

We appeal to Apache OpenOffice to do the right thing.

Make them aware that there’s a much more modern, up-to-date, professionally supported suite, based on OpenOffice, with many extra features that people need. But the most responsible thing to do in 2020 is: help new users. If Apache OpenOffice still wants to maintain its old 4.1 branch from 2014, sure, that’s important for legacy users. The OpenOffice brand is still so strong, even though the software hasn’t had a significant release for over six years, and is barely being developed or supported.

OpenOffice(.org) – the “father project” of LibreOffice – was a great office suite, and changed the world. But sometimes, users can lose out when they’re not aware of newer alternatives, or when one brand overshadows another. Hundreds of millions of people around the world have benefited from the choice and customisation that they bring. It’s great to have a rich and diverse set of free and open source software projects.

And today we say: LibreOffice is the future of OpenOffice. Today marks 20 years since the source code to OpenOffice was released.
