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May 23rd, 2007

What's the best defense for open source?

Posted by Dana Blankenhorn @ 8:16 am

Categories: Applications, Distributions, Enterprise Policy, Events, Implementations, Legal, Microsoft, Patents, Strategy, Sun Microsystems, documentation

Tags: OpenOffice, Open Source, Sun Microsystems Inc., Blog, What, OSBC, Dana Blankenhorn

OSBC logoThe OSBC is in San Francisco this week, worrying over defending against Microsoft patent claims.

Our own Ed Burnette was intrigued by hints in Jonathan Schwartz’ blog this week that Sun Microsystems might help defend Ubuntu and Red Hat, if push came to shove.

Interesting given that Sun isn’t even a member of the Open Invention Network, the corporate patent disarmament group headlined by IBM, Philips and Sony.

Personally, I was more intrigued by another aspect of his blog post. Schwartz repeated the point, with pictures, but it’s something which deserves special emphasis.

Open Office logoGet Open Office, he said. Instead of waiting for Microsoft’s lawyers to lay the hammer down, cut off Microsoft’s air supply by downloading, and using, the open source alternative to Microsoft Office, which is as big a driver of Microsoft’s revenues and profits these days as Windows.

I have Open Office, and have used it for months now. It’s powerful. But it’s far from perfect. I have major problems cutting-and-pasting ODT files into blog posts, for instance. The documentation is still poor, and not integrated into the product. Don’t even get me started on its drawing, presentation or database tools.

Still, Schwartz has an excellent point here. (Given that Open Office descends from Sun code, it’s a self-serving point, I know.) Rather than paying lawyers and waiting for a legal attack, what if large vendors, like Sun and the members of OIN, put some real money into improving Open Office, as was done with Firefox?

What if Open Office really were a solid enterprise alternative to Microsoft Office?

The best defense may indeed be a good offense.

Dana BlankenhornDana Blankenhorn has been a business journalist for 30 years, a tech freelancer since 1983. You can follow Dana on Twitter. See his full profile and disclosure of his industry affiliations.

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  • Talkback
  • Most Recent of 22 Talkback(s)
Microsoft's browser
"Microsoft predominance in the browser is still significant enough that the company can design the browser any way it likes."

Well, they still have changed their browser in other ways, such as ... (Read the rest)
Posted by: jbroche18 Posted on: 05/27/07 You are currently: a Guest | | Terms of Use
It's Database tool?  voska | 05/23/07
Put the money into marketing, not product.  Anton Philidor | 05/23/07
Have to agree ...  MisterMiester | 05/23/07
Sometimes that works, but...  Anton Philidor | 05/24/07
The history is correct  DanaBlankenhornZDNet Moderator | 05/24/07
More OpenOffice users.  Anton Philidor | 05/24/07
Microsoft's browser  jbroche18 | 05/27/07
Re:  rkuhn040172@... | 05/24/07
Resources hog  pjotr123 | 05/23/07
Accustomed to Office?  TripleII | 05/23/07
Open Office meets all our needs...  bportlock | 05/24/07
It would be cool if Google would Summer of Code it  Conmergence | 05/23/07
An almost adequate obsolete clone  TonyMcS | 05/23/07
Security  pjotr123 | 05/24/07
Well, that's one opinion....  linux for me | 05/24/07
I don't entirely disagree with Tony McS  DanaBlankenhornZDNet Moderator | 05/24/07
Open Office vs MS Office  pfyearwood | 05/24/07
Works?  rkuhn040172@... | 05/24/07
I understand that,  pfyearwood | 05/24/07
Keep floundering on the desktop  ejhonda | 05/24/07
Even for business it's getting close  Tib | 05/24/07
Good offense  mike_hauss@... | 05/24/07

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