OpenOffice.org Tries to Woo Dell 316
Rob writes "OpenOffice.org project members have written to Dell (pdf), hoping to persuade the company to adopt OpenOffice in response to customer demand. John McCreesh, OpenOffice.org marketing project lead, writes 'Let's have a conversation about how we could build an OpenOffice.org supplied by Dell product to give your customers what they are asking for.' Demand for open source products on Dell's IdeaStorm web site prompted the letter. A somewhat obvious question is raised: why isn't OpenOffice already available by default on new PC's and Workstations?"
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FWIW, StarOffice 5.2 was a POS with some decent technology hidden inside it monolithic interface. Its usability was utterly terrible, and was more of a chore to use than a pleasure. The work done by OpenOffice has changed all that. OOo is often just as pleasent to use, sometimes moreso than Microsoft Office is. It hasn't been growing in popularity quite as fast as FireFox has, but OOo installations are definitely beco
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I wouldn't be too sure of that. In the past few years, Dell did come preinstalled with Wordperfect Office. No one used that either.
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Corel worked damn hard to establish WordPerfect as the OEM default - and people still chose to upgrade to Microsoft Office. The "free" bundled office suite always comes across as just another throw-away.
A somewhat obvious answer: (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:A somewhat obvious answer: (Score:4, Insightful)
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Re:A somewhat obvious answer: (Score:5, Insightful)
Nothing in the GPL forbids Dell or anyone else for charging money for the software, so Dell wouldn't just "take a cut", they can set the price they like and take 100% of it rather than having to give some of it to Microsoft.
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That's actually not true. If Dell were to add an option on their website saying "OpenOffice $25", they would be allowed to charge the $25 to bundle OpenOffice with a Dell computer.
Technically true, but to bother supporting it they'd need a given threshold of their customers to choose it, and I'm guessing they don't think they will. Might also be afraid of the public backlash when some idiot consumer reporter at a TV station breaks the big story that Dell is charging customers for something they can downl
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Dell might want to offer support for OpenOffice for a very good reason - because it makes them money. On the one hand selling Microsoft Office gives Dell a small profit (I presume that nearly all the money goes to Microsoft), and low support costs (they can't be zero, since people will call even if they are immediately redirec
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Not to mention, they can add value to OpenOffice so that the Dell version is worth paying extra for, particularly by embedding all kinds of fancy widgets to direct Dell customers to Dell's certified business partners.
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Re:A somewhat obvious answer: (Score:5, Insightful)
MS Office is "free" with a Small Business Desktop from Dell, haven't you heard?
The sad reality seems to be that Dell thrives at Microsoft's pleasure and they'd be dumb to muck that up. To bad the DOJ had no teeth.
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The discount vendor has an insentive in offering you these products, because that's the sort of market they're reaching out to (the technically savy). Dell already has a large enough market and it's a market that would likely be confused if they recieved OOo and not MS Office.
Just my 2g.
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Of course, I have a sneaky suspicion that the minimal Works package is an attempt to get users to purchase Microsoft Word at a minimum. They probably hope to convince c
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I just went to Dell's site and scoped out their offerings. Even in a $359 package, Microsoft Works is "included in [the] price". That package does not include Microsoft Word. To get Word, you have to upgrade to a $79 Works Suite. Obviously, Dell could offer OpenOffice as an alternative to their default Works package and pocket the difference.
Of course, I have a sneaky suspicion that the minimal Works package is an attempt to get users to purchase Microsoft Word at a minimum. They probably hope to convince consumers to purchase Microsoft Office Professional "because they might need it". Obviously, having a full office suite available at no charge might cut into those profits. Especially since OOo has a much better reputation than the WordPerfect, Claris Works, and Lotus Suite products that PC producers used to bundle. So they're relying on Microsoft to provide the (if you'll excuse the colorful language) "shitty" office suite to convince consumers to upgrade.
You're completely missing the potential that Microsoft pays Dell to include Works on each machine as cheap advertising for Office.
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Am I? You're saying that getting a large cut of each Office sale is not "payment" enough?
Step 1: Offer up "Microsoft Works" suite at little or no cost to the manufacturer.
Step 2: Downplay the effectiveness of Works in favor of the expensive Microsoft Office Suite.
Step 3: Thereby convince the consumer to upgrade.
Step 4: Profit!!!
(For you Slashdot purists, you can add "Step 3.5: ??
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I wouldn't, because I know how to install it myself, but if I didn't know how to install it myself I'd be willing to pay at least half of what Microsoft Office would cost me.
Huh... (Score:3, Funny)
By the way, I've sent Dell a letter about a little time management application I've been working on for a few years. I'm expecting a reply!!!
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When my dad bought a new computer, he asked me about buying Microsoft office (or pirating a copy). Instead, I set up OOo for him. He's really happy with it. Open Office shines even better when you aren't using it only to view Microsoft Word docs, but rather authoring from it directly.
He thanked me and notified me that he loves OO, and has no need to use Microsoft Office.
For me, the killer app in open office is OODraw. I've used this for creating cards at christmas, and most recently to create a CD L
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I'm not sure how you can say that, since if Dell does not include OpenOffice, which is very likly, "public awareness" via the Dell vector will remail the same, which is none.
Dell is not interested in OpenOffice. Dell is a for-profit business. OpenOffice offers them nothing. In Dell's mind, it is not a "value added feature."
Here's why. Very few Dell customers actually want Linux. Legions of Dell customers want Windows. Legions of Del
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>Here's why. Very few Dell customers actually want Linux.
Because relatively few people know about Linux and what it can mean to them. They only know windows because Apple and MS are the ones with $$$ television advertisements.
>Legions of Dell customers want Windows.
Because relatively few people know about Linux and what it can mean to them. They only know windows because Apple and MS are the ones with $$$ tele
Here's why (Score:3, Insightful)
Because then customers would have less of an incentive to purchase MS Office. This gives MS a huge incentive to pressure Dell, et al, to not offer alternatives on a windows machine.
Seems fairly obvious to me.
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I had to pick one of them, and the free option was Corel.
Having not needed a new laptop since then I haven't bothered to see if they changed that. Although by the sounds of the discussion, appears it might have.
Upon first glance (Score:5, Funny)
"OpenOffice.org Tries to Doo Well"
Umm... (Score:3, Insightful)
Because your average home user buying an off the shelf PC (regardless of who it's from) has no idea what Open Office is. Even if you provided it as an option, given the choice between a (seemingly) free version of some MS product and Open Office, the average customer would take Open Office. Throw in the bit about most customers expecting to get support from the PC manufacturer for everything that's on there, and you have to talk about training your tech support folks on how to handle Open Office support calls.
Tech savy users and corporate customers are likely to blow the default image away and replace it with something tweaked to their choosing, so you wouldn't be saving them a tremendous amount of time by having it installed anyway.
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Dell has an option to include Corel Snapfire Plus. I sincerely doubt that most people have heard of it. Yet there it is.
I doubt that. I think most people would perceive that buying the MS product would make it most like
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I'm not sure what a home user needs with any office package. Perhaps that's part of the issue. I see Open Office's main potential customers in the short term being small and medium sized businesses. Then Corporations once smaller companies had been converted.
Large companies, will get MS Office discounted when they sold their souls setting up their Intranet. No-one much outside of a co
And a somewhat obvious answer already exists (Score:2)
I would say for the same (or at least closely related and similar) reason that PC's come with and the majority of people want/keep using Windows over other OS choices which are arguably better and just as easy or easier to use. It's what people are familiar with. I'm pretty confident your average joe on the street has heard of MS Office. That same guy probably has not heard of OpenOffice
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On top of that, it's still not 100% compatible with MS Office... I frequently have to slightly adjust things converting between OO's .odf and Office's .doc and have had some features of Excel spreadsheets not work in OO. That alone is going to make it unacceptable for use on projects for school or work which are then going to probably be used in MS Office.
Stop Using the Proprietary MS Formats - The vast majority of people complaining about OOo complain that it doesn't open MS Documents 100% Accurately.
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Maybe our places of employment use MS formats. Maybe our customers use MS formats. Most people do. If your customers demand you send them MS office files, what are you going to do?
I often work from home. Without MS software on my home machine, I would not be able t
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Because they can't up-sell you (Score:4, Insightful)
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Tricky how? Legally there is no issue here. The only thing they need to do is set up the support for OpenOffice, as far as I can tell. Or am I missing something else that you intended?
Spoonerism! (Score:2)
May I sew you to your sheets? [wikipedia.org]
Duh. (Score:2)
"Microsoft Works 8. DOES NOT INCLUDE MS WORD [Included in Price]"
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A somewhat obvious answer is given. (Score:2)
Because Microsoft will give less license discount if they did.
Makes sense from Dell's perspective (Score:2)
If Dell charged for OpenOffice, open-source advocates would scream bloody murder (OMG it's supposed to be free, why does choosing OpenOffice add $50 to the price of a PC?) On the other hand, customers expect whatever comes with their computer to be supported, which costs money. There's also the opportunity cost from OpenOffice cannibalizing sales of the much more profitable MS-Office. Also, they would hurt their relationship with Microsoft. So they can either give it away and lose money, or sell it for
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Hogwash!
Try calling Dell and see how much support you get for MS Works.
If it starts up, they consider their job done.
If it doesn't start up, they will tell you to wipe and reload from the image.
If it still doesn't start up, they will RMA the computer and send you a new one.
That is the complete extent of the application support you will get from Dell.
The "it costs Dell money to support OOO/Linux" argument is a ti
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Obvious? (Score:3, Insightful)
Obvious? What's obvious is that Dell can make a profit from MS Office. Frankly, if I were a business I would look to the profit aspect first.
Also consider tech support. I would think that Dell is going to get more support from MS than the OO people when it comes down to wide spread issues involving their product. Tech support is doubtlessly a large chunk of Dell's overhead. The better support from their software vendors the less that overhead will be. That's a big plus and anyone who's taken business-101 type classes can tell you this.
Not to mention that free software still has a stigma about it. This isn't likely to go away anytime soon.
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In technical terms, that stigma is called "Zero marketing budget".
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Yeah sure... (Score:3, Funny)
This WOULD have made sense last year... (Score:3, Informative)
The problem with OO right now is that, even though OO is a great substitute and can use Office files...it CANT use Office 2007 files. People are going to be saving files with
Support (Score:2)
Submission title (Score:2)
here's a possibility (Score:3, Insightful)
Microsoft Office is a lot more intelligent than people give it credit for.
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But they won't, regardless of quality. If users just downloaded the best free option off the net then no one would ever have to design their webpages to allow for IE's quirks ever again.
MS's entire business is founded on the fact that 90%+ of people use whatever software that comes with their machine; Office suites, OS's, browsers, whatever.
In most cases, it's got critical deficiencies that will confuse most customers.
Deficiencies or differences (
OpenOffice bundled on new PCs (Score:5, Interesting)
With that in mind I find it highly amusing that MS Office 2007 requires a substantial learning curve before most users can become efficient with it. Nice job yet again, Microsoft. Justify the massive pricetag of your newest product that is nothing more than a minor upgrade with a facelift by including an interface overhaul.
I have customers that are still using MS Office 97, purchased almost ten years ago. Why? Because for them, it still works just fine.
Still works fine (Score:2)
It still works fine because, despite what everyone is trying to sell you, methods of creating and dealing with "documents" haven't changed in many years. The feature list wars were over a decade ago, and everybody won.
Unfortunately for you and software vendors, until they get you to buy it by subscription they have to reengineer the whole thing every few years to get you to
Considering that Dell already ... (Score:3, Interesting)
how about StarOffice? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Why? (Score:5, Insightful)
OpenOffice is freely available to anyone with an internet connection, and Dell simply doesn't see the business case for distributing and supporting it. Even if they tried to distribute with a support disclaimer there would still be a lot of calls to support about it. Also, Dell would have to distribute CDs with the source code since OpenOffice is GPL'd, etc, etc. None of it is a show-stopper, but why go through all the hassle with no reward? Distributing free software that they don't want to support (or don't think they can sell support on) doesn't make sense for Dell.
Yeah, it would be nice, but warm feelings and the respect of the
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In short, its an extra hassle that Dell would have to satisfy.
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The OOo source code set comes to 259MB - thats an extra 259MB Dell has to copy, an extra 259MB that is wasted on the customer hard disk, or 259MB that Dell has to account for in its bandwidth build if it supplies an FTP server.
In short, its an extra hassle that Dell would have to satisfy.
On an 80 gig hard drive that 259 megs is trivial. Considering that the machines are probably RIS installed, the time to copy over another 259 megs is trivial, and dell has the option of putting thes ource on ftp or cd as well.
The average user that would use this, is one that went with the Corel office package previously. So the bottom line question for Dell is how much money they stand to lose for not reselling Corel office, and if they can recover the income lost by not including a demo of Corel Snap
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"You'd Do Well to Woo Dell!"
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More of an issue is why should they? What competitive advantage does this offer them? They can't offer it cheaper than their rivals - it's free! It wouldn't even add to the number when they say "over $1200 worth of software included free". They'd be stuck with support
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Re:Why? (Score:4, Insightful)
Even when the customer doesn't buy MS Office up front, you can be sure that MS pays Dell for every "60-day trial" version which comes installed on most PCs nowadays. Even if MS didn't unfairly retaliate, giving away OO would take away from subscribers buying or upgrading to paid MS Office so Dell would inevitably get less of a commission back from MS.
On the other hand adding a preloaded OO is unlikely to shift share to Dell so not much upside -- particularly, since the relatively small minority of users who consider this as a factor could easily download it themselves.
Plus supporting OO would add support costs.
So, while I would love personally to see more OO, I don't see the business case from Dell's perspective
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The doesn't really help dell gain new customers directly. Adding OO is a cheap way to retain happy and loyal customers and generate positive word of mouth. Dell spends millions on marketing and advertising to gain new customers. Having a full featured office suite included with the system goes a long
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As mentioned in other threads, this isn't obvious at all. Dell don't need to give OpenOffice away, they can charge for it.
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An important question is this, how many people are going to stick with the OO.o instal, and not s
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So Dell provides support for that stupid Weatherbug that they include(d)? That godawful McAfee "security suite" they include? That evil Sonic bloatware? Quicktime? RealPlayer?
No?
I didn't think so...
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If the average joe's computer came with a free word processor and spreadsheet, they no longer need to spend $250 and up on MS Office. Not only would Dell lose money from those lost software sales (which are far more pro
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In your rush to craft a bad analogy, you captured precisely why it is that those of us that gravitate to the notion of meritocracy find "selling shelf space" so galling.
The open source crowd isn't complaining that their retarded child can't get into Mensa. They are complaini
Re:Why? (Score:5, Informative)
1: So Dell gets a support call about Open Office. They handle it the same way they handle most technical questions about MS Office: go to the software vendor. Problem solved. No additional work required.
2: Why would Dell need to distribute CD's with source on them? Nowhere does the GPL even mention that you have to do this. All they have to do is include a piece of paper in each box that says "Want the Open Office source? Email: xxx@dell.com", or set up an FTP site, or make someone mail in a source request form, etc, etc. Problem solved.
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Problem not solved.
Take a look at the MS Office home pages. Tutorials. Case studies. Templates, clip art and tons of other resources. Easy on the eye, polished and professional. Then mouse over to OpenOffice.org.
Back to the Future, circa 1993.
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'with no measurable increase in revenue'
There would be an increase in revenue but I couldn't begin to imagine how you would measure it. Including a full featured office suite that doesn't carry a ridiculous price tag that is half again the cost of the machine would go a long way toward generating word of mouth and customer retention.
Then again, all advertisi
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Are you trying to tell me that Dell takes responsibility for Windows. Last time I checked, even Microsoft wouldn't take responsibility for that! Look at the EULA...
Look, Dell is huge. Running an FTP-site is something an individual like you and me can afford. In no way it will
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OpenOffice is freely available to anyone with an internet connection, and Dell simply doesn't see the business case for distributing and supporting it.
Yes, but how many know about it? As for the marketing, why shouldn't a "Complete office suite included -for only 5$ more!" work? They would even profit from it if they charge a minimal amount.
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I'm actually kind of here to moderate, but, what about the reward of more customers? You know, I bet a lot of people aren't particularly happy that you don't get any real office software when you get you
Re:Why? (Score:5, Insightful)
Yet they offer the incompatible (and amusingly named) Microsoft Works package. If they can offer Microsoft Works by default, why can't they offer OpenOffice as an option?
I believe that is the point the author is trying to make.
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Re:Why? (Score:5, Funny)
Your Dell laptop came with a solid state hard drive?
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In fact it works better in Linux than Windows as I can't find the damn Intel HDA drivers for this thing. Sound and wifi work out of the box with the Linux kernel.
My first laptop was a Compaq [forget the model] Athlon 1.8Ghz. It too was solid. I dropped it [in a metal case] twice, left it in the cold [in transit] and even poured about 100mL of water on it [by accident] and it kept going [af
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Or maybe it's because Dell can't make any money off OO?
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How hard is that for people to get into their heads?! I bet they can eaasily charge as much if not more than what MS pays them to put that 30 day Word trial on there. For Word MS does the support, for OOc guess who would do the support? I'll give you a few hints, not Dell or MS.
Of course reality is that Dell would at best use this as flexing power to get either higher discounts on MS software or to get more $$ per Word trial. I don't think you'l
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As is the case for most tech geeks, and probably most everyone on Slashdot. If I don't build it myself, it gets wiped clean and installed with what I want. But Joe Average Consumer doesn't get a shiny new PC and then wipe the drive clean, reinstalling with the other copy of Windows that he has around.
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Stick to writer, calc, and impress. Those are the good ones. 80% of people who use MS office just use word, excel, and powerpoint. Not many spring for the deluxe version that would include visio.
ammendment (Score:2)
Not that I'll ever use it.
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