StarOffice 5.1 released 135
Thomas Leineweber writes "Stardivision has just released the new version 5.1 of its StarOffice. You can download it as usual for free for non-commercial use. "
Science is to computer science as hydrodynamics is to plumbing.
Oh NO! (Score:1)
Hm.... (Score:1)
Re:Applix or StarOffice ? (Score:1)
StarOffice 5.1 ENGLISH download/reginfo... (Score:1)
Registration Data
Product: StarOffice 5.1
Operating System: Linux Intel
Language: English, US
Data to be filled in the User Data Dialog:
Company:
First/Last Name: bob test
Street/State: 8734 hgdfhjgsdfhjg
ZIP/City: 90210 sdf
Country: United States of America
Phone Home/Work:
Fax/eMail: sdffg@sad.com
Data to be filled in the Registration Key Dialog:
Custumer number: 8017663
Registration Key: 68L9-1RVX-7308RP-0L46C7-EJYX-YA0J
Re:StarOffice in the workplace (Score:1)
Secondly, the Word 97 format is unstable. I've had several documents with large figures, numerous equations and linked tables/spreadsheets. Word can take several minutes to load and repaginate the document. And I run into problems with the embedded equations several times. Fonts are missing and the greek symbols revert to their Western language equivalents. Integral signs, etc.. disappearing. The figures in various formats sometimes become elongated and I've had the stupid red X problems several times.
I would prefer Microsoft adopt a standard format like TeX or LaTeX. At least, if the frontend chokes on it, another editor can be used to complete the document.
I prefer Applix (Score:1)
bloated for my tastes, plus I can't stand the way it takes over
the whole desktop with its Win95 look-and-feel. It also tends
to crash occasionally.
Applix ($79 - $99) is smaller, faster, and quite stable. I've
done a couple long presentations with the graphics program,
and was quite happy with the results.
Re:If I just want to be able to open and read... (Score:1)
though often strings is adequate. mswordview
converts the
http://www.csn.ul.ie/~caolan/docs/MSWordView.ht
Re:Glibc 2.1? (Score:2)
Glibc 2.07 or higher supported.
I guess that means 2.1 support, it would be
totally stupid to release something not working on current caldera, RedHat, debian.....
Fredrik
Review the 5.1, not slam the 5.0! (Score:2)
But the 5.1 version has been out for hours and what we see is criticism of 5.0. Gang, give reviews of 5.1 here, esp. since improved compatibility is supposed to be a feature!
Re:Review the 5.1, not slam the 5.0! (Score:3)
Linux doesn't have a word processor. The best thing is Lyx - very fast and work can be imported to several formats. Conversion to html is not bad unless there are math formulas which get translated into messy gifs, etc.
The 60 meg. Star Office download says it all. Tired, ugly and bloated imitation of MS Office. Word Perfect is even worse - terrible motif interface. Try to change directories with the file selector and constantly "filter" to go to parent directory if you are lucky. Very intuitive, folks.
There are several gtk based work processors that looked promising but they seem to be dead in the water. KOffice seems to be trying to imitate MS in using CORBA in the place of COM - nobody really wants or needs embedded objects or "in-place editing" which increase bloat and instability geometrically. Linked objects - all right. You don't need CORBA or COM for that. What a way to ruin the K Desktop Environment, one of the few Linux desktop apps or systems that is really useful.
People just want an attractive, modern Word Processor that can perhaps also be used as a WYSIWYG html editor with images and tables. Not even frames, thank you. If we want to edit our images we can use a separate application. We don't want or need Office compatibility either. If you want to load and save Office files, use Windows and make sure you have the same version of Office that the files require. Most of the Slashdot visitors are using Windows anyway even though they also may have Linux installed just to impress other geeks.
It's not happening. 10 years ago I had much better word processing and desktop publishing software at very low cost with an Amiga. Regardless of the hype, Deluxe Paint 10 years ago was better for most drawing and painting tasks than Gimp - which is really an image or photo processing factory that can also be used as a paint or drawing program in a very round-about way. Like writing a script to draw a circle.
Linux is a server system, with lip service being paid to its usefullness as a desktop productivity or home system. Servers don't need browsers or word processors or paint programs.
If you want to have fun with a desktop system use Windows 9x, MacIntosh or even get out that old Amiga 500 or Atari ST you have in the closet.
Applixware has a lot going for it. (Score:3)
The mailing list is pretty active, with a bunch of the engineers constantly answering questions, often in the form of macros that do the trick (Hi Eric, Hi Mark!).
If you have the $99 bucks give it a try.
-- cary
Re:StarOffice in the workplace (Score:5)
"Other side?" What "other side?" The only side that I am aware of is the "how much does it cost us" side. Try the "other side" crap at Phillips, Shell, Mobil -- er DoubleCross --, BP, or any of the other majors and your ass will be out the door that afternoon. Did you learn that in "Business School" -- that sounds like the stuff that kids these days keep trying to pull in interviews. I have been wishing for one of those hooks to come out and drag them out of my office when they say stuff like that (my secretary is not interested and claims osteoporosis) because when they start talking about "other sides" and "third options" and "new paradigms" the interview is basically over. It means that they cannot add or subtract and/or have never met a budget in their life. And they think that they know something about real technology. Which is even more dangerous.
The only thing that is important is the bottom line, son, and I think that you have never been responsible for one on your life. AIX stays up for 1000 days at a time. Solaris is almost as good. Even HP-UX and OSF will do 200 days. Jesus Christ on a pogo stick -- IRIX will do more than 30 days. NT won't stay up for two weeks under load. Office is a pox and is restricted here because of the support budget that it alone uses up. We restrict the availability of Powerpoint (what the technicians refer to as "Powerpointyhair") for the same reason. As far as I can tell, Linux is just another UNIX, just a lot smaller. I have been working with UNIX for years (and Linux for the last four years on the advice of some of the younger staff members), and I have never seen an advantage to NT and Office and Windows before that (and OS/2 before that, and Macs on and off -- lately IMacs). Perhaps it is the CPA in me coming out -- it's all about ROI and cost of ownership and it doesn't get any better than UNIX and mainframes (more so now with IBM's price cuts). It is amazing (and reveals your fundamental lack of experience) that you would actually suggest that NT/Office is a good value proposition! I have tried Star Office once. I wasn't impressed -- a lot of the machines here are older Pentiums with 32MB and Star Office would not run well on them. But as a value proposition you are suggesting that a system that runs us about $6500/seat in support and licences PER YEAR EVERY YEAR costs less than one that would be free+$300 (last I checked) once. ONCE. That is why we are seriously considering Applix (smaller) or a freeware suite (LyX, GNUmeric, and some others -- but that is enough and exmh is quite nice -- we have menus for setting up procmail automatically) for the new systems as we replace them and/or using X as X terminals on the old systems (with new monitors and video cards). All of this is driven by cost. Period.
"Other side?"
You shouldn't have slept through the accounting classes -- they were part of your curriculum for a reason.
But hey -- I know who we have (I hired most of them) and I know that you aren't working for me -- I only hope that you are working for one of our compeditors.
Re:Have they resolved their glibc2 problem? (Score:1)
I don't have a key# yet to install it completely but I did get to the setup screen. I didn't even get that far with SO5.0 on RH6. So it looks encouraging.
Flame me, but... (Score:1)
^~~^~^^~~^~^~^~^^~^^~^~^~~^^^~^^~~^~~~^~~^~
"unprofessional" use of undocumented functions (Score:1)
Re:Review the 5.1, not slam the 5.0! (Score:1)
Wordperfect is a wonderful wordprocessor. Cosmetically it is dog ugly, they should have used GTK or QT - that would even save them development time compared to that awful and huge (bloated) Motif API.
However functionality is everything, good cosmetics just a nice to have (in my book). So for now I use WP.
Sometimes I start a Windows98 up in a VmWare VM just to use Excel (with 128M RAM and a K6-III it is smooth)
KOffice is coming along nicely and I like the way they do it, as for what people want in an office suite, please speak for yourself. I want more than you it seems. MS Office is bloated yes, but that does not mean that any implementation of object models will be bloated. Yes ofcourse they will be bigger, but with good programmers and SW designers - not neccesarily bloated.
It is like a desktop environment, it WILL use more memory than a TWM, but well written it will not use more than absolutely neccesary for its targeted functionality.
Re:yay vi. (Score:1)
I use a text editor for programming and a wordprocessor for e.g. reports and letters.
Re:XML for 2000? (Score:1)
I hope this supports glibc 2.1 (Score:1)
Re:StarOffice in the workplace (Score:1)
Re:StarOffice in the workplace (Score:2)
Stunning lack of quality control on their website (Score:1)
Re:StarOffice 5.1 ENGLISH download/reginfo... (Score:1)
First impressions (Score:2)
Note: I tested the OS/2 version and not the one for Linux, but I'm pretty sure the same thing applies to every single other version out there.
Re:StarOffice in the workplace (Score:1)
When you are sitting on the other side of the fence in the management decision meetings you start seeing some major flaws in the whole idea of a Linux/StarOffice migration.
I can see no positives from migrating away from WinNT/Office97 and plenty of negatives.
Lowest common denominator (Score:1)
StarOffice, WordPerfect and ApplixWare are really a boon for those running Linux in a hostile environment. I never touch the stuff to produce anything, but I love to be able to run Linux at the office and still be able to communicate with the rest of the folks.
Using the StarOffice "filter update" now and look forward to 5.1.
Sunsite UNC - now *that's* a smokin' mirror! (Score:1)
Woo hoo! Of course, now I have to wait until I go into the lab tomorrow to put it on a zip disk. The heck if I'm gonna try to get it to the home machine via my 56K modem.
Re:Why is everybody so down on SO5.0x? (Score:1)
| An office package is a tool and this one works
| for me.
My biggest beef with SO5 (and SO4, for that matter), some might consider silly. But I absolutely *hate* the way that SO doesn't integrate at all with the window manager. I would love it if each edited document got its own "real" window. C'mon, Star Division! At least with Applix I can use my preferred window manager to manage the windows!
So, it's not that it "looks like Windows" - it's that it doesn't play nice with the X window system!
Re:StarOffice in the workplace (Score:1)
Glibc 2.1? (Score:1)
So far I don't see it listed on the stardivision.com pages
/*He who controls Purple controls the Universe. *
Download URL here! (Score:3)
Its loaded (took me about 5 mins to get in) but seems to be going pretty quick (20k/s to the East Coast USA)
/*He who controls Purple controls the Universe. *
Re:Download URL here! (Score:1)
Re:Download URL here! (Score:1)
If you rule purple, you rule almost nothing anymore :-)
More related to the real subject: I'll give it a try tomorrow. Does anybody know if SO5.1 runs under FreeBSD? I'd like to run it at home as well.
Intosi
Star Office 3.1 (Score:1)
Naturally, I engraved a copy of 5.01 _yesterday_! (Score:1)
I hope it's as fast (relatively speaking) on Linux as the OS/2 bloke above intimated. My 5.01 runs usefully fast on a K6-II-300 with 64M, and only crashes about as often as Word, but got about a D from me for importing things from Word (2, 6 or 8).
Mind you, Word 8 gets only a C from me for importing from Word (for windows) 2. I see on their website that SO claim to have been working on that, so perhaps they'll get at least a C as well. S-:
Oh, well... at -f grab-staroffice-from-aarnet.sh now+10hours...
But it's not compatible (Score:3)
All this said, it's a decent office suite with a lot of great features, a nice interface, and damn fine cross-platform support. But it won't coexist comfortably with other office suites any better than any other office suite. A business or institution really can't mix office suites; for all the filters in the world, their file formats are still too far apart for everyday use.
A word processor that can "usually" open Word files is useless. When you're sent a Word file, the only acceptable word processor is one that can always open a Word file, even with clipart, drawings, equations, a glossary, embedded spreadsheets, and so forth.
You're not smarter than the people you work for. You're naive. There are a lot of things I dislike about MS Office, but even if StarOffice were suddenly so free that it was GPL'ed, it can cost a fortune to migrate a running business from one office suite to another.
If you have a department running Linux or some other such OS on the desktop and you need access to the company's standard office suite, WinFrame might make sense. And if you're on one of the major commercial Unixes, there's always SoftWindows.
StarOffice in the workplace (Score:1)
Yes, SO5.1 WORKS with RedHat 6.0 (Score:1)
Ben
Re:StarOffice in the workplace (Score:1)
I'm sorry to add fuel to the fire, but you left out the important words de facto from his post. Look them up.
Ethan
Please use MetaLab.unc.edu (Score:1)
so that would be
http://MetaLab.unc.edu/ StarDivision/unxlnxi/so51_lnx_01.tar [unc.edu]
Thanks
MetaLab instead of Sunsite.unc.edu (http and ftp) (Score:1)
http://MetaLab.unc.edu/ StarDivision/unxlnxi/so51_lnx_01.tar [unc.edu]
Thanks
Format matters.. (Score:1)
..HTML is adequate (and superior to Word or RTF) for most cases. It lacks formulas and some other useful doodads now. After XML (an MathML and the likes) support appears in all major browsers we are saved....
In your case - ask your boss to buy full Acrobat (with distiller) - it adds a button to Word - print to PDF. Works very well.
Re:It works on RedHat 6.0 (Score:1)
I agree that there was a definite improvement in the registration process...but did you ever think that a company could so totally and utterly screw up something so simple in the first place?
Re:StarOffice in the workplace (Score:1)
I Hope that they have fixed the portuguese accents (Score:1)
Other Platforms then Intel Linux (Score:1)
Re:Word processors and the like... (Score:2)
lets see...
context menu key gives me the menu I get when I right click on the title bar, windows-space shades the window, windows-F4 closes it, windows-x toggles maximize, windows-n minimizes it, windows-h hides it, windows-t brings up a terminal, windows-e brings up an editor (my current favorite is joe) in a term for quick jotting of notes, windows-q exits the X session, windows-1 through windows-5 switches to a particular virtual desktop, windows-leftarrow and windows-rightarrow moves to the previous and next virtual desktop, respectively...
need I go on? Or have I blabbed at the mouth enough?
Re:Star Office and Glibc (Score:1)
Re:Word processors and the like... (Score:1)
Word processors and the like... (Score:1)
As to using my favorite text input software--Wordperfect with linux, my attraction to linux (besides stability and quality) is being able to custom configure and compile apps. Neither Wordperfect for Linux nor StarOffice let me do that. And I really missed my Windows keyboard hot-keys, the mouse may be nice for the brain but not for my hand. Anyway, my dish is that Staroffice looks cool on their website (no screenshots!?!) but lacks usability. It is free though. That's worth considering.
Re:Word processors and the like... (Score:1)
I haven't used applixware, but as i tried to indicate in my rant, I haven't found a linux wp that I like, so I use windows.
Re:Have they resolved their glibc2 problem? (Score:2)
For 5.0, RedHat 6.0 has an RPM of Star Office which works just fine. It's not installed by default, it's on the Applications CD.
I wish I could find out if 5.1 works or not on my RedHat 6.0 system, but as another /.er already stated, the download area says that its closed.
----------
Re:Word processors and the like... (Score:2)
Between the two, I'd recommend Star Office, **IF** you have gobs of RAM (minimum 64M) and a fairly speedy processor to go with it. It's more polished, and I think it deals better with fonts, though given that it's running on X (the "it's 1999 and I still don't have built-in TrueType font support by default" window system), there's only so much you can expect.
I'd be curious to hear other people's opinions on this too...
P.S. Yes I know you can get TrueType font renderizers for X, my RedHat 6.0 XFree86 came with one installed. But it was an extra feature RedHat was nice enough to through in, and even with that X doesn't have a great way to deal with such fonts, or font scalability, transparently.
P.P.S. On ONE occasion Applix nuked the file I was editing when I tried to save it... only once over a period of about a year, but still, fyi...
----------
Non viewable page :( (Score:1)
Die Star Division Homepage sehr aufwendig. Zuaufwendig für ihren Microsoft Internetexplorer 3.0x.
Damit Sie diese Seiten aufrufen können brauchen Sie ein StarOffice 4.0/5.1, Netscape 3.x/ 4.x oder MSIE 4.x.
Wir bitten um ihr Verständnis.
I hate it when this happens...
Re:Download URL here! - NEW SITES (Score:1)
project primarily serves aarnet members, but we
do make archives available to australian connected
networks for the australian 'net community.
we can't make this available to networks outside
australia due to the high cost of international
traffic
-jason
Why is everybody so down on SO5.0x? (Score:1)
Secondly, most of the problems people have relate to "ease-of-use" and "it looks to damn much like windows, so it's from hell." Ok, I have almost never used MS-Office, but I found StarOffice Trivial to use, I reciently wrote a nice looking presentation with all of the "useless" imbeded objects, and my time was spend thinking about the presentation, not the software -- perfect. The result is nice too.
Lastly I don't care if it looks like windows. An office package is a tool and this one works for me.
Why is everyone up on word-cloning? (Score:1)
I know some people might feel it's hard to use, but as of a couple of weeks ago I'd never used LaTeX or TeX in my life, or even seen sample source for it. With the aid of LyX I wrote a 10000 word dissertation in it, including tables, diagrams, contents pages, etc.. And it looked substantially better than I've ever seen someone achieve with something like Word. And it only took me about 5 days (last time I wrote a project of around 8000 words in Word, it took me about 8 days, because it kept crashing / misnumbering figures / messing up bibliography references etc..)
I agree that you shouldn't be thinking about the software - but should you be thinking about the presentation? Surely the software should get the presentation right for you, and you should be worrying about the content! The software industry shows what happens when people worry more about presentation than content... Mentioning no names...
Microsoft is not the answer, NO is the answer. Microsoft is the question.
- Andy
Re:But it's not compatible - but neither is MS (Score:3)
Yep, and that includes from one version of MS Office to another.
Sure, you can retrofit filters and such so that your department still using Office 95 can open docs than some other branch that's using Office 97 sends you - maybe. But what about those old Word 5.0 files you've got around, or the Word documents from the division that used to be all-Mac? Yeah, you can open them (if you jump through the right hoops), but you'll lose the formatting. (Voice of experience here.)
Yes, it's an effort to switch from one office suite to another -- and each one still insists on its own internal format as well as supporting (to some degree or other) several other "portable" document formats -- but you're going to face that cost every time - or at best every other time - Microsoft comes out with a new version of Office, so you ought to look at all the long term costs involved.
Hell, a halfway competent manager will have already looked at these factors and decreed some standard -- as in really standard, not just what's most popular -- document format (or subset of document content) for the company, so that last year's contract boilerplate is still recognizable in next year's version of Office -- whoever's Office it is.
Re:Download URL here! - NEW SITES (Score:5)
FTP SITES:
Sun SITE UTK at University of Tennessee - Knoxville [utk.edu]
TU Clausthal - Germany [tu-clausthal.de]
Sun SITE Central Europe at RWTH-Aachen - Germany [rwth-aachen.de]
Sun SITE Finland at the Tampere University of Technology [sunsite.tut.fi]
Sun SITE Switzerland - cnlab & SWITCH - Rapperswil & Zurich [cnlab-switch.ch]
Star Division - Germany [stardivision.de]
Star Division - Germany [stardivision.de]
AARNet Mirror Project - Brisbane, Queensland, Australia [aarnet.edu.au]
HTTP SITES:
Sun SITE USA at University of North Carolina - UNC Chapel Hill [unc.edu]
Sun SITE UTK at University of Tennessee - Knoxville [utk.edu]
Sun SITE Central Europe at RWTH-Aachen - Germany [rwth-aachen.de]
Sun SITE Finland at the Tampere University of Technology [sunsite.tut.fi]
Sun SITE Nordic at Kungliga Tekniska Högskolan - Stockholm [sunsite.kth.se]
Sun SITE Belgium [belnet.be]
Sun SITE Northern Europe at Imperial College - London [ic.ac.uk]
Sun SITE Switzerland - cnlab & SWITCH - Rapperswil & Zurich [cnlab-switch.ch]
Question... (Score:2)
Re:Download URL here! (Score:2)
there are already 65 anonymous users at ftp.stardivision.de.
There is no capacity to support more than 65.
mirrors?
Re:Review the 5.1, not slam the 5.0! (Score:1)
However unfortunately we need one more thing and that is the capability to read M$-word files of all stupid versions. Still I think only wordperfect reads my Mac word 5.1 files but it does not even read rtf correctly.
Re:StarOffice in the workplace (Score:1)
Firstly, MS Office is not a standard, standards are properly documented open formats that are usualy (but not always) well thought out, sensible and portable. HTML, XML, ASCII text, TeX, Ansi C, HTTP and XPM are all "standards", a crappy, proprietary, backwards and forwards incompatible, binary document format is not a standard.
Why can't I buy or download a WYSIWYG word processor for Windows or Linux that has a nice open standard (like TeX), it would be so much nicer (and more refreshing) than these crap formats in word/wordperfect/*office etc.
--
Works with Rawhide - as well as can be expected (Score:2)
SO works with libc-2.1.1 ok with about 5 minutes of testing. It still slightly munged a test M$ Word 97 doc I had laying around. Abiword did a better job of importing the same doc.
Vmware doesn't read Word files (Score:1)
Re:StarOffice in the workplace (Score:2)
First, StarOffice lacks a lot of features. One example: Word's revision marks. SO doesn't have this feature. Word does. It is pretty common to want to mark different revisions of, e.g., a contract.
Second, SO's import feature isn't 100%, and sometimes it isn't even close. If people are passing around Word files, a lot of formatting will be missed.
XML for 2000? (Score:1)
As part of the M$ plan to take over the internet, I seem to remember there being talk of making the file formats of Office 2000/Windows 2000 based on XML. If that were to happen, then it shouldn't be a problem to hack together a parser or to write the tags.
Anyone know about this?
Re:StarOffice in the workplace (Score:1)
You claim that StarOffice would be $0 to support versus $6500 for Office? Do you have little elves who come in at night and do the maintanence for free? Part of support costs is training.
You sound like the skinflint boss from h*ll, to be blunt. (which you do so eloquently)
Re:Translation (Score:1)
I thought only Microsoft "forced" users to upgrade from IE 3 to IE 4.
Re:Review the 5.1, not slam the 5.0! (Score:2)
I'm a technical person, though, so I don't "live" in a "Office Suite" environment. Our programming people still work in OS/2 with Emacs. (the main product my group works on is part of an Embedded OS/2 product) And we're rated one of the top 30 companies to work for in the US.
Re:yay vi. (Score:2)
Have they resolved their glibc2 problem? (Score:1)
The last version of StarOffice used some undocumented glibc2.0 calls that disappeared in 2.1, which meant that StarOffice was broken for users of some recent distributions, including RedHat 6.0. Does anyone know if they resolved this problem in the new release?
--
US/English version not out yet? (Score:1)
#include "disclaim.h"
Re:FSCKING BINARIES !!!!! (Score:1)
Then I found out about the Aureal connection. I was pissed.
4Front now supports my card for US$30 until 2002. It was sad that I had to do that, but it wasn't 4Front's fault, it wasn't the Linux community's fault, it was only partially TB's fault. The blame is on Aureal for continuing to be a pre-Linux-hype Diamond or an (until recently) ATI. 4Front had to pay Aureal to get support for Linux, so I don't really mind because I like my sound card and an old GUS is hard to find (few people part with them, such as myself).
A somewhat happy ending though, the driver is still in beta and there are a couple of issues, like sound playing too fast. I filled out the support form and got an actual intelligent response in less than 5 minutes. It explained pretty much exactly what was happening and that they were working on it.
I was impressed. I'm so used to being given the "corporate finger" by many companies, especially after my response to the inevitable (which version of windows are you running). "We don't support Linux," they say matter-of-factly. Even when OS is completely irrelevant (broken switch on Toshiba notebook).
So 4Front is on my good list along with Matrox, Iomega, ZWorld, and Epson, all who have been very good to me regardless of what OS I use.
SO50 used undocumented glibc 2.0 functions! (Score:1)
Re:Download URL here! - NEW SITES (Score:1)
Please note that this mirror is not available to addresses outside Australia - it's intended for use by Australian Academic Research network members.
Re:I hope this supports glibc 2.1 (Score:1)
I don't think SO are completely insane, and I'm sure they'll release a glibc 2.1 version, but it would have been nice to get this nailed for 5.1 once and for all. libc funkyness is what keeps me from giving it a good burl.
Download? Can you now? (Score:1)
It's a good job they put the news about 5.1 on the front page of their site tho', or nobody would know about it
Re:StarOffice in the workplace (Score:1)
What's "idiotic" about using the world's de facto document format? You may not like the fact that Microsoft Office is the de facto standard, but that doesn't mean it isn't so.
Cheers
Alastair
Re:Glibc 2.1? (Score:1)
Matt
Re:Translation (Score:1)
i used lynx and skipped their inital page.
Now i had the right url for MSIE 3.x
and it worked fine.
So why should you call that page "large-scaled" ???
Bye AlexS.
Star office observations (Score:1)
1) forcing us to use their integrated, windoze95ish environment.
I don't mind this as much under linux as I do under OS/2, as linux doesn't really have a common feel to all of its apps anyway. But having to run that big program just to launch a single program (even if it's the mail client) really blows. You can integrate the apps to talk to each other without forcing what equates to a separate 'desktop' Might be good for people who do nothing but do word-processing/spreadsheets/etc but sucks for the rest of us.
2) creating their own scripting language.
Why not use PERL, REXX, Python, TCL, or anything that is already there? Or better yet, hooks to an API so that you can use the scripting language of your choice with it. REXX under OS/2, for example.
Other than that, it is a good suite once you get used to it...although they try to be too much like word in the wordprocessor. The drawing program is on the order of coreldraw and is great for doing flowcharts and such. I haven't really played with the other apps yet.
Re:Works with Rawhide - as well as can be expected (Score:1)
I downloaded it, and tried to install it, but
when I run the setup program, it insists that
I don't have ld-so-2 and glibc-2, and when I try
finish the install, it crashed the X-server.
Does anybody know what's up?
heck with RH6.0 what about 5.2?? (Score:1)
Gimmie Kernel
Re:Download URL here! (Score:2)
Linux:
ftp://ftp.tu-clausthal.de/pub/mirror/StarDivisi
Windows - still have to use this for the printer
ftp://ftp.tu-clausthal.de/pub/mirror/StarDivisi
They let me in first time at 200Kbps to the UK.
Re:XML for 2000? (Score:1)
(haha!)
Incidentally, has anyone else noticed what happens when you view a
(and i was wondering why my hdd was churning so bad)
It's change for the sake of change, on microsoft's part, the file size increases and Office2000 can't nearly do as many things as whatever their last version was (not that it matters too much). What's good though is that after a while they'll find ways to implement everything and then as it's so open 3rd party can make their own tools. Silly Microsoft!! you've gone and slipped up there, you were only be temporarily evil.
yay vi. (Score:1)
from the who-needs-a-word-processor-when-I-got-vi dept.
damn right.
Re:It works on RedHat 6.0 (Score:1)
Third (applications) CD-ROM has Star Office 5.0
in RPM format. But this RPM contains just an installation of Demo thirty days version. I was surprised how easy it was to register this version. I just clicked on "Star Office registration" and after a moment it says - "Registartion Complete!" That's all. Word "Unregistered" dissapeared from the window' title.
So what i want to says that it works pretty good
with Red Hat 6.0
Re:But it's not compatible - but neither is MS (Score:1)
Is there no way to guide people into using some form of steady standard? The OS wars are not yet over and this problem looms over all us as an even bigger problem. I have to process files from all versions of Office and Word and the incompatibility of the various versions is one of the biggest time wasters known.
Does any one know of an association that is looking into this?
Something must be done before W2000 adds another layer of inefficiency to an already screwed up situation.
Re:Non viewable page :) (Score:1)
or click on the globe at staroffice.de
Star Office and Glibc (Score:1)
since RH 6 seems to come with KDE, im a little suspicious.
glibc2.1 (Score:4)