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It's not v2.0, but OpenOffice.org update now available
Sep. 22, 2005

While some office suite users are still waiting for OpenOffice.org 2.0 to arrive, its parent organization has quietly released OpenOffice.org 1.1.5. The latest OO.o (OpenOffice.org) boasts several new features, not the least of which is support for importing OpenDocument documents, spreadsheets, and presentations.

The program, however, cannot save files to OpenDocument. There are no plans to add this capability to the OO.o line. Instead, this will be supported in the more advanced OO.o 2.0.

OpenOffice.org developers say they are close to issuing a release candidate for the long-awaited OO.o 2.0. A native port of OO.o for Max OS X is also expected to arrive shortly.

Once OO.o 2.0 appears, Sun Microsystems Inc. will release StarOffice 8 in short order.

The OpenDocument format is an XML-based OASIS (Organization for the Advancement of Structured Information Standards) international office document standard. It is meant to enable the free exchange of data between OpenDocument-compliant software packages.

The format has the support of several companies and organizations including IBM, the KDE Project and Red Hat Inc.

Although the OpenDocument standard is only a few months old, it also has garnered government support. The state of Massachusetts' CIO, Peter Quinn, has declared as of Jan. 1, 2007, all electronic documents created by state employees could be saved in only two format types: OpenDocument and Adobe's PDF (Portable Document Format).

Despite protests from Microsoft, Massachusetts has shown no signs of backing off its OpenDocument plans.

OO.o also has numerous bug fixes and improvements to its font handling. It also includes a fix to a recently reported security problem. Malicious hackers could have used this heap-based buffer overflow problem to run unauthorized programs if a user opened a suitably poisoned document.

Although the OO.o 1.1.5 press release indicates otherwise, this version is the first to be licensed solely under the LGPL (Lesser Gnu Public License). Previous versions were licensed under the now depreciated SISSL (Sun Industry Standard Source License) and the LGPL.

This new stable version of the popular open-source office suite is now available from the openoffice.org website in versions for the Windows (98/ME/NT/2000/XP), Linux (X86 and PowerPC) and Solaris (SPARC and X86) platforms.



If you found this eWEEK.com article by Steven J. Vaughan-Nichols informative, be sure to check out eWEEK.com's Linux & Open Source Center for the latest open-source news, reviews, and analysis.



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