AbiWord beats OpenOffice to a Grammar Checker 350
msevior writes "The recently released AbiWord-2.4 (downloads for Linux, OSX and Windows here ) is the first Free Word Processor to offer an integrated Grammar Checker. We can can do this because we're a pure GPL'd application and so can easily collaborate with other Freely licensed applications like link-grammar, gtkmathview and itex2mml which provide AbiWord-2.4 with a superb Latex-based Math feature.
Sun's license requirements for OpenOffice.Org make it much more difficult for such collaborations to occur."
Usefulness? (Score:3, Insightful)
Now if only they could have a floating thumb tack that gives you help whenever you don't need it.
Do people honestly use grammar check? Hasn't it been proven that no grammar checker works well enough to provide a wide cover of the English language?
Personally, when I write an article or something for wide dissemination, I'll send it to a group of writers I know and trust. Peer editing. They do the same when they need a human review. I'm sure there are websites to help others do similar swaps.
The MS Word g/c pisses me off bigtime. I have to disable it or go crazy.
For me, a grammar check is a bloat feature that doesn't add worth to a word processor. This is especially true for technical documents.
Is this a feature needed solely to promote the package (like the "often used" cruise control on every car) to the masses?
I'd rather have a thin distribution that works quickly without consuming massive amounts of RAM and processing power.
Am I alone?
Re:Usefulness? (Score:5, Insightful)
- It is well implemented, from what I hear, Wordperfect's Grammatik used to be almost always correct and very useful,as opposed to Word's grammar checker that 's here just so that Microsoft can say "we have a grammar checker"
- It didn't try to 'improve your style'. I hate it whenever Word tries to encourage me not to use passive.Also my pet hate when Word underlines all my headers and says "fragment: consider revising"
- It can be easily turned off, and doesnt fill your page with green lines under every sentence.
it won't be as good as peer review or a professional proofreader, but it may spot that embarrasing mistake before you send that critical report to the customer at 11 pm..
Re:Usefulness? (Score:2)
You typed "colour". Would you like me to change it to "color"?
Re:Usefulness? (Score:2)
e.g. after you think you've deleted the whole list of autocorrect options, and there's still something making it capitalise the "For" in "for(1..10){}"
Re:Usefulness? (Score:2)
Re:Usefulness? (Score:2)
Re:Usefulness? (Score:4, Interesting)
Physics papers would be a real bitch if I didn't have that option(Schrodinger is a key example).
Re:Usefulness? (Score:5, Interesting)
You can turn this off you know. If I had MS Word installed on this machine I'd tell you how, but I don't think it is too obscure.
Personally, I find the grammer checker quite useful and I believe that the passive voice is Evil(TM). Most people who use passive seem to believe that they need to in order to take the focus away from the person doing the action, and that this is particularly important in scientific publications etc.
All I can say in response is that there are a great many almost unreadable scientific papers out there that are over-wordy, constructed portacabin-like from pre-fabricated sentences, which contain nothing to keep the reader engaged. If that is the price of using the passive voice, then I don't think it is worth paying.
Can I recommend you take a look at George Orwell's essay Politics and the English Language [google.co.uk]? Although written in 1946, he still has a lot that is relevant to say about writing clear and engaging english. (Sorry, I've gone off the original subject a little, but I think this essay should be required reading for anyone who does any kind of formal writing.)
Re:Usefulness? (Score:2, Insightful)
I agree with you on the evil of excessive use of passive ( and more so on the unreadablity of moderm scientific papers!).There is is no denying that clear,specific writing is very important.
My problem with Word, however, is that it behaves towards writing style like the automaton it is, assuming that every passive voice is evil and marking it for review and so on, so I spend half my time shutting false alarms instead of fixing real problems in the document.
Mi
Re:Usefulness? (Score:3, Informative)
I disagree, it's the content that keeps one engaged in those academic papers. If you're interested in an experiment you're going to read it anyway, and you're going to be thankful it's written in a methodical manner. I don't need any literary flourishes in my materials and metho
Re:Usefulness? (Score:3, Informative)
Not everyone who is a great scientist is a great author. Academic writing as it is is easy to write, easy to read, and precise. If it's a little boring, well that's why you get paid. I'd like to see some examples of what you think is better, and you think can be replicated by any researcher.
Re:Usefulness? (Score:3, Informative)
Consider a technical report into the causes of a plane crash - most of the thing will be in the passive voice. Another less passive way to write it would be "plane go bugger up", which is perfect english grammar in some regions but is unlikely to convey what the author wants the reader to know.
Some fool will m
Re:Usefulness? (Score:5, Funny)
"Windows is broken."
Re:Usefulness? (Score:2)
Re:Usefulness? (Score:4, Insightful)
Note this is why passive voice is disfavored; it is often unnecessarily ambiguous.
Re:Usefulness? (Score:3, Insightful)
But maybe that's the point? Saying that "X is carrying the food" places too much focus on the fact that it is X, and not Y, that is carrying the food, when the fact that you want to communicate is that the food is being carried.
Compare these two sentences: "X tested Y for Z" and "Y was tested for Z". Can you reasonably tell me that the second sentence will not commu
Re:Usefulness? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Usefulness? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Usefulness? (Score:5, Insightful)
Oh, and don't use "someone" or "something", because both of those restrict the actor to either animate, or inanimate, while my sentence doesn't make any such restriction. Also, they create a greater air of uncertainty as to the agent of the sentence. "Someone strapped the unit in." makes it sound like, "I came into the lab, and someone had already strapped the unit in." Not, "As according to the process, the unit was strapped in."
Also, "The window has been broken for 3 weeks." *is* a passive sentence. The past perfect for "to be" (is) is "to have been" (has been). Thus, "I am a programmer." and "I have been a programmer for 3 weeks." Changing the tense of the sentence to make it seem like it's not a passive sentence shouldn't count for making it non-passive.
The passive isn't any less or more ambiguous than every setence that we use in English. It just has a bad rep, because stylistic perscriptionists declare that you should't use it. Meanwhile, in German, the perscriptivists *suggest* the passive, because it's an uncommon usage form that takes the tone of the sentence out of the "everyday".
Re:Usefulness? (Score:5, Informative)
This confusion has been propogated by Prescriptionists for no bloody reason, except maybe that Latin didn't do it, or something like that. But fact is that Germanic languages are often known to use seperable and inseperable affixes to their verbs. German and Dutch are most apparent, because they're V2, thus the word "aufsteigen" (to climb up) is generally written together, but then in a sentence it become "ich steige auf." (I climb up.) Here the "preposition" auf is placed at the end of the sentence. So, I hear you "yeah, whatever, this is German, it's not English."
Well, let's move to Swedish, on the other side of the Germanic Language tree, and you'll see that while they don't have the words directly affixed, they are still considiered averbial suffixes. Example: "klättra uppför". (to climb up) Here the verb infinitive is "klättra", and the suffix is "uppför", you can't drop that suffix without changing the semantic meaning of the sentence. It's "Jag klättrar uppför" (I climb up), that's how it's used, and "uppför" is not a preposition at the end of a sentence, it's a suffix to the verb.
Now, while we have all these complex verbal phrases out there like "to strap in" and "to climb up". It's interesting to note that English shows the same features as all of the other Germanic languages: adverbial affixes that look exactly the same as a preposition. It's easily demonstrable that it's the German verbal system. Prescriptionists just don't listen to Linguists though, they listen to their damned style manuals that don't take much more than a surface examination of the language and attempt to dictate reason upon it.
Learning foreign languages you begin to learn that all that crap that Prescriptionists tell you is wrong, is actually done in other languages all around the world, in fact to the perscription of their own language guidelines! So, while English Prescriptionists are telling you "don't use double negatives, because it means the opposite of what you're trying to say," there are major languages out there that "violate" this logic. And when they say "don't end a sentence with a preposition", they neglect evidence shown by other languages that these are not prepositions, they're adverbial affixes to the verb. And when they say "don't split infinitives" they don't know what the hell they're talking about because there isn't a way to put another word between the "b" and "e" in "be", which is the real infinitive. ("I can see." Where's the infinitive in that sentence? "see", not "to see", German and Swedish follow the same rules about when you say "to verb" or "zu verb" or "att verb" respectively, but you don't see them saying that it's part of their infinitive.)
Note, that these three rules are slowly growing out of merit among perscriptionists, because they're starting to realize that hey, linguists actually know what they're talking about, and can make a rational explanation for this feature of natural speech. The only one they keep is double negatives, saying that "agreement of negation should not be done with negative words, but rather with indefinite words, as this is the established formal standard." Which is true.
But you still won't see those elementary school teachers, who are stupid, changing their deeply rooted opinions on this matter.
Re:Usefulness? (Score:4, Interesting)
In English, the speaker agrees his "yes/no" response with his sentence. Thus, you use "no" only when you're responding with sentence in the negative.
Did you watch TV? No, I didn't watch TV.
Did you watch TV? Yes, I did watch TV.
Did you not watch TV? No, I didn't watch TV.
Did you not watch TV? Yes, I did watch TV.
In Japanese, the speaker's "hai/iie" response to the affirmation or negation of the question. This matches English for the positive, but is opposite for the negative.
terebi o mitta? iie, minakatta. (Did you watch TV? No, I didn't.)
terebi o mitta? hai, mitta. (Did you watch TV? Yes, I did.)
terebi o minakatta? hai, minakatta. (Did you not watch TV? Yes, I didn't.)
terebi o minakatta? iie, mitta. (Did you not watch TV? No, I did.)
In German, you have two pairs. For positive sentences you use "ja/nein" same as English, but for negative sentences, you have "ja/doch", responding on the affirmation of negation of the question.
Hast du ferngesehen? Nein, ich habe nicht. (Did you watch TV? No, I didn't.)
Hast du ferngesehen? Ja, ich habe. (Did you watch TV? Yes, I did.)
Hast du nicht ferngesehen? Ja, ich habe nicht. (Did you not watch TV? Yes, I didn't.)
Hast du nicht ferngesene? Doch, ich habe. (Did you not watch TV? Wrong, I did.)
This is generally why (at least this is the purpose behind it, even if it were not conciously the reaosn) the English-speaking militaries use a pair like "affirmative/negative" for responses. Because the response is consistent upon the question asked (a la natural Japanese).
Of course, English causes even more pitfalls with even positive questions: "Do you mind if I eat that?" "Yeah, go ahead." Since your response isn't a negative sentence, you say "yes" as per reasons above, even though we all know that "yeah" means, "I do mind if you eat that."
Anyways, the majority of people have problems with negative statements, even in their native language. Few languages actually have sufficiently consistent terms for responses to avoid this abiguity.
Re:Usefulness? (Score:4, Insightful)
In testing the VeloMatic A, the test unit was placed in the restraint system in front of the window, then as the test concluded, the window was broken.
With:
In testing the VeloMatic A, the test unit was placed in the restraint system in front of the window, then as the test concluded, something broke the window.
There's god damn nothing wrong with the Passive Voice except that it has a stigmatic notion in English. In German, it has a air of respectability to it over the active voice. Thus, in German if you want to sound more respectable, you use the passive more.
I spoke with my Dad on this topic once. He worked on process documents and reports. The idea is that you put everything in the passive, because the agents of the senteces are not to be indicated. You don't write "Bob strapped the VeloMatic A into the restraint system." no. You don't say who did what, it doesn't matter who did what, just that it was done. "The VeloMatic A was strapped into the restraint system."
Re:Usefulness? (Score:3, Funny)
Yeah... and there's god damn nothing wrong with murder except that it has a stigmatic notion in most civilised societies. *ahem* :-)
I prefer the active voice [bartleby.com] in writing for one simple and personal reason - too much passive voice gives me a headache and makes it difficult for me to concentrate. A sprinkling of passive voice is fine for variety, but a document written predominantly (or exclus
Re:Usefulness? (Score:2)
Doing things such as writing complete sentences, not running on and avoiding using passive voice are useful if you would like people to read what you write and understanding it instead of throwing it in the trash.
easier to read sentence are. fragments
Re:Usefulness? (Score:2, Interesting)
> I hear, Wordperfect's Grammatik used to be almost always correct
I seriously doubt it, although I have not seen that specific one. However, grammar is notoriously AI-complete, and I have a really hard time imagining that grammar checking is any better solved than translation.
The best grammar checkers available, as far as I am aware, are correct just about often enough to get a D in high school English class -- maybe a C if
Re:Usefulness? (Score:2)
I don't see that.. maybe you should use a "Heading" style for headings. Word does have styles, though it makes it almost impossible to use consistently by all the user-friendly second guessing it does. But using heading styles has other benefits; it lets you see the document in outline form, for instance.
Re:Usefulness? (Score:2)
Re:Usefulness? (Score:2, Informative)
However, I use ABIword as my primary word processor. It loads faster in both Windows and Linux (for me), it consumes less memory, and the interface is a decent clone of Word, so that others have fewer problems with it when they use my machine.
so... its benefits outweigh its problems for me.
Re:Usefulness? (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Usefulness? (Score:2, Funny)
Grammar check is perhaps a misnomer (Score:5, Insightful)
- As a partner to spell check, find correctly spelled but misplaced words (eg: there and their).
- Find common brain-farts such as reduplicated words.
- Remind blame-ducking idiots that the passive verb makes their evasions obvious. Mistakes were made, my foot!
- Point out incongruities and neologisms, which some people might not know aren't cultured english, such as excessive verbing of nouns.
These are all tasks that require an ability to parse grammar, and they're actually useful.To call them "grammar checking" would be too strong, but I can't think of a better descriptive name.
Re:Usefulness? (Score:2)
Would I rely on a computer to correct and improve my grammar? No thanks. Ditto a spelling checker - I just use it for typos.
Re:Usefulness? (Score:2)
Interesting. Most spellchecks I use (eg, text editors) DO flag duplicate words; however I see Word's doesn't, presuambly because it's part of it's Grammar check as you said.
Re:Usefulness? (Score:2)
Re:Usefulness? (Score:2, Informative)
As others have pointed out, a grammar check makes a
Re:Usefulness? (Score:2)
Sure (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Sure (Score:5, Funny)
LaTeX (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:LaTeX (Score:2)
Re:LaTeX (Score:3, Funny)
If only they had some technology built into their word processor to help with this...
Pfft. (Score:3, Funny)
Grammar checker? No thanks (Score:4, Insightful)
I suppose LaTeX support is nice for the math geeks, though you would think that they are already using a program with support for it if they need it.
Re:Grammar checker? No thanks (Score:5, Insightful)
I am a math geek, and unsurprisingly I do indeed use LaTeX. I am quite happy to see the TeX style math support in AbiWord though: not for me, but for others. As a math geek I read a lot of math, and seeing the ugly, badly rendered, hard to read, amateurish garbage produced by some word processors pains me. I'm realistic though. There are a lot of people who only need a little math and aren't going to learn how to write documents in LaTeX just for that. To have someting like AbiWords new equation editing is a good thing: it doesn't render quite as well as LaTeX, but it is streets ahead MS Word and nicer than OO.o currently manages: it's actually somewhat readable.
Personally I would prefer people use this OO.o macro [ucl.ac.be] which allows embedding of rendered LaTeX in an editable way, but to be fair you still need to know a little LaTeX to really be ale to use it (unlike AbiWord's offering).
Jedidiah.
Re:Grammar checker? No thanks (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Grammar checker? No thanks (Score:4, Insightful)
can do this..."
Re:Grammar checker? No thanks (Score:3, Interesting)
But out here in the real world, we don't often have the luxury of asking an English-inclined friend to doublecheck our work for us. If you had a job, and asked your coworkers to doublecheck your grammar on a simple document, you would probably get laughed at.
I often need to write a document quickly. I doublecheck afterwards, but common typos (it's vs.
Re:Grammar checker? No thanks (Score:2, Interesting)
What I find even better is to run my document through a text-to-speech program and listen to the grammar. Grammatical errors are much easier to catch by ear than by reading. It's too easy to skip plurals and verb inflection when you know what you should have written. But hearing it spoken makes that stuff obvious. Sometimes it helps catch long, awkwar
This just in (Score:2, Funny)
Re:This just in (Score:2)
Re:This just in (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:This just in (Score:2)
Re:This just in (Score:2)
Re:This just in (Score:2)
Actually Link Grammar checker is not GPL... (Score:5, Interesting)
multiple languages (Score:2, Interesting)
So, does anyone know what localizations of Abi will include a grammar check?
Re:multiple languages (Score:2, Interesting)
How does Sun's license affect using LinkGrammer? (Score:5, Informative)
http://bobo.link.cs.cmu.edu/link/ [cmu.edu]
As of December 2004, we are releasing the parser under a new license; the license allows unrestricted use in commercial applications, and is also compatible with the GNU GPL (General Public License). You can view the license here. We are also releasing version 4.1b, which is identical to version 4.1 (released in 2000) except that the licensing statements reflect the new license.
Sun's license for OpenOffice is LGPL
http://www.openoffice.org/license.html [openoffice.org]
Re:How does Sun's license affect using LinkGrammer (Score:2)
You are of course perfectly free to make sonamchauhanoffice, incorporating code from openoffice.org and linkgrammar.
However, because Sun bases its proprietary StarOffice on openoffice, code where the copyright can't be assigned to sun for relicensing is unlikely to make it into their repository.
Re:How does Sun's license affect using LinkGrammer (Score:2)
Eh? (Score:4, Insightful)
I'd be more concerned that if it were GPL'd that it couldn't use some or all of the above. Now arguably, OO does need to shed some pounds so if it dumped Python and / or Java that might be no bad thing, but that's a different topic altogether.
Oh, the hypocrisy... (Score:2, Interesting)
...mod me flamebait, but I can't help myself. So, what's happening here is that:
The submitter praises GNOME's premier word processor in that it can surpass OpenOffice.org because it is GPL'ed, whereas the inflexible LGPL license of OpenOffice.org cripples development.
And what license is it that GNOME's distributed under?
Anyways, I don't get why the licensing issue was brought up, but let me state my congrats to the Abiword, GNOME and OpenOffice.org teams for their good work!
Re:Oh, the hypocrisy... (Score:5, Informative)
No, I think you (and most posters) misunderstand what the licensing issue is. The problem with OpenOffice.org is *not* that it's LGPL'd, but rather that for code to be integrated into OpenOffice.org, Sun requires you turn your copyright over to Sun. Very few existing Open Source projects are willing to do that--because frankly it's evil. This makes it very difficult for OpenOffice.org to integrate anything that isn't home grown.
Re:Oh, the hypocrisy... (Score:4, Informative)
The FSF also requires you to assign your copyright to them if you contribute to some of their projects (such as emacs -- I know; I've contributed to emacs). And you have to sign a document saying that your work is your own, and that you have the right to assign copyright to them (i.e. your employer has no claim over the code). This is to make sure that any code that goes in is legit, or at least that if they get sued for copying someone's code, they can point to the document and say that it wasn't their fault.
Of course, the free software community trusts the FSF a lot more than than they trust Sun.
But which will be first to... (Score:4, Insightful)
GPL grammer checker is still possible (Score:2)
LGPL code can be inserted into GPL code but not the other way around.
Having a choice is good (Score:2)
Perhaps t
Equation Editing (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Equation Editing (Score:2)
Comment removed (Score:4, Informative)
Ehwww (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Equation Editing (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Equation Editing (Score:2, Interesting)
They seem comprable, but I like LaTeX's "functional" markup better. It might seem less intuitive at first glance, but it tends to make building nested structures, like
(Solve for x.) really easy since it parallels the way functions are built in real life.A Writer's Experiences (Score:4, Interesting)
I'm a pro writer, so I live inside word processors. AbiWord is my tool of choice these daya on both Linux and Windows.
I turn off real-time grammar checking, because it distracts me from the act of writing. In my experience, grammar checkers are often incorrect in their analysis, particularly if you write fiction and technical works (as I do.) Unusual terminology and structure can give these checkers indigestion.
That isn't to say that I don't use grammar checkers. When I've completed a draft of an article, I often run the grammar checker manually to make certain I haven't missed anything obvious or silly. But I can't stand them in "real time", where I feel like I'm back in high school with the teacher looking over my shoulder and nit-picking every keystroke.
If it works, it's not AI (Score:2)
And they probably always will be. Languages aren't purely rational, and this makes grammar checking an AI-hard problem. To fully judge whether the grammar of a sentence is correct, the checker would have to understand the sentence (at least partially). Even if you could get the checker to perfectly judge whether something is grammatical, there are always ungrammatical utterances you'll want to write.
Of course, it still helps to catc
Re:If it works, it's not AI (Score:2)
Re:A Writer's Experiences (Score:3, Interesting)
True, true. Actually no -- speaking as a professional writer myself, I don't turn off grammar checking because most of my sentences pass with no difficulty. Typically when I see something with a wavy green underline, I stop and ask, "Really? Really really?" And then I think about it for a second -- which is good -- and then decide, "No, that's BS, this thing is totally braindead," and continue.
But that's just it, tho
Re:A Writer's Experiences (Score:3, Interesting)
pcm2: But that's just it, though, you and I are professional writers. I want to hear from Joe Business Manager.
I have yet to see any evidence that non-pro writers use spell checkers, much less grammar checkers. I just had a contract come in from a Big Name Company, and it's riddled with strange errors; I've received business and professional e-mails that make me cringe. My feeling is that many (most?) non-pros really don't care if their prose stinks. ;)
Abiword owns (Score:3, Interesting)
When will Abiword support OpenDocument? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:When will Abiword support OpenDocument? (Score:2)
So I guess the answer is yes & no, Their are plans to support it with a plugin (like other plugin file filters word etc.), but no plans for making it the default. So it's really not clear if they will support it well or anytime soon.
Re:When will Abiword support OpenDocument? (Score:5, Insightful)
OpenDocument support
Support for the OpenDocument file format has been donated by INdT, Nokia's Technology Institute. Currently the OpenDocument import filter is basically complete, with support for styles, headers/footers, lists, image wrapping, text boxes, tables, footnotes/endnotes and tables of contents. OpenDocument export is planned as well and will be added during the 2.4.x series.
Yeah, but what about the crashes? (Score:2)
And to those who don't think a grammar checker is necessary: you don't do much writing, do you? Grammar checkers will not -- and never claimed to -- make anyone into a world-class writer. What they WILL do is catch typos th
Re:Yeah, but what about the crashes? (Score:2)
Re:Yeah, but what about the crashes? (Score:2, Informative)
Disclaimer: I'm the Win32 packager for AbiWord.
Since AbiWord is Open Source... (Score:4, Insightful)
Grammer Checker- New idea (Score:3, Interesting)
Take a huge corpus of grammatically correct text, use it to generate tables of what words follow each other. Then check the user's text against the tables. If your text isn't in there, then warn user that it may not be gramatical.
Discuss, discuss
P.S. Patent Pending
(ha ha just kidding, patents aren't for software, silly rabbit)
Re:Grammer Checker- New idea (Score:3, Informative)
http://cm.bell-labs.com/cm/cs/tpop/Markov.java [bell-labs.com]
Although this (short) program uses these state tables in order to spew out superficially good looking english text.
For example output, state table from:
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/10/02/magazine/02freak
Twenty-five hundred tons. That's how much manure was produced every day and tries to keep all three of you
from experiencing that telltale soft smush of a police captain, argued her dog-poop case. "While adults like
yourselves are appalle
They should use use their own grammar checker (Score:2, Insightful)
Nice to see (Score:3, Insightful)
Abiword has a native Aqua port as well (wish Gnumeric did).
grammar checkers, bah! (Score:5, Insightful)
An english grammar checker in OpenOffice will be useful when the english language acquires a good grammar. I don't see that happening for quite a while. In over 400 years of "modern english", it hasn't happened yet.
In fact, since the number of people who now speak english as a second language greatly exceeds the number of native english speakers, the diversity of acceptable english expression is increasing. English has always been very open to importing new sentence structures as well as vocabulary from other sources. English is a healthy growing language, that is changing almost from year to year as it absorbs and transmogrifies what these new english speakers bring to the party.
Re:-1 flamebait (Score:2)
Re:-1 flamebait (Score:3, Insightful)
Also, OO.org is LGPL and LinkGrammer has a BSD-ish license that allows free commercial use:
http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=165404&cid=13
Re:-1 flamebait (Score:2)
Not true. When GPLed code is linked with BSD code, the entire compiled work is upgraded* to GPL.
There are repositories of GPL patches to the various BSDs.
* Some will argue whether GPL gives less freedom or more protection for freedom.
Re:-1 flamebait (Score:2)
Why can't we keep it a healthy, friendly competition? Having AbiWord, KOffice and OOo all competing with each other (and, to a lesser extent, with MS Office) is only good. The main reason OOo's grammar checking might be behind is the fact that Star Office already had one...!
Re:-1 flamebait (Score:4, Informative)
For example, the ASUS WL-500g (Linksys like router with USB port) its firmware is recompilable and hackable by you and me since it is (mainly) GPLed code. The newer SL1000/SL5000 (vpn routers) contain several BSD modules which ruin the party:
[From: http://website.wl500g.info/beta/firmware.php?fid=
Changelog:
SL1000 and SL500 GPL source code
Before using the source code, please note:
1. The router's firewall and VPN are licensed 3rd party code and are not subjected to GPL terms.
2. Several software modules are derived from BSD codes, which ASUS won't release.
[From: http://wl500g.info/showthread.php?t=3417 [wl500g.info] ]
There are no chance to build something useful from this sources.
Re:-1 flamebait (Score:5, Insightful)
If you are feeling altrustic, then BSD allows maximum freedom for your code. If you want the world to benefit from your code, but don't want someone ripping off your work and hiding it in a commercial project without paying you anything, then GPL gives you great protection. Even after you release something under the GPL you can still license it to a commercial closed-source enterprise for a fee, like MySQL. It only becomes a nuisance when the project grows and has many contributers as you then need to ask permission from each contributer before you can relicense. On the flip side BSD encourages more forking where the new code is not merged back into the main tree as there is no incentive. If the appropriate license is chosen then I don't think either will encourage collaboration more than the other as the license should reflect the goal of the project. A group writing printer drivers which their respective companies have agreed to make Open Source for pragmatic reasons may not want the same license as a loosely-knit group of graphics programmers wanting to release 3D modelling system. There are plenty of other licenses [opensource.org] that can be used, though GPL, BSD and Apache licences currently have the greatest mind-share. There is no such thing as a best license, only the most appropriate one.
Phillip.
Re:-1 flamebait (Score:2, Insightful)
Well, public domain allows maximum freedom for your code. If you want credit (in the source), there's MIT style licenses (the Boost license is a nice one), and if you also don't want people to use (without permission) your name to advertise their product that uses your code, there's BSD.
If you want the world to benefit from your code, but don't want someone ripping off your work and hiding it in a commercial project without paying
Re:-1 flamebait (Score:2)
Re:This is a perfect example... (Score:2)
We're proud of the fact that for most users, our LaTeX-like equation editor is actually more productive than Microsoft's.
Give it a shot before you flame.
Disclaimer: I'm the Win32 packager for AbiWord.