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En:OpenOffice.org

Da Cantiere.
Versione del 16 mag 2009 alle 16:55 di Christian (Discussione | contributi) (citazioni grezze)

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en:OpenOffice.org - Sito Ufficiale

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OpenOffice.org
OpenOffice.org
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Lingue

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(Testo originale) (Traduzione)
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«As of March 2009[update], OpenOffice supports over 80 languages.»
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«As of March 2009[update], OpenOffice supports over 80 languages.»
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--Christian (discussione) 16:55, 16 mag 2009 (CEST)

Storia

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«OpenOffice.org was originally derived from StarOffice, an office suite developed by StarDivision and acquired by Sun Microsystems in August 1999. The source code of the suite was released in July 2000 with the aim of reducing the dominant market share of Microsoft Office by providing a free and open alternative; later versions of StarOffice are based upon OpenOffice.org with additional proprietary components. The project and software are informally referred to as OpenOffice, but this term is a trademark held by a company in the Netherlands co-founded by Wouter Hanegraaff and is also in use by Orange UK,[3] requiring the project to adopt OpenOffice.org as its formal name.[4]»
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«OpenOffice.org was originally derived from StarOffice, an office suite developed by StarDivision and acquired by Sun Microsystems in August 1999. The source code of the suite was released in July 2000 with the aim of reducing the dominant market share of Microsoft Office by providing a free and open alternative; later versions of StarOffice are based upon OpenOffice.org with additional proprietary components. The project and software are informally referred to as OpenOffice, but this term is a trademark held by a company in the Netherlands co-founded by Wouter Hanegraaff and is also in use by Orange UK,[3] requiring the project to adopt OpenOffice.org as its formal name.[4]»
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--Christian (discussione) 16:55, 16 mag 2009 (CEST)
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(Testo originale) (Traduzione)
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«On July 19, 2000, Sun Microsystems announced that it was making the source code of StarOffice available for download under both the LGPL and the Sun Industry Standards Source License (SISSL) with the intention of building an open source development community around the software. The new project was known as OpenOffice.org, and its website went live on October 13, 2000.

Work on version 2.0 began in early 2003 with the following goals: better interoperability with Microsoft Office; better performance, with improved speed and lower memory usage; greater scripting capabilities; better integration, particularly with GNOME; an easier-to-find and use database front-end for creating reports, forms and queries; a new built-in SQL database; and improved usability. A beta version was released on March 4, 2005.

On September 2, 2005 Sun announced that it was retiring the SISSL.[7] As a consequence, the OpenOffice.org Community Council announced that it would no longer dual license the office suite, and future versions would use only the LGPL.[8]

On October 20, 2005, OpenOffice.org 2.0 was formally released to the public.[9] Eight weeks after the release of Version 2.0, an update, OpenOffice.org 2.0.1, was released. It fixed minor bugs and introduced new features.

As of the 2.0.3 release, OpenOffice.org changed its release cycle from 18 months to releasing updates, feature enhancements and bug fixes every three months.[10] Currently, new versions including new features are released every six months (so-called "feature releases") alternating with so-called "bug fix releases" which are being released between two feature releases (every three months).

In October 2008, version 3.0 was released, featuring the ability to import, but not export, Office Open XML documents, support for the new ODF 1.2 document format, improved support for VBA macros, and a native port for Mac OS X.»
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«On July 19, 2000, Sun Microsystems announced that it was making the source code of StarOffice available for download under both the LGPL and the Sun Industry Standards Source License (SISSL) with the intention of building an open source development community around the software. The new project was known as OpenOffice.org, and its website went live on October 13, 2000.

Work on version 2.0 began in early 2003 with the following goals: better interoperability with Microsoft Office; better performance, with improved speed and lower memory usage; greater scripting capabilities; better integration, particularly with GNOME; an easier-to-find and use database front-end for creating reports, forms and queries; a new built-in SQL database; and improved usability. A beta version was released on March 4, 2005.

On September 2, 2005 Sun announced that it was retiring the SISSL.[7] As a consequence, the OpenOffice.org Community Council announced that it would no longer dual license the office suite, and future versions would use only the LGPL.[8]

On October 20, 2005, OpenOffice.org 2.0 was formally released to the public.[9] Eight weeks after the release of Version 2.0, an update, OpenOffice.org 2.0.1, was released. It fixed minor bugs and introduced new features.

As of the 2.0.3 release, OpenOffice.org changed its release cycle from 18 months to releasing updates, feature enhancements and bug fixes every three months.[10] Currently, new versions including new features are released every six months (so-called "feature releases") alternating with so-called "bug fix releases" which are being released between two feature releases (every three months).

In October 2008, version 3.0 was released, featuring the ability to import, but not export, Office Open XML documents, support for the new ODF 1.2 document format, improved support for VBA macros, and a native port for Mac OS X.»
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:--Christian (discussione) 16:55, 16 mag 2009 (CEST)


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«According to its mission statement, the OpenOffice.org project aims "To create, as a community, the leading international office suite that will run on all major platforms and provide access to all functionality and data through open-component based APIs and an XML-based file format."»
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«According to its mission statement, the OpenOffice.org project aims "To create, as a community, the leading international office suite that will run on all major platforms and provide access to all functionality and data through open-component based APIs and an XML-based file format."»
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:--Christian (discussione) 16:55, 16 mag 2009 (CEST)


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«OpenOffice.org aims to compete with Microsoft Office and emulate its look and feel where suitable. It can read and write most of the file formats found in Microsoft Office, and many other applications; an essential feature of the suite for many users. OpenOffice.org has been found to be able to open files of older versions of Microsoft Office and damaged files that newer versions of Microsoft Office itself cannot open.»
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«OpenOffice.org aims to compete with Microsoft Office and emulate its look and feel where suitable. It can read and write most of the file formats found in Microsoft Office, and many other applications; an essential feature of the suite for many users. OpenOffice.org has been found to be able to open files of older versions of Microsoft Office and damaged files that newer versions of Microsoft Office itself cannot open.»
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:--Christian (discussione) 16:55, 16 mag 2009 (CEST)


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«OpenOffice.org pioneered the ISO/IEC standard OpenDocument file formats (ODF), which it uses natively, by default. It also supports reading (and in some cases writing) many legacy and current proprietary file formats (e.g.: WordPerfect through libwpd, StarOffice, Lotus Software, MS Works through libwps, Rich Text Format), most notably including Microsoft Office formats.[21]»
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«OpenOffice.org pioneered the ISO/IEC standard OpenDocument file formats (ODF), which it uses natively, by default. It also supports reading (and in some cases writing) many legacy and current proprietary file formats (e.g.: WordPerfect through libwpd, StarOffice, Lotus Software, MS Works through libwps, Rich Text Format), most notably including Microsoft Office formats.[21]»
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:--Christian (discussione) 16:55, 16 mag 2009 (CEST)


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(Testo originale) (Traduzione)
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«Other projects

A number of products are derived from OpenOffice.org. Among the more well-known ones are Sun StarOffice and NeoOffice. The OpenOffice.org site also lists a large variety of complementary products including groupware solutions.

NeoOffice

NeoOffice is an independent port that offered a native OS X’s Aqua user interface even before such integration was available in OpenOffice.org. Its releases lag behind the official releases, due to its small development team and the concurrent development of the technology used to port the user interface.[31]»
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«Other projects

A number of products are derived from OpenOffice.org. Among the more well-known ones are Sun StarOffice and NeoOffice. The OpenOffice.org site also lists a large variety of complementary products including groupware solutions.

NeoOffice

NeoOffice is an independent port that offered a native OS X’s Aqua user interface even before such integration was available in OpenOffice.org. Its releases lag behind the official releases, due to its small development team and the concurrent development of the technology used to port the user interface.[31]»
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:--Christian (discussione) 16:55, 16 mag 2009 (CEST)


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«Extensions Since version 2.0.4, OpenOffice.org has supported extensions in a similar manner to Mozilla Firefox.[36] Extensions make it easy to add new functionality to an existing OpenOffice.org installation. As of January 2009[update] the OpenOffice.org Extension Repository lists more than 260 extensions. Developers can easily build new extensions for OpenOffice.org, for example by using the OpenOffice.org API Plugin for NetBeans.»
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«Extensions Since version 2.0.4, OpenOffice.org has supported extensions in a similar manner to Mozilla Firefox.[36] Extensions make it easy to add new functionality to an existing OpenOffice.org installation. As of January 2009[update] the OpenOffice.org Extension Repository lists more than 260 extensions. Developers can easily build new extensions for OpenOffice.org, for example by using the OpenOffice.org API Plugin for NetBeans.»
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:--Christian (discussione) 16:55, 16 mag 2009 (CEST)


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«In September 10, 2007, the OO.o community announced that IBM had joined to support the development of OpenOffice.org.[49] "IBM will be making initial code contributions that it has been developing as part of its Lotus Notes product, including accessibility enhancements, and will be making ongoing contributions to the feature richness and code quality of OpenOffice.org.»
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«In September 10, 2007, the OO.o community announced that IBM had joined to support the development of OpenOffice.org.[49] "IBM will be making initial code contributions that it has been developing as part of its Lotus Notes product, including accessibility enhancements, and will be making ongoing contributions to the feature richness and code quality of OpenOffice.org.»
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:--Christian (discussione) 16:55, 16 mag 2009 (CEST)