Sun buys maker of StarOffice 134
Anonymous Coward writes "CNet reports that Sun has bought Star Division-
the maker of StarOffice for Linux and other OSs.
" Purchase price unknown, but it fits into Sun's strategy quite nicely.
In order to get a loan you must first prove you don't need it.
Re:Off Topic (Score:1)
Re:Off Topic (Score:1)
Time to play wit KOffice... (Score:1)
Linux is a smorgasbord!
Re:Off Topic (Score:1)
Re:Not a good thing - Sun hates OS specific stuff. (Score:1)
Re:And don't forget ... (Score:1)
Strategy (Score:1)
Scary stuff... (Score:1)
Good! (Score:2)
I'm not saying that StarOffice is a perfect product - it's still a little rough around the edges. But it'll be a whole lot easier to pitch this to the typical PHB now that there's a billion-dollar company behind the product. `
OOPS... Delete that post (Score:1)
Off Topic (Score:1)
For a while I was getting broken HTML ( basically HEAD and TITLE tag and not much more
This site is quickly becoming one of the last stable ones on the net.
Not worried. (Score:2)
Besides Applixware, there's also StarOffice, plus there's a suite coming from the KDE folks.
But hey, if Sun wants to make some folks in Redmond to start packing their shorts, this is a definitely a way to do it. Imagine what pumping a few million dollars worth of R&D into StarOffice would do? Heh, heh...
--
Re:Good for Corel? (Score:1)
I view this as good news, not only for the Linux community, but for the software industry as a whole. The big question however is whether Sun will be able to effectively market the product and do the work necessary to convince enough users that this is a viable alternative to M$ Office.
Re:Deja Vu (Score:1)
xterm"
That's pretty much it
The Network is the People (Score:1)
But then again, it is unfortunate to see the rapid consolidation in this and other industries which create great giants that endanger the smaller companies which create for great diversity and innovation. M$ and Sun, Wallmart and Amazon and the others should be held to a high standard, because we are learning that Big Brother is not government.
And yet heartening is the Linux success. Created by technical vision and prowess, through a distributed and virtual community, Linux represents the power of a grass roots effort to level the playing field.
Today Linux represents the strength of the people over the corporations. Tomorrow Linux will be the server platform of choice the Internet. Sun will eventually stop competing with the people and replace Solaris with Linux in it's formidable hardware products. And they will ensure that their Java software platform is the Internet language of choice, competantly hosted on Linux to service the array of consumer devices, including Windows.
The Open Source community is wise to remember that it is freedom of choice, the abillity to innovate, and openness that is our passion. Linux is our finest offspring, which has now grown and is ready to live a life of it's own, in a corporate world. It is time for us to build upon it, but more importantly to relentlessly drive forward creating new technologies that are socially functional by empowering individuals and communities.
OPEN SOURCE JAVA! IF they won't open source it, let's write something better!
OPEN SOURCE SLASHDOT! FREE THE LATEST AND GREATEST CODE! Open source, Freedom of Speech and the Right to gather are more important than Slashdot.
Re:Oh good... (Score:1)
Have anyone ever seen software size of MS Office running fast under X ???
It can't be programmers fault, there are smart programmers outside of MS after all , so the only explanation is : they have to work with what they have which right now means X. Results are quite obvious.
They beat Red Hat to it... (Score:1)
If they do it right, Corel is going to cream Red Hat in the desktop space. Red Hat need to find _something_ to generate revenues. It ain't gonna be software sales...
Re:Sun keep StarOffice for OS/2 & Linux? Yeah, rig (Score:1)
Sun is really afraid of Linux. Not for their high end products but rather for middle-range ISP type stuff. Think about this: there are lot of shops with aging SUN boxes and being UNIX shops they are much more likely replace these boxes with Linux or SUN and not NT . So SUN has new competition in the market where they didn't have one before
Microsoft is not scared of Linux taking over workstation market. That won't happen anytime soon for the simple reason that Linux is complete mess on that level. MS is little bit scared of Linux competing against NT but it is SUN who really should prepare for onslaught of both NT and Linux pressing into markets previously claimed by SUN.
I will stay with emacs! (Score:1)
Sun buying Stardivision, sucks and it's dangerous (Score:1)
Re:Sun versus Linux (Score:1)
I'm not sure about that. I thought that SCO held the no: 1 slot in terms of licenses or units shipped (though not in revenue). I also remember reading something recently (though I don't remember which eZine it was on) which said that the Monterey triad (IBM + SCO + Sequent) will command over 50% of the commercial UNIX market when it ships. Well, they didn't say commercial in the article, but they didn't mention any of the free *ix's, so that's my spin on it.
Macka
Ain't touchin it... (Score:1)
Not that really has much to do with StarOffice or Sun. It would be nice to see a Mac version. Currently there is no office suite that runs on all platforms. There is only MS Office (which is pretty cool) for Mac and AppleWorks (which rocks).
Another one would be nice, but if I cant run it... I dont want it. Simple.
That goes for all applications/games/whatevers. It may be the bast program in the world, but I could not give a damn if it is not for the mac.
Thats loyalty for ya.
If you are wondering why I love the mac so much, it is because the Mac has saved my company literally tens of thousands of dollars on support costs compared to windows.. let alone Linux.
Re:Oh good... (Score:1)
Corel Wordperfect 8 runs pretty on my P166
Re:Oh good... (Score:1)
Re:Not official yet.. (Score:1)
This (buying staroffice) is a perfectly logical
move. They _must_ fight microsoft where its
strength are unless the don't want slowly loose
marketshare to mssql.
Don't laugh, many companies _will_ buy mssql
for enterprise servers, ms wants to go there
and they will get there. Give them two years of
marketing (32 proc. for win2000 anybody?),
and they will be there.
If by than ms also still has _this_ kind of
dominance in deskops and perhaps small servers
and proprietary protocolls and UIs and can offer a really competing product - then say goodbye to sun.
staroffice (Score:1)
Re:Not a good thing - Sun hates OS specific stuff. (Score:1)
Other interpretation: Sun adopts Linux for Sparc? (Score:1)
Linux also promotes the case of Unix versus NT, so it's good for Solaris and hence also for Sun. Following this logic, Sun could well give themselves a shot in the arm at the bottom end of the market by adopting the Linux port for Sparc and selling their workstations and servers with it preloaded, at less cost than with Solaris. This would create a loyal following of Linux/Sparc users, some of whom will promote the case of Sun equipment in their companies, so there is definitely a plus side to Linux in the Sun portfolio.
Sadly, because there are two sides to this coin, there is probably a massive political argument within Sun about it. Sigh.
Re:Oh good... (Score:1)
Re:Deja Vu (Score:1)
See http://www.acm.org/cacm/AUG96/antimac.htm (Score:1)
Check out the research article at
http://www.acm.org/cacm/AUG96/antimac.htm [acm.org].
Re:Good! (Score:2)
That said, I will be switching to KOffice as soon as it is ready. Why? I just don't like using proprietary software. I will use it, if there is not a reasonable free substitute. But, my goal is to use all free software ASAP, for a number of reasons, including:
--
Interested in XFMail? New XFMail home page [slappy.org]
Crappy Product? (Score:1)
The q is, is
Slash seems a little unstable. MySQL has been blamed, and also Rob's code (at least on slashnet).
Does this mean Linux is unstable? No, of course not.
The reason many of us dislike m$ products in the underlying operating system and security model is so shithouse. It is poss to write crap programs on any operating system. It is difficult to write good, reliable software when your operating system cannot be relied upon. It does not follow that
It does follow that windows is unstable, therefore ANY program running on windows is unstable.
-- Reverend Vryl
The real deal... Microsoft@ /. (Score:1)
I suggest you check it out at www.netcraft.com
Next... I find it amusing that some of these entries are traced back to Microsoft employees.
Definately to MSN.com... Give it up guys.
You've already lost. Star Office kicks Office 2000 but with no inherent vira breeding ground.
Take your DOS and go home. You guys must be really desperate to post here. Also, I still get that stupid Microsoft Solutions Provider magazine.
(yes were are licensed although we rarely use it)
And the front cover reads.. "The Linux Threat."
Man are you guys ever scared or what? What until the Corel version of Linux and the next version of Mandrake come out. Linux on the server is already a done deal. Next is Linux on the desktop.
Time Frame: 9 Months
By the way, my company just sent the K-Office people around $6,000.00 worth of hardware for their efforts.
Having fun, Running Linux, Being happy!
Linux... Because a GPL is WAY better than a GPF!
Nicholas
Re:Other interpretation: Sun adopts Linux for Spar (Score:1)
If SUN had any sense at all they would drop their S-L-O-W-A-R-I-S and adopt Linux. Sun makes decent hardware, but their OS offerings are just terrible. After using Linux and then being exposed to Solaris 2.6 on the Ultra E450, I can honestly say that Solaris is stone aged stuff compaired to Linux. Sure Linux has some missing pieces like a Journaling file system and Linux doesnt scale as well as Solaris, but ultimately this will change.
It's inexcusable that SUN ships Solaris with the stone aged tools provided with it. Working in the the a CLI on a sparc box is ten times less productive than doing the exact same thing on a Linux box. You'd think Sun would get their heads out of their asses and clean up Solaris and update it to something closer to the year 2000 instead of the early 80's. I had to spend at least a week downloading GPL'd software and compiling it with gcc under Solaris just to get the damn thing even marginally functional. So yeah, SUN has every reason in the world to shit in their pants over Linux. It's kicking everyone in the seat of the pants. SUN would better serve themselves by just getting out of the software business completely and sell hardware. Embrace Linux on all SUN hardware and be done with it. So I have no idea just what SUN has in mind by purchasing Star Division. It puts them in a unique position in the software world, but I doubt they will even take advantage of it. It's clear to me after using Solaris the past 3 months that SUN has fallen asleep. A pity we have to spend 55k for SUN hardware and have it ship with such amatuerish crap like Java and CDE. Come on SUN. Get with the program.
in little kid sized bites (Score:1)
- Maybe they just want leverage over Linux and are smart enough not to walk in shooting. So the Linux specific port lives on a while with Sun's sword dangling over it of course. And they will thereby accelerate Linux JRE development because of all the people who will thinik, what if Sun...When, in their opinion, the JRE is good enough, OS-specific StarOffice dies.
The temptation for them to try to use StarOffice as a Java showcase sooner rather than later will be strong, so rational guesses about what they will do are no good really. Understanding this in their guts, many people just cannot help but fear the worst.Re:Ain't touchin it... (Score:1)
There is, though, something that binds Mac fans and Linux fans together - we all appreciate a good design well implemented. And I think we would both respect that in each other's platform.
Incidently, my plan for "ideal office network" consists of Mac workstations with Linux back ends.
Two good products doing what they're great at.
warning signs to watch for (Score:1)
I hope that StarOffice doesn't disappear, its programmers reassigned to writing an office suite in Java.
hope staroffice is not headed for Netscape peril (Score:1)
hafnium
abiword (Score:1)
Re:Oh good... (Score:1)
Your "principle rule" is simply not true. It is in fact possible to speed up software. 2.2.x versions of the Linux kernel are certainly faster than 2.0.x version--and not just because of the multiprocessing capabilities. I'd do a little homework before I made blanket statements like the one you just made.
Re:Not official yet.. (Score:1)
After all, MS is in court about this, the seperation of OS from Applications.. i think Sun just shot themselves in the foot as far as the court battle goes.. microsoft will now easily be able to prove the volitility and marketeability of the market..
I love sun, i love my sparcs.. but whats the point.. another sell, another buy, another company after your money
Trend? (Score:1)
(sorry it's early saturday morning for me)
Re:Sun versus Linux (Score:1)
they really have to fear for their enterprise
market in long term.
Well yeah, they may have the best platform for
database etc. in enterprise shops, but
_this_is_where_ms_wants_to_go.
When sun looses this, they are lost.
Ever seen why corporations adopt exchange?
Pleease, quality isn't a decision factor, its
the desktop. The next logical steps from ms will
be aimed to big servers (win2000 pretends to
do 32 procs!), and they will again use the desktop
as an attacking point. If you want to fight them
in long term, fight them on the desktop or you
are screwed.
at
Finally, they can add a 3rd programmer (Score:1)
In the meantime, the Java thin-client front end to the Unix version fits well into Sun's thin desktop roadmap.
Re:Sun buying Stardivision, sucks and it's dangero (Score:1)
effect will be that the people at Corel (and abisource) will be very happy. Thats all, this isn't dangerous.
Get real, nobody will buy Solaris in order to
run an office suite. It's clear that nobody will
get a food in the desktop market against ms unless
he gives away at least the os for free.
Hope sun knows this.
Re:Other interpretation: Sun adopts Linux for Spar (Score:1)
for sun to fight against the ms-stronghold of
proprietary desktop "features" demanding for an
proprietary server os. Let's spread the word to
sun, just in case they don't know.
Sun moves into the household (Score:1)
Linux does NOT compete with Sun. (Score:1)
While Linux certainly has the ability to run on high-end hardware, most folks buying Sun hardware are going to be running Solaris. Linux has some scalability and other problems in this market.
For instance, one of the more popular engineering applications is Unigraphics, which is used extensively in the automotive and aerospace industries. UG will probably never run on Linux, especially considering Unigraphics Solutions' recent NT port. Currently HP and Sun have the market cornered on UG workstations.
Also, consider high-end server usage. Linux has no support for a journaling file system. Filesystem redundancy on Linux is lacking in general, in fact (ie Linux has support for software RAID, but only a handful of hardware RAID drivers exist...on a busy server, software RAID is practically useless due to its much slower speed.)
So all of you who are concerned with Sun destroying Linux need not be. Its not going to happen. Sun does not picture itself to be in the low-end of the market (Java was created to sell servers).
Re:Deja Vu (Score:1)
Story correction: Star Office NOT for MacOS (Score:1)
Most of the companies I worked for were Windows-based on the desktop, but always had a few diehards running old Macs (albiet one that hadn't been upgraded by anal, hostile IT department in years..).
Thanks to Star Office not supporting the Mac, those users will continue running Microsoft Office, as will I. I had to throw 196 MEGABYTES of RAM into my G3 to get any appreciable performance running MS Word 98, but it's the only word processor I could realistically use on the Mac (Word Perfect on the Mac isn't well supported and runs poorly under System 8.6). If Star Office even ran on PowerPC Linux I'd consider it...
Re:Other interpretation: Sun adopts Linux for Spar (Score:1)
Get a clue. I was referring to the stone aged tools that SUN so conviently ships with Solaris, more specifically the lack thereof. Oh unless you consider their bloated java as anything useful beyond chewing up a hell of a lot of ram.
Go read the internal architecture of solaris and Linux, learn about single system image, doors, dynamic domain, alternate pathing, dynamic reconfig, board drain, turnstile, kthread, paging algorithm implementation, scalabilty ot 64CPU w/no kernel mutex contention and stop yapping about the window manager and how you could get "ls" in color. You are just 1 step away removerd from a 'doze user.
Considering the fact our company has spent well over 55k for this E450, and considering the fact the fucking thing has yet to run a full week without crashing, and condidering the fact that SUN and or its service representatives cannot seem to identify and fix the problems, and considering the fact that SUN has replaced this E450 not once but 2 times, I think that is good enough indication to me that Solaris is just a stone aged piece of shit. Interesting our Linux boxen *NEVER* ever crash period running the same Oracle Software, yet the E450 has been nothing but trouble. I'll let you draw your own conclusions: HINT: If SUN Engineers cannot fix it then it doesnt seem likely anyone else can.
top yapping about the window manager and how you could get "ls" in color. You are just 1 step away removerd from a 'doze user.
Oh I was being nice. You've got the real scoop now. Obviously you are a Troll. What else could it be? In terms of being 1 step away from a doze user, I wager the 25+ years of HW/SW experience under my belt would show you to be more clueless than even a MAC user. Get a life. See thats the whole problem with SUN. Their own people take the same stone aged attitude you have shown here. Little wonder SUN is in deep shit up to it's shoulders. I'll place my bets with Linux. At least Linux developers do not seem to have their heads shoved into the sand or their bungholes either for that matter.
Re:Off Topic (Score:1)
Re:Shit! This sucks badly!!! (Score:1)
Uhh... young? Star started business in 1985, not that long after Sun. Innovative? I don't think Star is particularly innovative. In playing with Star Office, I got the impression that it was trying really hard to be Microsoft Office (down to the authentically slow assedness). Not much innovation there.
I'm taking a wait-and-see attitude towards this. Sun may be trying to position itself as a thin-client market leader. I think personally think this is pretty stupid. Many people have written off the thin-client concept in this age of fast, powerful, $500 desktop systems. Why bother struggling with a client-server architecture when having the aps on the client side is about as cheap, and can be as easy to administer?
Will it suck if StarOffice is removed from the Linux scene? A bit. A lot of people had problems with its bloatedness. I don't think we're guaranteed that Sun will axe it, though. We'll have to wait and see what Sun will do, before calling them bastards.
While we wait, perhaps we can just marvel at the fact that now, we're not faced with wondering if we'll have an office suite for Linux, but which of the office suites that are available (or are soon-to-be-available) we'll use (for those of us that need an office suite. Me, I'm a writer, and I'm happy to have WordPerfect).
Deja Vu (Score:1)
Just think, with the backing of Sun, more Unix on the desktop! It's a good thing, software choices are better in a Unix shop.
Microsoftland: Q. "Which email and productivity packages do we use?" A. "You'll only come close to the capability that you paid for if you also buy this, and This and THIS. And then pay for the upgrade for this, and that. Remember: Everyone is using this stuff--it must be good."
Unixland: Q. "What email and productivity packages do we use?" A. "Use any one you like, but one is already included. If you don't like the way something works than change it. Since most I/O is standardized (everything is a file) you can change the behavior and output to suit your needs. The computer comes with all the tools you need to set up anything you want. Go forth and be happy!"
And once you have a Unix shop it doesn't matter as much which Unix like OS you use.
The more the better (Score:1)
Star Office is a bit slow (seems faster on Win32 to me), it's innovative enough to grab some attention and hopefully marketshare.
Sun keep StarOffice for OS/2 & Linux? Yeah, right. (Score:1)
http://www.zdnet.com/zdnn/filters/bursts/0,3422
This is old news.. (Score:1)
Re:Off Topic (Score:2)
Yeah, it was out of commision fo an hour or so, but wineHQ has been MIA since yesterday.
Re:Not worried. (Score:1)
Not a good thing - Sun hates OS specific stuff. (Score:4)
Although a(nother) powerful company behind a popular Linux application definitely swings more momentum towards it, Sun's public persona seems to be platform specific - the Java platform, that is. Is there any (end user) software coming from inside Sun that isn't Java? Is there any that runs on multiple platforms like StarOffice does (other than the Java environment itself)?
Unfortunately, you know that old story - big company buys small company with the talent for getting quality things done quick. Getting absorbed into a gigantic infrastructure seems to take a toll on results.
So - I hope that Sun keeps Star separate, I hope that Sun doesn't trash everything that isn't Java, and I hope that quality software results.
Re:This is old news.. (Score:1)
support Abi! (Score:1)
Re:This is old news.. (Score:1)
Second, their domane name is awful, beening a plant name like that it's impossible to find on google or google [google.com] or infoseek [go.com], (that's exactly what happen to me. I remembered that it has a co.uk part, so I try this [register.co.uk] This is an example why a witty domain name can outpopular other good site. cy
What's the problem (Score:1)
Could someone please tell me quite what the problem is here ? As far as I can tell, Star Division is a smaller company that Sun... therefore being taken over is bad ? I like Star Office as it does everything that I require. Now that it has been taken on by a bigger company I'm sure that they arn't going to change it that much. In fact, I'd go as far as to say that they'll make it better because they can have more programmers working on it in exactly the same amount of time...
Illegal aliens (Score:2)
You're referring to Costa Mesa in Southern California's Orange County, right?
Unfortunately, I fear that without illegal aliens, there would be nobody to empty your trash, wait on you in fast food restaurants or fix your car. (Most car repair shops I've seen are run by a english-speaking front man who hires spanish speakers to do the actual work).
Illegal aliens may not speak my language, but they're incredibly hard workers and deserve a chance at success. I support them in their courageous efforts to make a life in a new, bewildering country.
D
----
All well and good, but... (Score:1)
Re:See http://www.acm.org/cacm/AUG96/antimac.htm (Score:1)
Re:The real deal... Microsoft@ /. (Score:1)
Cheers,
Nick
Good thing as long as Sun doesn't kill it. (Score:1)
Sun bought LightHouse Design-- the makes of an incredible suite of office productivity apps for NeXTSTEP/OpenStep. These apps were amazing-- often considered to be some of the best productivity apps ever written.
First Sun killed NEO-- so, the native Objective-C implementations died there. OK, fine, port 'em to Java!
Which, LightHouse DID! Not everything-- but large parts of certain apps were ported and, apparently, worked fine under Java.
BUT THEY KILLED THOSE TOO!!!
Why? Who knows....
I really hope that Sun doesn't kill this office suite too.
It depends.... (Score:1)
Re:Sun keep StarOffice for OS/2 & Linux? Yeah, rig (Score:1)
But, being hopeful, a Linux server is direct competition for their own servers. I don't really think they expect to take over the PC desktop. Ditching linux support for Star Office buys little and would definitely ignite a firestorm.
And don't forget ... (Score:1)
In addition to Applix, Star Office and KOffice,
don't forget Corel Office and the promised GNOME
office suite (the version of gnumeric that shipped
with RH6.0 just read in an Excel spreadsheet quite
nicely for me.)
Re:This is old news.. (Score:2)
-E
Re:Not official yet.. (Score:1)
The interesting thing to me is that Sun has never really aggresivley gone after the desktop market and this product is directly aimed for the desktop. Not to many high end e-commerce servers need to do word processing. So...is Sun doing this just to go after the boys in Redmond....or does Sun have plans to push Solaris on the desktop (something they really have never done, even when they gave away Solaris 7 ) or just what does Sun hope to accomplish?
I think Sun has enough sense not to kill the Linux version. The bad press from that would be nasty!
Sun could screw up a wet dream. (Score:1)
Sun is the biggest bunch of impotent morons in the computer world. They've been at it for years, and they still need Linux to have a fighting chance of taking on Microsoft.
Very sad.
Re:This is old news.. (Score:1)
Re:Sun keep StarOffice for OS/2 & Linux? Yeah, rig (Score:1)
With all of the server application vendors pushing Linux these days, and with the rather wonderful ability of Linux to make beachheads behind the risk-adverse managers' defensive lines (much in the same way that MS/PC infrastructures grew in corporate America 10 years ago), it's easy to see where Sun would be worried about future market share.
Sun wants to be thought of as the Computer Company for the Internet Age. Except for IBM's well heeled offerings, Linux is their only real competition for that title.
Sun doesn't have to kill the Linux versions of StarOffice to deemphasize them. Which will have better support? Linux or Solaris?
The Netscape Server example is cautionary. Who else is withdrawing software from the Linux market?
This could also explain Sun's insistence on pushing only Java. If Java succeeds, Sun could then make it increasingly hard for Java on Linux.
Maybe I'm being paranoid.
Re:This is old news.. (Score:1)
StarOffice going Open Source? (Score:1)
Re:Sun could screw up a wet dream. (Score:1)
Re:Deja Vu (Score:2)
Maybe I'm dumb, I don't see how the Unix I/O philosophy really helps office suite users. Furthermore, it seems that the MS COM stuff is much more pervasive on Windows than any equivlent on Unix.
(Don't take this as an anti-Unix rant - it's just that if you spend a good chunk of your day inside of a commercial office suite, right now you're much better off in Windows or MacOS than unix. What I would like to see is the KDE and Gnome efforts at Office apps come to open source fruition.)
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