research, esp. in Jaipur. But for now, it's London, and this is 
good: I love London.  While there, we'll be seeing the new production of 
Ph&#x00e8;dre with Helen Mirren, and probably a lot of other shows. I just wish 
it were all cheaper. For us poverly Canadians, the pound weighs nearly twice 
our loonie, so going out for, say, pizza, means that that humble pie has 
suddenly transformed itself into a lordly dish. Good thing about the current 
recession, though: things are litte brighter for the willing traveller, and our 
hotel, the Hoxton, in Shoreditch, is tr&#x00e8;s cool and even better than 
that, given the rates we were able to get.<br /><br />23 June: I fly to Tokyo 
via Beijing to meet with IPA representatives to discuss contributing to 
OpenOffice.org. Japan has long been a promise and a problem. Good-Day, Inc., of 
Osaka has contributed substntially for almost as long as OOo has been around. 
Indeed, much of the localization effort (to Japanese) is due to their team, and 
I thank Maeda-san and his company, along with Nakata Maho, for their 
unstintinting contributions to developing the code into a qualified appication 
suitable for enterprise use.<br /><br />But Good-Day is fairly alone in this 
endeavour. To be sure, there are many individuals and small groups who have 
made and who make OOo a player in Japan. But there are not enough, and that's a 
shame. It's a shame because the alternative--proprietary licensed 
material--places public and private corporations in a terrible bind of dependng 
their own quotidian activity on the health and interest of a very remote 
company.  Their choice, I suppose. But is it of the people who elected the 
representatives to government? I wonder. I also wonder whether the 
recession--which, incidentally, has highlighted the economic consequences of 
dependency like no other lesson could--will change the view on forging 
sustainable and local works, such as OpenOffice.org in Japanese, for the 
Japanese market, supported by Japanese companies, and so on. To me, the choice 
seems plain. And if there are deficiencies in OOo for the market, then let's 
work on them. I would guess that it would be cheaper to resolve these than 
continue to pay, for god knows how long, the effective tax levied by 
proprietary companies for code that is as essential as ink and paper to the 
daily running of civil life.<br /><br />So, I am optimistic about this meeting 
and hope that it opens the door to many others, with IPA, other government 
groups, and with more Japanese companies, some of them already deploying OOo 
and profiting from it. But these I shall not name here do not contribute back 
to the project. They thus weaken it.<br /><br />China, and in particular 
Redflag 2000, have strongly supported OOo development. Indeed, the government 
(or at least a facet of it) has gone on record endorsing and pushing Foss. 
Redflag, which hosted the superb OOoCon last November in Beijing, where the 
company is located, has placed a lot of developers on the task of developing 
the code for the market. But, it too, is somewhat alone, an odd point, given 
the situation, but one I expect will change in the very near future. Of course, 
investing in OOo or any large Foss project, is a lot like (read: identitical 
to) investing in a company: you don't do it unless you have some assurance of 
its economic and intellectual viability. Judding Foss projects has proved 
notoriously difficult in this regard. What ruler do you use? Hits per page? 
Downloads? Bugfixes? All are suspect, as none is nicely equivalent to the usual 
business metrics, which can be translated to: Money in hand. So it sounds 
good--but that's not enough---to say that OOo has been downloaded about 200M 
times and that tens of millions use it and some even on a daily basis. Show me 
not the code but the money here, for the question inevitably comes down to, How 
do you survive, as a project?<br /><br />Of course, the answer to that is easy, 
and oddly has nothing to do with altruism. It has rather everything to do with 
self intererst and the calculus of markets and enterprise politics. And it has 
to do with the interest value of the shown code to individuals and groups. OOo, 
as I realized on my first day back in October 2000, is immensely interesting 
and potentially disruptive in a way few other applications are or can be. For 
it is a set of tools that give users and developers the wherewithal to produce 
a range of documents, not just "office" ones, and the open standard(s) it uses 
further grant an open window to the range of Web apps that other suites cannot 
take advantage of.<br /><br />But back to China. The immediate reason for the 
trip is <a href="http://ooo-speak.blogspot.com/feeds/posts/default";>COPU's</a> 
annual event, this year in Beijing at the end of June. The event is both 
theatrical and, in part for that reason, qutie important. As well, it gives us 
participants a chance to meet ex camera with those we would probably miss. And 
that alone is worth the ticket.<br /><br /><br /><div 
class="blogger-post-footer"><img width="1" height="1" 
src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/4649039904546083564-6139785145424705872?l=ooo-speak.blogspot.com";
 /></div></p>
-<p>
-<em><a href="http://ooo-speak.blogspot.com/2009/05/trips-china-japan.html";>by 
oulipo ([email protected]) at May 24, 2009 03:47 PM BST</a></em>
-</p>
-<br />
-<hr />
-<br />
 <a id="disclaimer" name="disclaimer"></a>
 <p><em>Disclaimer: all views expressed on this page are those 
 of the individual contributors, and may not reflect the views of the 

File [changed]: opml.xml
Url: 
http://marketing.openoffice.org/source/browse/marketing/www/planet/opml.xml?r1=1.1994&r2=1.1995
Delta lines:  +1 -1
-------------------
--- opml.xml    2009-06-15 11:00:41+0000        1.1994
+++ opml.xml    2009-06-15 17:00:41+0000        1.1995
@@ -2,7 +2,7 @@
 <opml version="1.1">
        <head>
                <title>Marketing Planet</title>
-               <dateModified>Mon, 15 Jun 2009 11:00:26 +0000</dateModified>
+               <dateModified>Mon, 15 Jun 2009 17:00:26 +0000</dateModified>
                <ownerName>Marketing Project</ownerName>
                <ownerEmail>[email protected]</ownerEmail>
        </head>

File [changed]: rss10.xml
Url: 
http://marketing.openoffice.org/source/browse/marketing/www/planet/rss10.xml?r1=1.766&r2=1.767
Delta lines:  +8 -8
-------------------
--- rss10.xml   2009-06-12 23:00:43+0000        1.766
+++ rss10.xml   2009-06-15 17:00:41+0000        1.767
@@ -13,6 +13,7 @@
 
        <items>
                <rdf:Seq>
+                       <rdf:li 
rdf:resource="tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4887643299605448632.post-6793350226421939452"
 />
                        <rdf:li 
rdf:resource="tag:google.com,2005:reader/item/7dc2f4f19d6c62ef" />
                        <rdf:li 
rdf:resource="tag:google.com,2005:reader/item/1a067cc1eea6155a" />
                        <rdf:li 
rdf:resource="http://www.solidoffice.com/?p=1161"; />
@@ -32,11 +33,17 @@
                        <rdf:li 
rdf:resource="tag:google.com,2005:reader/item/d1a38e6f8a4c00f9" />
                        <rdf:li 
rdf:resource="tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4649039904546083564.post-6589002475932314814"
 />
                        <rdf:li 
rdf:resource="tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4649039904546083564.post-814228670360310856"
 />
-                       <rdf:li 
rdf:resource="tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4649039904546083564.post-6139785145424705872"
 />
                </rdf:Seq>
        </items>
 </channel>
 
+<item 
rdf:about="tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4887643299605448632.post-6793350226421939452">
+       <title>OOo Marketeers: New Features in 3.1 as video!</title>
+       
<link>http://ooomarketing.blogspot.com/2009/06/new-features-in-31-as-video.html</link>
+       <content:encoded>See the new features of OpenOffice.org 3.1 in a 
convenient video: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V4ARctdsAtM - thanks to Carl 
and Rosana for their great production!&lt;div 
class=&quot;blogger-post-footer&quot;&gt;&lt;img width=&quot;1&quot; 
height=&quot;1&quot; 
src=&quot;https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/4887643299605448632-6793350226421939452?l=ooomarketing.blogspot.com&quot;
 /&gt;&lt;/div&gt;</content:encoded>
+       <dc:date>2009-06-15T17:00:24+00:00</dc:date>
+       <dc:creator>floeff</dc:creator>
+</item>
 <item rdf:about="tag:google.com,2005:reader/item/7dc2f4f19d6c62ef">
        <title>GullFOSS: New: OOo-DEV 3.1.1 Developer Snapshot (build 
OOO310_m13) available</title>
        <link>http://blogs.sun.com/GullFOSS/entry/new_ooo_dev_3_111</link>
@@ -259,12 +266,5 @@
        <dc:date>2009-05-24T22:41:24+00:00</dc:date>
        <dc:creator>oulipo</dc:creator>
 </item>
-<item 
rdf:about="tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4649039904546083564.post-6139785145424705872">
-       <title>Louis Suarez-Potts: Trips: China, Japan</title>
-       
<link>http://ooo-speak.blogspot.com/2009/05/trips-china-japan.html</link>
-       <content:encoded>&lt;br /&gt;9 June sees us fly to London, where Tina 
will do research on India and Victorian England. A lot of Victorian Indian 
material is sequestered in the British libraries/museums; not a surprise. We'll 
probably still make a trip to India for more research, esp. in Jaipur. But for 
now, it's London, and this is good: I love London.  While there, we'll be 
seeing the new production of Ph&amp;#x00e8;dre with Helen Mirren, and probably 
a lot of other shows. I just wish it were all cheaper. For us poverly 
Canadians, the pound weighs nearly twice our loonie, so going out for, say, 
pizza, means that that humble pie has suddenly transformed itself into a lordly 
dish. Good thing about the current recession, though: things are litte brighter 
for the willing traveller, and our hotel, the Hoxton, in Shoreditch, is 
tr&amp;#x00e8;s cool and even better than that, given the rates we were able to 
get.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;23 June: I fly to Tokyo via Beijing to meet with 
IPA representatives to discuss contributing to OpenOffice.org. Japan has long 
been a promise and a problem. Good-Day, Inc., of Osaka has contributed 
substntially for almost as long as OOo has been around. Indeed, much of the 
localization effort (to Japanese) is due to their team, and I thank Maeda-san 
and his company, along with Nakata Maho, for their unstintinting contributions 
to developing the code into a qualified appication suitable for enterprise 
use.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;But Good-Day is fairly alone in this endeavour. To 
be sure, there are many individuals and small groups who have made and who make 
OOo a player in Japan. But there are not enough, and that's a shame. It's a 
shame because the alternative--proprietary licensed material--places public and 
private corporations in a terrible bind of dependng their own quotidian 
activity on the health and interest of a very remote company.  Their choice, I 
suppose. But is it of the people who elected the representatives to government? 
I wonder. I also wonder whether the recession--which, incidentally, has 
highlighted the economic consequences of dependency like no other lesson 
could--will change the view on forging sustainable and local works, such as 
OpenOffice.org in Japanese, for the Japanese market, supported by Japanese 
companies, and so on. To me, the choice seems plain. And if there are 
deficiencies in OOo for the market, then let's work on them. I would guess that 
it would be cheaper to resolve these than continue to pay, for god knows how 
long, the effective tax levied by proprietary companies for code that is as 
essential as ink and paper to the daily running of civil life.&lt;br 
/&gt;&lt;br /&gt;So, I am optimistic about this meeting and hope that it opens 
the door to many others, with IPA, other government groups, and with more 
Japanese companies, some of them already deploying OOo and profiting from it. 
But these I shall not name here do not contribute back to the project. They 
thus weaken it.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;China, and in particular Redflag 2000, 
have strongly supported OOo development. Indeed, the government (or at least a 
facet of it) has gone on record endorsing and pushing Foss. Redflag, which 
hosted the superb OOoCon last November in Beijing, where the company is 
located, has placed a lot of developers on the task of developing the code for 
the market. But, it too, is somewhat alone, an odd point, given the situation, 
but one I expect will change in the very near future. Of course, investing in 
OOo or any large Foss project, is a lot like (read: identitical to) investing 
in a company: you don't do it unless you have some assurance of its economic 
and intellectual viability. Judding Foss projects has proved notoriously 
difficult in this regard. What ruler do you use? Hits per page? Downloads? 
Bugfixes? All are suspect, as none is nicely equivalent to the usual business 
metrics, which can be translated to: Money in hand. So it sounds good--but 
that's not enough---to say that OOo has been downloaded about 200M times and 
that tens of millions use it and some even on a daily basis. Show me not the 
code but the money here, for the question inevitably comes down to, How do you 
survive, as a project?&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Of course, the answer to that is 
easy, and oddly has nothing to do with altruism. It has rather everything to do 
with self intererst and the calculus of markets and enterprise politics. And it 
has to do with the interest value of the shown code to individuals and groups. 
OOo, as I realized on my first day back in October 2000, is immensely 
interesting and potentially disruptive in a way few other applications are or 
can be. For it is a set of tools that give users and developers the wherewithal 
to produce a range of documents, not just &quot;office&quot; ones, and the open 
standard(s) it uses further grant an open window to the range of Web apps that 
other suites cannot take advantage of.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;But back to 
China. The immediate reason for the trip is &lt;a 
href=&quot;http://ooo-speak.blogspot.com/feeds/posts/default&quot;&gt;COPU's&lt;/a&gt;
 annual event, this year in Beijing at the end of June. The event is both 
theatrical and, in part for that reason, qutie important. As well, it gives us 
participants a chance to meet ex camera with those we would probably miss. And 
that alone is worth the ticket.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;div 
class=&quot;blogger-post-footer&quot;&gt;&lt;img width=&quot;1&quot; 
height=&quot;1&quot; 
src=&quot;https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/4649039904546083564-6139785145424705872?l=ooo-speak.blogspot.com&quot;
 /&gt;&lt;/div&gt;</content:encoded>
-       <dc:date>2009-05-24T15:47:00+00:00</dc:date>
-       <dc:creator>oulipo</dc:creator>
-</item>
 
 </rdf:RDF>

File [changed]: rss20.xml
Url: 
http://marketing.openoffice.org/source/browse/marketing/www/planet/rss20.xml?r1=1.766&r2=1.767
Delta lines:  +8 -8
-------------------
--- rss20.xml   2009-06-12 23:00:44+0000        1.766
+++ rss20.xml   2009-06-15 17:00:42+0000        1.767
@@ -8,6 +8,14 @@
        <description>Marketing Planet - 
http://marketing.openoffice.org/planet/</description>
 
 <item>
+       <title>OOo Marketeers: New Features in 3.1 as video!</title>
+       
<guid>tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4887643299605448632.post-6793350226421939452</guid>
+       
<link>http://ooomarketing.blogspot.com/2009/06/new-features-in-31-as-video.html</link>
+       <description>See the new features of OpenOffice.org 3.1 in a convenient 
video: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V4ARctdsAtM - thanks to Carl and Rosana 
for their great production!&lt;div 
class=&quot;blogger-post-footer&quot;&gt;&lt;img width=&quot;1&quot; 
height=&quot;1&quot; 
src=&quot;https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/4887643299605448632-6793350226421939452?l=ooomarketing.blogspot.com&quot;
 /&gt;&lt;/div&gt;</description>
+       <pubDate>Mon, 15 Jun 2009 17:00:24 +0000</pubDate>
+       <author>[email protected] (floeff)</author>
+</item>
+<item>
        <title>GullFOSS: New: OOo-DEV 3.1.1 Developer Snapshot (build 
OOO310_m13) available</title>
        <guid>tag:google.com,2005:reader/item/7dc2f4f19d6c62ef</guid>
        <link>http://blogs.sun.com/GullFOSS/entry/new_ooo_dev_3_111</link>
@@ -242,14 +250,6 @@
        <pubDate>Sun, 24 May 2009 22:41:24 +0000</pubDate>
        <author>[email protected] (oulipo)</author>
 </item>
-<item>
-       <title>Louis Suarez-Potts: Trips: China, Japan</title>
-       
<guid>tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4649039904546083564.post-6139785145424705872</guid>
-       
<link>http://ooo-speak.blogspot.com/2009/05/trips-china-japan.html</link>
-       <description>&lt;br /&gt;9 June sees us fly to London, where Tina will 
do research on India and Victorian England. A lot of Victorian Indian material 
is sequestered in the British libraries/museums; not a surprise. We'll probably 
still make a trip to India for more research, esp. in Jaipur. But for now, it's 
London, and this is good: I love London.  While there, we'll be seeing the new 
production of Ph&amp;#x00e8;dre with Helen Mirren, and probably a lot of other 
shows. I just wish it were all cheaper. For us poverly Canadians, the pound 
weighs nearly twice our loonie, so going out for, say, pizza, means that that 
humble pie has suddenly transformed itself into a lordly dish. Good thing about 
the current recession, though: things are litte brighter for the willing 
traveller, and our hotel, the Hoxton, in Shoreditch, is tr&amp;#x00e8;s cool 
and even better than that, given the rates we were able to get.&lt;br 
/&gt;&lt;br /&gt;23 June: I fly to Tokyo via Beijing to meet with IPA 
representatives to discuss contributing to OpenOffice.org. Japan has long been 
a promise and a problem. Good-Day, Inc., of Osaka has contributed substntially 
for almost as long as OOo has been around. Indeed, much of the localization 
effort (to Japanese) is due to their team, and I thank Maeda-san and his 
company, along with Nakata Maho, for their unstintinting contributions to 
developing the code into a qualified appication suitable for enterprise 
use.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;But Good-Day is fairly alone in this endeavour. To 
be sure, there are many individuals and small groups who have made and who make 
OOo a player in Japan. But there are not enough, and that's a shame. It's a 
shame because the alternative--proprietary licensed material--places public and 
private corporations in a terrible bind of dependng their own quotidian 
activity on the health and interest of a very remote company.  Their choice, I 
suppose. But is it of the people who elected the representatives to government? 
I wonder. I also wonder whether the recession--which, incidentally, has 
highlighted the economic consequences of dependency like no other lesson 
could--will change the view on forging sustainable and local works, such as 
OpenOffice.org in Japanese, for the Japanese market, supported by Japanese 
companies, and so on. To me, the choice seems plain. And if there are 
deficiencies in OOo for the market, then let's work on them. I would guess that 
it would be cheaper to resolve these than continue to pay, for god knows how 
long, the effective tax levied by proprietary companies for code that is as 
essential as ink and paper to the daily running of civil life.&lt;br 
/&gt;&lt;br /&gt;So, I am optimistic about this meeting and hope that it opens 
the door to many others, with IPA, other government groups, and with more 
Japanese companies, some of them already deploying OOo and profiting from it. 
But these I shall not name here do not contribute back to the project. They 
thus weaken it.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;China, and in particular Redflag 2000, 
have strongly supported OOo development. Indeed, the government (or at least a 
facet of it) has gone on record endorsing and pushing Foss. Redflag, which 
hosted the superb OOoCon last November in Beijing, where the company is 
located, has placed a lot of developers on the task of developing the code for 
the market. But, it too, is somewhat alone, an odd point, given the situation, 
but one I expect will change in the very near future. Of course, investing in 
OOo or any large Foss project, is a lot like (read: identitical to) investing 
in a company: you don't do it unless you have some assurance of its economic 
and intellectual viability. Judding Foss projects has proved notoriously 
difficult in this regard. What ruler do you use? Hits per page? Downloads? 
Bugfixes? All are suspect, as none is nicely equivalent to the usual business 
metrics, which can be translated to: Money in hand. So it sounds good--but 
that's not enough---to say that OOo has been downloaded about 200M times and 
that tens of millions use it and some even on a daily basis. Show me not the 
code but the money here, for the question inevitably comes down to, How do you 
survive, as a project?&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Of course, the answer to that is 
easy, and oddly has nothing to do with altruism. It has rather everything to do 
with self intererst and the calculus of markets and enterprise politics. And it 
has to do with the interest value of the shown code to individuals and groups. 
OOo, as I realized on my first day back in October 2000, is immensely 
interesting and potentially disruptive in a way few other applications are or 
can be. For it is a set of tools that give users and developers the wherewithal 
to produce a range of documents, not just &quot;office&quot; ones, and the open 
standard(s) it uses further grant an open window to the range of Web apps that 
other suites cannot take advantage of.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;But back to 
China. The immediate reason for the trip is &lt;a 
href=&quot;http://ooo-speak.blogspot.com/feeds/posts/default&quot;&gt;COPU's&lt;/a&gt;
 annual event, this year in Beijing at the end of June. The event is both 
theatrical and, in part for that reason, qutie important. As well, it gives us 
participants a chance to meet ex camera with those we would probably miss. And 
that alone is worth the ticket.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;div 
class=&quot;blogger-post-footer&quot;&gt;&lt;img width=&quot;1&quot; 
height=&quot;1&quot; 
src=&quot;https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/4649039904546083564-6139785145424705872?l=ooo-speak.blogspot.com&quot;
 /&gt;&lt;/div&gt;</description>
-       <pubDate>Sun, 24 May 2009 15:47:00 +0000</pubDate>
-       <author>[email protected] (oulipo)</author>
-</item>
 
 </channel>
 </rss>




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