KOffice preps version 2.0 with first release candidate
- 09 April, 2009 11:06
- Comments
KOffice 2 will include Krita, an image manipulation tool like PhotoShop or the Gimp
The open source KOffice project has announced the availability of the first release candidate of the next generation, version 2.0, which may be the last release before the final 2.0.
According to its developers, the goal of the RC1 release is to determine whether the code “measures up” to the standards for a 2.0 release, but also say the final 2.0 is a foundation for “further releases and for experimental users” and not intended to replace KOffice 1.6 or other office suites for productive work.
“We are aware of many missing features, inconsistencies and problematic areas in the user experience,” according to the developers.
The final 2.0 release will include a Word processor (KWord), spreadsheet (KSpread), presentation manager (KPresenter), a project management app (KPlato), a vector graphics editor (Karbon), and a raster graphics editor and image manipulation tool (Krita).
KChart is available as a shape plugin so charts are available in all the KOffice applications in an integrated manner.
KOffice 2.0 includes Flake Shapes – something simple like a square or complex as a chart – as a central concept.
With Flake, any KOffice application can handle any shape. For instance, KWord can embed bitmap graphics, Krita can embed vector graphics and Karbon can embed charts.
All the applications of KOffice have a new layout better suited to today's wider screens and any tool can be ripped off to create its own window and later be re-docked.
KOffice began life as the native office suite for KDE and Linux, but KOffice 2.0 will be cross-platform and most of the applications will run on Windows and Mac OS X.
With this release candidate, Qt 4.5 has become a hard dependency, and, due to a security patch, lcms 1.18 is also a hard dependency.
Commenting on the release, KDE developer Jonathan Riddell said it may be the only release candidate and brings “more than three years of work to a temporary conclusion”.
“Compared to Beta 7, this release candidate brings a multitude of bug fixes and not a single new feature,” Riddell posted on the KDE news blog.
“While confident that the applications can be used for real work, we squarely aim the 2.0 release at the enthusiast, the tinkerer, the curious, the bold and the adventurous. For them, there is plenty to explore and investigate: this release contains many years of work.”
Upcoming will include Kivio for flowcharting, Kexi for report generation and KFormula will become a Flake Shape like KChart.
“We hope for strong testing from the user community, and if that testing uncovers new critical bugs, we will release another release candidate,” Riddell said.
See the RC1 changelog for all the changes made for the release.
Join the CIO Australia group on LinkedIn. The group is open to CIOs, IT Directors, COOs, CTOs and senior IT managers.
- Bookmark this page
- Share this article
- Got more on this story? Email CIO
- Follow CIO on twitter
- Workshifting: How IT is Changing the Way Business is Done
- Aberdeen Group Analyst Insight Report: Does Your Enterprise Have a “Dropbox Problem?”
- A whitepaper on Cloud Security
- So Long, Silos: Why Multi-Domain MDM Is Better For Your Business
- Top Reasons to Implement an SOA Governance Strategy: A List for IT Executives
-
Australia's first 4G smartphone is the HTC Velocity 4G
-
Social networking, ignorance, and apathy
-
China's Alibaba sees big growth with AliExpress site
-
10 Tips for Dealing with a Bully Boss
-
How to design a successful RACI project plan
-
Web 2.0 in the Workplace Today
More than a decade after the term ‘Web 2.0’ was coined, many businesses are still nowhere near to taking full advantage of the collaborative technologies the term refers to. Undoubtedly, confidence is growing in relation to using tools such as Facebook, Skype, Twitter, and indeed many more organisations are using such technology now compared to even just a couple of years ago. But the fact remains that a worrying amount of businesses seem to be operating a ‘lockdown’ approach – an approach that I’m sure many Board-level staff know is simply not good for business in the long-term. -
Learning To Compete: IT’s Next Transformation
CIOs must become competitive players in managing relationships between IT and the business. Megatrends like virtualization, consumerisation, cloud computing, and mobility are forcing a new model for operating IT. This interactive white paper from CIO Magazine and EMC explores this transformation as a leadership opportunity, as an opportunity to create new models for IT, and as a catalyst to fundamentally change the dynamic between IT and the business. Embedded videos feature CIOs from T-Mobile USA and Wharton School of Business and a quick survey provides benchmarking between CIO peers. -
Endpoint Buyers Guide
It takes more than antivirus to stop today’s advanced threats. Protecting corporate assets requires a complete security solution that includes anti-malware, host-based intrusion prevention (HIPS), web protection, patch assessment, application and device control, network access control, data loss prevention, firewall and other capabilities. In short, you need an endpoint protection solution. We examine the top vendors according to market share and industry analysis: Kaspersky Lab, McAfee, Sophos, Symantec and Trend Micro. Each vendor’s solutions are evaluated according to: Product features and capabilities, Effectiveness, Performance, Usability, Data protection, and Technical support.
-
Systems Analysis and Design with UML 2E
-
Managing the Development of Software-intensive Systems
-
Implementing Backup and Recovery
-
Practical Introduction to Software Design with C++
-
Information Nation
-
The Hidden Power of Illustrator CS
-
Software Project Management for Dummies
-
Microsoft Windows Vista Visual Encyclopedia
-
Restoration and Retouching with Photoshop® Elements 2








Comments
Post new comment