Look At These Beautiful Little Corals Grown Like Popsicles In A Lab

Coral sex is a wonder to behold. On a summer night, always around a full moon, corals somehow all know to release billions of sperm and eggs into the sea, turning the water into a pink miasma of sex. This spawning relies on precise environmental cues, which could get scrambled in climate change. That’s why researchers are trying to get them to spawn in the lab. Read more…

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Look At These Beautiful Little Corals Grown Like Popsicles In A Lab

Ubuntu Linux 14.04 LTS Trusty Tahr Released

An anonymous reader writes with this announcement: “Ubuntu Linux version 14.04 LTS (code named “Trusty Tahr”) has been released and available for download. This updated version includes the Linux kernel v3.13.0-24.46, Python 3.4, Xen 4.4, Libreoffice 4.2.3, MySQL 5.6/MariaDB 5.5, Apache 2.4, PHP 5.5, improvements to AppArmor allow more fine-grained control over application, and more. The latest release of Ubuntu Server is heavily focused on supporting cloud and scale-out computing platforms such as OpenStack, Docker, and more. As part of the wider Ubuntu 14.04 release efforts the Ubuntu Touch team is proud to make the latest and greatest touch experience available to our enthusiast users and developers. You can install Ubuntu on Nexus 4 Phone (mako), Nexus 7 (2013) Tablet (flo), and Nexus 10 Tablet (manta) by following these instructions. On a hardware front, ARM multiplatform support has been added, enabling you to build a single ARM kernel image that can boot across multiple hardware platforms. Additionally, the ARM64 and Power architectures are now fully supported. See detailed release note for more information here and a quick upgrade to a newer version of Ubuntu is possible over the network.” Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Ubuntu Linux 14.04 LTS Trusty Tahr Released

Facebook Adds "Nearby Friends" to Show You Where Everyone’s At

Facebook’s newest feature, Nearby Friends, begins rolling out today . The opt-in app addition lets your friends know when you’re close by, with the option to show your precise location on a map, if that’s the kind of thing you want to share with your friends. Read more…

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Facebook Adds "Nearby Friends" to Show You Where Everyone’s At

What We Know About the First Earth-Sized Planet In a Habitable Zone

When you’re looking for alien life, the best place to look is somewhere like Earth; the only place we know of that life exists. Kepler-186f , the first Earth-sized planet to be found in the habitable zone of a star, is the best bet we’ve ever found. Read more…

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What We Know About the First Earth-Sized Planet In a Habitable Zone

MSI GS60 Ghost review: a gaming rig in an Ultrabook’s clothing

It’s the natural order of things: NVIDIA releases a new line of mobile GPUs and suddenly the market is flooded with new gaming laptops. It is spring, after all. Most notebooks in the category follow a standard form, but every now and then someone breaks the oversized, hulking mold. This year, it’s MSI. Until now, the company’s lightweight series consisted of one machine, the GS70 Stealth . It was praised for being thin, light and having a more premium feel than most gaming laptops, but its 17-inch screen still made it unwieldy. Enter the GS60 Ghost : everything you loved about the Stealth, but with a 15-inch display and — wouldn’t you know it — NVIDIA’s new GeForce GTX 800M series GPU . Let’s see how it stacks up. Look and feel There’s a new fad trending in the world of gaming laptops, and we like it: thin, light and simple. Three years ago, you’d have been hard-pressed to find a gaming rig that fit those adjectives, but they’re perfectly suitable for the GS60 Ghost. Save for a few manufacturer logos, a silver-accented mousepad and a small, angular shelf surrounding the keyboard, this laptop is as plain as they come. There are no gaudy color schemes, aggressive shapes or unnecessary embellishments — just a lightly brushed, black magnesium-alloy chassis. This simple elegance doesn’t cripple the device’s connectivity options, either — Ethernet, Mini DisplayPort and HDMI sockets run down the laptop’s right edge, accompanied by an SD card reader and a USB 3.0 port. Two more USB 3.0 connections fill out the device’s left side, flanked by a pair of audio jacks and the machine’s AC adapter. Air vents circle around the back of the GS60’s slim 0.78-inch frame, quietly teasing the graphical prowess hidden within. All in all, if it weren’t for MSI’s Dragon Army branding on the lid, the GS60 Ghost could easily be mistaken for a 15-inch Ultrabook. While the notebook’s metal frame lends it the countenance of a sturdy, well-built machine, it also makes it an easy target for scratches — which is probably why MSI ships a soft, zippered case with every unit. The protective sleeve is only lightly padded, but it’s a nice freebie nonetheless. Keyboard and trackpad There is one element of the Ghost’s design that put us off: the keyboard. There’s nothing wrong with its full-sized chiclet layout, and it’s certainly not missing any key functions, but the keycaps are marred by an ugly, sharply angled and slightly oversized font. Fortunately, almost everything else about the keyboard overshadows its cosmetic faults. Most gaming laptops feature keyboards with a faint, multicolored backlight, usually controlled through a desktop application. So does the GS60, but it takes things a step further: The notebook’s SteelSeries-sourced keyboard gives users control over not just the robust LED backlight, but also the specific function of each individual key. The included SteelSeries Engine can reprogram any key (except F1-F12) to launch applications, run customized macros or simply emulate a different keyboard function. Custom profiles can be configured to automatically launch with specific games or applications too, and can be visually differentiated by custom backlight configurations. It makes for a decent typewriter too, though the keys could stand to have a little more travel. We were a little surprised to find a buttonless, clickable trackpad — common for Ultrabooks and productivity machines, but extremely rare for gaming rigs. MSI’s implementation seemed stiff and awkward at first; it tracks fingers well enough, but only right-clicks if you press down in the lower-right-hand corner. Turn on multi-touch gestures and two-finger clicking, however, and the pad blossoms into a productivity wunderkind. Properly configured, the Ghost’s trackpad is excellent for general use. Unfortunately, it’s on a gaming laptop. Trackpads make poor game controllers as a general rule, but clickable trackpads are particularly ill-suited to the task. Since both mouse buttons are integrated into the same clickable surface (differentiated only by an assigned area or how many fingers are being used), only one can be activated at a time. The problem? Many games require the player to move the mouse while simultaneously using both mouse buttons — aiming down the scope in a first-person shooter, for instance. Trying to depress the pad while using it to move a character is also extremely awkward. Overall, it’s a great mouse, but terrible for game input. Display and sound Wide viewing angles, bright colors and a non-reflective, matte screen: everything we want in a laptop display and exactly what the GS60 has to offer. It’s a relief too: Far too many gaming laptops ship with panels that lose their luster when viewed off center. MSI claims the Ghost’s 15.3-inch panel will display accurate colors to any viewer within 85 degrees of the screen, and while we didn’t exactly whip out a protractor, we’ll admit the display stayed vibrant no matter what angle we tried. All told, it’s bright, beautiful and glare-free. There isn’t much else to say. While it’s not uncommon for notebooks to lean heavily on audio software to get the most out of their tinny speakers, the GS60’s tin cans seem to use the drivers as a crutch . Without the aid of the included Sound Blaster Cinema equalizer, the Ghost’s audio has all the fidelity of an AM radio. Properly filtered, they don’t sound bad , per se, but for speakers proudly flaunting Dynaudio branding, they’re resoundingly average. Still, they do more than a passable job when tuned to the software’s default settings: They don’t distort, crackle or buzz at high volumes, for example. There’s nothing wrong with them, really; we just expected more. Performance and battery life PCMark7 PCMark Vantage 3DMark06 3DMark11 ATTO (top disk speeds) MSI GS60 Ghost (2.4GHz Core i7-4700HQ, NVIDIA GTX 860M 2GB) 5, 909 22, 602 22, 898 E7, 908, / P5, 152 / X1, 519 537 MB/s (reads); 495 MB/s (writes) Alienware 14 (2.4GHz Core i7-4700MQ, NVIDIA GTX 765M 2GB) 5, 310 21, 502 20, 868 E6, 529 / P4, 211 507 MB/s (reads); 418 MB/s (writes) Alienware 17 (2.7GHz Core i7-4800MQ, NVIDIA GeForce GTX 780M 4GB) 5, 647 22, 114 27, 137 E10, 638 / P7, 246 509 MB/s (reads); 420 MB/s (writes) Digital Storm Veloce (2.7GHz Core i7-4800MQ, GeForce GTX 765M 2GB) 6, 107 21, 379 20, 340 E6, 696 / P4, 353 506 MB/s (reads); 196 MB/s (writes) Razer Blade 14-inch (2.2GHz Core i7-4702HQ, GeForce GTX 765M) 5, 837 19, 505 19, 815 E6, 364 / P4, 161 546 MB/s (reads); 253 MB/s (writes) MSI GT70 Dragon Edition (2013) (2.4GHz Core i7-4700MQ, GeForce GTX 780M) 6, 111 20, 250 N/A E10, 519 / P7, 416 1.19 GB/s (reads); 806 MB/s (writes) Razer Edge Pro (1.9GHz Core i7-3517U, NVIDIA GT 640M LE 2GB) 4, 949 13, 536 10, 260 E2, 507 / P1, 576 409 MB/s (reads); 496 MB/s (writes) Samsung Series 7 Gamer (2.30GHz Core i7-3610QM, GeForce GTX 675M) N/A 11, 515 21, 131 N/A N/A Looking forward to seeing how NVIDIA’s new GPU architecture (codenamed Maxwell ) performs? You’ll have to wait a little longer. NVIDIA has a habit of outfitting its mobile chips with a mixture of new and old architectures, and its new 800M series is no exception: The GeForce GTX 860M at the GS60’s core happens to have both Maxwell and Kepler variants, differentiated by clock speed and total core count. NVIDIA says the two chips should perform on the same level — but it’s worth noting that MSI’s Ghost is outfitted with the GPU’s Kepler silicon. Even so, last year’s GPU architecture doesn’t seem to be much of a hindrance: The GS60 Ghost consistently walked the line between ultra and very high graphic settings, with few games struggling to reach playable frame rates at maximum settings. Saints Row IV , Thief and Battlefield 4 all maintained a 30 fps average at ultra high quality, with their lowest frame counts staying in the high twenties. BioShock Infinite did even better; it held a 44 fps average on its highest graphics settings. Even The Witcher 2 , a game known for taxing GPUs, toed the line: 33 frames per second at its maximum setting (with the GPU-killing ubersambling option disabled, of course). Naturally, Crysis 3 struggled to hit playable frame rates without significant concessions (we had to scale it back to medium to hit 30 fps), but struggling with Crysi s is par for the course anyway, right? Still, we can’t help but wonder if we’re missing out for the sake of last year’s architecture. NVIDIA announced the GeForce GTX 800M series with a new feature that promises to extend a laptop’s on-battery playtime by 50 to 100 percent. The Ghost gave itself up after just 52 minutes of gameplay, which is about average — far below the doubled runtime NVIDIA promises. In fact, the GS60’s high-performance runtime was only on par with the 50-minute average NVIDIA is trying to extend. The feature, called Battery Boost, uses NVIDIA’s GeForce Experience software to match game performance to a target frame rate. Indeed, the Ghost did limit its output to 35 fps when disconnected from its AC adapter, but it didn’t translate into more gameplay. It was also a fairly inconsistent experience, and would drop to a choppy 15 fps average for extended periods of time. Battery life MSI GS60 Ghost 3:13 Razer Blade 14-inch 6:24 MSI GT70 Dragon Edition 4:34 Razer Edge Pro 3:40 Razer Blade 2.0 3:29 Alienware 14 3:07 Alienware 17 2:55 Digital Storm Veloce 2:53 MSI GT70 2:49 MSI GT683DXR 2:40 Samsung Series 7 Gamer 2:11 2011 Sony VAIO F Series 2:07 Qosmio X775-3DV78 1:26 The Ghost’s Ultrabook stylings don’t lend it any traditional longevity either: Engadget’s standard battery test exhausted the rig in three hours and 13 minutes. That’s about average for a modern gaming laptop, but it falls short of long-lasting outliers like Razer’s third-generation Blade. Frankly, it’s what we expected out of the Ghost, but gamers looking for a machine to pull double-duty at the office may want to look for something more longevous. Software Once upon a time, laptops and pre-built computers came riddled with bloatware, off-brand software packages and thinly veiled advertisements disguised as “free trials.” It’s just the way it was. This unpopular trend has been dying off in recent years, however, and we’re happy to report that the GS60 Ghost features only two offenders: the ever-present Norton security suite and XSplit Gamecaster. The former is easily (and traditionally) ignored, but the latter may be worth the attention of wannabe Twitch superstars . It’s a gameplay-broadcasting suite, complete with chat integration, webcam-overlay options and even annotation tools. That said, it’s only a demo; if you’re interested in hosting a watermark-free stream at a decent resolution, it’ll cost you $15. Just about everything else on the Ghost’s internal storage is a complement to its hardware, including the aforementioned GeForce Experience (which also offers capture and streaming options, by the way), Sound Blaster Cinema 2 and SteelSeries Engine suites. There’s also an MSI Dragon Gaming Center app, but don’t get too excited: It’s little more than a CPU-temperature monitor with a built-in application launcher. Configuration options MSI’s ultra-slim gaming laptop only comes in two configurations, and not much sets them apart. Our $1, 800 review model houses an Intel Core i7-4700HQ processor, NVIDIA GeForce GTX 860M graphics (with 2GB GDDR5), 16GB DDR3L RAM and a 128GB SSD drive paired with 1TB of HDD storage. Knock $100 off that price and you’ll get the exact same thing minus four gigs of RAM and 250GB of HDD space. There’s also a third model in the works — the high-resolution Ghost Pro we saw at CeBIT — but MSI told us it won’t be available for several months. Even so, it could be worth the wait: MSI’s $2, 100 model will boast GeForce GTX 870M graphics (with 3GB GDDR5) and a super-sharp, 15.6-inch 2, 880 x 1, 620 display. The competition As fond as we are of the Ghost’s slim, metallic frame, it does have at least one drawback: It’s expensive. You don’t have to look far to find a more affordable alternative with similar internals — in fact, MSI has one . The Ghost’s cousin, the GE60 Apache, matches our review laptop almost part for part, ringing in at $1, 350, albeit with half as much RAM and a body that’s twice as thick (thanks in part to optical media). Meanwhile, another $50 buys the GE70, with 12GB DDR3L RAM, an optical drive and a larger 17.3-inch screen. If you’re willing to compromise, you’ve got plenty of affordable options. If your heart’s set on thin, powerful and expensive, however, you’d be remiss to ignore the snake in the room: the 14-inch Razer Blade . This refreshed gaming portable not only matches the Ghost Pro’s GeForce GTX 870M GPU, but also outpaces that model’s 3K display with a 3, 200 x 1, 800 IPS multi-touch panel. It’s even a hair slimmer than MSI’s kit, flaunting its “thinnest gaming laptop” crown with a 0.70-inch frame. It only costs $100 more than the Ghost Pro, too. Wrap-up Like the Razer Blade, the Ghost plays to a specific niche: gamers who want the power of a full-fledged gaming PC without sacrificing portability or aesthetics. It’s a small subset of the notebook market, but MSI’s GS60 fits right in: It’s thin, powerful and a joy to use. It’s not perfect, though. Pitted against the Blade, the Ghost’s average battery life is disappointing and its Kepler-based GPU fails to make NVIDIA’s new Battery Boost feature shine. Its attractive design can also detract from its gaming roots, best exemplified by a trackpad that, while outstanding for an Ultrabook, feels out of place on a gaming machine. While these gripes are easy to dismiss, one more shadow hangs over MSI’s GS60: the apparition of the unreleased Ghost Pro. It’s everything the current model is and more , teasing enough upgrades to conceivably push the Ghost’s performance off the fence of 30 fps gameplay. As is, the GS60 is a solid option for folks looking for a slim gaming rig, but a more powerful, identical machine is just around the corner. You want our opinion? Wait for the Pro model. Filed under: Laptops Comments

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MSI GS60 Ghost review: a gaming rig in an Ultrabook’s clothing

Sonos Is About to Get Even Easier By Ditching the Bridge

Sonos’ multi-room wireless music system is crazy easy to use, but it’s always had one annoying little drawback: You’ve got to plug at least one Sonos speaker or a Sonos Bridge into your router for it to work. Well the company just announced that it’s overhauled its tech so that you don’t need to be plugged in anymore. Read more…

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Sonos Is About to Get Even Easier By Ditching the Bridge

Tactus Taps Wistron To Bring Its Magical Physical Touchscreen Buttons To The Masses

 Tactus makes keyboards that appear out of seemingly flat glass touchscreen surfaces, thanks a fluid-based layer that reacts to electrical signals to create rises and bumps that serve as keys and buttons. It’s a magical technology, and one that you can see demoed on video in the clip below from CES this year. Soon, you’ll be able to get that tech on a range of devices thanks to a new… Read More

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Tactus Taps Wistron To Bring Its Magical Physical Touchscreen Buttons To The Masses

You can now watch A&E and History live on iOS and the web

A&E Networks is regularly finding ways to make its programming more widely available, particularly by having on-demand options through TV providers and its own apps. To help boost these efforts, the company’s now bringing live streaming into the fold, at least with a couple of properties. As of today, viewers can now watch a real-time feed of A&E and History , via each channel’s website and their applications on iOS — no word on when, or if, the feature will head to Android . Naturally, you’ll need a cable subscription to enjoy this, as is often the case for most services that use the internet to broadcast entertainment content . Of course, TV Everywhere offerings like Time Warner Cable’s mobile apps already made live streaming A&E and History possible, so long as you’ve had access to the right channel package. By doing this, however, A&E Networks is essentially cutting out the middle man and, in the process, giving you another option for times when you might need it. A&E Networks Senior VP of Digital Media, Evan Silverman, told Variety that “this is just another stage in our evolution of TV Everywhere.” Filed under: Home Entertainment , Internet , HD Comments Via: Variety Source: A&E , History

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You can now watch A&E and History live on iOS and the web

MediaPortal 1.7.0 FINAL released

MediaPortal 1.7.0 Final We are very happy to present you the final version of MediaPortal 1.7.0 today. This release includes a number of new features and bug fixes. Please report any problems in the bug reporting sections of the forum.  Highlights of this release Many of the changes in this release are things that you might not notice at first, but they are designed to improve the stability of MediaPortal moving forwards for the next few releases. Using SkinSettings/Expressions Skin Settings and Expressions are really powerful. Skin designers are going to be doing some amazing things with them in the near future. We have already been testing a home screen editor entirely within the MediaPortal GUI. Look for this in Area 51 very soon. Separate the WindowsPlugins to individual files This is one for the developers. Since MediaPortal started, the core plugins (My Videos, My Music, My Pictures, etc.) have been stored in a single file called WindowsPlugins.dll. This means that a lot of code has been loaded that isn’t always needed. Also, making a change to one plugin often resulted in another plugin developing a new bug. We can’t carry on like that, so the plugins are now in their own self-contained files. This will make things more stable and easier to fix/improve in future. Attention:  This change made us ‘bump’ the plugin subsystems, so there is a chance you need an updated plugin to be compatible with the 1.7.0 Release. 1.7 Pre Release compatible plugins will still work fine with this release. Enhancements to the TV and Video OSDs TV recording thumbs and comskip markers were not properly shown in the TV and Video Info OSDs. This is fixed. Improvements to the Installer You probably have the LAV Filters package installed to get the best quality playback of most video files, and TitanExtended installed to provide skin files for your plugins. The installer correctly detects the installed version, and only offers to install these if a newer version is available. Wake On LAN MediaPortal can now wake your server if it is in sleep mode and you want to access your files. Add MediaInfo For Files in the Background We use a code library called MediaInfo to obtain certain information about video files when you play them. This information can be displayed by MediaPortal. Up to now, it has only been possible to obtain this information when you actually play a file. With this release, we have added a setting to allow all files to be scanned in the background. This is turned off by default, so check out the documentation for changes to see where this setting is and how to enable it. We also updated the library to v0.7.67.  Full list of changes You can review the complete change log for MP 1.7.0 by using the link below: Changelog: MediaPortal Documentation of new features can be found at the following link: What’s new for MediaPortal 1.7.0 Compiled Plugin related changes Community Plugin Developers should have a look at the following page to find out about the changes which will effect their extensions. Some of these changes are mandatory to become 1.7.0 compatible: changes which affect plugins Additional Information:  TVE3 Code freeze At the moment we are working hard on releasing a new version of our TVEngine – which is called TVE3.5. Development is still in early stage and some features are missing. To make a release of this happen in the future we have to put our current TVEngine (TVE3) on code freeze. This means only critical issues will get fixed. Everything else will have to wait for a TVE3.5 release. When we think it is ready for public testing you will find a testbuild in our Area51 forum part. Since we have limited resources we are not able to give you a specific release date. It is ready when it is ready! We’ll hope you understand that. Thanks! Installation, Upgrade, Download and Feedback Installation With MediaPortal 1.6.0 we switched to .NET4 so you need to make sure you have .NET4 installed on your computer (not needed if you are on Windows 8 because it comes with .NET4, but you NEED the .NET 3.5 features enabled!). Otherwise you are not able to install MediaPortal and the installer just quits. Download-Link: Microsoft .NET Framework 4 (Standalone Installer) Aside from that when doing a clean installation of 1.7.0 there is nothing else special to worry about. Upgrade Upgrading from 1.2.x, 1.3.0 Alpha/Beta/RC/Final, 1.4.0, 1.5.0, 1.6.0 and 1.7 Pre Release to 1.7.0 All MediaPortal 1.2.x, 1.3.0 Alpha/Beta/RC/Final, 1.4.0, 1.5.0, 1.6.0 and 1.7 Pre Release installations can be upgraded to 1.7.0, without losing your settings. Plugins: If you are running MediaPortal 1.6.0 or earlier , then it is possible that some of your previously installed plugins will be shown as incompatible after the upgrade to 1.7.0 ! Whether or not a plugin is incompatible depends on the MediaPortal subsystems the plugin uses. Skins: Warning ! Due to the new features and changes introduced in 1.4.0 , none of the 1.3.x skins are compatible with 1.7.0 ! Please contact the author of the skin you use for further information and updates. Upgrading Extensions: The easiest way to upgrade your extensions is by launching the MediaPortal Extension Installer , and let it check for updated versions. However this only works for extensions that use our MPEI system. If the author of the extension releases it as a stand alone installer, you must contact them for an updated version. Upgrading from 1.2.0 Alpha or earlier to 1.7.0 All MediaPortal installations starting with 1.1.0 RC1 can be upgraded to 1.7.0, without losing your settings. If you are running MediaPortal 1.2.0 Alpha or earlier, then none of your extensions (plugins and skins) will work after the upgrade to 1.7.0! You must update your extensions after the upgrade!  So, please make sure that 1.7.0 compatible versions of your extensions are available before you start the upgrade! General note about Upgrades Manually stop TV-Service! On some systems our installer is not able to update the TV-Server installation because its files are locked or the service can not be stopped. For upgrades to 1.7.0 we recommend that you manually stop the TV-Service and make sure, via Windows Task Manager (enable the “all users” option), that the TvService.exe process is really gone before starting to upgrade. Custom TV-Service properties If you manually changed the properties of the TV-Service (like restart on error options) , then you must redo these changes after the upgrade. The installer is not able to save and restore your custom service properties when it installs the new version of the TV-Service.  Feedback Bugs If you think you found a bug then please post a detailed report in our Bug Reports Forum . Make sure your report includes all the required information . Incomplete reports will be removed to keep the forum clean.  Download Finally – the download. We hope that you took the time to read this release news entirely because it includes vital information about the major changes.   If you would like to support MediaPortal, we would be happy to receive a small donation ! The Team wishes you a lot of fun with this new release! .::. Download – MediaPortal 1.7.0 Final .::.   :: Post a Comment ::

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MediaPortal 1.7.0 FINAL released

Apache OpenOffice Reaches 100 Million Downloads. Now What?

We’re thankfully long past the days when an emailed Word document was useless without a copy of Microsoft Word, and that’s in large part thanks to the success of the OpenOffice family of word processors. “Family, ” because the OpenOffice name has been attached to several branches of a codebase that’s gone through some serious evolution over the years, starting from its roots in closed-source StarOffice, acquired and open-sourced by Sun to become OpenOffice.org. The same software has led (via some hamfisted moves by Oracle after its acquisition of Sun) to the also-excellent LibreOffice. OpenOffice.org’s direct descendant is Apache OpenOffice, and an anonymous reader writes with this excellent news from that project: “The Apache Software Foundation (ASF), the all-volunteer developers, stewards, and incubators of more than 170 Open Source projects and initiatives, announced today that Apache OpenOffice has been downloaded 100 million times. Over 100 million downloads, over 750 extensions, over 2, 800 templates. But what does the community at Apache need to do to get the next 100 million?” If you want to play along, you can get the latest version of OpenOffice from SourceForge (Slashdot’s corporate cousin). I wonder how many government offices — the U.S. Federal government has long been Microsoft’s biggest customer — couldn’t get along just fine with an open source word processor, even considering all the proprietary-format documents they’re stuck with for now. Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Apache OpenOffice Reaches 100 Million Downloads. Now What?