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RedOffice 4.0 Beta Updates OpenOffice UI

Posted by CmdrTaco on Monday June 02, @09:00AM
from the but-is-it-better dept.
Johannes Eva writes "As IBM Lotus Symphony shows its first public version 1.0, the Chinese OpenOffice.org derivative RedOffice offers the first beta of its new version 4.0. The open source RedOffice gets a new UI inspired from Microsoft Office 2007, with a vertical 'ribbon.' Is this the future of OpenOffice.org?"

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  • Microsoft (Score:5, Funny)

    by dintech (998802) on Monday June 02, @09:01AM (#23625789)
    Oh dear. More evidence for the Microsoft "fact"-sheet that open source is indeed communism.
    • Re:Microsoft (Score:5, Interesting)

      by bloodninja (1291306) on Monday June 02, @09:34AM (#23626103)

      Oh dear. More evidence for the Microsoft "fact"-sheet that open source is indeed communism.
      Be that so. Although some Russian leaders have ruined the idea of communism for many people, much of what we love about FOSS software could be seen as communist (or, at the very least, Marxist) ideas. That said, I love the MSO 2007 interface. Although I've used several different office products over the course of the years, I do not consider myself proficient in any of them. Nor do I want to invest the time to get proficient. In the rare times that I've used MSO 2007 at the university (at home I run Kubuntu), I've found that I can do my work quicker in MSO than in OpenOffice, which I am more familiar with. I would love to see the ribbon as an alternative UI in OOo. I don't see any reason that the program cannot have two UI's, other than lack of programmer time developing it.
      • Re:Microsoft (Score:4, Insightful)

        by Anonymous Coward on Monday June 02, @09:42AM (#23626175)
        Here, let me correct that for you:

        "Although some Russian, Chinese, Cambodian, Cuban, Yugoslavian, Romanian, and Polish leaders have demonstrated the ultimate outcome of communism for many people..."
        • Re:Microsoft (Score:5, Informative)

          by jaxtherat (1165473) on Monday June 02, @09:58AM (#23626361) Homepage
          Whoever modded that 'Flamebait' should have moded that 'Insightful'.

          Speaking as someone who used to live behind the Iron Curtain, and DAILY thanks his parents for emigrating to Australia.
        • Re:Microsoft (Score:5, Insightful)

          by Tranzistors (1180307) on Monday June 02, @10:07AM (#23626459)
          Well, communism works great, if there is abundance. And in case of software, there is abundance.

          Capitalism works on axiom "there is infinite human needs and wants, in a world of finite resources", and it can't normally work in world where production (copying) and distribution is very cheep, so it must make resources scares artificially (DRM and such).

          Anyway, what these communist countries did wrong was what Software vendors and MAFIAA did - applied good paradigm in wrong situation.
          • Re:Microsoft (Score:4, Interesting)

            by bloodninja (1291306) on Monday June 02, @10:56AM (#23627005)

            Well, communism works great, if there is abundance. And in case of software, there is abundance.
            Thank you, that describes exactly the situation in as few words as I've yet seen.
          • Re:Microsoft (Score:5, Interesting)

            by steelfood (895457) on Monday June 02, @10:58AM (#23627035)
            What's particularly interesting is that China will be a huge proponent of OSS, as the government is very suspicious of closed-source software, especially ones developed in the US (*cough* Microsoft *cough*).

            The people might not respect copyrights (the culture certainly doesn't have any interest in the concept of "intellectual property"), but the government will have to at least pay lip service to it, and that usually means playing by the GPL.

            It's ironic, but it also makes sense that "open" governments have to hide their dirty laundry, while governments that have no need to maintain the pretense of being democratic and free can actually openly air their dirty laundry.

            At the end of the day, the goal of governments, and the people working for them, is controlling the governed, and it's not only unrealistic, but naieve to think otherwise. The US government is just as guilty of this as Iran or North Korea, as we've been witness to over the past few decades since the witch hunt of the 50's, the difference being that the US government's limits are more in line with our expectations, and the Iranian government's limits are not. That and what we define to be within the boundaries of "good" appear to be more productive than what North Korea defines to be "good."

            Anyway, I digress.

            As soon as they get their act together, we should be seeing more OSS initiatives from China. After all, they wouldn't want the NSA hiding keyloggers in the export versions of Windows or Acrobat or PowerDVD or WOW or stuff like that. China will want control of the software that gets installed in their government computers, and oddly enough, the only way to do that without reinventing the wheel is to release control of the software.

            Of course, proprietary software is still useful for making surveillance tools, but that's something we get to choose to install on our systems--for now at least.
          • Capitalism (Score:5, Insightful)

            by Z34107 (925136) <zealoussniper.netscape@net> on Monday June 02, @12:07PM (#23627927)

            Just to nitpick, capitalism works just in a lack of scarcity. DRM and DMCA is a government and legislation thing - capitalism is an economic system.

            Traditional Adam-Smith-Invisible-Hand-esque capitalist economics say MP3s should be free.

        • Re:Microsoft (Score:5, Insightful)

          by rbanffy (584143) on Monday June 02, @12:23PM (#23628099) Homepage
          While there is a great deal of overlap between communism and police states with aggressive dictatorships, they are not synonyms.

          Often, the flag of communism is used as a bait to induce an unsatisfied population to help a group to rise to power and as an excuse to create mechanisms for repression of the previous government and, ultimately, to betray those ideals and the people who supported them as soon as their help is no longer necessary or their cooperation can be obtained by other means.

          It's indeed a tragedy. But let's not confuse things. Neither non-communist countries are automatically paradises of civil rights nor communist countries are inevitably police-states. Things are a lot more complex than that.
            • Re:Microsoft (Score:5, Insightful)

              by R2.0 (532027) on Monday June 02, @11:56AM (#23627767)
              "For what it is worth, Yugoslavia under Marshall Tito worked out fairly well."

              For a while - until he died and the lid blew off.

              One of the reasons that Yugoslavia "worked" is that Tito ruthlessly suppressed sectarianism and ethnicities. While it appeared to be a good thing, especially to the eyes of Western liberals who regard religion as evil, it had the effect of building a pressure cooker which blew apart in the 90's, causing violence far in excess of whatever Tito did. Iraq is the same way - Saddam suppressed the Kurds and Shia, and "kept the peace". But in doing so, he set the seeds for the situation we see now, with the US popping the cork prematurely.

              You can't take large populations of ethnically and religiously diverse populations, put them in close contact, and tell them "Get along - or else". It just doesn't work over the long term.
      • Re:Microsoft (Score:5, Insightful)

        by ShieldW0lf (601553) on Monday June 02, @09:49AM (#23626241) Journal
        Be that so. Although some Russian leaders have ruined the idea of communism for many people,

        Who supplied you with all your news about what was going on in those Communist states? Was it Stalin, or was it your own national news?

        It's not communism-the-economic-model that's the problem, it's totalitarianism-the-political-model. You can't dissociate the two in your mind because your own nation has been brainwashing you to think of them as inseparable, most likely since the time you were born.

        Both democratic capitalist states and totalitarian communist states have carrots and sticks.

        In the democratic state, you are dominated through economics, but liberated from autocratic government, in totalitarian communist states, you are dominated by government, but liberated from dynastic capitalist empires.

        Capitalism is the same as Totalitarianism, Communism is the same as Democracy, ain't nobody free on this hunk of dirt, and very few who even know well enough how to even ask for freedom in the first place.
        • Re:Microsoft (Score:4, Insightful)

          by xappax (876447) on Monday June 02, @10:38AM (#23626797) Homepage
          This is a common misconception. Communism does not imply authoritarian control of the economy.

          Large-scale implementations of communism have tended to use authoritarian control to force a communist economic model. This was, in my opinion, an astonishingly bad idea.

          Communism simply means that the economy is managed by the community. If the community government is totalitarian, communism will be enforced through totalitarianism. If the community government is a decentralized direct democracy, then the economy will be managed through direct democratic involvement by all the people.

          This is in contrast to capitalism, in which the economy is ostensibly managed by nobody, and in practice managed by those who control the lions share of money or resources. This commonly leads to a small number of successful capitalists gaining effective centralized control of the economy.

          Since a capitalist economy cannot be managed by the community, there is no recourse should the economy become dominated by a small number of centralized companies or people. Despite the democratic, emergent properties of the community government, the economy can still easily slip into a model that is centralized in all but name.
  • by Aehgts (972561) on Monday June 02, @09:20AM (#23625963) Journal
    An article written in English showing a Chinese program being installed on a French OS.
    I'm sure the new UI is fantastic, based on the eight-by-ten colour glossy photographs
    with circles and arrows and a paragraph on the back of each one explaining what each one was.

    Makes me want to install RedOffice and blog about it.
    And then three people do it, three, can you imagine, three people installing RedOffice and blogging about it.
    They may think it's an organization. And can you, can you imagine fifty people a day,
    I said fifty people a day installing RedOffice and blogging about it.
    And friends they may thinks it's a movement.


    (Apologies to Arlo)
  • by tecker (793737) on Monday June 02, @09:32AM (#23626079) Homepage
    The server is bleeding bad. Less then 20 Posts and its already down. Be Kind and use the cache [nyud.net]
  • Lotus Symphony (Score:4, Interesting)

    by Jason Levine (196982) on Monday June 02, @10:56AM (#23627001) Homepage
    Back when I tried the Alpha version of Lotus Symphony, I really liked the UI and the fact that I could import WordPro documents (as we're standardized on *shudder* Lotus WordPro here at work). What I didn't like was that Symphony would change all OpenOffice.org file associations to itself when it was installed and every time it was run. There was no option to leave the file associations alone. (Much less an opt-in to change them in the first place.)

    Since then, I've kept a wary eye on Symphony. Their latest release notes state: "It is now supported to change the file types to be associated with IBM Lotus Symphony during installation." In addition, the notes talk about a "File Type Associations panel." Hopefully, this means that they realized the error in the Alpha version and have made the file associations opt-in both on install and on program launch.

    (If anyone knows for sure, I'd be happy to hear what the latest version does with file type associations.)
    • by RootWind (993172) on Monday June 02, @10:47AM (#23626891)
      To tell you the truth, I think it is dependent on how willing the person is to learn new things. Here's what I found out with a small sample (probably not representative). I was tasked with rolling out Office 2007 as a trial to a group of 185 college students and ~70 faculty. From our informal survey, approval over 2003 after initial 1 hour exposure: Students: 62.1%; Faculty: 42.8%. After 1 month, Students: 82.1%; Faculty: 54.3%. From the students and faculty that said they were not familiar with Office, the majority preferred 2007. And as expected, those who considered themselves experts, mostly preferred 2003.