Re: [tech-cord] Star Office (was:Microsoft)

2002-08-01 Thread George Tuttle

Staroffice, I speculate, was developed to cut into the revenue stream of
their competitor, Microsoft.  Since a small revenue stream is being produced
by Staroffice, they made a business decision of developing a product for the
market that would really hurt Microsoft.  Staroffice is also available for
their own Sun operating system and also for Linux.  Another reason to
consider Linux where web access and basic business operations are the main
uses in school labs.  Complete systems for less than $500.
Another interesting development.  Dell has decided to get into the PDA
market.  They surprised me by picking Windows CE as the operating system.
The other two major players in the market are HP with Jornada (which is to
be discontinued) and Compaq.  Both of their machines are around $500.  Dell
says theirs will be less than $300. (probably $299)

George
- Original Message -
From: Steven Scarbrough [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Wednesday, July 31, 2002 9:18 PM
Subject: [tech-cord] Star Office (was:Microsoft)


 George writes:
 Contrary to rumors, Staroffice 6.0 is free to schools after you
 purchase one copy for $50 and send in a licensing form.  I've been using
 Staroffice for about 18 months now and switched to 6.0 about 6 weeks ago
 and have to say it is a greatly improved product.  It will open and save
 in the Microsoft Office format so there really aren't any compatibility
 issues .  I'm going to put it on machines that do not have Office on them
 yet, faculty and student.

 Sad news...
 

 STAROFFICE NOT FORTHCOMING FOR MAC
 Contrary to recent news reports, Sun Microsystems and Apple Computer
 are not developing a version of StarOffice for the Mac, according to an
 official from Sun. Two open-source developers have produced an alpha
 version of OpenOffice for Mac; StarOffice is based on the OpenOffice
 suite, developed by OpenOffice.org. At a news conference Monday, the
 official from Sun and the two developers said that there have been
 talks between Sun and Apple, but there are no plans to move forward
 with such a project. The developers said it would take them another one
 to three years to finish work on their Apple ready version of
 OpenOffice, one with all of the features and user interface of other
 Apple applications.
 InfoWorld, 30 July 2002
 http://www.idg.net/ic_899509_1794_9-1.html
 --

 Steve Scarbrough, Technology Coordinator
 Storm Lake Community School District
 419 Lake Avenue
 Storm Lake, IA  50588
 712.732.8100   fax:8101
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 http://mail.storm-lake.k12.ia.us/~sscarbrough/

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RE: [tech-cord] Star Office (was:Microsoft)

2002-08-01 Thread Thomas Voss


If you haven't tried it already and are looking for an open
source office suite, check out www.openoffice.org. It's backed by Sun
and made to compete more directly with Microsoft then StarOffice was.
The Windows and *nix version of the software is fully released, but the
Mac is still a in a development stage. 

-Original Message-
From: Steven Scarbrough [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] 
Sent: Wednesday, July 31, 2002 9:19 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [tech-cord] Star Office (was:Microsoft)


George writes:
Contrary to rumors, Staroffice 6.0 is free to schools after you 
purchase one copy for $50 and send in a licensing form.  I've been 
using Staroffice for about 18 months now and switched to 6.0 about 6 
weeks ago and have to say it is a greatly improved product.  It will 
open and save in the Microsoft Office format so there really aren't any

compatibility issues .  I'm going to put it on machines that do not 
have Office on them yet, faculty and student.

Sad news...


STAROFFICE NOT FORTHCOMING FOR MAC
Contrary to recent news reports, Sun Microsystems and Apple Computer are
not developing a version of StarOffice for the Mac, according to an
official from Sun. Two open-source developers have produced an alpha
version of OpenOffice for Mac; StarOffice is based on the OpenOffice
suite, developed by OpenOffice.org. At a news conference Monday, the
official from Sun and the two developers said that there have been talks
between Sun and Apple, but there are no plans to move forward with such
a project. The developers said it would take them another one to three
years to finish work on their Apple ready version of OpenOffice, one
with all of the features and user interface of other Apple applications.
InfoWorld, 30 July 2002 http://www.idg.net/ic_899509_1794_9-1.html
--

Steve Scarbrough, Technology Coordinator
Storm Lake Community School District
419 Lake Avenue
Storm Lake, IA  50588
712.732.8100   fax:8101
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://mail.storm-lake.k12.ia.us/~sscarbrough/

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