She is certainly modest. I'm thinking her work with OpenOffice.org (OOo) began a little earlier than 2004. In any case, she became active with the Documentation team at OOo and was not satisfied with how that group was being run. So, she asked for volunteers writers to become part of a new independent group to produce user manuals for the fledgling OOo. This became ODFAuthors. To help with our work, ODFAuthors.org was created, and she provided much of the instructional work. This website was modified as time went on until it was recently been moved recently to the Nextcloud.
She was our mentor in so many ways insisting everything needed to be done in the right way and on time as much as possible. The transition from OOo 1.14 to 2.0 was one of those times. There was a major change in all parts of OOo at that time. Prior to this, OOo's format was changed from that used by Star Office, from which it had come, to the new ODT format. This required a major rewrite of all of the user guides. In addition, Base went from being a flat database using dBase to a relational database database using HSQLDB. She wanted the guides ready by the time that OOo 2.0 was released. To get this done, the writers had to use daily builds in the beginning. (These are unstable to say the least, but she got the writers to do use them.)
In another way, she got those who volunteered for this project to go outside of their comfort zone, to learn new things, new ways. She also served as the final authority as to what got published. She even reviewed chapters when no one else could.
In time, OOo recognized our work and us as writers; a merger with the OOo document team occurred. The changes she had insisted on from the very beginning came with us.
Dan