LibreOffice
Facts (10)
Sources
Free and open-source software - Wikipedia en.wikipedia.org 3 facts
accountThe LibreItalia Association announced on September 15, 2015, that the Italian Ministry of Defence planned to install LibreOffice on approximately 150,000 PC workstations over the following 18 months.
measurementBy June 23, 2016, the Italian Ministry of Defence had migrated 6,000 workstations to the LibreOffice suite.
claimThe Italian military is transitioning its software systems to LibreOffice and the OpenDocument Format (ODF).
What Is Open Source Software and Why Use OSS? coursera.org Dec 31, 2025 1 fact
claimExamples of open source software include Mozilla Firefox, Apache HTTP Server, LibreOffice, GNU Image Manipulation Program (GIMP), Blender, and WordPress.
What is Open Source Software? - HotWax Systems hotwaxsystems.com Aug 11, 2025 1 fact
claimIndividuals commonly use open source software for operating systems like Linux, browsers like Firefox, media tools, office suites like LibreOffice, personal projects, and learning tools.
What Is Open Source Software? - IBM ibm.com 1 fact
claimLibreOffice is an open source suite of office productivity applications that rival Microsoft Office.
What is Open Source Software? Definition Guide, Benefits & Types sonarsource.com 1 fact
claimDesktop applications such as LibreOffice and Mozilla Firefox serve as open source alternatives to proprietary software options.
Open-Source Governance And Open Source Collaboration - Meegle meegle.com 1 fact
claimThe OpenOffice project struggled to compete with LibreOffice due to governance challenges and a lack of active contributors.
What is Open Source Software (OSS)? - Harness harness.io Dec 17, 2025 1 fact
claimOpen Source Software is widely adopted across domains including operating systems (Linux), web browsers (Mozilla Firefox), office suites (LibreOffice), source code managers (Gitness, GitHub), and programming languages (Python, Ruby).
Software License Types Explained: Open and Closed Source sonatype.com Apr 26, 2023 1 fact
claimThe Mozilla Public License (used by Mozilla and LibreOffice) and the LGPL (used by projects like FFMPEG) are examples of weak copyleft software licenses.