
Win;
Mac;
Linux 
It’s here! I’ve been waiting for OpenOffice.org 3.0 Beta for what seems like forever. I was getting a little bit worried when it wasn’t released on April 30th like it was supposed to be, and the release date was never revised. Luckily it’s only rolling in about a week late.
If you were one of the people expecting a huge facelift in this version of OpenOffice.org I’m afraid you’ll be a little disappointed. For the most part the interface is the same as it was with the exception of some refreshed icons. Some people I talked to were keeping their fingers crossed that the next major release of OpenOffice.org would include an Office 2007-like Ribbon, but it’s still using the classic toolbar style. Hey, it can now run on Mac OS X without needing X11 which is a huge feat in itself.
What I’m really excited about is that OpenOffice.org 3.0 is able to open the Office 2007 document formats. I’ve been using Office 2007 for a little while, and trying to use OpenOffice.org was quite a pain since I have a relatively large number of files saved in the Office 2007 file format. This will help ease the transition for many users.
And there’s still more! Here’s a look at the new features included in OpenOffice.org 3.0 Beta:
- Mac OS X Support
OpenOffice.org is now able to run on Mac OS X without the need for X11. Thus, OpenOffice.org behaves like any other Aqua application. The cool thing is, while the market leading office suite vendor dropped VBA support and the Solver feature, OpenOffice.org recently introduced limited VBA support and includes a powerful Solver component. - ODF 1.2 Support
OpenOffice.org 3.0 already supports the features of the upcoming version 1.2 of the ISO standard OpenDocument Format (ODF). ODF 1.2 includes a powerful formula language as well as a sophisticated metadata model based on the W3C standards RDF and OWL. - Microsoft Office 2007 Document Support
OpenOffice.org 3.0 is now capable of opening files created with Microsoft Office 2007 or Microsoft Office 2008 for Mac OS X (.docx, .xlsx, .pptx, etc.). - Solver
OpenOffice.org now also has a solver component which allows solving optimization problems where the optimum value of a particular spreadsheet cell has to be calculated based on constraints provided in other cells. - Chart Enhancements
- Improved Crop Feature
- Spreadsheet Collaboration
This new feature in OpenOffice.org 3.0 allows collaborating on spreadsheets with multiple users. By sharing a spreadsheet; other users can easily add their data to the spreadsheet. - 1024 Columns Per Calc Sheet Instead of 256
- Display Multiple Writer Pages While Editing
With the new zoom slider, it is now easily possible to change the zoom factor. More importantly, OpenOffice.org Writer can now display multiple pages at the same time. - Improved Notes Feature in Writer
With version 3.0, OpenOffice.org got an advanced notes features which displays notes on the side of the document. This makes notes a lot easier to read. In addition, notes from different users are displayed in different colours together with the editing date and time. - New Icons
- Start Center
When you open the application; you are now welcomed by a Start Center that allow you to chose which module you would like to use, or if you would prefer to open a document.

Yeah I downloaded OO 3.0 this morning and played around with it. It was pretty good and stable but I am one those people who were expected a change in the UI. But the Charts seems to have glossy stuff in it, hopefully it would carry over to the other programs.
I used Open Office and it is a great competitor to M$ Office. Only place it’s lacking in is the UI…reminds me of Windows 98:\
Maybe the UI refresh is yet to be added? (hopes)
When I first read the review (that is linked in daily downloads now) I was really happy about the PIM addition. I know its not a big deal to use add-ons but why not have the PIM standard? ‘bloat’ is the software equivalent of ‘liberal’ these days, people use the word to blast feature rich applications.
Let’s hope so. Only thing keeping me from switching away from M$ Office. I’m sure once they update it, many will flock to it:D
*sigh*, no interface update again. What about those planned performance improvements?
At this stage it is doubtful. It’s expected to be released in a few months, and there will not be a revolutionary interface change that can successfully be done in that period of time. Considering the app already received new icons I don’t think it will be much more revamped than that.
I’m not sure if they have any intentions on integrating that into the suite yet. They now reference Thunderbird and Lightning on the OpenOffice page as a great tool that works well with the suite, but no word as to whether it will become integrated.
Maybe there are some performance improvements? They didn’t explicitly list any, but it could just part of the bug fixes. Have you tried it to see if it runs any faster?
I do not really care about the ribbon UI, but the anti-alias in the Impress – that would be the killer feature…