Hi Raphael,

this is really sad to hear. The gap between so many users and a vanishing 
community developers wise is really strange. So the question comes to mind what 
the reasons are for this situation:

* are there problems in the community - especially among the developers?
* is OpenOffice not competitive anymore compared to Microsoft Office?
* is OpenOffice not competitive anymore compared to Google Docs and similar 
tools?
* are the download numbers correct?
* do you have an idea about the acceptance of OpenOffice in the wide world 
(marketing. press and so on)?

I am quite sure you already asked and discussed these questions. But maybe they 
trigger some in depth discussions to better understand the “why”

I wish you all the best with the project and hope, that it will move on.

Andy
-- 
Andy Wenk
Hamburg - Germany
RockIt!

GPG public key: 
http://pgp.mit.edu/pks/lookup?op=get&search=0x45D3565377F93D29



> On 19. Apr 2017, at 22:19, Raphael Bircher <rbircherapa...@gmail.com> wrote:
> 
> Hi people
> 
> I want to raise a question here. I know, we have to solve our problems our 
> self, but maybe here are people with ideas. OpenOffice has a big community 
> problem. The community was simply melted away in the last year. We have at 
> the moment no Company who offer devs. And the rest of the community fights 
> the absolutely urgent issues. There was already a discussion about 
> retirement, it was refused. But this doesn't mean we are out of the danger 
> zone.
> 
> The sweet part of this story is our user base. We have 100'000 Downloads 
> EVERY single DAY. I mean, this is crazy. We have really loyal users. We get 
> also frequently messages from user who just want to say "thank you".
> 
> The sad thing about this is, they have actually no chance to do something for 
> the program. They are looked out. Remember, they are normal users, they are 
> no developers. They are typically private users or small companies. But 
> imagine what happened if only a small part of our users pay 20$.
> 
> We really need devs and we need skilled one, because OpenOffice is 
> challenging for programmers. Companies with a load of money has a easy way to 
> influence an Apache project. Simply pay a developer, that's it. But people 
> without big pocket are simply looked out. (if they have no programmer skills) 
> That's not fair!
> 
> How to solve this problem? Thanks a load.
> 
> Regards Raphael
> 
> -- 
> My introduction https://youtu.be/Ln4vly5sxYU
> 
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