El Reg has published an article that suggests, at least according to one person in the LibreOffice community, that OpenOffice development is essentially moribund and Apache should abandon it.
Christian Schaller, a Red Hat Software Engineering Manager and GNOME developer, wrote an open letter to Apache saying that "the OpenOffice project is all but dead upstream since IBM pulled their developers off the project almost a year ago and has significantly fallen behind feature wise... I hope that now that it is clear that this effort has failed that you would be willing to re-direct people who go to the openoffice.org website to the LibreOffice website instead."
A member of the Apache OpenOffice team was quick to respond: "We think Apache OpenOffice as released has been a huge success," he said. "Most of us don't really like the direction LibreOffice is heading to."
That said, the most recent OpenOffice update, version 4.1.1, was published nearly a year ago, and while the source code repository does show recent activity, it is much less than that for LibreOffice, as a quick browse of GitHub stats will confirm.
Other coverage can be found here.
I use LibreOffice when I'm in Linux and OpenOffice when I'm in MacOS X. Personally, I prefer them both to MS Office, although I do have MS Office on the Mac only because the people I work with don't use anything else. Are there any Soylentils here beside myself who use either one of these free products?
Note by Subsentient: Changed title from "Wither OpenOffice?"
(Score: 2) by Phoenix666 on Saturday August 22 2015, @01:50AM
I didn't have any problem with the original title. "Whither, my good man?" = "Whereto, my good man?" As in, "Where do you want to go?" To me it fits well with German constructions that start with "Wohin?" No verb required, because it's understood there's a sense of motion. There are strong Scandinavian and Anglo-Saxon influences on Old English, so it doesn't seem strange that the archaic term "whither" could have inherited that similarity with those other Germanic languages. But we'd need a scholar of Old English to weigh in on that.
Washington DC delenda est.