Go-oo

Go-oo
Developer(s) free software community
Stable release

3.2.1-11  (July 21, 2010; 18 months ago (2010-07-21))[1]

[±]
Development status Discontinued (Now part of LibreOffice)
Written in C++
Operating system Windows, Linux and Mac
Platform Cross-platform
Type Office suite
License GNU Lesser General Public License / CDDL
Website http://go-oo.org/

Go-oo (previously called ooo-build[2]) was an office suite which started as a set of patches for the cross-platform OpenOffice.org office suite, then later became an independent fork of OpenOffice.org with a number of enhancements. In September 2010 Go-oo was discontinued and became the basis for the newer LibreOffice suite[3] and by late December 2010 the Go-oo patches were incorporated into release candidate 1 of the LibreOffice fork of OpenOffice.

The OpenOffice.org included with many popular Linux distributions such as Debian, Mandriva, openSUSE, Gentoo, and Ubuntu used some of Go-oo patches before they officially moved to LibreOffice which is a fork initially based on Go-oo.[4][5][6][7]

Go-oo/LibreOffice, as a variant of OpenOffice.org, supports the ISO/IEC standard file formats OpenDocument (full support) and Office Open XML (read and write) for data interchange, as well as Microsoft Office 97–2003 formats, among many others. Go-oo/LibreOffice has more complete support for Office Open XML file formats than OpenOffice.org releases produced by Oracle Corporation (which require the addition of the ODF Converter Integrator extension in order to provide comparable functionality)[8] as well as other enhancements that were not accepted into the upstream Oracle version. The hybrid PDF export (PDF that includes original source documents), Sun Presentation Minimizer, and other functionality is directly available in Go-oo/LibreOffice.

Contents

History

For a long time, various Linux distributions, including SUSE in its various forms, Debian and Ubuntu, have cooperated in maintaining a large set of patches to the upstream OpenOffice.org that for various technical or semi-political reasons have not been accepted or not even submitted upstream.[9][10][11] Some of the companies behind those distributions have also offered Windows builds of OpenOffice.org offering the same enhancements compared to the upstream build. Windows builds include, for example, OxygenOffice Professional and OpenOffice.org Novell Edition. Go-oo is just a more concentrated branding effort for these patches and patched builds of OpenOffice.org.

Michael Meeks, from Novell, (who also works on OpenOffice.org and GNOME), said that the differentiation was done because Sun Microsystems wanted to preserve the right to offer its own version (StarOffice) and even sell the development to the proprietary software market, like IBM Lotus Symphony from IBM.[12] Sun was accused of not accepting contributions from the community.[13][14]

Versions

Stable builds of Go-oo were usually available a couple of days after Oracle OpenOffice.org stable builds. Windows builds have a different last number in the version's number than Linux builds.[15] A stable version for Macintosh computers is available.[16]

Windows versions
Version Available from
2.3.0 (unstable) October 8, 2007
2.4.0 April 30, 2008
2.4.1 June 10, 2008
3.0 October 22, 2008
3.0.1 February 4, 2009
3.1.0 June 2, 2009
3.1.1 September 16, 2009
3.2.0 (3.2.0-13) February 26, 2010
3.2.1 (3.2.1-11) July 21, 2010
Linux versions
Version Available from
2.3.0 (unstable) November 14, 2007
2.4.0 (unstable) February 20, 2008
2.4.1 June 26, 2008
3.0.0 November 21, 2008
3.0.1 February 5, 2009
3.1.0 June 2, 2009
3.1.1 September 5, 2009
3.2.0 February 26, 2010
3.2.1 July 21, 2010
Mac versions
Version Available from
3.1.0 May 28, 2009
3.1.1 September 4, 2009
3.2.0 (3.2.0.13) February 26, 2010
3.2.1 June 4, 2010

Some differences between OpenOffice.org and Go-oo

Advantages

Features

Filetype support

Import
Save/Export

Disadvantages

Other differences

See also

References

  1. ^ http://go-oo.mirrorbrain.org/stable/win32/?C=M;O=D
  2. ^ Sun Refuses LGPL for OpenOffice; Novell forks - Slashdot
  3. ^ "Michael Meeks talks about LibreOffice and the Document Foundation". http://lwn.net/SubscriberLink/407339/006fbb522912ea00/. 
  4. ^ "Gentoo's OpenOffice Package". http://packages.gentoo.org/package/app-office/openoffice?full_cat. 
  5. ^ "Bug #151829 in openoffice.org (Ubuntu): "Include go-oo in Ubuntu"". Chris Cheney, Ubuntu's OpenOffice.org package maintainer. https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/openoffice.org/+bug/151829/comments/5. Retrieved 2009-01-28. 
  6. ^ Linux.com :: Go-OO: The best office suite you never knew you used
  7. ^ a b Go-oo derivates in Linux distributions
  8. ^ "odf-converter-integrator". http://katana.oooninja.com/w/odf-converter-integrator. Retrieved 2010-10-18. 
  9. ^ Ooo-build - collection of patches, artwork and build infrastructure
  10. ^ "Building ooo-build from source". 2007-12-22. http://www.oooninja.com/2007/12/building-ooo-build-from-source.html. Retrieved 2010-02-09. 
  11. ^ Editions of OpenOffice.org
  12. ^ Reviewed July 7, 2008, Der Standard interview with Michael Meeks
  13. ^ Sun Refuses LGPL for OpenOffice; Novell forks
  14. ^ Can IBM save OpenOffice.org from itself?
  15. ^ Go-oo download
  16. ^ Go-oo Mac OS X-Intel version
  17. ^ The fastest OpenOffice.org edition
  18. ^ Dictionaries in OpenOffice.org 3
  19. ^ What is Go-oo? - What is Go-oo and how is it related to Open Office
  20. ^ SVG Import Filter - OpenOffice.org wiki
  21. ^ SVG Import Extension - OpenOffice.org repository for extensions
  22. ^ SVG Tiny Import/Export (does not work with OOo 3.1) - OpenOffice.org repository for extensions
  23. ^ "Download OpenOffice.org–OpenXML translator". Novell. http://download.novell.com/Download?buildid=OabXVm-plcA~. Retrieved 2009-01-12. 
  24. ^ a b OpenOffice.org Novell Edition for Windows
  25. ^ Tango style OpenOffice.org
  26. ^ OpenOffice.org 3.0 icons
  27. ^ OpenOffice.org first start wizard

External links