Hi :)
Lol, it was all very exciting and a bit turgid at the same time.  Still is, 
even tho things have calmed down a lot now apparently.  

The basic up-shot is that you don't need to change.  OpenOffice faded like the 
moon wanes and then waxes.  Hopefully under Apache it will wax towards being 
full again.  

You can choose to "jump ship" now and join the much more exciting and better 
developed LibreOffice now or you could choose to stick-it-out a bit longer and 
then choose to change (or not) at some point later on.  

Regards from
Tom :)


--- On Thu, 24/11/11, Regina Henschel <[email protected]> wrote:

From: Regina Henschel <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [libreoffice-users] Demise of Open Office
To: [email protected]
Date: Thursday, 24 November, 2011, 19:18

Hi John,

John Gregson schrieb:
> I am an older person, with limited computer knowledge, using Open Office
> 3.3; on Win 7.
> Would some Kind Soul please explain why Open Office seems to be fading
> away.

When Oracle bought Sun it got the rights on OpenOffice.org among other things. 
But Oracle had no interest to develop OpenOffice.org. It shuts down the 
development department and dismissed the developers. Oracle gave Apache the 
possibility to do further work on OpenOffice.org. But parts of OpenOffice.org 
are not compatible with the Apache license. So the current work is to identify 
those parts and replace them with Apache license compatible solutions. In 
addition, OpenOffice.org was not only a product but had a lot of infrastructure 
around like Wiki, Bugzilla, mailinglists and forums, which Apache tries to 
migrate to the way Apache works. So it will last some time till the next 
release will appear and it will no longer be an "OpenOffice.org" but an "Apache 
OpenOffice". For more information see for example 
https://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/display/OOOUSERS/OpenOffice.org+Migration+Status

Apache is not an enterprise but a foundation and does not employs developers 
but the work is done by volunteers. In this aspect it is similar with The 
Document Foundation and LibreOffice. There are enterprises which pay some 
developers (including some of the old stuff) to work full time on the Apache 
OpenOffice. That is similar to the situation here, where some enterprises pay 
developers to work full time on LibreOffice. The latter had worked already on 
the OpenOffice.org code for a long time and LibreOffice gets all of their 
know-how. The fact, that lot of the volunteers of OpenOffice.org work now on 
LibreOffice has been told already.

> In Open office, I use Writer and Calc; I assume that the OOo files are
> compatible with Libre Office. Should I start using Libre Office
> immediately? Please keep abbreviations to a minimum., or at least
> explain the abbreviation.

You can start immediately with LibreOffice. There are some versions available 
parallel. The version with the higher second number has got new features but 
might contain some more bugs. The version with the smaller second number does 
not have the latest features but has got a lot of bug fixes already and is in 
use a long time by many users.

Kind regards
Regina





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