LWN: Comments on "A new LibreOffice strategic marketing plan" https://lwn.net/Articles/826217/ This is a special feed containing comments posted to the individual LWN article titled "A new LibreOffice strategic marketing plan". en-us Sun, 31 Aug 2025 02:03:58 +0000 Sun, 31 Aug 2025 02:03:58 +0000 https://www.rssboard.org/rss-specification lwn@lwn.net So the Enterprise version is less stable? https://lwn.net/Articles/826231/ https://lwn.net/Articles/826231/ Wol <div class="FormattedComment"> Is that &quot;new things being tried&quot; or &quot;requested features being rolled out&quot;?<br> <p> Going back to WordPerfect (again), there&#x27;s a reason it grew from obscurity to 40% of the market over maybe 5 years to 1995. They were responsive to customer demand for new features.<br> <p> Okay. now things are more mature there are fewer features to add, but this is the route the professional/enterprise version should go down - if you pay support or buy a licenced version, your voice as a *customer*, not a free rider, gets you people working on feature requests. And isn&#x27;t that the way Wine works? Or Ghostscript? Stuff drops down into the public version from the supported version.<br> <p> And actually, that&#x27;s the way a lot of commercial software works :-) Either advertised by pirated versions, or old versions are sold cheap with the intention of pushing upgrades ...<br> <p> Cheers,<br> Wol<br> </div> Thu, 16 Jul 2020 08:08:36 +0000 So the Enterprise version is less stable? https://lwn.net/Articles/826227/ https://lwn.net/Articles/826227/ epa <div class="FormattedComment"> This seems a bit backwards. It’s more usual, both in software and other fields of technology, for new features to be first tried in mid-range products, with the professional or enterprise version being somewhat more conservative. The feature can graduate to pro use once it has proven its worth and been refined a bit. <br> </div> Thu, 16 Jul 2020 05:06:51 +0000