An Early Look at StarOffice 8 134
polar_bear` writes "NewsForge has an early review of Sun's StarOffice 8, set to be released in mid-October. From the article: 'StarOffice 8 is not perfect, but it is an excellent value for businesses that do not depend on proprietary Microsoft formats for production work.'" And yes, for the uninitiated, NewsForge is still owned by the same parent company as Slashdot.
Obvious (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Obvious (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Obvious (Score:2)
Re:Obvious (Score:1)
Re:Obvious (Score:5, Funny)
No compelling features over OOo 2.0? (Score:5, Interesting)
So, after reading the article, I didn't see any compelling features beyond what OpenOffice.org 2.0 promises. I saw several references to StarOffice's superiority over Microsoft Office 2003, but that's about it.
Me, I'll wait for OpenOffice.org 2.0. BTW, when is that, anyway?
Re:No compelling features over OOo 2.0? (Score:5, Interesting)
This being said I have several buisnesses using OOo 2.0 Beta 2 for production work. They do this simply because the betas for OOo 2.0 are simply so much more stable and functional than 1.1.x that there is no reason not to use them. Yes, I know-- don't use beta software for production work this seems to be the exception.
This being said, I don't use OOo much. I find that it doesn't have applications in any are which are best-of-breed and the only value I see is that you have an integrated suite. Gor example, Gnumeric is such of a great spreadsheet I can't imagine using anything else for production work.
Comment removed (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:No compelling features over OOo 2.0? (Score:3, Interesting)
I can even do VBA macros in Gnumeric. And macros in Python, etc.
And I can do detailed financial analysis, etc.
Re: (Score:2)
Re:No compelling features over OOo 2.0? (Score:2)
So I heard in the last thread on this subject, and a lot of people disagreed then, too. By all means try it, but don't bet your business on it; there were some pretty basic bugs in the beta I downloaded just over a week ago.
Re:No compelling features over OOo 2.0? (Score:2)
Well, to be fair, for my Linux customers, I also install AbiWord and Gnumeric. These are often better applications for document processing and spreadsheets respectively anyway but people want an office suite.
For my Windows customers, I tent to also have 1.1.x available on their fileservers and/or Abiword and Gnumeric available as well.
So far, I have not had anyone give me
Re:No compelling features over OOo 2.0? (Score:2)
Normally Abiword is designed to be a backup program for most of my customers. It is nice to have as a secondary word processor.
Now, to be fair, I use Abiword quite a bit for sim
Re:No compelling features over OOo 2.0? (Score:1)
Re:No compelling features over OOo 2.0? (Score:5, Interesting)
1. StarOffice has better MS Office support (I assume thanks to the Sun/MS Deal)
2. StarOffice has a nicer GUI that Sun has not backported into OOo
3. Sun provides corporate support for StarOffice. You're on your own for OOo.
4. Extra bundled stuff like fonts, clipart, and templates. Nice if you do a lot of office documents, but not critical or irreplacible.
Me, I'll wait for OpenOffice.org 2.0. BTW, when is that, anyway?
When it's done. They've released betas of it as OOo 1.9.x, so you can go grab a copy whenever you feel like it.
Re:No compelling features over OOo 2.0? (Score:5, Informative)
Sun also provides corporate support for OpenOffice, however since StarOffice is more or less free when you buy a support contract, it doesn't make much sense to use it.
Re:No compelling features over OOo 2.0? (Score:2)
Re:WordPerfect (Score:2)
Nicer GUI? (Score:1)
Hrm... Based on the linked [newsforge.com] screen [newsforge.com] shots [newsforge.com] I'd say it's pretty much the same as OO.o Beta 2 [openoffice.org], which I've been using for months.
Does anybody have any clarification on this?
Re:Nicer GUI? (Score:1, Informative)
http://people.redhat.com/dcbw/ooo-nwf.html [redhat.com]
Re:No compelling features over OOo 2.0? (Score:1, Informative)
There is already an OpenOffice.org 2.0 review [thejemreport.com] up.
Re:No compelling features over OOo 2.0? (Score:4, Informative)
Re:No compelling features over OOo 2.0? (Score:1)
From http://development.openoffice.org/releases/OpenOff ice_org_2_x.html [openoffice.org]
Plan:
Beats the ??? 2005 date I saw for 2.0 final last time I checked.
OpenOffice (Score:5, Insightful)
I thought OpenOffice was originally based on StarOffice?
Re:OpenOffice (Score:1, Interesting)
Re:OpenOffice (Score:3, Interesting)
So the products are symbotic now.
Re:OpenOffice (Score:5, Informative)
It was. Just like Mozilla and Netscape. Serpent eating tail....
Another way to look at it is that OOo was released as an open source version of the pre-StarOffice 6.0 codebase. OOo forms the basic foundation on which StarOffice 6.0 and later is built on.
Re:OpenOffice (Score:1, Redundant)
You can think that OpenOffice is to StarOffice as Fedora is to Red Hat. The current "community" developed code base that the commercial product is developed from, but having started with the cod
Re: OpenOffice (Score:3, Informative)
StarDivision, the original author of the StarOffice suite of software, was founded in Germany in the mid-1980s. It was acquired by Sun Microsystems during the summer of 1999 and StarOffice 5.2 was released in June of 2000. Future versions of StarOffice software, beginning with 6.0, have been built using the OpenOffice.org source, APIs, file formats, and reference implementation. Sun continues to sponsor development on OpenOffice.org and is the primary contributor of cod
Re:OpenOffice (Score:2)
Kif, we have a conundrum.
What is based on what? (Score:5, Insightful)
Not to be overly-pedantic, but isn't OOo based On StarOffice...?
Re:What is based on what? (Score:5, Informative)
StarDivision, the original author of the StarOffice suite of software, was founded in Germany in the mid-1980s. It was acquired by Sun Microsystems during the summer of 1999 and StarOffice 5.2 was released in June of 2000. Future versions of StarOffice software, beginning with 6.0, have been built using the OpenOffice.org source, APIs, file formats, and reference implementation. Sun continues to sponsor development on OpenOffice.org and is the primary contributor of code to OpenOffice.org. CollabNet hosts the website infrastructure for development of the product and helps manage the project.
Re:What is based on what? (Score:1, Interesting)
Sun then bought Star Office. Due to much community bantering about open sourcing it (or maybe they had plans anyway? Either way, there was much bantering), they seperated out all the parts of star office that could not legally be open sourced, and open sourced the rest, under the name Open Office. They then set up Open Office.org much in the same way that red hat set up fedora.
So, OOo *was* originally from Star Office code tree. H
Re:What is based on what? (Score:4, Informative)
Correction. StarOffice was a commercial product that was intended as an alternative office suite. Sometime around the 5.x versions StarDivision began giving the office suite away to home users as a method of druming up consumer and business awareness. This gained them kudos from places like Lockergnome who were always on the lookout for cool new stuff. Shortly thereafter, Sun Microsystems acquired StarDivision and made StarOffice a free download. After the initial "cool factor" died down from that, Sun split the OOo and StarOffice projects.
Re:What is based on what? (Score:2)
I supported SO5.1 for a year or so. Worst product I ever had to provide help for.
Re:What is based on what? (Score:2)
Indeed. The first job of the OOo team was to break out the applications from that hideous "Integrated Desktop" interface. Now it seems like a bad memory, but I remember it being THE biggest failing point of StarOffice.
From the article... (Score:5, Insightful)
Hm. So is the writer implying that Word perfectly converts every single WORD document? Because that's totally orthogonal to my experience.
Orthogonal (Score:2)
Re:Orthogonal (Score:1)
Re:Orthogonal (Score:1, Insightful)
Re:Orthogonal (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Orthogonal (Score:1, Redundant)
Re:Orthogonal (Score:2)
Sorry, that is a dontogon.
An orthodontist is someone who makes sure your teeth (dont) are right (ortho).
An orthogon is a rectangle.
Re:From the article... (Score:2)
According to Google Define [google.com] that would mean you had a right angle experience? or that office was right? Brain asplode.
error in your response (Score:1, Redundant)
Pardon me for playing grammar nazi, but you have a subordinate clause there (highlighted) which adds no information to the sentence, and, in fact, can actually confuse and mislead people. It's like saying, "Carol, like all people that don't have blue eyes, needed oxygen to breathe." This can leave people with the mistaken impression that people with blue eyes don't need oxygen to breath
Re:error in your response (Score:2)
Re:error in your response (Score:1)
Hexus link? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Hexus link? (Score:2)
Re:Hexus link? (Score:2)
Parent companies (Score:1, Troll)
Re:Parent companies (Score:3, Insightful)
Full Disclosure (Score:2, Insightful)
Saucy disclosure (Score:2, Informative)
Is it necessary to disclose such potential conflicts of interest in so surley a manner? These clarifications are not a "favor" for the uninitiated, they are made in the interests of full disclosure; standards that all good reporting must adhere to.
All in good fun (Score:2)
I think it is just tounge in cheek. The disclosure is there for those that want it, and the humor is there for those of us that need it. Remember, Slashdot has to compete for return visits with places like Fark and Kiro5hun.
Re:Saucy disclosure (Score:2)
Heck, I can not find good reporting on the TV or in the papers. A whole article should be devoted to noting where "good reporting" was found.
(Slightly O/T) OpenOffice (Score:5, Interesting)
(Please don't make this into a question of Linux vs BSD or free vs propriertary OS, that's not the point I'm trying to make.)
From a usability perspective I like OpenOffice, but I wish it were more portable. In my mind, if a program uses too many Linuxisms that don't hold on other Unix-like systems and require non-trivial patches to port, it is a good sign that the code is poorly written. I.E. it's doing stupid things like relying on Linux-specific values in
Re:(Slightly O/T) OpenOffice (Score:1, Funny)
Re:(Slightly O/T) OpenOffice (Score:4, Insightful)
Why is this in "Linux"? (Score:1)
OpenOffice will not recognize 64 bit JVMs (Score:5, Informative)
I wrote a more detailed article on getting OO.o to work with Java on 64 bit platforms, it can be found here [ensode.net]
Re:OpenOffice will not recognize 64 bit JVMs (Score:2)
its a bit like the maxosX to macosx86 migration: All java apps will work automatically on the x86 os, but as Java itself will be a native x86 app, the PPC emulation will not kick in for any native libraries -these will all have to be rebuilt for MacOS/x86.
Nb, java1.5.05 came out last week. Swing apps on linux appear to have better dialog box support (i.e. key entry works more re
Learning StarOffice is Hard (Score:5, Insightful)
StarOffice, although complete, is too different from MS Office. It's not that people can't use StarOffice as efficiently as they can use MS Office...they simply do not want to. It was difficult to get anyone to take it seriously. Even though every single feature of MS-Office that they actually use is in there, they were hell-bent on refusing to use it because of the features StarOffice lacks that they never use.
Talk about stifling oneself.
Re:Learning StarOffice is Hard (Score:2)
Re:Learning StarOffice is Hard (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Learning StarOffice is Hard (Score:2)
Netscape 3 wiped the floor with IE 3. Netscape 4 wiped the floor with IE 3. IE 4 absolutely shat all over Netscape 4 from a very great height.
Netscape 4 crashed at the drop of a hat. It was a resource hog. It was slow - I remember one deeply nested table test that rendered in a second or two in IE 4 that literally took minutes in Netscape 4. It couldn't resize its window without reloading t
Re:Learning StarOffice is Hard (Score:2)
As for Media Player, I honestly liked MS's offering until I believe 7.x That was a very simple, streamlined, straightforward media player. After that, they redesigned it into a nightmare. The current one (10?) makes me shudder. I'm n
Re:Learning StarOffice is Hard (Score:1)
The question is how to make people less afraid of it. At work, I am using the method of pushing them into the water. Well, some swim but some drowned...
Specifics, please? (Score:2)
Second, I'd like to learn of the specific complaints they have.
As this pertains to switching to an open source program—OpenOffice.org: perhaps as OpenOffice.org is used in more schools it will become more commonplace to know how to work with OO.o, then your office can eventually hire people who are accustomed to OO.o to replace the workers who insi
Re:Learning StarOffice is Hard (Score:4, Interesting)
"They don't want to" (Score:2)
Re:Learning StarOffice is Hard (Score:2)
Re:Learning StarOffice is Hard (Score:2)
Their Office 12 product that is supposed to be released next year will be completely different from their current version. The menus will be gone, and there will be som tablike toolbars instead. Compared to learning all that new stuff, learning the differences in Staroffice will be very easy.
Clipart? who needs it? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Clipart? who needs it? (Score:2)
Why categorized as Linux? (Score:4, Insightful)
Perhaps the article should have considered a broader perspective of the new application than on a single platform.
Re:Why categorized as Linux? (Score:2)
StarOffice exists for 3 different operating systems, and is probably more widespread on Windows than Linux (or Solaris, for that matter), and is Sun's product. And in spite of this, the editor puts it under "Linux". I can't help but think that this is a cheap plug for Linux.
Startup time? (Score:3, Informative)
Take OpenOffice as an example, the startup time scales QUADRATICALLY with the version number:
Starting OOdraw on my laptop:
69 secs for opening oodraw2 (1.9.126)
21 secs for opening oodraw (1.1.4)
So (2.0/1.1)^2 = 3.3, and 69s/21s = 3.3
Seriously, I love linux for the fact that I can use 'old hardware', but why do I have to wait QUADRATICALLY longer to start the same basic application?
I'll be sticking with Openoffice 1.1 over OO2 or Staroffice8 thank you very much.
Re:Startup time? (Score:2)
Re:Startup time? (Score:1)
That's a good suggestion, I certainly hope so :)
Re:Startup time? (Score:1)
Re:Startup time? (Score:1)
That's interesting, since I'm using Ubuntu Breezy which I think is based on sid.
Re:Startup time? (Score:2, Informative)
I don't know Ubuntu very much since I've been using Debian as my main OS for more than three years and never felt like switching. Anyway, if you want to try openoffice.org2 from experimental (I assume that should also work with Ubuntu, but not at all sure of that) :
Add to your /etc/apt/sources.list :
deb http://ftp.fr.debian.org/debian/ [debian.org] ../project/experimental main contrib non-free
deb-src http://ftp.fr.debian.org/debian/ [debian.org] ../project/experimental main contrib non-free
Then apt-get -t experimental insta
Re:Startup time? (Score:2)
The first and most significant is that you compare *beta* version with *stable* release. I don't know how you compiled OOo2 - I assume you have'nt and used some binary packages - well beta applications are often not optimised. Often beta compiles have left information usefull for debbuging (that is what beta is for) which slows things down.
The second flaw is that you think that everybody runs old hardware just for the sake of running old hardware. This is fla
Re:Startup time? (Score:1)
That is a good point, made earlier. The version I'm running is a precompiled binary in the preview version of Ubuntu Breezy.
he second flaw is that you think that ev
Re:Startup time? (Score:2)
> modern apps on my 'older hardware', which in fact is a Pentium III 800MHz
> with 256 Mb of ram.
I am writing this from Duron 500Mhz with 512MB RAM (I could switch to something newer but I don't really see the point of doing so) and OOo2 (and 1) runs fine on this machine. By decent hardware I meant something like P3 1Ghz with 256MB - this does its job for not demanding office work.
I work as an administrator in medium sized of
Re:Startup time? (Score:2)
>
> Seriously, I love linux for the fact that I can use 'old hardware', but why do I have to wait QUADRATICALLY
> longer to start the same basic application?
>
TimeCube guy, is that you?
Too much Sun Java stuff in StarOffice now (Score:5, Insightful)
Each new version of StarOffice seems to have more dependencies on Sun's Java. This is not good for OpenOffice.
It's not Java, per se, that's the problem. It's the dependency of open source software on closed source software, the evil that Stallman always warns about. You don't want someone to be in a position where they can cut off your air supply.
Re:Too much Sun Java stuff in StarOffice now (Score:2)
So unless there's something that extends or violates the Java standard in Sun's Java (and is necessary for the install), then any whinging about 'closed source software' is flawed and irrelevant.
Re:Too much Sun Java stuff in StarOffice now (Score:1)
Re:Too much Sun Java stuff in StarOffice now (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Too much Sun Java stuff in StarOffice now (Score:2)
With hindsight, trying to implement the entire fly-by-wire control system on a JSP page served up on the same low-end server/tomcat runtime that hosted the customer-accessible front end and the reactor GUI was a bit of a design error.
-steve
Re:Too much Sun Java stuff in StarOffice now (Score:2)
Start Office vs MS Office (Score:3, Insightful)
Anyone else notice that Star Office's Menus and Toolbars are strikingly close to MS Office 2003? Down to the names and order of icon placement in the toolbars. http://www.newsforge.com/blob.pl?id=a2c2239ed1854
I think the anti-ms crowd is intellectually dishonest not to point this out. If/whenever MS pulls something like that you guys scream from the roof tops. Why is it different when its done to MS? Is your argument principled or not? Or is it simply anything but MS? If that is the case, your stance takes us down a more dangerous road than only MS.
I know someone is going to scream its not the case. For those people, click on the above link and open Word 2k3. But if that's not enough then how about this for example; What happens if/when StarOffice 9.0 gets rid of the File menus and goes to the ribbon design model that MS is using with the next Office? Will that be acceptable too? I mean, I guess copying is the nicest form of flattery, but... well. go head, I'm bracing for the modding.
Not ready for prime time yet (Score:3, Interesting)
Well, I fired OO up and loaded the file. What normally takes say 10 seconds with Word took over 15 mins! I assumed that this was a one time hit converting from MS Office format, so I saved the document in OO native format so I would subsequently time opening from the native format. Took 15 mins to save the bloody thing and the same to open it again.
For us this product isn't an option. Its pathetic at loading/saving when compared to Office.
Might be OK for small doc but for us it just doesn't cut it.
Re:Not ready for prime time yet (Score:2, Informative)
What normally takes say 10 seconds with Word took over 15 mins! I assumed that this was a one time hit converting from MS Office format, so I saved the document in OO native format so I would subsequently time opening from the native format. Took 15 mins to save the bloody thing and the same to open it again.
I've seen that with every version of StarOffice I've used. What drastically improved it for me was saving the original Word format in .RTF or .HTML and then opening in StarOffice, saving as a StarOf
Re:Not ready for prime time yet (Score:1)
Re:Not ready for prime time yet (Score:1)
Re:Not ready for prime time yet (Score:2)
Re:ooooh careful! (Score:1)