xenopeek wrote:sphyrth wrote:Umm... Isn't Apache OpenOffice the very reason we have LibreOffice?
Nope. LibreOffice predates Apache OpenOffice.
Basically Sun and later Oracle mismanaged the OpenOffice project, making it hard if not impossible for developers and others outside those companies to contribute to OpenOffice and play a role in the decision making process. This culminated in the eventual formation of The Document Foundation as a home for the LibreOffice project, a fork of OpenOffice born out of the frustration of its developers. Most outside developers quickly moved to LibreOffice and later Oracle laid off its own remaining OpenOffice developers. As Oracle had contractual obligations to IBM regarding OpenOffice they donated it to the Apache Foundation where mostly IBM developers continued to work on it (as IBM had contractual obligations to its customers). Over time development of OpenOffice has continued to decline to the point where now the Apache Foundation has put the project on monthly report for its inability to handle security issues. This leading to the discussion if the project shouldn't be finally closed.
The history of Apache OpenOffice explains as much:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apache_OpenOffice#History
If you're interested in more look up the history of StarOffice, OpenOffice, LibreOffice, and The Document Foundation on wikipedia.
Sun opensourced/GPL'd Staroffice as OpenOffice<- without which, there would be NO LibreOffice today. So how could that be misconstrued as "mismanagement" on Sun's part ???
https://www.openoffice.org/press/sun_release.html
Instead, we should all thank the (now defunct) Sun Microsystems for that bit of generousity, unlike Oracle, or IBM, ...
The only purposeful "mismanagement" of anything that Sun had opensourced, has always been Oracle.
Oracle was/is the Sun killer.
After Oracle bought out Sun Microsystems,
for fear of Sun's MySQL, Oracle systematically killed their inhouse OpenSolaris,..., OpenOffice, (Opensource) MySQL, ..., and and every other thing that Sun Microsystems had ever "Open"ed to the Public.
So we all owe a great gratitude to the (now defunct) Sun, and their past developers, for giving us (no matter how indirectly or directly) our LibreOffice.
If anything is "fading" it's java, which again, Oracle hasn't put a lot of effort into fixing.