What I don't understand is why major Linux distros with deep pockets (IBM/Red Hat, Canonical, SUSE, etc.) don't design, or help technically or financially maintain, major apps for photo editing, office suites, and video editing, and make them compatible with existing apps like Adobe or MS-Office. This would not only boost the FOSS ecosystem, but major government contracts could be given to them, and the public would benefit from it. Tax payers money should go to FLOSS and not to tech bros

@nixCraft What I was thinking is local small businesses conscious of big tech corruption could use FOSS instead of proprietary software because it has open file formats that aren't tethered to Adobe or Microsoft's centralized cloud servers. And when they do well 10% of that money goes to FOSS developers. Developers can provide special updates for them based on niches, IE (a special GIMP plugin) that they pay for. Collaborative Enterprise and grass roots rebelling against big tech.
@nixCraft I don't think tax payer money should go anywhere. But I agree those companies should be obligated by community norms to financially support FOSS a lot more. The real problem is the damage software patents did in the 2000s destroying small devs. Partially because of that past there is no good way to consistently make money with FOSS today. Ideas I have are normalize paying for feature request, normalize businesses using FOSS to make money and most importantly abolish software patents
@nixCraft it is really hard to get something of the complexity of LibreOffice off the ground, let alone make it successful. If you want to make the world a better place, put some money into scratching an itch. I'd love to see anyone with some cash to spare, sponsor LibreOffice to improve variable font support, just to mention an idea. It would leapfrog MS Offices equally lackluster variable font support in an instant.

But it's not the shiny new toy that will sell your OS to the masses, so not holding my breath.

@nixCraft RedHat has invested 20 years in LibreOffice and that is why it is actually actively supported.
Also deep pockets are really stretch - they spent few tens of millions for almost everything, kernel, server and then desktop. They don't exactly have Google kind of money. I think they have achieved a lot without wasting millions.
@nixCraft My guess: The corporate owners of those particular flavors of Linux don't see any economic advantage to themselves by making something compatible with their peers' software. They're more than likely supporting the open-source efforts to piggyback off of unique ideas in an effort to develop retail products they control in a bid to take away market share from their competitors.
@nixCraft it’s because as companies their focus is on the enterprise market and specifically server and cloud. Those companies abandoned desktop as a core focus in the business market 15 years ago or longer. Sure, they “have” a desktop in their enterprise products but they mainly just package up what others do or provide some funding to the open source community efforts. #linux
@nixCraft these companies focus on distros, as you said: they employ people who have an understanding of Linux internals, its tooling and current ecosystem to work on them (stretching out to software like compositors or containers).

At that upper layer, without a guaranteed market, they would have to sink money without a certain return of investment.

@nixCraft well some have tried. Libreoffice started as Novell's fork of OpenOffice because Sun refused to allow patches coming from outside of Sun employees. So Novell's fork could open docx in 2.4 while the official one couldn't until 3.x (and Novell's 2.4 had better compatibility).

IBM also dabbled with their own OpenOffice fork but IIRC they didn't plan on sharing any code (mostly UI improvements) until they were abandoning it.

@nixCraft I woulf have expected that, after the current revelations related to data sovereignity from Microsoft, plus the big courtain of bullshit coming from the other hyperscalers, the EU governments would actually understand what the actual price of beign locked-in by a faithful servant of a crypto-fascist state actually means. And steps would be taken into the right direction. Alas... like russian oil and gas before, the current status quo will continue until... God only knows when...
@nixCraft The European Union has done and still is supporting open source.

There's a catalogue: https://interoperable-europe.ec.europa.eu/interoperable-europe/news/eu-open-source-solutions-catalogue-now-live

And that one https://interoperable-europe.ec.europa.eu/collection/fosseps might also be interesting.

The German Parliament has a "Bundescloud" which is a Nextcloud. The Nextcloud GmbH contracts explicitly state, that everything they develop for a customer will be released as open source.