OpenOffice.org

MEDIA RELEASE
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

OPENOFFICE.ORG COMMUNITY ANNOUNCES OPENOFFICE.ORG 1.O: 
FREE OFFICE PRODUCTIVITY SOFTWARE

Global Community builds full-featured office suite with revolutionary
momentum

Perth, Australia (May 1, 2002) - The OpenOffice.org community
(http://www.openoffice.org/) today announced the availability of
OpenOffice.org 1.0, the open source, multi-platform, multi-lingual
office productivity suite available as a free download at the
OpenOffice.org community website. OpenOffice.org 1.0 is the culmination
of more than 18 months of collaborative effort by members of the
OpenOffice.org community, which is comprised of Sun employees, volunteer
developers, marketers, and end users working to create an international
office suite that will run on all major platforms.

OpenOffice.org 1.0, which shares the same code base as Sun's StarOffice
6.0 is -- like StarOffice 6.0 -- a full-featured office suite that
provides a near drop-in replacement for Microsoft Office. OpenOffice.org
1.0 offers consumers and businesses software freedom, enabling a free
market for service and support, while the Sun-branded product,
StarOffice 6.0, offers 24x7 fee-based support and training for consumers
and businesses, along with deployment and migration services. StarOffice
also offers additional features, such as a database, special fonts and
Sun quality and assurance testing.The two office suites complement each
other, meeting the varying needs of consumers, open source advocates and
enterprise customers.

"OpenOffice.org 1.0 may be the single best hope for consumers fed-up
with Microsoft's desktop monopoly," said Eric Raymond, co-founder of the
Open Source Initiative (OSI). "With Sun moving to a full service and
support business model for StarOffice, users around the globe will
continue to have a free office productivity software tool through the
OpenOffice.org open source community."

The OpenOffice.org 1.0 office suite features key desktop applications --
including word processor, spreadsheet, presentation and drawing programs
-- in more than 25 languages. In addition, OpenOffice.org 1.0 works
transparently with a variety of file formats, enabling users familiar
with other office suites, such as Microsoft Office and StarOffice, to
work seamlessly in the application. The OpenOffice.org 1.0 software runs
stably and natively on multiple platforms, including Linux, PPC Linux,
Solaris, Windows and many other flavours of Unix.

OpenOffice.org is the largest open source project with more than 7.5
million lines of code. To date, more than 4.5 million downloads of
earlier versions of OpenOffice.org 1.0 have taken place. With the
release of the 1.0 version, the OpenOffice.org community expects that
number to grow significantly as businesses and individuals around the
world explore the free alternative to proprietary office suites.

The OpenOffice.org Community

In less than two years, the OpenOffice.org community has grown to more
than 10,000 volunteers, working together to build the leading
international office suite that will run on all major platforms and
provide access to all functionality and data through open-component
based APIs and an XML-based file format. Sun initiated this effort by
donating the StarOffice source code and engineering to the
OpenOffice.org community. One of the major benefits of community-based
development is peer review, which has resulted in a stable, secure and
flexible software package.

Participants in the Community work on projects ranging from code
development to porting and localisation, to bug reporting,
documentation, product marketing, local language sites and mirror sites
for software download.

"There are many important roles that volunteer developers can play to
shape the future functionality of OpenOffice.org (OOo) so if you are
looking for someplace to contribute, OOo can use you," said Kevin
Hendricks, a key contributor to the OpenOffice.org community since its
inception nearly two years ago. Hendricks has lead volunteer development
teams for both the OpenOffice.org 1.0 spellchecker and PPC Linux port
projects.

"When OpenOffice.org was released, it was a tremendous amount of code
with a very deep history, and thus we knew it would take a lot of time
and effort to reach a critical mass of community participation," said
Brian Behlendorf, CTO and co-founder, CollabNet.  "The project has now
attracted a significant amount of outside involvement, some of it in
pretty interesting areas like marketing and quality assurance. With the
release of 1.0, it's clear those efforts are bearing real fruit.
Congratulations to the community -- and to Sun -- for making this
happen."

CollabNet's SourceCast application enables both centralised and
geographically distributed software development teams to collaborate on
OpenOffice.org projects and to track them accurately. SourceCast is the
premier Web-based collaboration environment, which includes an
integrated set of software development applications. CollabNet also
provides strategic advice on open source issues and the growth of
OpenOffice.org, and offers analysis on current trends within the
community.

"OpenOffice.org may be the most important open source project right now,
said Miguel de Icaza, founder of the GNOME project. Because people will
try it and see they can get everyday work done without giving more money
to Microsoft, they'll see -- in a low-risk way -- that open source
software can work for them and be an even better solution.

About OpenOffice.org

OpenOffice.org is the home of the open source project and its community
of developers, users and marketers responsible for the on-going
development of the OpenOffice.org 1.0 product. The mission of
OpenOffice.org is to create, as a community, the leading international
office suite that will run on all major platforms and provide access to
all functionality and data through open-component based APIs and an
XML-based file format. Additional ports, such as FreeBSD, IRIX and Mac
OS X are in various stages of completion by developers and end-users in
the OpenOffice.org community. OpenOffice.org 1.0 is written in C++ and
has documented API's licensed under the GNU Lesser General Public
License (LGPL) and Sun Industry Standards Source License (SISSL) open
source licenses.

About CollabNet

CollabNet provides companies with solutions for collaborative software
development by combining a Web-based software application with a suite
of consulting services. Using these solutions, customers can collaborate
on development projects within an enterprise, with customers, business
partners, or with third party developer organisations, such as industry
specific or open source communities. CollabNet enables corporations to
reduce costs and increase revenues by bringing different project team
members together, regardless of their location. CollabNet is currently
working with customers ranging from hardware and software providers to
companies from industries such as financial services, wireless, and
pharmaceuticals. Brian Behlendorf, co-founder of the Apache Software
Foundation, established CollabNet in July 1999. For more information,
see http://www.collab.net/.

About Sun Microsystems, Inc.

Since its inception in 1982, a singular vision -- "The Network Is The
ComputerTM" -- has propelled Sun Microsystems, Inc. (Nasdaq:SUNW) to its
position as a leading provider of industrial-strength hardware, software
and services that power the Internet and allow companies worldwide to
take their businesses to the nth. Sun can be found in more than 170
countries and on the World Wide Web at http://www.sun.com/.


MEDIA RELEASE CONTACT:
Jacqueline McNally
Community Contact, Australia/New Zealand
OpenOffice.org Marketing Project
Jacqueline McNally
+61 8 9474 3021 (GMT +0800)
[EMAIL PROTECTED] 



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