back to article OpenOffice files Oracle divorce papers

Open sourcers have seized control of the OpenOffice project and product and declared their independence from database giant Oracle. The OpenOffice.org Project has unveiled a major restructuring that separates itself from Oracle and that takes responsibility for OpenOffice away from a single company. Oracle had been OpenOffice …

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    1. John G Imrie

      @Richard.

      I guess you don't like Television, which if IRC is a mix of Greek and Latin.

      1. PirateSlayer
        Troll

        @john

        Pretty specious John given that it doesn't change the fact that the word 'Libre' is not in the english language but television is. IRC english is a mix of latin and germanic languages...meh.

        Then again, how many trademarks do you know that don't get a squiggly red line under them (or is it a squiggly rainbow line in LibreOffice)?

        1. ThomH

          Libre is pretty much Latin and pretty much English

          In that it's from the Latin liber, other descendants of which that have survived into [modern] English being liberty, liberal, etc.

      2. Robert E A Harvey

        no title

        >I guess you don't like Television, which if IRC is a mix of Greek and Latin

        True. But there are many better reasopns for disliking television. Such as television programmes.

  1. Anonymous Coward
    Welcome

    Sounds like a feminine hygiene product

    Terrible name aside, anything that takes three to four times longer to load a .doc file than MS Word on my laptop really isn't a competitive product. It was useful on opensolaris where there were fewer choices for word processing, but even there I preferred Emacs or TeX over openoffice. Hopefully the fork will also include dramatically improving the performance on multiple platforms.

    1. Matthew Barker

      You haven't lived...

      until you've had to watch 100s of presentations created on Open/Star Office, all converted to PDFs –with no transitions or animations because they didn't work very well. Or because they didn't work the same across the "supported" platforms.

      Thanks, but no thanks.

      The name is...*sigh*...a bit uninspired. Sounds like maybe a committee came up with it after deliberating for 5 minutes with names in a hat.

      1. Michael H.F. Wilkinson Silver badge
        Boffin

        Why not use pdfLaTeX and beamer.cls

        and pdfanim.sty, using EMACS of course !!

        I do that all the time ;-)

  2. Neill Mitchell

    Oh Gawd

    "From now on, though, OpenOffice's development and direction will be decided by a steering committee of developers and national language project managers."

    Now any committee is usually bad enough, but a committee of developers fills me with absolute dread. Let's hope at least of these developers cares about usability or we're in for a geek fest of bad UI decisions. Let's also hope they resist the urge to rewrite vast swathes of code in an attempt to achieve some ridiculous code purity goal. See this time and time again unfortunately and it usually ends with a stagnated project.

  3. Anonymous Coward
    Coat

    Name

    LibreOffice.org? As in 'loo'?

    Mine's the one with the cleaning fluid in the pocket.

  4. MyHeadIsSpinning
    FAIL

    Well meaning but slow-witted Sun Microsystems

    After reading that article, I would have to agree that Sun was very slow witted indeed; as it appears that no sooner than it sold itself out to Oracle, that Oracle immediately shut down or suspended all successful and popular projects.

    Perhaps Oracle could be called slow witted as well.

    1. tempemeaty
      Alert

      ..or...

      ...perhaps Oracle bought Sun to shut down open source efforts. Oracle might actually be at war against open source. It would explain Oracles silence.

      1. asdf
        Flame

        less about the open source stuff

        and much more about owning Java. The one exception of course would be to FUD MySQL hard as it was actually a minor threat to Oracles cash cow.

    2. Anne Ominous

      How so?

      Certainly, Sun's business was not doing well at the time, but that was largely due to the gradual decline in demand for the Sparc architecture. One could say that Sun was at fault there, but all they were really guilty of was putting their faith in Sparc, years ago.

      But how do Oracle's actions reflect on Sun? Sun isn't responsible for Oracle's stupidity, so that hardly qualifies it for the "slow-witted" moniker.

      Oracle, on the other hand, has repeatedly been cutting off its nose to spite its face. Their market percentage was already shrinking, and what do they do? Acquire Sun, then proceed to toss all the good stuff that Sun was doing -- and that people liked -- out the window.

      So we have pretty darned strong evidence that Oracle has been very slow-witted. Sun, not so much.

    3. ForthIsNotDead

      Depends...

      "as it appears that no sooner than it sold itself out to Oracle, that Oracle immediately shut down or suspended all successful and popular projects"

      Depends what you define as "successful" I suppose.

      If your definition is "everyone-thinks-this-is-really-groovy-and-look-how-many-people-are-downloading-this-and-yes-the-bandwidth-and-server-costs-and-the-development-costs-are-costing-us-a-fortune-but-look-everyone-loves-us-and-it-is-free-so-everyone-thinks-we're-really-cool-and-groovy-man-I-mean-how-nice-is-that-spread-the-love-more-herbal-tea-anyone" then yes, Sun were masters at it.

      If your definition of successful is bringing in enough money to cover costs and just maybe turn a reasonable profit, then, er, well... They got bought, didn't they?

  5. Anonymous Coward
    Thumb Up

    name

    how about "getting rid of complacency and finally implement improvements - office"

  6. Mark 65

    2 points

    1. Don't Libre make feminine hygene products?

    2. "From now on, though, OpenOffice's development and direction will be decided by a steering committee of developers and national language project managers." sounds like an exercise in herding cats.

    1. Anonymous Coward
      Grenade

      yes and yes

      1. Yes.

      2. Committees are the kiss of death in nearly every software project since nobody wants to take responsibility for the unpopular decisions. It reminds me of the demotivator poster 'none of us are as dumb as all of us.'

      Just because it's free doesn't mean you can ignore the fact that the software is currently bloated and has utterly terrible performance. If it takes 3+ minutes to load a 32k doc file on a laptop, it fails. One can only hope that the fork succeeds in improving the overall quality and performance.

      1. Anonymous Coward
        Anonymous Coward

        "takes 3+ minutes to load a 32k doc file on "

        Try setting it up PROPERLY - just a hint.

        1. Anonymous Coward
          Grenade

          setting it up properly?

          I downloaded and installed it ...what part of the set-up would I have missed to merely be able to open and read a document? Same laptop with MS Office with a stock install opened the same document in no time at all. I think you're missing the point that if this is to be an alternative for the masses to MS Office, it has a long way to go.

          1. Chemist

            "setting it up properly?"

            Enable systray quickstarter in Options memory

            Don't use the Java environment under Options Java

            Loads a 70K spreadsheet including starting OpenOfiice over the network via wireless in 10 secs on a Celeron mobile laptop - mind I'm using Linux

            1. Renato
              FAIL

              Re: "setting it up properly?"

              I didn't have to enable a systray quickstarter to use MS Office (or Abiword for that matter) and they load a MS Office document way faster than OOo.

              And why in the fscking hell I'd want a Java environment on my office suite?

              Anyway, if I had to configure it properly it isn't a product ready for end-users.

              OOo is bloated. Period.

              1. Chemist

                @Renato

                I repeat - if you can't get OpenOffice to open documents ~ as quickly as Office then it's not been set-up correctly.

                Changing a few settings to save the cost of Office seems a small price ( esp. as I've got it on 6 machines ). In any case Office isn't an option as I'm an all-Linux operation. Whether under Windows OpenOffice is slower I can't test now but I DO know the kind of times that are quoted, if true, don't match my experience or many other peoples either.

                Where I have found OpenOffice slow is using large spreadsheets - but in my previous life Excel wasn't up to it either as I used millions of rows so needed JMP.

  7. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    It is a shame...

    ...that Oracle have bought something of so much community value, something which carried the geuine inspiration and genius of the modern computing generation ... and squandered that value.

    Only time will tell how much hard cash follows the good will down the toilet where Oracle has flushed it ... in Oracle's bottom line.

  8. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    What took them so long?

    The most noticeable thing about the last update to Open Office was that it had Oracle logos plastered all over it - I'm sure there were other fixes and maybe even new features included, but the only change that I could see was Larry's Ego marks. I immediately deleted the downloads from OpenOffice.org, and switched to the build from Go-oo.org.

  9. Arbuthnot Darjeeling

    new non-anglocentric name for OpenOffice?

    Unverbindlich Geschäftsstelle 1.0 has a certain je ne c'est-quois about it, don'ch'a think?

    1. Anonymous Coward
      Big Brother

      the title is required, and must contain letters and/or digits.

      I have no idea what you're talking about but for some reason I am seeing the second part of your sentence surrendering to the first...maybe we should keep it in English.

      1. TeeCee Gold badge
        FAIL

        Re: the title is required etc.

        "....maybe we should keep it in English."

        What? Like "libre"?

        Didn't you hear the sonic boom as the subtlety of the original post screamed past waaaay over your head?

    2. Arbuthnot Darjeeling
      Happy

      oops my bad

      - je ne sais quois, I meant.

      Typical - labour over the German, slip on the French

  10. GreyWolf
    Paris Hilton

    Oh to be a fly on the wall

    in Steve Ballmer's office when that news came. I bet I would have learned some new swearwords. MS-Office is not going to be a cash-cow for much longer, and then the decline of MS becomes obvious even to the man in the street.

    Any news on when Steve is getting his anti-aircraft missile launcher? I hear he wants to take out Larry's MIG while he's showboating in it...

    [Paris, because she's both Libre and Gratis]

    1. The BigYin

      "MS-Office is not going to be a cash-cow for much longer"

      Dream on. I know I do....gawds do I despise MS Office. At least 2010 seems to e slightly less bad than 2007, but it is still worse than 2003.

    2. Anonymous Coward
      Gates Horns

      Hrm...

      Im not so sure... I'd think MS would be delighted at this news.

      The fracture between OOo and Ocom and the wrangling over names etc. will go on for months if not years. Plus the resultant ummm step child is now in the hands of a commmmitttteeee (never can remember how many m's, t's and e's in there), of engineers no less, so as has been commented already UI and features are now likely to be at odds.

      I'd imagine MS are laughing all the way at this one.

    3. W. Keith Wingate
      Gates Horns

      Here's to hoping M$ do not get the last laugh

      I almost hate to mention this, but OSS projects with good corporate sponsorship seem to do better than the more grass roots offerings by "self-organized teams". That may be an "inconvenient truth" in certain circles and surely there are exceptions (apache httpd ; perl, python, ...) but if you compare the popularity of "eclipse" (say) to other IDE's, I'd say it has as much to do with IBM's backing as with an innovative architecture. The fact that OO got much better and somewhat more popular after Sun's involvement was due to a number of factors including increased dissatisfaction w/ MS Office, the increased popularity of Linux (where would Linux be w/out RedHat, Cannonical, etc.), but I think some credit must be given to Sun's (then) deep pockets and its wealth of in-house talent.

      To be sure, no one was looking forward to a version of "Base" which needed redundant control files and 24 x 7 full-time DBA's , and Oracle would likely have continued to let the suite rot on the vine anyway, but I am starting to wonder whether I will have to finally break down and learn to use that bloody ribbon in Office 2007.

      As for the name, you don't suppose they'd go for iGNUoracle ?

  11. David McMahon
    Pint

    Been waiting for this

    I wish the team every success with this, we know that Oracle would only have money grabbing intentions of the project, so am glad to see that cut the strings, this story needs updates!

    I deploy x(OS)Office every time someone does not want to spend money on MS office (Often deleting pirate versions of MS Office) so can only hope that the project continues.

    I would advise everyone to download the binaries as Oracle might pull the plug on downloads.

    Pint for the team :)

  12. John Sanders
    Linux

    LibreOffice...

    Let's be honest, sounds bad.

    I would call it something like OpenDocs, OpenDocuments, NotOracle...

    I hope something good comes out of this like more worth it upgrades, OpenOffice is a good and necessary piece of software. But let's be honest there are some areas that need improvement fast, like not taking an afternoon to open some documents, or getting rid of the Java crap making it even slower.

  13. paul@work
    Linux

    Sun not shining

    It does seem (to me anyway) that Larry is taking over from where Darl McBride left off.

    Who would have thought that Oracle would have wanted to be as popular as SCO in the open source community?

  14. Anne Ominous

    Still a bad name.

    I understand what some are saying about the name, but I still don't think it's really appropriate.

    I was somewhat dismayed that the article called Sun "slow-witted", without seeing fit to mention the idiot moves Oracle has made in recent years. One of Sun's biggest problems was that the hardware demand simply moved away from its platform (in a way vaguely reminiscent of VHS vs. Betamax). Oracle, on the other hand, has simply been arrogant and domineering, and has been pissing everybody off.

    Under the circumstances, if I were the Document Foundation breaking away from Oracle, I think I'd name it F*ckOffice.

  15. Robert E A Harvey

    all french?

    I'd have gone for LibreBureau

  16. Steen Hive
    Thumb Up

    OpenOrifice

    Gets my vote.

  17. Lars Silver badge
    Happy

    Why not OS-Office

    For Open Source and all the different operation systems supported.

  18. Anonymous Coward
    FAIL

    Who cares?

    OpenOffice sucks anyway - regardless of what you call it. I have 5 computers at home. 3 are provided by my employer and my wife's employer and all have MS Office on. 2 others are personal ones (one for gaming and one for recording music on). I tried running OpenOffice on both these for about a year. I tried really hard because I didn't fancy forking out on an MSOffice licence. I spent so much time helping the other half out with problems, and dealing with formatting frustrations with documents sent to me (work and non-work related) that I gave up and a few months ago bought MSOffice. No regrets, despite the silly price.

    I used to think OpenOffice would fail because of the fact that Excel is miles better. Now I think it will fail because it can't even get the Word Processor right, and the spreadsheet is just appalling.

    1. TeeCee Gold badge
      Thumb Up

      Word processor....spreadsheet....

      Ah, you haven't used the database yet then?

      There's a whole world of pain in there that you have yet to delve into. You have to give 'em credit though, making Access look good can't be easy.

  19. AnonymousLee

    ForkOffice

    Gets my vote.

  20. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    Java updates...

    Does this mean we won't have open office forced on us every time we get a java update?

    1. Test Man
      Stop

      Nope.

      You'll still get OpenOffice.org "suggested" (not forced - you're clicking on the wrong link) when you get a Java update.

      Of course, LibreOffice won't be "forced" onto you (or even suggested) when you get a Java update.

      1. Anonymous Coward
        Anonymous Coward

        Isn't it set on by default by the install program?

        A bit like all those annoying toolbars added to useful programs.

  21. ForthIsNotDead
    Thumb Down

    Oracle loving it

    I imagine Oracle are secretly very happy about this.

    They have effectively been cut loose of their obligations, without coming out and having to do it themselves. They they don't have look like the bad guy in all of this.

    There'll be a few drinks drunk at Oracle Towers to toast this one, I reckon...

    That said, I think the LibreOffice folks could probably read the writing on the wall, and decided to act on the offensive, rather than wait for Oracle to dump OO and then have to be on the defensive, so I can't say I blame them for taking this action.

    I just hope it doesn't affect the quality of OOo/whatever-it's-called-this-week because it is really shaping up into a lovely suite of products.

    Personally, I think it's so good, that I would have no objection at all to shelling out a few quid for it. I'd happily pay £20 for it. I think they should consider charging for it. It's *that* good.

  22. hamsterjam
    Coat

    Developing (and correcting) an earlier joke....

    As a name LibreOffice has a certain je ne sais quoi, but I don't know what it is.

  23. Tsu Dho Nimh
    Coat

    Starting Over? Again?

    ARRRGH! And what about the ancient request for a decent outline view? I submitted the request in 2000 or 2001 and it has the most votes of any feature request in the database.

    How much of the code are they taking with them?

    Mine's the one with the ancient copy of Microsoft Word in the pocket. I'd throw it out if I didn't need the outline view.

  24. the old rang

    LibreOffice

    I investigated the 'Libre Office' option of the stick. If I was running Red Hat, it might be worth the effort... I am not, so it isn't. I know how to get around an RPM file to deb... but don't feel like wasting my time getting around hundreds of RPM files, after extracting the TAR...

    Looking at Lyx and LaTEX more and more, even with the learning curve. (Lotus is archaic with only 32 bit software, not worth the finagling to function.)

    If I want to do a book, Lyx/Latex seems to be the answer. RTF or .txt is enough for 99% of what I write... The other 1%? I use a pen..

    Irritating the Open Source Community, though, makes little sense... Too many of them are 'Black Hats.'

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