Re: open source on mobile [WAS: Re: Apache open office on Anroid

2015-04-24 Thread jonathon
On 04/21/2015 09:40 PM, Louis Suárez-Potts wrote:

We’ve done this unofficially; but why not have a page that identifies
not just derivatives

As best as I can determine, only one program on Android claims to be
derived from the AOO code base, and nothing on iOS claims to be so derived.

with the point of identity being ODF support (and license).

I quit trying to track iOS and Android apps that had ODF support, when I
realized that for every app that did so, there were around 50 that made
that claim, but could neither open, nor write ODF documents.

jonathon




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Re: open source on mobile [WAS: Re: Apache open office on Anroid

2015-04-21 Thread jan i
On Tuesday, April 21, 2015, Louis Suárez-Potts lui...@gmail.com wrote:

 Hm. I think the issue below is serious. And one we can address. But do
 others think that way or believe otherwise?


Not sure how we can really address this, considering our challenges making
a new desktop release.

Rgds
jan i


 louis
  On 20 Apr 2015, at 13:25, Louis Suárez-Potts lui...@gmail.com
 javascript:; wrote:
 
 
  On 20 Apr 2015, at 13:06, Guy Waterval waterval@gmail.com
 javascript:; wrote:
 
  Or have you not noticed that there are
  precious few native (as opposed to virtualised) open-source
 productivity
  tools to be found ready for the enterprise?
 
  to rephrase: productivity software, especially for enterprise, is
 overwhelmingly dominated by proprietary apps sold by very large
 multinational corporations. The apps available are often free, as in beer
 but not free as in speech. They are not open source. It does not matter if
 the operating system is Android or iOS or whatever, though there are some
 differences, at least in the marginal OSs, which represent a minute
 fraction of the total used.
 
  What this means is that as tablets (however imagined) are brought into
 the enterprise (public or private sector), open source is almost entirely
 absent. Yes, many apps use open source languages but so what? The UX model
 promoted by the smart, mobile device shuts out user intervention, with some
 exception, and there seems to be nothing organised that I can see that’s
 trying to change this arrangement and make it easier to create, distribute
 and even promote open source productivity apps on mobile devices.
 
  Yes, I am aware that tablets are falling out of popularity, but I also
 am aware that the tablet as imagined by Apple and incarnated in the iPad,
 was designed and is still envisioned as a consumer entertainment device,
 not as a work device (though that is changing) and that efforts to
 insinuate the tablet form factor into enterprise, as Microsoft has tried,
 have not succeeded. However, the mobile device is succeeding in areas where
 investment capital is less visible and it is likely to be the preferred
 mode for the billions that will be coming fresh to school, work, and other
 areas where computing devices are de rigeur (now or soon). And these users,
 in Africa, Latin America, and  the rest of the world, rich or poor, will be
 using… proprietary software.
 
  So, although the situation on the desktop (and by this one means also
 the laptop, of course; one refers here to the UX not hardware) is generally
 not bad for open source, that’s not so for the mobile UX. I doubt very much
 that Ubuntu or Moz. will put a dent into hard proprietary wave. What would,
 however, would be mobile apps that can work smoothly with existing desktop
 productivity software installations. Like Corinthia.
 
  best
  louis



-- 
Sent from My iPad, sorry for any misspellings.


open source on mobile [WAS: Re: Apache open office on Anroid

2015-04-21 Thread Louis Suárez-Potts
Hm. I think the issue below is serious. And one we can address. But do others 
think that way or believe otherwise?

louis
 On 20 Apr 2015, at 13:25, Louis Suárez-Potts lui...@gmail.com wrote:
 
 
 On 20 Apr 2015, at 13:06, Guy Waterval waterval@gmail.com wrote:
 
 Or have you not noticed that there are
 precious few native (as opposed to virtualised) open-source productivity
 tools to be found ready for the enterprise?
 
 to rephrase: productivity software, especially for enterprise, is 
 overwhelmingly dominated by proprietary apps sold by very large multinational 
 corporations. The apps available are often free, as in beer but not free as 
 in speech. They are not open source. It does not matter if the operating 
 system is Android or iOS or whatever, though there are some differences, at 
 least in the marginal OSs, which represent a minute fraction of the total 
 used.
 
 What this means is that as tablets (however imagined) are brought into the 
 enterprise (public or private sector), open source is almost entirely absent. 
 Yes, many apps use open source languages but so what? The UX model promoted 
 by the smart, mobile device shuts out user intervention, with some exception, 
 and there seems to be nothing organised that I can see that’s trying to 
 change this arrangement and make it easier to create, distribute and even 
 promote open source productivity apps on mobile devices.
 
 Yes, I am aware that tablets are falling out of popularity, but I also am 
 aware that the tablet as imagined by Apple and incarnated in the iPad, was 
 designed and is still envisioned as a consumer entertainment device, not as a 
 work device (though that is changing) and that efforts to insinuate the 
 tablet form factor into enterprise, as Microsoft has tried, have not 
 succeeded. However, the mobile device is succeeding in areas where investment 
 capital is less visible and it is likely to be the preferred mode for the 
 billions that will be coming fresh to school, work, and other areas where 
 computing devices are de rigeur (now or soon). And these users, in Africa, 
 Latin America, and  the rest of the world, rich or poor, will be using… 
 proprietary software.
 
 So, although the situation on the desktop (and by this one means also the 
 laptop, of course; one refers here to the UX not hardware) is generally not 
 bad for open source, that’s not so for the mobile UX. I doubt very much that 
 Ubuntu or Moz. will put a dent into hard proprietary wave. What would, 
 however, would be mobile apps that can work smoothly with existing desktop 
 productivity software installations. Like Corinthia.
 
 best
 louis



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Re: open source on mobile [WAS: Re: Apache open office on Anroid

2015-04-21 Thread Louis Suárez-Potts

 On 21 Apr 2015, at 17:37, jan i j...@apache.org wrote:
 
 On Tuesday, April 21, 2015, Louis Suárez-Potts lui...@gmail.com wrote:
 
 Hm. I think the issue below is serious. And one we can address. But do
 others think that way or believe otherwise?
 
 
 Not sure how we can really address this, considering our challenges making
 a new desktop release.
 

Thanks, Jan. Well, just by stating what you said is a start. Stating that we 
have limits here, in AOO, and that to pursue other ways of cracking this 
problem is okay and ought to be endorsed is a good next step. We’ve done this 
unofficially; but why not have a page that identifies not just derivatives but 
avenues of exploration and discovery, with the point of identity being ODF 
support (and license).


 Rgds
 jan i
 
 
 louis
 On 20 Apr 2015, at 13:25, Louis Suárez-Potts lui...@gmail.com
 javascript:; wrote:
 
 
 On 20 Apr 2015, at 13:06, Guy Waterval waterval@gmail.com
 javascript:; wrote:
 
 Or have you not noticed that there are
 precious few native (as opposed to virtualised) open-source
 productivity
 tools to be found ready for the enterprise?
 
 to rephrase: productivity software, especially for enterprise, is
 overwhelmingly dominated by proprietary apps sold by very large
 multinational corporations. The apps available are often free, as in beer
 but not free as in speech. They are not open source. It does not matter if
 the operating system is Android or iOS or whatever, though there are some
 differences, at least in the marginal OSs, which represent a minute
 fraction of the total used.
 
 What this means is that as tablets (however imagined) are brought into
 the enterprise (public or private sector), open source is almost entirely
 absent. Yes, many apps use open source languages but so what? The UX model
 promoted by the smart, mobile device shuts out user intervention, with some
 exception, and there seems to be nothing organised that I can see that’s
 trying to change this arrangement and make it easier to create, distribute
 and even promote open source productivity apps on mobile devices.
 
 Yes, I am aware that tablets are falling out of popularity, but I also
 am aware that the tablet as imagined by Apple and incarnated in the iPad,
 was designed and is still envisioned as a consumer entertainment device,
 not as a work device (though that is changing) and that efforts to
 insinuate the tablet form factor into enterprise, as Microsoft has tried,
 have not succeeded. However, the mobile device is succeeding in areas where
 investment capital is less visible and it is likely to be the preferred
 mode for the billions that will be coming fresh to school, work, and other
 areas where computing devices are de rigeur (now or soon). And these users,
 in Africa, Latin America, and  the rest of the world, rich or poor, will be
 using… proprietary software.
 
 So, although the situation on the desktop (and by this one means also
 the laptop, of course; one refers here to the UX not hardware) is generally
 not bad for open source, that’s not so for the mobile UX. I doubt very much
 that Ubuntu or Moz. will put a dent into hard proprietary wave. What would,
 however, would be mobile apps that can work smoothly with existing desktop
 productivity software installations. Like Corinthia.
 
 best
 louis
 
 
 
 --
 Sent from My iPad, sorry for any misspellings.



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