Hello Patrick,

OpenOffice.org is free and will always be free. I'll try to explain.

OpenOffice.org is "open source" software. Roughly speaking, this means that anyone can contribute to the software, not just one company. By sharing the workload among several companies and several volunteers, the cost of development is lowered significantly. This is the first step towards being able to provide it for free.

Sun Microsystems is the primary sponsor of OpenOffice.org. But there are others (Novell, Red Hat, etc) and a large group of volunteers. Each one gains something or another from contributing to this software. For example:

1) Sun Microsystems sells Solaris computers. OpenOffice.org makes those easier to sell. Sun also sells a commercial product called StarOffice which is based on OpenOffice.org.

2) Novell and Red Hat sell Linux distributions, as well as a suite of services for Linux. OpenOffice.org is a crucial component in making Linux desktops a high-value offer.

3) Some companies provide training services. For example, for companies that want to migrate to OpenOffice.org.

4) Some individuals are writers who sell books on OpenOffice.org.


Here you have 4 categories of people who finnancially gain from OpenOffice.org without actually selling it. You can see how these groups have much to gain from collaborating on a free office suite.


There are other reasons why one might contribute to an open source project:

1) Say you are a competitor of Microsoft. Half of Microsofot's money comes from MS Office. By providing a lower-cost alternative, you make it harder for MS to charge its exorbitant prices. This is not a rare form of "competition". Provide a cheap alternative to your competitor's most lucrative line.

2) A lot of us are simply volunteers. For example, I am. OpenOffice.org is not simply a software product, it is a community. A lot of us work here on our spare time simply because the project is interesting.

Cheers,
Daniel.


Patrick Headley wrote:
Hi,



I am testing various aspects of OpenOffice v2.0 beta and see that it is a
high-quality product with a lot of potential. My confusion is how software
of this quality be produced for free. How do the developers of OpenOffice
make a living? How does Sun Microsystems tie into OpenOffice? Is there
eventually going to be a fee for licensing?



Please help as I would like to begin using OpenOffice but don't want any
surprises with regards to licensing and upgrades later on.



Patrick Headley

Linx Consulting, Inc.

10491 Hyacinth St.

Highlands Ranch, CO 80129-5412

(303) 916-5522

 <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [EMAIL PROTECTED]

 <http://www.LinxCo-Inc.com> www.LinxCo-Inc.com

Communications Director - Denver Area Access Users Group

www.DAAUG.org







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