LibreOffice’s New Website: Meet the Design Team

LibreOffice is getting a shiny new website! We’re still working on it, and everyone interested in testing and helping out can join our mailing list for updates.

But today, we’re talking to the team who created the new design. Say hello to Dan Gallagher, Cat de Leon, Irene Geller, Helen Tran and Zarema Ross. Together, they identified needs and use cases for the website, created mockups, and then moved on to more concrete designs. Let’s see what they have to say…


Tell us a bit about yourselves!

Dan Gallagher: I’m a UX Designer coming from a background in psychology and education. I’m interested in creating intuitive designs based on human psychology. I’m currently living in Chicago, IL. In my free time, I like to box, make music, or play Dungeons and Dragons.

Cat de Leon: My name is Cat and I’m from the San Francisco Bay Area. I have an untraditional background, having majored in math in college, worked in higher education as an institutional researcher, and recently worked as a social media manager. Luckily, I’ve found my dream job in product design! If I’m not designing, I’m probably eating good food, playing video games, playing tennis, watching NBA games, or working out. I will never reject an opportunity to see a picture of your pet. 🙂

Irene Geller: I’m a digital designer from New Jersey (USA) with a focus on UI, visual assets, and branding at the moment. But I began my creative life as a traditional artist, just painting, drawing, and teaching others, too!

Helen Tran: I’m from San Francisco, California. My hobbies include finding scenic sights and building on my UX Research career on the side. I’m a killer for awesome views!

Zarema Ross: Originally I’m from Russia. Today, I live and work in the USA as a UX designer. Before my career in design, I finished an MS in Economics and Management, conducted market research, analysis, and built strategies in the oil and gas industry. I’ve led 10 subsidiaries, approved budgets, and was involved in financial planning.

Being skilled in turning data into actionable information to improve business results, andbeing passionate about solving problems, I end up becoming a User Experience Designer. I get my inspiration from my hobbies such as traveling, Russian ballet, Broadway shows, contemporary art galleries, and digital trends (AR, VR, etc.).

I consider myself a dreamer and a futurist. I hope new technologies will bring enhancements into our everyday lives, and will offer the opportunity to all people around the world to use them. That is why today, I’m working on different UX design projects, helping the world become a better place.

New banner for the front page


How did you get involved in the LibreOffice website redesign project?

Dan Gallagher: I was connected with a member of the website redesign project through a friend. We hopped on a video call and discussed the project, and it sounded like a great opportunity! I had used LibreOffice before, and I really like the idea of giving free office tools away to anyone.

Cat de Leon: I was recruited by Christine Louie and Lisa Lin who did the initial research for LibreOffice’s redesign project. They brought on a team of designers and researchers to continue their work and bring their concepts to life.

Irene Geller: During the 2020 pandemic year, I attended several webinars about UX/UI, to keep myself occupied, fresh on industry knowledge, and to be quite honest, sane. Apparently, at one of these webinars- we don’t even remember which one!- I had connected with Christine Louie (who is now a UX Researcher at Facebook). I must have made a positive impression in the live comments section, because some time after the webinar, Christine reached out to me about volunteering to assist with LibreOffice’s website redesign project. Since I was already a user of LibreOffice in my day-to-day life, I thought it would be an interesting project to take on!

Helen Tran: I met Christine, who was the lead UX Researcher, through a webinar – and after getting to know each other she reached out to me for this amazing opportunity to join the LibreOffice website redesign project. I got to meet the rest of the team which included Lisa, Dan, Cat, Zarema, and Irene who were also all a pleasure to work with. Thanks to everyone who contributed as this team and the team at LibreOffice made this project such a success! 🙂

Zarema Ross: I was invited into the project by one of my colleagues from the UX bootcamp I went to. I liked LibreOffice’s mission to support the community and develop software that everyone can use. I’ve met an amazing team of software developers and UX designers. I really enjoyed working on the project, as it was well organized, and I had a chance to collaborate with cross-functional teams from software developers to the marketing team, as well as run workshops with them in order to improve the information architecture.

New graphics and cleaner design


What particular aspects did you work on, and what was it like?

Dan Gallagher: I focused more on the sketching, wireframing, and documentation of the project. It was my first time working on a team of designers and researchers – it was amazing to be able to share my work and get feedback at every stage of the design process. Every call, someone suggested something I wouldn’t have thought of if I were working alone. I was fortunate to be on a team of skilled and dedicated designers!

Cat de Leon: Before this project, I have only done solo projects so working with a team has been absolutely fantastic. I’ve enjoyed every conversation and meeting I’ve had with this team and I hope to continue our relationships after we’re all done here. I’ve also thoroughly enjoyed connecting with our stakeholders all over the world, like Ilmari, Heiko, and Mike! Our team would probably agree that we’ve gotten far more well versed in time zones after this project. 🙂

Irene Geller: I helped with creating high fidelity UI designs that captured our stakeholders’ key goals for various webpage designs. However, the best part of this project wasn’t working as an individual designer – but as a team!

We used Figma for all of our design work, which allows multiple users to collaboratively work on a design, in real-time. That was a new experience for me as I usually work as a “design team of one”. I found that we often came up with our best ideas when we worked together!

For example, one time we met up to look over the page designs that Cat, Dan, and Zarema had completed. I immediately saw which elements worked best in each approach (ie what fit the stakeholders’ goals best), and quickly combined them together in one new page design, with adjustments to make it all cohesive. Everyone responded positively, so we spent the remainder of the meeting polishing all the elements of this new design. When we presented it at our next stakeholder meeting, they absolutely loved it – an immediate success! That showed me the power of collaborative design.

Overall, it was a real pleasure to work with such talented and smart individuals for a good cause. It certainly made the pandemic lockdown a little brighter, too!

Helen Tran: I worked as a UX Researcher for this project. I helped recruit participants, ran usability tests, and interpreted data to test the projected website launches. It was an amazing experience! It was definitely enjoyable to see the combined efforts made by everyone on this team go into play during the usability runs to witness how individuals engaged with the various features. This experience was rewarding from start to finish seeing the behind the scenes work to a polished website based on all of our hard efforts.

Zarema Ross: Working within an international team of UX designers and Software developers (in the USA and Germany), I:

  • Led design workshops with cross-functional teams to explore innovative solutions for problems and opportunities identified through research and data
  • Performed content audit, validated the SiteMap, restructured the information architecture
  • Sketched designs, created low and hi-fi mockups
  • Iterated on designs and performed usability testing
  • Contributed and maintained the UI kit and style guides

At the end of the day, it was teamwork that drove us to the results we have. I would like to say special thanks to our UX design team: Helen Tran – the time we spent on usability testing, deriving the insights from the research; Dan Gallagher, Cat de Leon and Irene Geller- for the brainstorming we did together, going from lo-fi to hi-fi designs.

And a redesigned download page


What are you interested in doing next?

Dan Gallagher: I’ll continue freelancing, working on personal projects, and searching for a full-time job. Working on this project was a great experience to highlight on my resume, it shows I work well within a team and can balance user and business needs!

Cat de Leon: Now I’m a product Designer for CaaStle. And I just know that wherever I go in future, I’ll be solving users’ problems to the best of my product design abilities and I’ll be having a blast doing it. Thank you so much for this opportunity, LibreOffice!

Helen Tran: I’m interested in growing my UX Research career! I’m ready to dive deep and hop along new projects to learn and enhance my UX skills. Hoping for many more grateful experiences like this project! 🙂

Zarema Ross: I’m interested in the topic of accessibility and inclusive design. I’m currently working on Accessifier which is a crowdsourced web app that provides accessibility ratings of specific apps for users with accessibility needs. I also do UX design on a freelance basis. And I’m looking forward to collaborating with new people, exchange knowledge and create impactful designs. Here’s my LinkedIn page.


Many thanks again to the whole team for their work! And as mentioned, anyone can join our website mailing list to help us to finalise, test and promote the new website. Let’s make it happen together!

Community Member Monday: Jackson Cavalcanti Junior

Today we’re talking to Jackson Cavalcanti Junior, who’s active in the LibreOffice documentation community and was recently awarded a custom badge for his work

Tell us a bit about yourself!

I am Brazilian, from the city of Olinda, Pernambuco. I am 62 years old, and work as a public servant in the municipality of Olinda. I am one of the creators of the Municipal Public Archive of Olinda. I am also a human rights activist, especially for LGBT people. I am a proofreader and I also write for my blog.

In my work, in the city of Olinda, since 2001 I have been working with free office software, having started with OpenOffice.org, then with BrOffice and LibreOffice Writer, with which I created several models of documents to be used by the agencies that are part of the administrative structure of the Municipality of Olinda. These models remained on the City Hall’s intranet until 2016, when in that year’s elections another political party was elected, and that project was discontinued.

As a citizen, I am an activist in the LGBT movement, in which I have worked since 1980, when I helped found the Homosexual Action Group (GATHO), which was the first group in Pernambuco to fight in defense of citizenship for homosexual people. This group no longer exists, but I am a member of the LGBT Forum of Pernambuco, where I work as an independent activist, to which I was invited by my history as an activist for the LGBT cause in the state where I reside.

I also advertise LibreOffice among my friends, in the institutions where I work, and also in the WhatsApp and Telegram groups.

I like to photograph my city, my animals and nature.

What are you working on in the LibreOffice project right now?

I am currently working on the team of proofreaders for Brazilian translations of LibreOffice documentation.

Why did you decide to become a member of The Document Foundation, the non-profit behind LibreOffice?

Because, still at the time of BrOffice, I was the creator of the User Group for the software in my state. After I joined the team of Brazilian reviewers for the LibreOffice documentation, I felt it was time to request my entry as a member of TDF. I was very happy when I heard that I was approved as a member of the foundation.

Anything else you plan to do in the future? What does LibreOffice
really need?

For the future, in addition to continuing to revise the new LibreOffice guides, I will further encourage the use of this software.

Thanks a lot to Jackson for his contributions and help in our projects! All LibreOffice users are welcome to find out what they can do for LibreOffice, and build up useful skills at the same time…

Open Badges for awesome Brazilian Portuguese contributors!

LibreOffice’s documentation team is driven by volunteers around the world. Today, we want to say a special thanks to members of the Brazilian Portuguese community, who’ve worked hard to translate and update user guides.

So we’re sending out Open Badges – special, customised badges with embedded metadata, describing their achievements. The badges can be verified using an external service, and are a great way to show off contributions and use as proof of participation.

So, here are the badge recipients – we’ve sent them out personally:

  • Vera Cavalcante – For her volunteer collaborations to produce an excellent Portuguese revision of the LibreOffice 7.x User Guides, and her long-time commitment to LibreOffice from the LibreOffice Magazine times.
  • Luciana Mota – For her valuable contributions to the translation of LibreOffice Help, and the Portuguese revision of the LibreOffice 7.x User Guides.
  • Marcia Buffon Machado – For her contribution to the Portuguese revision of the LibreOffice 7.x User Guides.
  • Felipe Viggiano – For his excellent and successful global coordination of the LibreOffice 7.0 and 7.1 User guides; team management; valuable addition to the other LibreOffice 7.x guides; and active collaboration with the Brazilian Documentation Team.
  • Tulio Macedo – For his active participation in the design of the online User Guides and revision of the LibreOffice 7.x User Guide in Brazilian Portuguese.
  • Rafael Lima – For his active contributions to ScriptForge library development, testing and documentation; his coordination of the LibreOffice 7.0 Math Guide, including the translation to Brazilian Portuguese; and his active translation of the LibreOffice Help to Brazilian Portuguese.
  • Timothy Brennan Jr. – For his active participation in the Portuguese revision of the LibreOffice 7.x User Guides.
  • Raul Pacheco – For his revisions of the translation of the LibreOffice 7.x User Guides to Brazilian Portuguese, and refactoring of the guide’s screenshots and graphics.
  • Jackson Junior – For his active participation in the Portuguese revision of the LibreOffice 7.x User Guides.

Huge thanks to all recipients – check your inbox for your badges!

LibreOffice flyer for schools and universities: extra design

Our LibreOffice New Generation project aims to bring new – and especially younger – contributors into the LibreOffice community. Earlier in the year, we created a flyer for schools and universities, and we’ve sent out printed versions to many people around the world.

Now, here’s an alternative design, thanks to Rizal Muttaqin and the Indonesian community! Click the image to get the original SVG file, if you want to make updates and translations (Vegur font required). And if you’d like some printed flyers to hand out in a school or university, drop us a line and let us know

Translations

Coming up on July 19: Bug Hunting Session for LibreOffice 7.2 RC1

LibreOffice 7.2 is being developed by our worldwide community, and is due to be released in mid-August 2021 – see the release notes describing the new features here.

In order to find, report and triage bugs, the LibreOffice QA team is organizing a Bug Hunting Session for LibreOffice 7.2 Release Candidate 1 on Monday July 19, 2021. Builds will be available for Linux (DEB and RPM), macOS and Windows.

Mentors will be available from 07:00 UTC to 19:00 UTC for questions or help in the IRC channel #libreoffice-qa and the Telegram QA Channel. Of course, hunting bugs will be possible also on other days, as the builds of this particular version (LibreOffice 7.2.0 RC1) will be available until the beginning of August when LibreOffice 7.2 RC2 will be released. Check the Release Plan.

All details of the first bug hunting session are available on the wiki.