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Well, there is only one company working on MS Office, too, and there's only one company working on iWork
. But it looks as if Sun is slowly downscaling their development effort on OOo, and OOo is unlikely to be ever a popular project for volunteers to work on, even if it became truly open and community oriented, because of the size and complexity of the codebase, the weirdness of the buildsystem, the amount of unfamiliar technologies used -- technologies that are only used in OOo. But then, as a KOffice developer, I _would_ say that, wouldn't I :-)
Oh, since I now have a chance to talk to an actual KOffice developer: are there plans to seriously boost MS compatibility, now that MS released their format specs? (Also, you could reuse OOo filters, but it's possible to do better than that, as far as I can judge by Softmaker Office.)
. But it looks as if Sun is slowly downscaling their development effort on OOo, and OOo is unlikely to be ever a popular project for volunteers to work on, even if it became truly open and community oriented, because of the size and complexity of the codebase, the weirdness of the buildsystem, the amount of unfamiliar technologies used -- technologies that are only used in OOo. But then, as a KOffice developer, I _would_ say that, wouldn't I :-) There are two companies - I don't know why you turned the fact I said there are two companies into some sort of lynch pin to your whole argument. The fact of the matter is that there are limited resources to not only maintain OpenOffice.org/StarOffice for existing Novell/Sun customers as well as using those same programmers to ad features to OpenOffice.org as well.
Its a whole lot more complex than releasing a piece of software - you have to release it, maintain it, ship updates, test those updates for regressions. Then then there is maintaining those releases from the past. You've released 2.4 but there are customers still using 2.3 - so you'll need to maintain that as well. Again, it isn't as simple as you make out.
As for OpenOffice.org, there needs to be resources, but like I said, the two major players are doing as much as they can - where is Red Hat? why can't they allocate 10 full time programmers? or has their 'giving up on the desktop' reached as so far as not even helping with desktop oriented opensource products? what about Ubuntu - where is their contribution outside distribution specific bugs?






Member since:
2005-07-06
When there are only two companies actually working full time on it - are you surprised? Novell and Sun are doing as much as they can with the limited resources - its time for the vendors who do bundle it with their respective distributions to actually allocate some man/person power to the project.