Sun "seeds" Aust StarOffice user base

Sun Microsystems has stepped-up its efforts to barge open a space in the office software market currently dominated by Microsoft.

Sun is offering educational and non-profit institutions almost unlimited rights to use its suite of office productivity software StarOffice 6.0 for a nominal fee, believing that it will "sow the seeds" for a large enterprise user-base.

Non-profit and educational institutions can buy the right copy and distribute the software to their members for vocational and personal use for AU$183. Prior to announcing the move a StarOffice 6.0 license package for 500 users would have cost a university or school AU$71,000.

StarOffice 6.0 is the result of Sun's strategy to develop a competitor to Microsoft's Office software suite that began around five years ago. Prior versions of the software were distributed freely under open source licenses. StarOffice 6.0 is the first commercial release of the package.

While a StarOffice 6.0 single-user its retail license costs AU$209, Microsoft Office XP which dominates the markets retails for between AU$300 and AU$1100.

A spokesperson for Sun Microsystem said that while Microsoft's monopoly over the desktop market is difficult to break it is not impossible.

According to Sun's estimates when combined, the non-profit organisation and educational institution markets represent about five million potential users.

Sun has distributed 181 copies of the StarOffice 6.0 to Australian enterprises for evaluation.

Sun, which is touting its latest offer as a "donation" to Australian education, may also stand to gain from support contracts sales spurred by interest in the software.

Sun offers educational institutions support contracts to educational institutions at a discounted rate of AU$4752 per year. The contract allows for unlimited phone support for two named individuals within each organisation.

Sources close to Sun said that the move could increase take-up of support contracts but that the margins involved in the service were not assured.

Talkback 4 comments

    This naively assumes that the ...Anonymous -- 18/10/02

    This naively assumes that the features, fit n' finish, stability and support are somewhat equivilant. They are not ...

    Well Microsoft beat out the co ...Mike B -- 18/10/02

    Well Microsoft beat out the competition by being good enough and cheaper. They better watch out that many of these open source projects are getting to the point where they are good enough and cheaper. I guess its rather appropriate that Microsoft gets hurt by something that is copying them, since they got where they are by copying others.

    Mike

    Although Star Office 5.x was f ...Anonymous -- 18/10/02

    Although Star Office 5.x was free, it's source was never available. Saying that previous versions were available under an open source licence is untrue.

    Martin, splitting hairs ... Th ...Anonymous -- 21/10/02

    Martin, splitting hairs ...

    The report doesn't say version 5.x  was available, it says "prior versions", i.e. prior to StarOffice 6.0 commercial release. Sun released the alpha version of StarOffice 6 to Open Source, so that is a prior version to the commercial relase of StarOffice 6.0.

    Whether your point has any value is, however, moot. The real point is that the source for OpenOffice is avaiable as Open Source. It is also available on Linux, Windows, Solaris and shortly Mac OS X too.

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