Our new extensions and templates page is getting ready!

Our old Extensions and Templates Website has worked well over the years. It is one of the key and most frequented websites of the LibreOffice project, as it enables users to enhance the functionality of LibreOffice with add-ons and plug-ins, while providing an easy way for authors to improve LibreOffice.

We’d like to express a special thanks to Andreas Mantke for implementing, designing and maintaining it in first place! It was his initiative to come up with such a website and he has spent countless hours over the past years to maintain the site to the benefit of our community. Kudos and thank you so much for your help and dedication!

As we look forward, we’ve been thinking about how to progress, while building on some of the other technologies we use.

After research and evaluation of various options, we’ve made the decision to update the website and base it on SilverStripe, the content management system we use for the main LibreOffice website. Our goals include:

  • Streamlined design
  • Improved usability for authors and users
  • Make extensions very prominent
  • Make it easy to localise in many languages

In the last few months, we’ve been working on a new site and workflow, and today we’d like to share the current progress, and provide some information on what’s going on under the hood. Christian Lohmaier talks about the new website, which will be available soon…


Initial setup

We decided to use a much more reduced and simplified setup for this. With fewer tools to maintain, the easier it is to add improvements along the way.

We’ve made the decision to go with SilverStripe, since that is a CMS we are already familiar with since we are already using it for our main website. It has a Model View Controller design that is easy to grasp and extend by anyone who knows some PHP and html and CSS.

The separate backend (administrative interface) and frontend (what a visitor using the site sees) allows us to streamline the workflow and improve error handling.

Having the data completely decoupled from the representation will allow us to revamp the site as new ideas come along or potential problems will surface. One of our goals is to simplify the user interface and also allow for translation and localization of both the extensions as well as the whole site from the very beginning. Extension maintainers can translate their listing into the language of their main target language.

Discoverability

Similarly, users told us that they wanted their extensions to be even easier to discover, so for this we decided to go with a curated list of tags as the main categorization/classification. We learned from other tag-using systems (like ask) that freeform tags would require a high level of discipline from content creators to not create too specific or too similar tags to make for a useful search tool.

Having a curated list of tags also allows for translation of the tags, further improving the experience for our non-English speaking endusers. This also will allow us to get rid of the rather arbitrary split into templates and extensions, but rather have a more targeted listings.

And since we’re already using SilverStripe in combination with TDF’s Single Sign-On solution, current users of our SSO can easily access the new site.

Creating and editing

To illustrate the keep-it-simple approach, here is what an extension maintainer would see once logged in to edit or create an extension entry:

And here’s what creation of a new entry would look like:

While some people might think that this is not the most exciting user interface, and that it also boxes the user in, well: that is the whole point about it!

Just like on the current site, we kept the concept of having a main extension entry along with individual releases that might be limited to a certain language or a specific operating system:

Moderation

The new sites provides some features also for extension moderators with a more expansive admin interface in which they would have access to reports and where they can add and maintain the list of available tags, and do other similar tasks.

In the next post we’ll dig a little deeper into the more technical stuff like the data model and templating systems. That will then provide the required knowledge to not just give feedback on the current design (both visual as well as from a low-level perspective), but already provide concrete improvements in form of patches.

As we’re a volunteer-driven, community project, we really appreciate any help – so if you want to give us a hand, join our website mailing list and drop us a line. We look forward to hearing from you!

The Document Foundation announces LibreOffice 6.4.1

Berlin, February 27, 2020 – The Document Foundation announces LibreOffice 6.4.1, the 1st minor release of the LibreOffice 6.4 family, targeted at technology enthusiasts and power users. LibreOffice 6.4.1 includes 80 bug fixes and improvements to document compatibility.

LibreOffice 6.4.1 represents the bleeding edge in term of features for open source office suites, and as such is not optimized for enterprise class deployments, where features are less important than robustness. Users wanting a more mature version can download LibreOffice 6.3.5, which includes some months of back-ported fixes.

LibreOffice 6.4.1’s change log pages are available on TDF’s wiki: https://wiki.documentfoundation.org/Releases/6.4.1/RC1 (changed in RC1) and https://wiki.documentfoundation.org/Releases/6.4.1/RC2 (changed in RC2).

LibreOffice’s individual users are helped by a global community of volunteers: https://www.libreoffice.org/get-help/community-support/. On the website and the wiki there are guides, manuals, tutorials and HowTos. Donations help us to make all of these resources available.

LibreOffice in business

For enterprise class deployments, TDF strongly recommend sourcing LibreOffice from one of the ecosystem partners to get long-term supported releases, dedicated assistance, custom new features and other benefits, including Service Level Agreements (SLAs). Also, the work done by ecosystem partners flows back into the LibreOffice project, benefiting everyone.

Also, support for migrations and trainings should be sourced from certified professionals who provide value-added services which extend the reach of the community to the corporate world and offer CIOs and IT managers a solution in line with proprietary offerings.

In fact, LibreOffice – thanks to its mature codebase, rich feature set, strong support for open standards, excellent compatibility and long-term support options from certified partners – represents the ideal solution for businesses that want to regain control of their data and free themselves from vendor lock-in.

Availability of LibreOffice 6.4.1

LibreOffice 6.4.1 is immediately available from the following link: https://www.libreoffice.org/download/. Minimum requirements are specified on the download page. TDF builds of the latest LibreOffice Online source code are available as Docker images: https://hub.docker.com/r/libreoffice/online/.

LibreOffice Online is fundamentally a server-based platform, and should be installed and configured by adding cloud storage and an SSL certificate. It might be considered an enabling technology for the cloud services offered by ISPs or the private cloud of enterprises and large organizations.

All versions of LibreOffice are built with document conversion libraries from the Document Liberation Project: https://www.documentliberation.org.

Support LibreOffice

LibreOffice users are invited to join the community at https://ask.libreoffice.org, where they can get and provide user-to-user support. People willing to contribute their time and professional skills to the project can visit the dedicated website at https://whatcanidoforlibreoffice.org.

LibreOffice users, free software advocates and community members can provide financial support to The Document Foundation with a donation via PayPal, credit card or other tools at https://www.libreoffice.org/donate.

LibreOffice Conference 2021 Call for Locations

THE CALL FOR LOCATION FOR LIBREOFFICE CONFERENCE 2021 IS NOW OPEN

Background

Once a year, the LibreOffice Community gathers for a global community event: the LibreOffice Conference, or LibOCon. After a series of successful events – Paris, October 2011; Berlin, October 2012; Milan, September 2013; Bern, September 2014; Aarhus, September 2015; Brno, September 2016; Rome, October 2017; Tirana, September 2018 and Almeria, September 2019 – the venue for 2020 is Nuremberg, Germany.

To ease the organization, TDF Board of Directors has decided to open the call for location for 2021 earlier this year, to give the 2021 event organizers the opportunity of attending the conference in Nurembers in October 2020. The LibreOffice Conference takes place between September and November, with a preference for September.

The deadline for sending in proposals is June 30, 2020.

After receiving the applications, we will evaluate if all pre-conditions have been met and the overall content of the proposal, and give all applicants a chance to answer questions and clarify details if needed.

What applicants need to know

Several team members are needed and getting closer to the event, it tends to become a time consuming job, and each member of the team should be able to devote as much time as necessary. Also, dealing with finances and sponsors is a specific responsibility of conference organizers. Although TDF will provide a list of sponsors and ease the process, the team must be able to manage the budget according to the amount of sponsorships, and commit expenses based on the resulting amount of money.

In the past, we have received applications from several third parties, including casinos or professional event managers. Keep in mind that the LibreOffice Conference is a community event, by the community for the community. While we appreciate the interest of people with professional background, proposals not supported and driven by community members (not only TDF members) will not be considered as valid.

What must be covered by the proposal

IMPORTANT: Proposals missing the following information might be considered incomplete. While we try to give every applicant a chance to add or clarify missing information, there is no guarantee that the proposal will be accepted, since we have a rather short time frame. In order to enhance the chances for your proposal to be accepted, please answer as many of the following questions as possible.

The team

Only proposals with a fair amount of team members who are able to dedicate time and are part of the LibreOffice community will be considered as valid. Based on our experience, at least five team members are required, and those team members need to interact and communicate with the community. Please name all the team members, their role in the community, and their availability in term of time (especially during the month prior to the conference).

At least one team member should be working exclusively on sponsor relations, and on managing invitations for VISAs (as required for many countries). Both of these tasks require a fair amount of time, and are crucial to the organization. Based on our experience, at least a few dozen VISA requests, if not more, need to be dealt with, and you need between € 10.000 and € 20.000 in sponsorship fees. Please let us know if you have at least one team member willing to work on these topics.

The organizing entity

The Document Foundation itself will not be legally or financially responsible for organizing the event. Although it will support the organization of the conference by any possible means, it is necessary to have a local entity, an enterprise or preferably a non-profit, to take care of financial and legal requirements such as insurances and signing contractual obligations.

Another important reason for a local entity is the fact that VISA invitation letters can usually be issued only by a local entity from within the country. Please give details on the organization, its type and its leadership.

The main venue

The venue should be easily accessible from other countries, so ideally, an airport and a central train station are nearby. It should also have a good connection to the local public transportation. Please give details on the venue, its location, and its connection to public transportation.

Ideally, there is just one venue for all conference sessions. In case you distribute the conference among two venues, they should be reachable by public transportation or foot in no more than 10 minutes. Please let us know in case you plan for more than one venue (with the exception of parties and receptions).

The main venue should be partially wheelchair-accessible, with at least the opening/closing sessions and main track room fulfilling this requirement. Please let us know how accessible is the venue.

The conference itself is on 3 days, but their is an extra day before the conference dedicated to community meetings, which should be taken into account into the proposal.

Also let us know if there are defribillators available at the venue and if your team has BLS notions.

Providing canvas, projectors and rooms for two to five parallel tracks, for a total of approximately 300 participants, is also required. Please let us know if your venue fulfills these requirements.

Next to the presentations, there is often the need to have private meetings. For sure, there are a TDF Board of Directors meeting, a Membership Committee meeting and a TDF Team meeting, so at least two additional rooms are required one day before and one day after the conference. These meeting rooms can also be in a different location from the main conference venue. Please let us know if you can provide these meeting rooms.

Next to conference rooms, there should also be an open space for community gatherings. Please let us know if you can provide such a space.

A publicly accessible, free wireless Internet connection is required. If the venue itself does not provide WiFi, an alternative is represented by broadband 3G/4G wireless routers.

We should also know in advance if there are firewall restrictions in place that limit or forbid the access to services like SSH, Gerrit, Git and others (including e-mail), and whether we can provide a TDF VPN to overcome such limitations. Please let us know which kind of wireless Internet connectivity will be provided to conference attendees.

Having video archives or video live streams is not a must-have, but a nice-to-have. Please let us know if you plan video archives or live streams of the presentations.

Also, if at least one of the social events will be in a wheelchair-accessible location, this will be highly appreciated and will be absolutely wonderful.

Accommodations

Since we expect around 300 visitors, the availability of three/four stars hotel rooms or equivalent accommodations (B&B, or similar) is required. Please elaborate on the hotel offerings near the venue.

Offering couch surfing, motels, youth hostels or other means of free to cheap accommodation is a nice-to-have. Please let us know if such accommodations are available at your venue.

One more thing…

Please describe in your own words why you want to host the next LibreOffice Conference, what motivates you, and what you expect from organizing the event.

Other informations

Please write anything else that can support your application, like

  • Adoption of free open source software and open document standards in your country/region
  • FOSS support by national/local government bodies, or other organizations, enterprises, user groups
  • Cultural and/or IT related events close to the conference (parallel events are not a problem, if they do not distract participants from the LibreOffice Conference)
  • Potential conference sponsors, and the sponsorship size if it is already confirmed
  • Parties and receptions that are already planned, also in partnership with other local organizations
  • Anything else…

Providing child care would be a nice addition to the application, as there are participants with children who might be encouraged to participate if the service is available.

You may find useful information on the dedicated pad for conferences management.

How to apply

Please send your proposal as plain text e-mail, or HTML e-mail, or Open Document File to info@documentfoundation.org. Please write only in English. We will send a confirmation of your application no later than one week after we have received your proposal. In case that you have not heard back from us by then, please let us know.

Again, the deadline is June, 30 2019 24:00 UTC.

THANK YOU FOR YOUR INTEREST IN HOSTING THE LIBREOFFICE CONFERENCE!

LibreOffice 6.3.5 available for download

Berlin, February 20, 2020 – The Document Foundation announces LibreOffice 6.3.5, the 5th minor release of the LibreOffice 6.3 family, targeted at individuals using the software for production purposes, who are invited to update their current version. The new release provides bug and regression fixes, and improvements to document compatibility.

LibreOffice 6.3.5’s change log pages are available on TDF’s wiki: https://wiki.documentfoundation.org/Releases/6.3.5/RC1 (changed in RC1) and https://wiki.documentfoundation.org/Releases/6.3.5/RC2 (changed in RC2).

LibreOffice’s individual users are helped by a global community of volunteers: https://www.libreoffice.org/get-help/community-support/. On the website and the wiki there are guides, manuals, tutorials and HowTos. Donations help us to make all of these resources available.

LibreOffice in business

For enterprise class deployments, TDF strongly recommend sourcing LibreOffice from one of the ecosystem partners to get long-term supported releases, dedicated assistance, custom new features and other benefits, including SLA (Service Level Agreements). Also, the work done by ecosystem partners flows back into the LibreOffice project, benefiting everyone.

Also, support for migrations and trainings should be sourced from certified professionals who provide value-added services which extend the reach of the community to the corporate world and offer CIOs and IT managers a solution in line with proprietary offerings.

In fact, LibreOffice – thanks to its mature codebase, rich feature set, strong support for open standards, excellent compatibility and long-term support options from certified partners – represents the ideal solution for businesses that want to regain control of their data and free themselves from vendor lock-in.

Availability of LibreOffice 6.3.5

LibreOffice 6.3.5 is immediately available from the following link: https://www.libreoffice.org/download/. Minimum requirements are specified on the download page. TDF builds of the latest LibreOffice Online source code are available as Docker images: https://hub.docker.com/r/libreoffice/online/.

LibreOffice Online is fundamentally a server-based platform, and should be installed and configured by adding cloud storage and an SSL certificate. It might be considered an enabling technology for the cloud services offered by ISPs or the private cloud of enterprises and large organizations.

All versions of LibreOffice are built with document conversion libraries from the Document Liberation Project: https://www.documentliberation.org.

Support LibreOffice

LibreOffice users are invited to join the community at https://ask.libreoffice.org, where they can get and provide user-to-user support. People willing to contribute their time and professional skills to the project can visit the dedicated website at https://whatcanidoforlibreoffice.org.

LibreOffice users, free software advocates and community members can provide financial support to The Document Foundation with a donation via PayPal, credit card or other tools at https://www.libreoffice.org/donate.

10 great LibreOffice-only features

LibreOffice is the successor project to OpenOffice, which had its last major release (4.1) back in 2014, as you can see in this timeline – click to enlarge. And, of course, it’s still free and open source:

We release a new major version every six months – so let’s check out some of the great features our community and certified developers have added in recent years!


1. Improved compatibility – .docx export

LibreOffice Writer, the word processor, can export documents in .docx format (OOXML), as used by Microsoft Office. Many other compatibility improvements have been added too.


2. NotebookBar user interface

Since LibreOffice 6.2, we have an alternative user interface option called the NotebookBar. To activate it, go to View > User Interface > Tabbed.


3. EPUB export

Want to create e-books from your documents? With LibreOffice, you can! Click File > Export and choose EPUB, which can be read on many e-book devices.


4. Document signing

For improved security, you can use OpenPGP keys to sign and encrypt ODF, OOXML and PDF documents. (ODF is the OpenDocument Format, the native format of LibreOffice.)


5. Pivot charts

Calc, LibreOffice’s spreadsheet, lets you create charts from pivot tables. This helps you to summarise data sets in complex spreadsheets.


6. Document watermarks

LibreOffice 5.4 introduced custom watermarks, which can be added to page backgrounds.


7. Major spreadsheet performance boosts

Calc has benefited from multi-threading support, dramatically boosting performance on computers with multi-core CPUs.


8. Attractive presentation templates

Impress, LibreOffice’s presentation tool, includes a selection of hand-crafted templates, so you can focus on content rather than design.


9. Documentation improvements

LibreOffice’s help system has been improved to be more user-friendly, while many guidebooks have been updated too.


10. Safe Mode

To improve reliability, LibreOffice 5.3 introduced a Safe Mode, which temporarily disables your user configuration and extensions. This helps you to pinpoint any issues which may affect your setup.


Like what you see? Download LibreOffice and try it out – it’s free!


Those are just some of the features – but of course, our community has grown, we’ve started the Document Liberation Project and we have professional support options for using LibreOffice in businesses. And there’s much more still to come – join us!

LibreOffice presentations at FOSDEM 2020 – learn about the technology behind the software

FOSDEM is the biggest European get-together of free and open source software (aka FOSS). And, of course, the LibreOffice community and certified developers were there!

Indeed, many developers and community members gave talks about their recent work – check out these links for the videos and slides…

Main track

Open Document Editors devroom

Collaborative Information and Content Management Applications