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<pre>Moving to LibreOffice 8 (instead of 7.6) makes sense for marketing
purposes, as media is looking at LibreOffice as the real innovator in
the open source office suite market, and the feeling of journalists is
that we are forever stuck at 7.x.
We all know that the next version will not include any significant
innovation which can justify the change of version, apart from the new
build system for Windows and the availability of LibreOffice for Arm
processors on Windows (which has not been announced)...</pre>
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Hello,</p>
<p>Using LO 8 would attract some light of media for some time ok but
they'll conclude quite quickly the same as you've just said:</p>
<p>"no significant innovation which can justify the change of
version" so we would have just obeyed to marketing rules for them.<br>
</p>
<p>IMHO, we should use 7.6 for the next major release or if
marketing absolutely wants media to talk about LO, we may also
partly use "Ubuntu" style:</p>
<p>LibreOffice <2 last digits of the year>.<the month
number with 2 digits>.<minor version><br>
</p>
<p>=> so 7.6.0 would be 23.05.0 (since a major version is about
every 6 months and 7.5.0 has been released in November 2022).<br>
</p>
<p>At least, it's clear and predictable, except after 2099 but it
lets us a bit of time to prepare oneself to the 4 digits year :-)</p>
<p>Anyway, don't bother too much, there'll always be people
complaining and people ok with the decision. The pb is that even
if complaining people corresponds to 1%, you'll hear about them
more than the OK people.</p>
<p>Julien<br>
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