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Comment Re:What? (Score 1) 480

Not true. LibreOffice has some serious bugs when working with doc, docx, & odt that are extremely problematic and have not been fixed for months on end. Exhibit A is the "read-error" bug when files have images.
https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=52226
This renders a word processor basically unusable. The solutions are either disabling autosave or not using images. I've been using OpenOffice for over a decade & I am this close to going back to MS Office. It used to be good. Post-fork, it's a piece of junk, & the community refuses to acknowledge this. Sticking our heads in the sand will not help.
Patents

Submission + - Is a patent worth having? Maybe not... (nytimes.com)

tarball_tinkerbell writes: "The New York Times (sorry, registration required) reports: for most public companies, patents don't pay off. James Bessen and Michael J. Meurer of the Boston University School of Law have crunched the numbers and are finishing up a book on the topic, "Do Patents Work?," due in 2008 — synopsis and sample chapters here. Having analyzed data from 1976 to 1999, they found that starting in the late 1990s, publicly traded companies saw patent litigation costs outstrip patent profits. Specifically, they estimate that about $8.4 billion in global profits came directly from patents held by publicly traded United States companies in 1997, rising to about $9.3 billion in 1999, with two-thirds of the profits going to chemical and pharmaceutical companies. Domestic litigation costs alone, meanwhile, soared to $16 billion in 1999 from $8 billion in 1997.
Things have probably become worse since then. For instance, patent litigation is up: there were 2,318 patent-related suits in 1999, and 2,830 in fiscal 2006 (though that's down from the peak year, 2004, when 3,075 were filed). Mr. Bessen said awards in patent cases also seemed to be up, though he was less confident in that data. Worse, he says, companies doing the most research and development are sued the most.

In addition, economists Michele Boldrin of Washington University at St. Louis and David Levine of UCLA argue that the patent system should be abolished."

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