2008/10/8 James Knott <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> I have been reading eweek articles for years and haven't seen that web
> buyers mag.
>

Here is the first page of the two page article:

When sun microsystems bought the little-known StarOffice productivity
suite in 1999 and soon thereafter released the product's code base as
open-source software, it was unclear how far the arguably quixotic
initiative might reach—and what damage it could possibly wreak on
Microsoft's ironclad grip on the office productivity market. Now, nine
years later, Sun and the project that grew up around that code base,
OpenOffice.org, are on the verge of a major 3.0 release. While
OpenOffice.org hasn't achieved the same measure of mainstream adoption
as its ideological cousin, the Firefox Web browser, the freely
available office suite has helped advance the state of file format
standardization to the extent that Microsoft first developed its own
open-file format and is now prepared to include support for the
ISO-standard OpenDocument format in Office 2007. I tested
OpenOffice.org 3.0 in a near-final RC3 version and was pleased with
the progress that the project has made toward improving format
compatibility and feature parity with Microsoft Office. I also tested
a beta release of StarOffice 9, which is the commercial version of
OpenOffice.org for which Sun offers support and intellectual property
indemnification. As with previous versions of the suites, the extent
to which OpenOffice.org or StarOffice can serve effectively as a
replacement to Microsoft Office will depend on the features and
documents you use in your organization. Since OpenOffice.org is free
to download and take for a spin, it's certainly worth giving the suite
a run in your environment to judge for yourself.

Platforms and formats
As in previous versions, openoffice.org 3.0 runs on Windows, Linux,
Solaris x86 and Solaris Sparc. Both the Windows and Linux flavors of
OpenOffice.org are available in both 32- and 64-bit x86 editions. New
in OpenOffice.org version 3 is native support for Apple's OS X.
Previous OpenOffice.org iterations required the X11 server to run,
which made OpenOffice.org a bit of a misfit on the OS X desktop.
OpenOffice.org supports the newest version of the OpenDocument file
format, ODF 1.2. The latest version of ODF includes accessibility and
metadata enhancements, as well as a means of specifying spreadsheet
formulas that's more detailed than what was laid out in ODF 1.0. The
lack of formula specificity in ODF 1.0 meant that certain aspects of
storing spreadsheet formulas were up to the application developer to
define, which could lead to incompatibility between documents created
with different ODF implementations. The formula issue hasn't been a
major problem so far, since OpenOffice.org/StarOffice has been the
primary ODF implementation, but the formula improvements in ODF 1.2
lay the groundwork for broader adoption of the document standard. Also
new in OpenOffice.org 3 are import filters for Microsoft Office
2007-formatted documents. The XML-based .docx, .xlsx and .pptx formats
in which Microsoft's suite now save documents by default. I tried out
OpenOffice.org 3's Office 2007 format support with a few documents and
found the fidelity fairly good overall, but marred by enough small
errors to disrupt roundtrip, cross-application document collaboration.
OpenOffice.org 3 fares much better at this point with Microsoft's
older, binary Office formats. When maintaining file format fidelity is
paramount, I suggest that users opt for Adobe's PDF format, which
OpenOffice.org has supported well as an export format. New in
OpenOffice.org 3 is limited support for importing and editing PDF
documents, through a freely downloadable extension. The marketing
materials at the OpenOffice.org project site describe the PDF import
option as a resort for making small changes to PDFs for which the
editable originals have gone missing; in other words, users should
keep their expectations for this feature fairly modest. Indeed, after
spending a bit of time testing the suite's new PDF import function,
I'd be hard pressed to imagine many circumstances in which I'd find
the feature useful. Imported PDF documents open within the suite's
presentation application, Impress, and text is editable on a
line-by-line basis. I was able to import a PDF I had created using
OpenOffice.org with fairly good fidelity, but when I opened one of
eWeek's product

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Dotan Cohen

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