OpenOffice 3.0 demand crashes servers

Servers hosting the new version of OpenOffice.org have crashed, under the weight of demand for the latest version of the open source office productivity suite.

(Credit: OpenOffice.org)

OpenOffice 3.0 was uploaded to the organisation's servers at 10am BST on Monday. According to OpenOffice.org's marketing lead, John McCreesh, "the servers seem to have collapsed under the load" of download requests.

McCreesh pointed out that the "vast majority" of downloads of the suite take place through local mirrors, but said "the fact that our central site can't even run the bouncer [to divert requests to those local mirrors] must mean it's ... our biggest-ever download".

"We've never had this kind of outage before," McCreesh added. At the time of writing (mid-afternoon Monday in the UK), the servers were still not back up.

OpenOffice 3.0 is a significant update to the suite, which includes free, community-led alternatives to Microsoft Office products such as Word and Excel. The new version includes native Mac OS X support for the first time, and is also the first iteration of OpenOffice to be able to read the .docx Office Open XML (OOXML) documents that are created in Office 2007. OOXML is the chief rival to the OpenDocument Format (ODF) specification that has been used in OpenOffice for some time.

The other big change in OpenOffice 3.0 is its increased focus on the integration of extensions. "What we are doing is improving the way people can build extensions so, rather than keep on increasing the size of OpenOffice, people can download additional functionality if they particularly need it," said McCreesh.

"We introduced [the extension functionality] in OpenOffice 2 but, now in 3, it's fully integrated so we can check for versions of extensions," said McCreesh. "It just looks like part of OpenOffice; you don't really know you're using an extension."

In the new version of the suite, the Writer application can now handle the editing of multiple pages at the same time and on separate monitors. The Calc application now supports larger spreadsheets and includes a new "solver" component for "people who are into high-powered equation-solving", McCreesh said.

He also said the chart component, which is used across several of the OpenOffice applications, has been given a "complete rewrite" and is now "more visually appealing".

Asked why it was still not possible to export OOXML documents in OpenOffice, rather than just being able to read them, McCreesh said there had been "no demand" for such functionality.

"We're providing people with a migration path away from Microsoft," McCreesh said, adding that he thought OpenOffice fans should try to tempt Microsoft Office users over to the free alternative.

For those OpenOffice users who need to send a document to a Microsoft Office 2007 user, McCreesh recommended sending the document in an older Office format. "If you're one of the 10 people in an organisation who uses Office 2007, you would have to save in an old version anyway [for most colleagues]," he claimed. "The new Microsoft format is for a minority interest at the moment."

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Talkback 2 comments

    So many great one liners ... Anonymous -- 14/10/08

    Starting with "was that McCreech or McCrash" ... and then ending with "Microsoft format is for a minority interest" ... guess he was holding that market share chart upside down again, or is that the "more visually appealing" feature in action.
    I can feel a "PR Release of the week" competition page in the making - and before the rubber bullets come out, for all companies - but hand drawn charactitures should be mandatory.

    Seriously Anonymous -- 14/10/08

    to Mr. Anonymous.
    Microsoft's DOCX format *is* of a minority interest to OOo users. The main reason to be able to save in a microsoft format is to share to microsoft office users, which is something that .DOC works better for than .DOCX at this point.

    To the editor:
    I don't think their servers "crashed", they are simply too over-loaded to support all the traffic. That's a somewhat different thing.

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