On Oct 29, 2010, at 9:53 AM, Frank Esposito wrote:
> On Fri, Oct 29, 2010 at 8:33 AM, Monfort Florian
> <[email protected]>wrote:
>> Le vendredi 29 octobre 2010 à 09:29 -0400, James Walker a écrit :
>>> Maybe something that we should think about is creating a Document
>> Foundation
>>> family of products.
>>> 
>>> I would not really put more products into the main LibreOffice software,
>> but
>>> find and/or create additional products that enhance the usability of LO.
>>> One thing we really need to think about is an email/calender product. and
>>> some kind of project management product that easily intergrates with LO,
>>> even if those products are ones that are out there already they need to
>> be
>>> easily intergrated into LO.  Are there any that have kind of staled that
>> we
>>> could approach the community to help them out and bring them under the
>>> foundation to help them grow.
>>> 
>>> Of course the easy thing to do would be a partnership with Mozilla,  and
>> use
>>> Thunderbird, and Lightening.
>>> 
>>> I have always felt that the project has been missing email, calender and
>>> contact management software.
>>> 
>>> James
> 
> These great idea. I would also add because I think the market is still wide
> open is the cloud office suite (think google docs). We could develop a
> server based online office suite that is fully compatible with ODF. this
> would be great for education and "virtual offices."
> 
> Another path would be mobile phones, this are is wide open for FOSS.
> Android, iPhone and blackberry ports of LO.

I think we need to look ahead to tablets, based on iOS and Android. According 
to recent news articles, sales of iPads have made Apple the number one computer 
vendor in the USA. Thinking strategically, it looks like the developing world 
may skip PCs entirely and adopt tablets as their standard computing platform 
going forward, just like they skipped landlines in favor of mobile phones. 
Microsoft Windows will have an enormous challenge to gain any foothold in this 
market, and MS Office too. Thus, we have an opportunity to start on a level 
playing field here, without the huge inertia MS has long enjoyed. On a fair 
playing field, we will win--no question.

My strategic suggestion is that we build a "LibreOffice Touch" for Android and 
iOS tablets as the first new member of this broader family of products. Full 
ODF support will allow compatibility with LibreOffice, and consistent branding 
will help reinforce both product lines.

(As for web office suites, I researched this recently. Zimbra provides open 
source web-based docs and spreadsheets that customers can install on their own 
servers, first launched in 2006: 
http://www.zdnet.com/blog/web2explorer/zimbra-launches-zimbra-documents/259  If 
we want to work in this area, collaborating with Zimbra could give us a jump 
start.)

-Ben

Benjamin Horst
[email protected]
646-464-2314 (Eastern)
www.solidoffice.com


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