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/v3-uk/news/2044090/oracle-drops-openoffice-commercial-software-portfolio
15 Apr 2011, Iain Thomson , V3
Oracle is dropping the OpenOffice application suite from its commercial software offerings, and handing the code to the open source community.
The company said in a statement that it will concentrate its open source efforts on MySQL and Linux, where there is a broad base of corporate and government support. Oracle did not say whether it will still invest in OpenOffice.
"Given the breadth of interest in free personal productivity applications, and the rapid evolution of personal computing technologies, we believe the OpenOffice.org project would be best managed by an organisation focused on serving that broad constituency on a non-commercial basis," said Edward Screven, Oracle's chief corporate architect.
"We intend to begin working immediately with community members to further the continued success of OpenOffice. Oracle will continue to strongly support the adoption of open standards-based document formats, such as the Open Document Format [ODF]."
OpenOffice began life as an attempt by Sun Microsystems to provide an open source alternative to Microsoft Office to support the ODF standard. The software was popular, sometimes outstripping the ability of Sun's servers to cope with demand.
But after the Oracle takeover of Sun the new management quickly fell out with the chief developers, leading them to decamp en masse to set up of a similar open source project called LibreOffice.
Oracle seemed unwilling to negotiate with the developers, and more have since joined LibreOffice from OpenOffice.
The move will probably be the end of the Sun-inspired project, or it may be possible to merge the remaining OpenOffice and LibreOffice teams. Oracle was unavailable for comment at time of going to press.
Do you agree?
Inaccurate History
"OpenOffice began life as an attempt by Sun Microsystems to provide an open source alternative to Microsoft Office to support the ODF standard"
No it didn't. It began life as StarOffice from a company called StarDivision who were then bought out by Sun. Sun then created an open source version (called OpenOffice.org) while continuing to sell StarOffice. The Star|OpenOffice.org file format then went on to become ODF. Your sentence implies that ODF existed before OO.org and that Sun created OO.org out of thin air after ODF was invented.
Posted by Scot McSweeney-Roberts, 19 Apr 2011
FOSS community drops Oracle
nuff said!
Posted by Bob Wya, 27 Apr 2011