Thursday | 8 January, 2009

Stories about: OpenOffice.org

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    IBM threatens to leave standards bodies 24/09/2008 08:30:00

    IBM is threatening to leave organizations that set standards for software interoperability because of concerns that their processes are not always fair.
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    Microsoft liberalizes virtualization options 04/09/2008 08:22:00

    As Microsoft officially released its Application Virtualization 4.5 software this week, it also announced several licensing changes around virtual desktops and application virtualization, while omitting a long-anticipated one.
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    Exploit reveals the darker side of automatic updates 31/07/2008 10:58:00

    A recent study of Web browser installations showed that far too few are up to date with the latest security patches. And browsers aren't alone; as my dear old mum can attest, it can be hard to keep up with OS and application patches when all you want to do is use your computer for work. It should come as no surprise that many PCs are vulnerable to security exploits that could otherwise be prevented.
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    SourceForge Award Winners Announced 29/07/2008 09:35:52

    SourceForge.net's annual Community Choice Awards, designed to honor open source software projects in a variety of categories, have concluded. This year's awards were open to any open source projects, not just ones that were hosted on SourceForge.net, so they promised to be an accurate representation of the entire field.
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    Software piracy hurts the open-source community too 24/07/2008 13:48:38

    Proprietary software vendors, movie companies and the music industry aren't the only businesses that don't like pirates stealing, copying and reselling their CDs and DVDs.
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    Online office apps get real 17/07/2008 08:09:55

    Web-based office suites are coming into their own at last. For quite a while, Web-based suites -- which offered word processing, spreadsheets, presentations, and other tools associated with desktop office suites -- were extolled not because they did these things well, but because they could do them at all. But the three major competitors, Google Docs, ThinkFree, and Zoho, have all made major improvements in recent months. They're becoming both broader, with more applications, and deeper, with more features and functionality in existing apps.
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    Office killers pack some heat 16/07/2008 09:41:06

    There are few pieces of software that users touch more often than office productivity suites. The market monster is, of course, Microsoft Office, with the lion's share of all licenses for office productivity tools. But two trends -- open source and cloud computing -- are offering a new generation of Office alternatives that businesses may want to consider.
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    Can you really live without Microsoft Office? 16/07/2008 08:59:23

    Open source and cloud computing alternatives can replace Office in some circumstances
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    Open Source: Are Macs the Red-Headed Stepchild? 10/07/2008 09:09:57

    It's not uncommon to use more than one computer during the course of a week: a Mac at work, a PC at home and a laptop on the road. When people search for applications that will work across all platforms, many look for an open-source solution first, only to discover that apps that work on Windows are woefully underdeveloped for the Mac.
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    Open-Source CRM Delivers More Control, Less Cost 07/07/2008 13:28:20

    A good CRM package does you no good if employees aren't willing to use it. Case in point: IMA Financial Group, a medium-sized financial services company based in the US. IMA had installed a commercial customer relationship management system that "was flexible and configurable and attractive on the front end," says business processes manager Jennifer Hallam.
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    Microsoft's future No. 1: The 'Borvell' scenario 25/06/2008 10:56:20

    Microsoft's a dinosaur that didn't know its dead yet. The cloud computing meteor was speeding its way, and when pervasive computing in the cloud became a reality in about 2015, Microsoft was all but dead. Why? Because the Windows and Office revenues collapsed as users finally stop buying upgrades they don't need, and cloud offerings via the browser took their place. Poof! Gone was 80 percent of Microsoft's profits. And gone was the money to invest in technologies that took multiple versions to get right -- if they ever got it right -- such as the Xbox, Zune, Microsoft Dynamics, and MSN.
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