Who is behind libreoffice




















ODF is "the only true standard format available today for office documents," says the Document Foundation team. Unlike proprietary formats, "any version of LibreOffice will write the same document in the same way," which enables users to protect ownership of their documents and avoid vendor lock-in.

LibreOffice can open a wide variety of document types thanks to the volunteer work of developers at the Document Liberation Project. Users don't need Microsoft Office to open. It can import Apple's Keynote, Pages, and Numbers. This type of interoperability isn't just about freedom, it also has economic benefits.

Unfortunately, disinterest by governments, schools, and enterprises, as well as lack of transparency by vendors, results in large, unnecessary expenditures tied up in non-standard document formats.

LibreOffice is available in more than languages, reaching "the largest number of individuals in their native language. In some cases, this language is representative of a language minority, like Guarani in South America, which is spoken by many in Paraguay and regions of Argentina, Bolivia, and Brazil," says the Document Foundation. Making the code open source fostered the development of an independent, worldwide community based on meritocratic principles.

The community spans six continents and includes people from all over the world. The Document Foundation estimates 1, contributors are active on at least a weekly basis, supported by about 4, people who are called upon when needed. It also garners support from the enterprises who deploy the software on a large scale, companies on the Document Foundation's advisory board, and a large number of individual donors to the foundation.

The Document Foundation is always looking for new members to join the community, including software developers, quality assurance managers, user interface designers, documentation writers, language translators, and more. For more on how you can help, visit the Get Involved section of LibreOffice's website.

For me, LibreOffice is not only a viable alternative to Microsoft, but clearly the better application with regard to usability, and it has always been, starting with StarWriter which already used to be the better word processor compared to Microsoft Word back in its time IIRC, I started with StarWriter 2.

That said, it is was a major backlash to my personal 'document freedom' when both LibreOffice and, some time later, OpenOffice stopped supporting their own legacy file formats, first for saving, then for opening, too, i. Which is why I still have to keep a working StarOffice 5.

And while I'm therefore not completely convinced that 's LibreOffice development is still perfectly on track, I'm still more than happy to have the same full-fledged office suite on Linux as the one I had been using while I still was running Windows on my systems. Hi, why you have doubts about LibreOffice development? We are looking for an individual or company to implement an autoupdater for LibreOffice.

Currently, LibreOffice can notify the user about a new version, but download and installation require manual action by the user, it is not automated. We originally posted this tender in April, but we are now extending the application deadline. LibreOffice is free and open source software, originally based on OpenOffice.

LibreOffice is developed by users who, just like you, believe in the principles of Free Software and in sharing their work with the world in non-restrictive ways. We believe that users should have the freedom to run, copy, distribute, study, change and improve the software that we distribute.

While we do offer no-cost downloads of the LibreOffice suite of programs, Free Software is first and foremost a matter of liberty, not price. We campaign for these freedoms because we believe that everyone deserves them. We seek to eliminate the digital divide and empower all as full citizens, support the preservation of mother tongues, and avoid proprietary software and format lock-in. We work to attain our goals by. Two years later came OpenOffice.

The idea was that documents created with OpenOffice could be read by any other program ensuring that they could always be accessed. Today even Microsoft Office supports the ODF format, and at the same time, each new version of LibreOfice improves the support for the native files of that office suite.

T DF was created as a charitable foundation under German law. The entity is open for the participation of individuals as well as companies and states. The Document Foundation's mission is to facilitate the evolution of the LibreOffice Community into a new, open, independent, and meritocratic organization.

TDF will protect past investments by building on the achievements of the first decade with OpenOffice. The content of the article adheres to our principles of editorial ethics. To report an error click here!



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