Please support our Software Development advertiser:
Sep 11th, 2007, 5:19 am
IBM has announced that it is joining the OpenOffice.org development community, with an initial involvement concerning code contributions it has been developing as part of its Lotus Notes product. The code includes accessibility enhancements, and IBM is expected to make ongoing contributions to the feature richness and code quality of OpenOffice.org. As an aside, IBM has also declared that it will leverage OpenOffice.org technology in its own product line.
Since the project's creation by Sun Microsystems in 2000, nearly 100 million have downloaded the product; and thousands contribute to it. As an international team of volunteer and sponsored contributors, the OpenOffice.org community has created what is widely regarded as the most important open-source project in the world today. The OpenOffice.org community acknowledges generous sponsorship from a number of companies, including Sun Microsystems, the founder and primary contributor. The suite contains word processing, spreadsheet, presentation, drawing, database, and other modules; it uses the ODF as its native file format as well as fully supporting other common file formats (including Microsoft Office).
The software runs on all major platforms, including Windows, Vista, Linux, Solaris, Mac OS X, and is available in over 100 languages. OpenOffice.org is fully interoperable with other popular suites and may be used free of charge for any purpose, private or commercial; the license is LGPL.
"IBM is very pleased to be joining the OpenOffice.org community" Mike Rhodin, General Manager of IBM's Lotus division told DaniWeb " We are very optimistic that IBM's contribution of technology and engineering resources will provide tangible benefits to the community membership and to users of OpenOffice.org technology around the world. We're particularly pleased to be teaming with the community to accelerate the rate of innovation in the office productivity marketplace."
"We look forward to working with IBM and the other members of OpenOffice.org to ensure that this momentum continues" said Rich Green, Executive Vice President, Software at Sun Microsystems, Inc. Green also invited others to join the community and participate in building an OpenOffice.org and ODF future.
One who has already joined the gang is Mark Shuttleworth, the founder of Ubuntu with which OpenOffice.org is distributed. He could hardly contain his enthusiasm telling us "We are excited about IBM joining Sun and other contributors to the OpenOffice.org community in pushing development of OpenOffice.org and the OpenDocument Format. We are firmly committed to help set, drive and promote open standards like the ODF world-wide to free all users from any dependency on single vendors and proprietary software. The OpenOffice.org community is showing that it is possible for large, competing companies to collaborate and deliver extraordinary value to all of their users."
Scott Crenshaw, Red Hat's Vice President of Enterprise Linux, agreed: "IBM continues to show their commitment to the proliferation of open-source software and we applaud them on joining the OpenOffice.org community. We look forward to continuing our strong relationship with IBM as we work toward a common goal of bringing value to our customers and fostering the adoption of open standards and ODF."
Since the project's creation by Sun Microsystems in 2000, nearly 100 million have downloaded the product; and thousands contribute to it. As an international team of volunteer and sponsored contributors, the OpenOffice.org community has created what is widely regarded as the most important open-source project in the world today. The OpenOffice.org community acknowledges generous sponsorship from a number of companies, including Sun Microsystems, the founder and primary contributor. The suite contains word processing, spreadsheet, presentation, drawing, database, and other modules; it uses the ODF as its native file format as well as fully supporting other common file formats (including Microsoft Office).
The software runs on all major platforms, including Windows, Vista, Linux, Solaris, Mac OS X, and is available in over 100 languages. OpenOffice.org is fully interoperable with other popular suites and may be used free of charge for any purpose, private or commercial; the license is LGPL.
"IBM is very pleased to be joining the OpenOffice.org community" Mike Rhodin, General Manager of IBM's Lotus division told DaniWeb " We are very optimistic that IBM's contribution of technology and engineering resources will provide tangible benefits to the community membership and to users of OpenOffice.org technology around the world. We're particularly pleased to be teaming with the community to accelerate the rate of innovation in the office productivity marketplace."
"We look forward to working with IBM and the other members of OpenOffice.org to ensure that this momentum continues" said Rich Green, Executive Vice President, Software at Sun Microsystems, Inc. Green also invited others to join the community and participate in building an OpenOffice.org and ODF future.
One who has already joined the gang is Mark Shuttleworth, the founder of Ubuntu with which OpenOffice.org is distributed. He could hardly contain his enthusiasm telling us "We are excited about IBM joining Sun and other contributors to the OpenOffice.org community in pushing development of OpenOffice.org and the OpenDocument Format. We are firmly committed to help set, drive and promote open standards like the ODF world-wide to free all users from any dependency on single vendors and proprietary software. The OpenOffice.org community is showing that it is possible for large, competing companies to collaborate and deliver extraordinary value to all of their users."
Scott Crenshaw, Red Hat's Vice President of Enterprise Linux, agreed: "IBM continues to show their commitment to the proliferation of open-source software and we applaud them on joining the OpenOffice.org community. We look forward to continuing our strong relationship with IBM as we work toward a common goal of bringing value to our customers and fostering the adoption of open standards and ODF."
This blog entry was written by Bill Andad, staff writer aka newsguy. It has received 14,780 views, 2 comments, and 62 linkbacks. 2 voters have rated this entry an average of 5 out of 5 stars. It was promoted to featured status Sep 11th, 2007.
•
•
•
•
advertising apple business china crime data development email environment europe facebook firefox gaming google hacking hardware ibm internet iphone ipod law legal linux malware microsoft mobile mozilla news office open source os privacy red hat research search security social networking software spam sun survey technology trojan ubuntu virus vista web windows yahoo youtube
All Recent Tags Comments (Newest First)
docsharp01 | Newbie Poster | 5 Days Ago
•
•
•
•
I've used OpenOffice and I like it. Open source is the way to go on the internet.
http://www.1-satellite-tv-facts.com
http://www.1-satellite-tv-facts.com/Direct-TV.html
http://www.1-satellite-tv-facts.com/Dish-Network.html
http://www.1-satellite-tv-facts.com/...ite-Radio.html
http://www.1-satellite-tv-facts.com/...t-Service.html
http://www.1-satellite-tv-facts.com/Satellite-DSL.html
http://www.1-satellite-tv-facts.com/...-Internet.html
http://www.1-satellite-tv-facts.com/VoIP.html
http://www.1-satellite-tv-facts.com/Phone-Systems.html
http://www.1-satellite-tv-facts.com/...-Programs.html
http://www.1-satellite-tv-facts.com
http://www.1-satellite-tv-facts.com/Direct-TV.html
http://www.1-satellite-tv-facts.com/Dish-Network.html
http://www.1-satellite-tv-facts.com/...ite-Radio.html
http://www.1-satellite-tv-facts.com/...t-Service.html
http://www.1-satellite-tv-facts.com/Satellite-DSL.html
http://www.1-satellite-tv-facts.com/...-Internet.html
http://www.1-satellite-tv-facts.com/VoIP.html
http://www.1-satellite-tv-facts.com/Phone-Systems.html
http://www.1-satellite-tv-facts.com/...-Programs.html
Sturm | Veteran Poster | Sep 12th, 2007
•
•
•
•
I wish IBM, Sun, and Redhat would actually get behind a project that matters.
Post Comment
•
•
•
•
Only community members can start a blog or comment on blog entries. You must register or log in to contribute.
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
DaniWeb Software Development Marketplace
Related Blog Entries
- Viacom defends itself over YouTube data log disclosure (23 Hours Ago)
- Need an online dictionary? Just ask Ask. (2 Days Ago)
- FreeRunner Linux Phone Liberated on July 4 (2 Days Ago)
- Judge hands YouTube video viewing data to Viacom (3 Days Ago)
- Apple iPhone 3G creates shortage of flash memory chips (3 Days Ago)
- Microsoft announces host of new Internet Explorer 8 security features (3 Days Ago)
- Apple Leopard changes spots (5 Days Ago)
- With ‘Ganymede’ Release, Eclipse Community Gets it Done (5 Days Ago)
- Meister 7.2 Makes Builds More Continuous (9 Days Ago)
- YASAT: Yet Another Static Analysis Tool, This One For Mac OS X (9 Days Ago)
Related Forum Threads
- RedHat 8 (*nix Software)
- Red Hat Gone Bad! (*nix Software)
- Red Hat Linux (Getting Started and Choosing a Distro)
- Microsoft to buy Red Hat ? (Linux Users Lounge)
- Red Hat 9 on VMWare 4 (*nix Software)
- Red Hat Linux Webserver Configurations (*nix Software)
- VMWare Red Hat 9 VMWare Tools and DNS (*nix Software)
Featured Entry