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<div class="moz-cite-prefix">On 13/11/2014 17:28, David Monks wrote:<br>
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<blockquote
cite="mid:EMEW3|46cf231d6119e3ee5a14b99e25ac440fqACHSp07dm11g08|ecs.soton.ac.uk|F5170A49-4853-408C-9116-0826EF9B4AC2@soton.ac.uk"
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I’m pretty sure LibreOffice is just the maintained fork of
OpenOffice (which hasn’t seen work in a while).</blockquote>
<br>
Yup, Oracle killed it and sacked everyone working on it.<br>
<br>
Here is a needlessly confusing diagram which explains nothing,
because I like colours and bezier curves:<br>
<a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:StarOffice_major_derivatives.svg">https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:StarOffice_major_derivatives.svg</a><br>
<br>
An Apache branch of OO exists and is arguably "more official"
because Oracle gave them the name to use, but LibreOffice is the one
you'll find on Linux boxes.<br>
<br>
There's also the allegedly-more-OSX-native NeoOffice, which is
apparently in the Mac App Store these days, for money.<br>
<br>
I have no idea which of these options will waste the least of your
time, but I suspect "sticking with OpenOffice until something
actually breaks" beats all of them.<br>
<br>
-- <br>
Phil<br>
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