Tuesday September 11, 2007
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David Lee Todd, Unknown Product Manager People who love sausages and software should never watch either being made |
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All
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Diary of a startup
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General
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Java CAPS
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Open Source
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Product Management
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SeeBeyond
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Solaris
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StarOffice and OpenOffice.org
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Who am I?
The OpenOffice.org ecosystem and the StarOffice distro People often ask what the difference is between OpenOffice.org and StarOffice. This question has been popping up more often after Google's announcement that it would distribute StarOffice for free as part of the Google Pack of desktop applications. Here's my take on this, gathered from my colleagues on the OpenOffice and StarOffice teams, especially Louis Suarez-Potts, OpenOffice.org Community Manager. OpenOffice.org is a community Open Source project, released under the Lesser General Public License. Anyone can download either the binary or the source and redistribute them, at no charge, subject to the restrictions of the license. Sun is the biggest contributor to this project, but by no means the only one. Sun's contribution to this project is its gift to the world. Like the Linux community, the OpenOffice.org community encourages others to develop their own distributions -- “distros” -- of the OpenOffice.org software by picking and choosing from its modules, and by adding their own modules. StarOffice is such a distro, created by taking the OpenOffice.org core, and adding various commercially-oriented modules, such as an advanced spellchecker licensed from a third party. The fact that Sun Microsystems created the StarOffice distro, and charges for it, does not mean that Sun considers StarOffice to be more “official” that OpenOffice.org, any more than Debian or Ubuntu is more “official” than the Linux kernel. StarOffice is just oriented toward a particular market segment. There are other distros that target other markets. Sun created another distro called StarSuite that is oriented toward the Asian market. NeoOffice is an independent distro that has been ported to the Macintosh Aqua user interface. Novell created its own distro as well. The Google Pack StarOffice distro is a non-commercial version that is limited to Windows platforms. The OpenOffice.org ecosystem encompasses all these distros, and also includes many indpendent vendors who provide support, training, consulting and other services for the various distros. Sun sells support and other services for OpenOffice.org, StarOffice and StarSuite, and cooperates with independent support vendors in various markets. We take pride in our major contribution to this ever-growing, open ecosystem. Posted by davidleetodd ( Sep 11 2007, 06:26:21 AM PDT ) Permalink Comments [3] Post a Comment: Comments are closed for this entry. |
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Posted by Plan-B for Software Documentation on September 13, 2007 at 09:03 AM PDT #
Can you please remove my email address from my comment to your blog on Solaris' desktop opportunity and replace it with my name, I don't need more spam.
Thanks,
Peter.
Posted by Peter on October 03, 2007 at 06:30 PM PDT #
Hi Peter,
Our Roller blogging software won't let us edit a comment, so I had to delete yours entirely. Thanks for your interest in the blog!
dave
Posted by davidleetodd on October 04, 2007 at 09:44 AM PDT #