Difference between revisions of "Star-Division"

From CPCWiki - THE Amstrad CPC encyclopedia!
Jump to: navigation, search
(External links)
Line 1: Line 1:
[[Image:Star-Division-logo.jpg|thumb|Star-Division logo]]
+
[[File:Star-Division-logo.jpg|thumb|Star-Division logo]]
  
 
'''Star-Division''' was a software house from Lüneburg, Germany, founded in 1984 by Marco Börries. Well known for its software StarOffice, it was bought by Sun Microsystems on August 5th, 1999.
 
'''Star-Division''' was a software house from Lüneburg, Germany, founded in 1984 by Marco Börries. Well known for its software StarOffice, it was bought by Sun Microsystems on August 5th, 1999.
  
StarOffice itself developed from the StarWriter word processor, released for the CPC in 1985 and for DOS the year later. When Sun bought StarOffice, they released it as open source under the name OpenOffice, and continued to maintain their own version as StarOffice. The two are now the second most popular productivity suite for Windows, and the most popular for Linux.  
+
StarOffice itself developed from the StarWriter word processor, released for the CPC in 1985 and for DOS the year later. When Sun bought StarOffice, they released it as open source under the name OpenOffice, and continued to maintain their own version as StarOffice. The two are now the second most popular productivity suites for Windows, and the most popular for Linux.
 +
 
 +
After selling Star Division to Sun Microsystems in 1999, Marco Börries himself is now a multimillionaire.
  
 
== Releases for CPC ==
 
== Releases for CPC ==

Revision as of 13:52, 27 October 2013

Star-Division logo

Star-Division was a software house from Lüneburg, Germany, founded in 1984 by Marco Börries. Well known for its software StarOffice, it was bought by Sun Microsystems on August 5th, 1999.

StarOffice itself developed from the StarWriter word processor, released for the CPC in 1985 and for DOS the year later. When Sun bought StarOffice, they released it as open source under the name OpenOffice, and continued to maintain their own version as StarOffice. The two are now the second most popular productivity suites for Windows, and the most popular for Linux.

After selling Star Division to Sun Microsystems in 1999, Marco Börries himself is now a multimillionaire.

Releases for CPC

External links