Oracle ditches Open Office

 

Reunification with LibreOffice unlikely.

Oracle has given up its stake of Open Office, donating the open source software suite to the Apache Foundation.

Larry Ellison’s company claimed the move was an attempt to “demonstrate its commitment” to open source and developer communities by allowing Open Office to become an entirely community-based project.

Oracle became the owner of the largest rival to Microsoft’s Office software when it acquired Sun Microsystems back in 2009. Open Office will now become part of the Apache Foundation’s Incubator project.

A separate arm of Open Office, named The Document Foundation (TDF), branched off to create its own version free from Oracle soon after the acquisition, but the organisation said it would “welcome the reuniting” of Open Office and its LibreOffice suite.

However, despite a more similar outlook to open source than Oracle, TDF claimed it was unlikely the Apache Foundation would bring the two suites back together.

“The step Oracle has taken today was no doubt taken in good faith, but does not appear to directly achieve this goal,” read a statement from TDF.

“The Apache community, which we respect enormously, has very different expectations and norms – licensing, membership and more – to the existing OpenOffice.org and LibreOffice projects.”

It added: “We regret the missed opportunity but are committed to working with all active community members to devise the best possible future for LibreOffice and OpenOffice.org."

Copyright © ITPro, Dennis Publishing


Oracle ditches Open Office
"I reckon Microsoft office is still the best productivity suite ever. so Oracle made the good choice."
By JohnHenry
 
 
 
Comments: 2
kartsie
Jun 3, 2011 11:31 AM
What I'd like to know is whether Oracle employees are still going to work on OOo after the transfer.

If I understand correctly, a lot of OOo devs who weren't Sun employees have moved to LibO. If Oracle is abandoning OOo development and firing/reassigning its developers, the project will probably die from attrition, leaving LibO the only contender.
JohnHenry
Jun 9, 2011 10:02 AM
I reckon Microsoft office is still the best productivity suite ever.
so Oracle made the good choice.
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