Space: Apache OpenOffice Community 
(https://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/display/OOOUSERS)
Page: (Draft) The Public Service Mission of OpenOffice 
(https://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/display/OOOUSERS/%28Draft%29+The+Public+Service+Mission+of+OpenOffice)

Added by Rob Weir:
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h2. Introduction


Along with an email client and a web browser, an office suite is a core 
essential application that almost every computer user requires. Although there 
is a dominant commercial product in this category, its price and limited 
platform and language support makes it an unsatisfactory option for many. 
OpenOffice, for over a decade, has helped fill this gap. Our goal is to 
develop, publish and support OpenOffice as a world-class office suite, free for 
anyone to use, and since it is open source, free for anyone to build upon. 
Using the generally available discounted price of commercial office products, 
the value of OpenOffice downloads over the past decade exceeds USD 10
billion (10,000,000,000),



h2. Overcoming the "Digital Divide"


More than 40% of the world population lives on less than US$ 2 per day, and 
around 20% live on less than US$ 1 per day. Against these numbers, commercial 
shrink-wrapped office software is often seen as a luxury good. End-user facing 
open source software, like OpenOffice, brings high-quality software to those 
who would otherwise have no other affordable options. Within the ICT for 
Development (ICT4D) community, OpenOffice has long been an important part of 
achieving development goals.



h2. Support for Linguistic and Cultural Diversity


There are over 6,000 languages in the world, but unless the language is 
associated with a G20 economic superpower, commercial vendors tend to ignore 
it. The OpenOffice community has a long standing tradition of supporting a 
large number of languages, including languages used by smaller populations, 
minority languages, endangered languages, etc. For example, South Africa has 11 
official languages. OpenOffice has been translated to all of them. By 
supporting languages that would not otherwise be supported we help reduce 
"digital exclusion" and promote development, local education and administration.



h2. Accessibility


Persons with disabilities, especially those with visual impairments, commonly 
rely on "assistive technology" to interact with computers. Such technologies 
work well only when applications are designed and coded to work well with them. 
Additionally, users who create documents must do their part to ensure that the 
documents they create work well with assistive technology, for example through 
the use ofimage captions, consistent list levels, etc. The OpenOffice project 
aims to provide strong accessibility support, both in the core product and 
including broader ecosystem support via extensions, for working with Braille 
printers, exporting to DAISY talking books, etc.



h2. Open Standards


Open standards are those standards which are created in an open, transparent 
process, where the specifications can be freely accessed and implemented 
without royalties. Most core web standards are open standards. The default 
document format in OpenOffice, OpenDocument Format (ODF) is also an open 
standard. Widespread use of open standards promotes interoperability and choice 
in the market. But this does not come without effort on our part. We commit to 
faithful implementation of open standards, and to work with standards 
organizations and other vendors to improve these standards and to test and 
improve interoperability.

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