We were at the Chemnitzer Linux-Tage 2023!

LibreOffice booth

In the LibreOffice community, most of our activities take place online: development, design, QA, localisation, marketing and so forth. But we like to meet face-to-face too, at events and conferences – and last weekend we did just that, at the Chemnitzer Linux-Tage 2023 in Germany.

We had a booth with LibreOffice materials (flyers, stickers, pens and books):

Booth materials

As it was a Linux and free software-oriented event, almost all participants already knew about (and used) LibreOffice, but they had lots of interesting questions about our project.

Linux-Tage logo

Some visitors to our booth told us about deployments of LibreOffice in their businesses and organisations, while others talked to us about interesting use cases of LibreOffice in education and other areas.

Thanks to the Linux-Tage organisers for a great meetup! Now we’re looking forward to more events this year – and especially the LibreOffice Conference 2023 in September… 😊

Participants talking to each other

LibreOffice at the Univention Summit 2023

Photo of LibreOffice stand

Thorsten Behrens and Lothar Becker from the LibreOffice community attended the recent Univention Summit 2023 in Bremen, northern Germany. They had a stand with LibreOffice merchandise, talked to visitors and answered questions. Lothar summarised the event:

It was well attended. Many known contacts, as well as new visitors, came by the stand and informed themselves or asked about LibreOffice – but also its availability in app stores for all platforms. Other topics that we frequently addressed at the stand included LibreOffice Technology, i.e. subscription versions from ecosystem partners, and their integration, e.g. in document management systems, where we were also able to refer people to the Collabora stand. Overall, it was emphasised again and again that it is important to have the project present at such an event.

Thanks to Thorsten and Lothar for attending! We plan to attend many more events this year – keep an eye on this blog for updates!

Photo of talk on stage

LibreOffice ID at the Indonesian Linux Conference 2022

Great activities in the Indonesian LibreOffice community! They got in touch and gave us a quick summary:


LibreOffice’s Indonesian community collaborated with the Organizing Committee of the Indonesia Linux Conference 2022, to hold a short presentation, “Implementation of LibreOffice in the Ecosystem at a University”.

This event was held on Friday, November 4, 2022 in the 2nd Campus Hall of Universitas Muhammadiyah Sidoarjo, Surabaya – and at the same time became a pre-event running up to the Indonesian Linux Conference 2022, which was held on November 5, 2022.

Rania Amina, leader of the Indonesia Linux Conference committee, who is also an official member of The Document Foundation, said that the LibreOffice presentation was a request from the campus community, which felt the need to introduce a powerful open source office application that has active support from the community in Indonesia.

Sokibi and Rahman Yusri Aftian (Aftian) were the speakers in this talk. Sokibi explained in a straightforward manner what LibreOffice is, comprehensive with its development history until now. Aftian presented material about using LibreOffice to write Pegon script, one of the local manuscripts, for campus scientific research.

The participants who attended were very enthusiastic about what was presented.

Apart from information about talks, at the Indonesia Linux Conference 2022 there were also two topics about LibreOffice presented by Nawinda (Lecturer at Budi Luhur University Jakarta) and Adrian Saputra (Student oat Nurul Fikri). Nawindah shared her experiences about teaching LibreOffice Base on her campus for the purposes of recording transactions and so forth. Meanwhile, Adrian brought up the topic of data visualization with LibreOffice.

At the Indonesian Linux Conference 2022, LibreOffice Indonesia received a booth slot with GimpScape ID and Shoes Fans to showcase and share about LibreOffice ID’s community activities – and invite participants to participate actively in the open source world, especially LibreOffice, both in the local and global community as well.


Many thanks to Rania, and all the Indonesian community members, for helping to spread the word about LibreOffice and free software!

The Latin American LibreOffice 2022 Conference was a success!

Female volunteering, interoperability, professional training, migration, Python based macro development and much more were highlighted themes at the event held at the Catholic University of Brasilia in the capital of Brazil.

Daniel A. Rodriguez writes:

The Latin American LibreOffice Conference gathered around 400 people, among them students and IT professionals, and was opened to the public on Thursday August 25th in a ceremony presided by Prof. Wesley Sepulvida, representing UCB, Lothar Becker (formerly on the Board of Directors of The Document Foundation) and Olivier Hallot representing the LibreOffice community.

The conference was organized entirely by volunteers, and followed up on the first event held in the city of Asunción in Paraguay in 2019. Brasilia was chosen to host the conference in 2022 because of its importance in the Latin American context and its excellent infrastructure. The lectures and workshops were given by members of the LibreOffice community from Italy, Spain, Mexico, Brazil and Argentina, on August 25 and 26 at the Catholic University of Brasília, on the Taguatinga campus.

Italo Vignoli (Italy – TDF) and Olivier Hallot (Brazil – TDF), founding members of The Document Foundation, opened the lectures, presenting the sustainability of free software projects and the history of LibreOffice in Brazil, respectively. At the end of the morning, the participants took the official photo of the event.

In the early afternoon, Daniel Rodriguez (Argentina – TDF / UNAU) spoke about the implementation of a version of LibreOffice Online at the Alto Uruguay National University in Argentina, and Rafael Silveira (Brazil) presented the migration project to LibreOffice at Nuclebrás Equipamentos Pesados (NUCLEP). Simultaneously, in the computer lab Henderson Matsuura Sanches (Brazil – TDF) gave a workshop with practical tips about how to do an End of Course Paper in LibreOffice.

Xisco Fauli (Spain – TDF) presented the testing procedure of LibreOffice, followed by Lothar Becker (Germany – TDF) who talked about entrepreneurship with free software. Roberto Salomon (Brazil – Chief architect for Latin America at SUSE) spoke about the future that opens up with the technological innovations that are arriving in Brazil. In the closing of the first day, Prof. Andre Lima (UCB) spoke about open source solutions for LGPD compliance. In the workshops, Rafael Lima (Brazil – TDF) led the work on python scripting with a full room.

On the second day, Gustavo Pacheco (Brazil – TDF) shared with the audience details about the importance of being careful when investing in cryptocurrencies and how LibreOffice can help in decision making. He was followed by Olivier Hallot who presented the different ways of documenting software projects. Tulio Macedo (Brazil – TDF) presented the challenges of more accessible documentation. Simultaneously, Xisco Fauli led the session on software bug identification and confirmation. At the same time, Felipe Marra, Rafael Osiro and Giovanni Favorim from UCB led a workshop on software versioning control with the git tool. Prof. Remis Balaniuk (UCB) gave an introductory workshop on python.

In the afternoon, Italo Vignoli spoke about digital sovereignty. Followed by Olivier Hallot who presented migration strategies between office suites. Eliane Domingos (Brazil – TDF) talked about female volunteering in the LibreOffice project. At the same time, Mauricio Baeza (Mexico – TDF) gave a workshop about creating extensions for LibreOffice. In parallel, Prof. Cleto Spotto (UCB) analyzed snippets of LibreOffice code in a C++ workshop.

Henderson Matsuura showed how to install and use Mendeley in Writer, followed by Olivier Hallot who covered first steps in developing code for LibreOffice. Jackson Junior (Brazil – TDF) presented his experiences in standardizing documents at the Secretariat of Environment and Urban Planning (SEMAPU) of Olinda, Pernambuco, and Prof. Cleto Spotto (UCB) conducted an introductory workshop on LibreOffice Math. Finally, Prof. Hially Vaguetti (UCB) showed how to make academic presentations in LibreOffice Impress.

The conference was closed by Prof. Wesley Sepulvida, who thanked The Document Foundation and the LibreOffice community for their presence. In return, Olivier Hallot thanked the Catholic University of Brasilia for its hospitality and the volunteers and speakers for their participation in this first face-to-face event after the pandemic.

Now we look forward to meeting more people at the LibreOffice Conference 2022 in Milan, at the end of this month!

Live town-hall meetings with the Membership Committee candidates

The Document Foundation is the non-profit home of LibreOffice, and its Membership Committee (MC) administers membership applications and renewals following the criteria defined in the Foundation’s Statutes.

The election process for a new MC is underway, and we’ll have live Q&A sessions with the candidates!

Where

When

A few notes

  • please send in your questions beforehand if possible, to elections@documentfoundation.org
  • pick the session that suits you best (so you can ask live questions)
  • the sessions are optional for the candidates, so while we’re grateful for everyone joining – if someone can’t make it, that is fine, and people can always ask questions on the mailing list
  • to give attendees the opportunity to ask questions in a language different from English, we’ll try to have a person doing live translations in every session
  • questions towards the candidates will be prepared in English, and/or translated to English on the go
  • we will record the sessions, for our members not able to attend
  • when you attend via Jitsi: please mute yourself when not speaking; keep your video off and ask your questions in the Jitsi chat, if you don’t want to be recorded; and note that the chat content itself might also be part of the recording

Please do follow-up with any questions – and we’re looking forward to meeting many of you in the next three days!