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Home business strategy

LibreOffice Making Community Software Sustainable

by Dana Blankenhorn
February 23, 2011
in business strategy, e-commerce, intellectual property, Internet, open source, Personal, software
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Libre-Office logo Revolution is easy. Nation building is hard.

At Gettysburg Abraham Lincoln dated this nation's founding to the Declaration of Independence. We celebrate July 4 as our national day.

Personally, though, I'm a fan of June 21. That's the day, in 1788, when New Hampshire ratified the Constitution.  As it was the ninth state to do this, it was on that day that our form of government was truly established. (For those keeping score at home, that's 11 score years and, as of now, a little less than eight months.)

For Libre Office, September 29 is their Independence Day.  That was the date, last year when The Document Foundation was created to fork the code base of OpenOffice.org  from its corporate owner, Oracle.


Jefferson Davis announcing confederate constitution What has been going on since then is akin to the American Revolution. Community bylaws were established on December 1, but that's no more significant, in its way, than the creation of the Confederate Constitution, established 150 years ago as of March 11.

Whether the current conflict is the open source equivalent of a Revolutionary or Civil War depends on you. It depends on whether you're willing to work for it, to basically fight for it, within your organization and with your pocketbook.

Because OpenOffice is not going away. Oracle has announced what it calls Project Renaissance to give the software a new user interface. A Version 3.3 has been released. More important IBM's Symphony, now offered in a cloud version, remains based on OpenOffice. Not LibreOffice.

While we wait for the LibreOffice version of Ben Franklin to head over to IBM and seduce it (this was always my dad's favorite version of the Ben Franklin myth) something more important is going on.

LibreOffice needs 50,000 Euros (about $67,000) to incorporate in Europe.  Just because it has established a foundation and bylaws, doesn't mean it's a legal entity. Florian Effenburger announced the drive last week .

“Now that we have our first release of LibreOffice, which has been downloaded and installed all around the world, the time has come to legally establish the future home for our community”.

Not exactly when in the course of human events, but then again Thomas Jefferson wasn't taking credit cards. Florian is.

Florian-effenberger So far, I'm glad to say, the drive is doing a lot better than the American Republic did . Over 40,000 Euros came in during just one week. “Your are our rockstars,” Florian wrote.

But the job has just begun. LibreOffice needs a marketing budget. It needs a travel budget. It needs to get to trade shows. And it needs to pre-finance inventory of things like books and DVDs. These are the weapons of high tech business war.

And this is a business war. Oracle has very deep pockets. Its corporate structure is the standard on which most open source has been based over the years. The idea of a foundation truly funded by individuals (as opposed to a business consortium like Eclipse or Mozilla, or an agreement among corporate employees like Apache) would be a truly big step, especially if it were really able to compete.

Won't you help? 

Tags: application softwareFlorian EffenbergerGermanygovernanceLibreOfficeopen sourceOpenOfficesoftware
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Dana Blankenhorn

Dana Blankenhorn

Dana Blankenhorn began his career as a financial journalist in 1978, began covering technology in 1982, and the Internet in 1985. He started one of the first Internet daily newsletters, the Interactive Age Daily, in 1994. He recently retired from InvestorPlace and lives in Atlanta, GA, preparing for his next great adventure. He's a graduate of Rice University (1977) and Northwestern's Medill School of Journalism (MSJ 1978). He's a native of Massapequa, NY.

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Comments 2

  1. zaine_ridling says:
    14 years ago

    Donated last week and will donate each week until they’re incorporated. As you note Dana, this isn’t just about the code, but about freedom. I appreciate the major Linux distros immediately incorporating it in their repositories.
    That said, LibreOffice is a very unique fork in that coders quickly came out to support it and hack away at cleaning up the source code. Most (true) forks fail. This one may have the legs to make OOo a relic of a greedy corporation. LibreOffice represents a conscious strike against Oracle’s handling of its open source portfolio. But coders who contribute don’t have to share their copyrights. So it doesn’t matter who their employer is. The advantage is that no “one” will have control of the project. Got the 3.3.1 update this morning. Should be fun!

    Reply
  2. zaine_ridling says:
    14 years ago

    Donated last week and will donate each week until they’re incorporated. As you note Dana, this isn’t just about the code, but about freedom. I appreciate the major Linux distros immediately incorporating it in their repositories.
    That said, LibreOffice is a very unique fork in that coders quickly came out to support it and hack away at cleaning up the source code. Most (true) forks fail. This one may have the legs to make OOo a relic of a greedy corporation. LibreOffice represents a conscious strike against Oracle’s handling of its open source portfolio. But coders who contribute don’t have to share their copyrights. So it doesn’t matter who their employer is. The advantage is that no “one” will have control of the project. Got the 3.3.1 update this morning. Should be fun!

    Reply

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