Maybe some marketing people at Oracle think Sun’s productivity application suite was a dismal failure because it wasn’t sufficiently expensive?…
While Oracle has a long way to go in catching up to competing office suites, it is hoping to close the gap by positioning its products as more flexible and open alternatives.
Open Office 3.3 Standard Edition costs US$49.95 per user and is meant for companies with one to 99 employees. The Enterprise Edition, which includes many more tools, connectors and supported platforms, costs $90 per user with a minimum of 100 users, although volume pricing is available.
But interoperability with Office comes at an additional price. Earlier this year, Oracle imposed a $90 per user fee on an ODF plug-in that enables the sharing of files between Open Office and Microsoft Office. The plug-in had been available at no charge under Sun's ownership.
Oracle Takes on Microsoft, Google With Cloud Office - PCWorld Business Center
what's this? like the 4th time they've tried to get in on the collaboration game?
ReplyDeleteI think Oracle Collaboration Suite (the precursor to the apparently also-failed Oracle Beehive) was #4, so Cloud Office might count as candidate #6...
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