LibreOffice A free alternative for anyone who can't afford Mictosoft suites, even has a pretty comprehensive Powerpoint alternative called Impress thats included. Both of which are compatible with Microsoft Office and Powerpoint. The forums say that they can have a few issues going back and forth between the programs but I havent had any yet.
Scribus is a good free open source Microsoft Publisher alternative.
Our institution provides the browser-based version of Microsoft Office to all students. And I tell my students that if they don't like that version (it lacks some of the capabilities of the regular software, especially Excel), there is Open Office, a freeware (and completely legal) version they can use.
Having Adobe support Linux has never been the best answer, but the fallacy became a lot more obvious when Adobe shifted to online-DRM subscription sales model and then discontinued their perpetually licensed software sales. Adobe shouldn't bother to support Linux because they're right: they wouldn't sell very many copies for Linux.
Everyone should have some alternatives, no matter what they're using. Emacs users should be able to switch editors if it should become necessary, and Chromium users can switch to Firefox, and Calligra Suite users to FreeOffice, and even Linux users to a BSD if it should ever become necessary.
Anyone who uses specific software professionally should also have an exit plan. Artists, accountants, draftspersons, microelectronics designers, photographers, programmers, lawyers; everyone.
The Document Foundation (TDF) announces the availability of LibreOffice 5.3.1, the first minor release of the LibreOffice 5.3 family released in early February, with 100 bugs or regressions fixed against the previous version.
LibreOffice 5.3.1 is targeted at technology enthusiasts, early adopters and power users, as it is focused on bleeding edge features.
LibreOffice 5.3.1 is immediately available for download from the following link: https://www.libreoffice.org/download/download/.
LibreOffice's license permits it to copy code from OpenOffice while OpenOffice's less permissive doesn't allow it to copy LibreOffice's code. This means every single fix you're going to see is probably already in LibreOffice and they improve their software on their own.
There's no reason to use OpenOffice since 2011.
https://cloud.ibm.com/docs/overview?topic=overview-zero-downtime
> How does IBM Cloud ensure zero downtime?
Definitely not this month, fellas.
EDIT: Why I don't use that word on statuspage postings.
LibreOffice exists for 6 years now and made vast improvements. The overwhelming majority of Sun OpenOffice.org developers and community moved to LibreOffice when Oracle took over Sun Microsystems. The Apache OpenOffice is kept online because of a minority of developers that do not want to let go, but who cannot actually maintain it. They mislead Windows users by not mentioning that LibreOffice exists.
Because MS wants to make lots of money.
Why not try LibreOffice completely free? It does absolutely everything that MS proprietary software does that the vast majority of users are likely to ever need.
Open source does not mean you can do whatever you like with it. You have to meet the licence criteria. These are varied but may include things like:
From the LibreOffice licence: https://www.libreoffice.org/about-us/licenses/
CompleteOffice may be violating these terms:
"All distribution of Covered Software in Source Code Form, including any Modifications that You create or to which You contribute, must be under the terms of this License. You must inform recipients that the Source Code Form of the Covered Software is governed by the terms of this License, and how they can obtain a copy of this License. You may not attempt to alter or restrict the recipients’ rights in the Source Code Form."
Correct, but it's a start. Sensitize people to the dangers of the cloud, and hopefully soon enough they'll realize a Linux PC with LibreOffice is currently the only actually viable safe option to go with regards to government and military PCs.
I'm happy to see the list of LibreOffice users slowly growing since I last checked a year or two ago, when IIRC only France and Italy's defense departments were listed as users: https://www.libreoffice.org/discover/who-uses-libreoffice/
OpenOffice is not getting serious development for over 8 years now. Please don't use it, the only thing it has is the name recognition.
Use LibreOffice if you want a FOSS office suite.
Consider becoming a donator if you want to accelerate the development process. The more full-time professional programmers the project can hire, the faster it will surpass Microsoft Office in features and quality.
You should probably switch to LibreOffice. OpenOffice is a dead product as it was last updated January 2011. LibreOffice is maintained.
FYI, this is apparently the first release that includes a native 64-bit version for Windows. I noticed the LibreOffice website didn't correctly steer me to that on a Windows machine, so here's a link for Windows x86_64 in case you need it for any reason.
Sure, I'm well aware of that model (being an openSUSE user :) ) but I don't think that's what's happening here. According to the Libreoffice site TDF does not provide professional support for LibreOffice and there is no reference to LibreOffice Premium on their website that I can find.
I don't know. The only thing I don't like about https://www.libreoffice.org/ is the animated download gif. I really dislike the logo and the animation looks weird imo.
But other than that, what's wrong with the website?
Not forever.
From the FAQ:
>How long can I use this plan?
>
>You can use the plan as long as you are working at a qualified school. Your eligibility may be re-verified at any time. When your Office 365 Education plan expires:
>
> * The Office applications enter a reduced-functionality mode, which means that you can view documents, but you cannot edit or create new documents.
>
> * Online services associated with the school email address—for example, Office Online and OneDrive—will no longer work.
>
> * If your plan expires, you can extend your plan by re-verifying your status as an educator, or by moving to an Office 365 personal plan
​
Viable, long-term alternative: LibreOffice.
It's free, open source, works with Microsoft Office files, and none of my teachers were any the wiser.
There's certainly differences between the two, but it's more of a trade off than a deficiency. For example, there's some rarely used (but useful) function that Excel has that Calc doesn't, but Calc supports regex matching which Excel lacks (this is a big deal to me). There's a few other small things, but nothing I would consider a deal breaker.
If you really want cloud support, Google Docs is quite nice, and it's free, too. Otherwise, I just use Dropbox, also free, and save my school files in there.
LibreOffice - www.libreoffice.org
Free, fully featured, not trapped in a browser, not beholden to network latency, and not locking you into a company's data trap.
Once you start using LibreOffice then you'll wonder why anybody still pays for Office software.
> ... Libre Office, it's Microsoft Office XP and in the last 10 years has seen 0 improvements in functionality.
That's completely false. LibreOffice has within its five years of existence constantly added new and improved functionality: https://www.libreoffice.org/discover/new-features/
Perhaps you were thinking of OpenOffice.org, which stalled and then got forked by LibreOffice (because that's what you can do when free software gets stalled)?
"The Document Foundation has been made aware of an unofficial version of LibreOffice on the Windows Store. We are investigating further, but we want to be clear: this is not an official version created by The Document Foundation, so the app's page is misleading. The only official source of the software (which can be downloaded for free, i.e. without any cost for the end user) is LibreOffice website: https://www.libreoffice.org. lso, the money from the Windows Store version is not collected by The Document Foundation."
Tacky. Trying to be greedy and charge money for free software.
> Amazing that they just don't seem to care about fixing this.
"They" is a volunteer-driven, community open source project with very limited resources (compared to the vast size of the userbase). Suggesting "they" don't care is very unfair! The community is working super hard but needs help: https://www.libreoffice.org/community/get-involved/
Most OS projects of this scope have a large corporate sponsor or a source of revenue. Chromium has Google and Firefox has search engine revenue. LibreOffice has none of these. TDF doesn't hire a single programmer and all the bug triaging, regression bisecting is done by volunteers. So if you're looking for a projected to help out, consider them by starting here.
They could really use your help triaging bugs, helping bisect regressions, with documentation, or answering Ask LO questions.
EDIT: they're starting a Bug Hunting Session for 5.2 now here.
I hope the Sifr icon set becomes available generally for Qt/GTK (especially KDE) https://www.libreoffice.org/assets/Uploads/EN-Project_images/4.2NewFeatures/FlatIcons/Screenshotfrom2013-11-1915-33-23.png
Try out Google Docs. http://docs.google.com
You can upload Microsoft formats and edit them online.
Another alternative is to download OpenOffice. It is an open source clone, but that comes with some downsides. Occasionally when moving between openoffice and Microsoft office there will be formatting problems.
Automatic updates would be good, indeed, but it's pretty complex to do properly. It is being worked on, as per this talk from FOSDEM '18: https://archive.fosdem.org/2018/schedule/event/ode_automatic_updater/
Of course, as with all things open source, more help would be very welcome: https://www.libreoffice.org/community/developers/
Note that while Oracle got the brand OpenOffice when they bought Sun Microsystems a very long time ago, they did not do something with it. Almost all the developers went to LibreOffice, which is a lot more up to date.
> OpenOffice.
Or rather OpenOffice's community continuation, LibreOffice (it's pretty much just a rename from when the community broke away from Oracle after Oracle bought Sun).
It can be downloaded here.
Appears to be just a rename/clarification of the LibreOffice packages? You were always trailing behind with LibreOffice, unless you installed libreoffice-fresh. Now it's clear you are doing so with name libreoffice-still.
Edit: it's just alignment with upstream naming. Both versions are stable ;)
Someone had mentioned in that other post that Paypal added 2$ to the account, so you cant close it. However you can donate that 2$ pretty easy.
I just gave mine to Libreoffice:
Try LibreOffice. But I don't recommend their opendocument format for saving and instead prefer .docx format.
I've heard to export your resume in pdf format to ensure prospective employers see the file as you intended (LibreOffice has an Export as pdf option).
You can download Open Office or Libre Office. They're open source versions of Word and several other Microsoft Office products. The two are basically identical, but Libre Office is updated more often and Open Office is now being run by Apache. You'll find people who prefer one over the other (due to the way development is going), but they're both nearly identical. Both will open Word files as well as save documents created in the software as a Word file.
At work we use google workspace. It is a paid service, but gives a lot more space + shared drives. Although I have to say that I work in manufacturing, not in game dev. We use it to share documents, project files like CAD models and stuff.
This is the fifth bugfix release of the 5.2.x branch of LibreOffice which contains new features and program enhancements. As such, the version is stable and is suitable for all users. This version may contain a few annoying bugs which will be fixed in the next bugfix versions to come. Detailed release notes can be accessed from the list below.
> Why does LO have all of the MS Office software equivalents....except for OneNote?
Because... nobody has volunteered to implement one :-) New features don't just appear by magic, and someone has to work on them. As an open source project, LibreOffice's features are implemented either by volunteers who are "scratching their own itches", or by certified developers working on behalf of customers.
If you really want a OneNote equivalent in LibreOffice, get involved and make it happen! Or consider funding a certified developer to work on it. Those are the best ways to make wishes a reality :-)
Much more interesting read about size, memory and speed improvements, lines of code removed and servers load decreased: http://people.gnome.org/~michael/blog/2011-06-03-libreoffice-3-4-0.html
And don't miss last link from original article: https://www.libreoffice.org/download/3-4-new-features-and-fixes/
Have you looked at https://www.libreoffice.org/ ? It has open sourced options to MS office products and some other stuff too. As long as you aren't using really esoteric features, it's essentially fully file compatible. Totally free. No subscription.
Office: Libreoffice (forked from OpenOffice quite a while ago)
Corel Draw: Inkscape, perhaps? (I've never used Corel Draw, but it seems to be vector drawing.)
If you want such a feature, join in and help the volunteers to make it, or consider funding a certified developer to work on it! See here:
https://www.libreoffice.org/get-help/frequently-asked-questions/#features
Yes, you can. You can run the Collabora Online Development Edition in ownCloud, Nextcloud or Pydio and collaboratively edit text documents (docx, doc, odt), spreadsheets (xlsx, xls, ods) or presentations (pptx, ppt, odp). For info on how to do this, check out: https://www.collaboraoffice.com/code
Simple answer: no you don't need to worry.
This is an important reason to think about switching to LibreOffice. It's not just a better choice because it's free. The software freedom philosophy that underpins it is the most important thing- because writing is a human right, and no company should be allowed to be a middle-man to this process.
Libre Office is a popular free program that is compatible with Microsoft Office. It's basically an updated version of Open Office since it's based off Open Office. It doesn't use the ribbon interface though.
The Kingsoft Office website says they support MS Office documents, but I've never used it so can't say how well it works. Since it's free you can test it out to see.
For folks worried about losing MS Office, check out LibreOffice:
It's open source, free of charge, and works under Windows/Mac/Linux.
I personally use it for school so I know it gets the job done.
OpenOffice is an Apache Project. The official homepage links to sourceforge. So yes, that’s where you download the official releases.
However, back in 2010, LibreOffice was created as a fork from OpenOffice. A lot of the community and developers moved to LibreOffice, which many consider to be the successor of OpenOffice.
So unless there is a specific reason to use OpenOffice, you should download LibreOffice IMHO.
https://www.libreoffice.org/get-help/system-requirements/
> For certain features of the software - but not most - Java is required. Java is notably required for Base.
Article title is clickbait.
It's only "beyond LibreOffice" in the sense that neither you, nor anyone else, has chosen to implement it. LibreOffice is a volunteer-driven, community open source project, with a small non-profit entity helping to organise it. If you really want a new feature, you can contribute some time back to the community that works so hard: https://www.libreoffice.org/community/get-involved/
Or you could consider funding a certified developer to work on the feature: https://www.documentfoundation.org/gethelp/developers/
That's the only way things will keep moving forward. New features don't happen by magic! Contribute back and we can all benefit :-)
You can use most distros without ever even touching the terminal, it is just faster most of the time. And with the software thing, generally there are alternatives to the software you already use which are sometimes the same or better than the one you use for windows. Libre Office is a good example.
> I usually use open office
Look into using LibreOffice instead, It is a continuation of the same open source code base that was OpenOffice with many of the original developers that used to work on OpenOffice working on LibreOffice instead after the branding for OpenOffice long story short was acquired by a company that doesn't have the best track record for holding the same values as the open source community so the community got together and made LibreOffice. These days OpenOffice is literally years of development time behind and in a far far worse shape then LibreOffice and all the mindshare in the development field is on LibreOffice with OpenOffice sometimes taking over a year to get a fairly simple security fix out that LibreOffice due to being based on the same source also had but they fixed it in a couple of hours.
TL;DR Use LibreOffice instead of OpenOffice. https://www.libreoffice.org/
I love open-source software and I prefer to support it where I can, but in my opinion Open Office is terrible! I think, compatibility wise, it's not too bad but using it is horrible; I was happy that Microsoft got rid of the 1001 "Toolbars to use before you die" interface and replaced it with the neat and tidy ribbon. A lot of FOSS advocates won't admit that but the^Microsoft^UI^is^better...
Also, OpenOffice (whilst nolonger on the brink of extermination) has more or less been depreciated by LibreOffice.
LibreOffice. Because the money is directly paying developers to implement new features https://blog.documentfoundation.org/tenders/ .
It is also an essential part of FOSS. It is something that you can give to a Windows and Mac user to prove that FOSS is a viable alternative to proprietary software.
Writing fiction is free if you already have a computer and/or paper. LibreOffice is a free, fully-featured word processor if you need one. It's as easy as opening a word document and writing something.
There are a lot of guides on finding ideas and stuff, but it boils down to: once you start thinking about stories you start getting ideas. It's just a habit you build.
I would be great to have a healthy OpenOffice project, so its good to see that they are able to actually make releases again.
But currently almost everyone would be better off with LibreOffice.
Instead consider LibreOffice. It's also what most (if not all) Linux distros use nowadays. For all intents and purposes LibreOffice is today what people mean when they say "OpenOffice".
Essentially, LibreOffice is a more-active fork of OpenOffice that happened a bit after Oracle bought Sun did what Oracle does best (piss everyone off and set a raging hellfire to any existing goodwill). The fork was so successful that Oracle folded and handed OpenOffice over to the Apache foundation for hospice care.
It seems that the bug was already reported in February. Basing on information in the bugreport, the regression was fixed in August in the master, but the bugfix wasn't backported to 3.5.x and 3.6.x. So that guy has every right to whine -- it's easier to simply switch to OpenOffice than wait for a year for the bugfix that is critical for your workflow.
My big problem with Word for paperback formatting is that it will move things around for no reason.
So, for that reason, I use LibreOffice which works just like Word should. And it's free!
For page numbering, I put my front matter in its own file with no page numbers and then start a second file with page 1. I could use sections for this but, for some reason, my brain doesn't seem to be able to do so. Two files are easy and I join the PDFs together using a free online tool.
Argh bitte benutzt LibreOffice statt OpenOffice. Bei letzterem ist die Entwicklung quasi komplett eingeschlafen, die Entwickler sind vor Jahren zu LibreOffice gewechselt. LibreOffice ist eine gute Alternative zu MS Office und hat inzwischen fast 100% Kompatibilität zu Word und Excel und auch einigermaßen zu PowerPoint.
Lässt sich hier herunterladen: https://www.libreoffice.org/download/download/
Running actual Microsoft Excel & Word on the Pi is completely impossible. You can however run Libre Office on it, and it's mostly compatible with Microsoft Office.
I'd recommend Linux Mint.
For spreadsheets/documents (i.e. Excel/Word), LibreOffice is a fantastic drop-in replacement. LibreOffice comes installed on Linux Mint by default.
In fact, almost everything you'll need is installed by default on Mint.
Take the plunge... it's worth it! :)
I'd have to substitute notepad for Notepad++. Everything you love about Notepad, but it also has tabs (and auto-save!) and the ability to be a editor for just about any type of file, with syntax helpers for most anything (html, java, C++, etc).
I also have to throw in LibreOffice. Great free software that has most of the capabilities of M$ Office without a whole lot of bloat. I've been using it for years, ever since OpenOffice went a bit stagnant.
EDIT: Fix'd ugly, ugly links.
Office 2007 will be no longer supported in October 2017. When that happens, you'll be forced to update to the new UI which has improved usability, or switch to Libre Office. Not doing so you run the risk of un-patched security vulnerabilities which can be exploited by visiting a web page in any browser^^1 .
^1: ^Regardless ^of ^precaution, ^vulnerabilities ^can ^affect ^anybody.
nope, the code is open source but the brand isn't!
https://www.libreoffice.org/about-us/licenses/
"This License does not grant any rights in the trademarks, service marks, or logos of any Contributor (except as may be necessary to comply with the notice requirements in Section 3.4)."
Very true - colleges even teach MS Office as part of their curriculum and now that I think back to it, the basics they teach can easily be taught on the FREE LibreOffice suite too.
Forget excel, check out OpenOffice. Its free, you can donate, it has Word, Excel, Powerpoint, Paint, all the things for FREE legally. If you use it and you like it please consider a donation. It can open all M$ files too.
If your Mac came with Pages, try to open it in Pages and see if you have better luck there. Also try opening it in TextEdit.
If that doesn't work, it's a long shot, but you might try downloading LibreOffice — a free alternative office suite — and seeing if you can open it using that app.
In all these cases, you may end up seeing a lot of gobbledygook near the top of the document, but if you scroll past that, most of the actual content may be intact.
I guess you haven't been backing up to Time Machine frequently? Thought that was worth mentioning, just in case it had slipped your mind. If this happened to me, I'd probably just restore yesterday's copy. You might try this anyway. Macs sometimes keep hourly backups locally. Try going into Time Machine, and if it's turned on, you may be able to find a version from before the corruption took place.
Check out LibreOffice - if it meets your requirements than the RPI will be fine.
It's not the fastest machine.
You will need also a keyboard, monitor and mouse. You're not scoring something for $35. If you want to buy all brand new you're better suited with a chromebook or a low-end $199 win10 laptop which you can score from any bestbuy
Also, lugging around an RPI, + Monitor + Keyboard + Mouse would be a pain in the ass. Just get $200 or something and score a laptop.
Pages '09 Is going to be 10 years old, so it was inevitable that it would stop working at some point with newer OS's. I personally like the latest version of Pages. True it loses some compatibility with legacy programs, but there's no reason to avoid it just based on that for new documents.
If you don't like the newer, supported version of Pages, you can still use the built-in Text Edit.app to do quick and dirty word processing files that can be saved to Word, RTF or PDF formats. If you need something more advanced, you can try the jack-of-all-trades app Libre Office, but be warned that it is not as tightly integrated with the macOS as Pages will be.
LibreOffice Online is the unsupported development version of Collabora Cloud Suite, and will probably be open core at best (or unsupported dev version forever at worse).
Seafile is open core, and much worse than OwnCloud when it comes to what features need to be paid for.
I would love to have an open source alternative to Google Apps or Office 365, but I cannot see many people jumping on the bandwagon when the base software being used to build the cloud versions is either crippled or requires paying just as much as the paid alternatives.
> but how is the law on downloading software products via direct download sites?
Just the same.
> Or how does one secure copies of software e.g. word processing etc in Germany without having to shell out so much money?
Use free software such as LibreOffice or OpenOffice.
For some reason, nobody seemed to mention this praiseworthy bit yet:
> The Document Foundation has developed a Migration Protocol to support enterprises moving from proprietary office suites to LibreOffice, which is based on the deployment of an LTS version from the LibreOffice Enterprise family, plus migration consultancy and training sourced from certified professionals who offer CIOs and IT managers value-added solutions in line with proprietary offerings. Reference: https://www.libreoffice.org/get-help/professional-support/.
That's a major step for LibreOffice in enterprise, and in turn less MSOffice hegemony.
Gotta be that guy and plug LibreOffice.
Unless you've got some weird edge-case automation or some somesuch coded to specific MSO macros, it does everything MSO will and doesn't require that you be online.
De sitene er vel kjent for å ha mange stjålne keys/keys som er kjøpt for videresalg med stjålne kredittkort.
Om du ikke trenger spesifikke funksjoner i Word, kan du kanskje prøve ~~https://www.openoffice.org/no/~~ https://no.libreoffice.org/
Edit: Endret link til den beste forken.
Use an SSD.
Use distcc to hook it up to 10 64-core Amazon Cloud instances, then run emerge with -j 640.
emerge libreoffice-bin
docker search libreoffice
https://www.libreoffice.org/download/flatpak/
Switch to Debian.
> I got a laptop from my boss to put Outlook and Office on because I'm pretty good with computers.
.. seriously? If the company you're working at is hurting that bad that they have to pirate MS Office then you should really be looking for a new job. Or introduce him/her to LibreOffice.
Also per sidebar rules this isn't the sub to ask for links.. try /r/illegaltorrents.
You can use libreoffice writer to edit a text document and save it as a PDF. It's open source free software.
To see your Netflix viewing history, go to Netflix account settings, choose your profile and then click the link to see your viewing activity.
It also gives you the option to download your viewing history as a CSV file, which you should be able to open in Excel, LibreOffice, Google Sheets, or a text editor.
This is incorrect; if google drive is correctly configured it can and does meet security and audit requirements of most large enterprises, and in fact is better suited for auditing than many other options that enterprises insist on using. This starts with marketing spiel, but I'm sure you can google for the workspaces docs you need to learn more.
If you'd rather input your info manually, have you ever considered excel? You could also use openoffice's calc, which is similar to excel, yet free.
Check out these free excel budget sheets, maybe they suit your need.
I mean I'm not an expert but it doesn't look like GPL from their own licenses page.
>LibreOffice is made available subject to the terms of the Mozilla Public License v2.0 which is reproduced below.
Moreover, this clause below seems to allow reproducing, distributing, selling, etc.
>2.1. Grants >Each Contributor hereby grants You a world-wide, royalty-free, non-exclusive license: >under intellectual property rights (other than patent or trademark) Licensable by such Contributor to use, reproduce, make available, modify, display, perform, distribute, and otherwise exploit its Contributions, either on an unmodified basis, with Modifications, or as part of a Larger Work; and under Patent Claims of such Contributor to make, use, sell, offer for sale, have made, import, and otherwise transfer either its Contributions or its Contributor Version.
https://www.libreoffice.org/about-us/licenses/
I'm sure the experts will chime in to tell me I'm wrong though.
Have you looked at LibreOffice? It is a full suite of programs, just like Microsoft Office is. It is totally free and open source.
Your professor might allow you to use it.
I've used Libre/Open office for just over a decade, I'd say the issues with moving/changing/formatting when opened in MS Office is about the same you have if two people are using different versions of MS Office. Sometimes it just works, sometimes things change for no good reason.
Also keep in mind one of the best things about open source software is the freedom it gives. If you currently have a machine with MS Office installed, then install the latest version and take it for a spin. Make sure it can do what you need, open what you already have, and if you save them as MS office formats, that you can open them in MS Office.
Also I had a similar problem when I was in Uni. My solution was to always include a PDF of the document as I saw it with every submission. Mac and Windows both come with programs that can open PDFs by default, and it is by no means an exotic format. Also for documents graded specifically on formatting I always used LaTeX. I did have an issue with one Prof. in the language department demanding it in MS Office format or he would grade the assignment as a 0. That I had to solve by getting another professor (Who wrote the formatting rubric being used, and also used LaTeX) to speak up on my behalf to resolve. Also anything graded on formatting should be submitted in an immutable format, meaning regardless of how/where it's opened it should look the same.
Academia is partially funded/subsidized by MS, in order to make them believe MS Office is the only solution, when it's usually not even the best solution. By requiring students to use it they are squashing competition, limiting innovation, and teaching students to not question what tools they are using.
Well, it already is the focus of the Design community, who works on it! (There's not much point forcing, say, the infra team to work on UX when they have many other things to do.)
The Design community has worked on the new NotebookBar user interface, run surveys to get feedback from users, has regular calls to work on important topics, and more. See their blog for details
So there already is a big focus on UI/UX. But they can only focus on things that people report, of course. If you have specific user interface changes/improvements in mind, let them know and they can become a reality! 👍
btw. LibreOffice support kostet weit mehr als einmalig 89,-€ und die document foundation will eigl. auch das enterprise's diese lizenzen erwerben anstatt die mailinglisten vollzumüllen.
deshalb gibt es untern "download" auch ein "business users click here" wo man dann auf https://www.libreoffice.org/download/libreoffice-in-business/ kommt.
Use LibreOffice instead of MS Office. It's just as good. Opensource. Free. It totally reads office documents (and the other way around).
I refuse to give Microsoft any more money than I have to. I'm still running Office 2007 from CDs that I install on every new computer I buy. Fuck Microsoft.
> Well you cant avoid Microsoft office suite and Adobe editing suite if you want something professional.
OpenOffice and LibreOffice are widely used by governments around the world.
Adobe pretty much has a monopoly on the image editing field and this is mostly because of the .psd file format which has lots of compatibility issues. Even different adove photoshop versions have issues handling different psd file versions.
You can do everything that photoshop can do in other apps like gimp and krita. The problem is that most people require you to either import or export in the psd file format.
tl;dr: It's not a matter of lacking professional applications. It's a matter of file format monopoly.
You can use Collabora Office. You'll need to add their F-Droid Repo.
Collabora isn't available through the official F-Droid repository. You probably enabled the 3rd party repo from here: https://www.collaboraoffice.com/releases-en/collabora-office-on-mobiles-supporting-password-protected-documents-and-available-on-f-droid/
I guess they simply rebuild the app daily, and that's why you get daily updates. Doesn't mean anything changed, though.
Edit: After taking a closer look you probably installed the "Collabora Office 6.4 Snapshot" instead of "Collabora Office 6.4". The latter only gets updates every few months.
I also recommend using Adveronix, it's a Toolbar Addon for Sheets, which lets you pull data from Google, Facebook and many providers, visually and pretty straightforward.
https://workspace.google.com/marketplace/app/adveronix/523964251627
im not affiliated with them in any way, but its so usefull you'll thank me foreva.
I sometimes need to send texts out to hundreds of people as part of event coordination I work with. Used to take me forever and I'd make mistakes until a few months ago I started using a Google sheets extension that just instantly sends texts to everyone on my list with all of their individual information automatically included. Saves me hours per week honestly.
edit: this is the one. us & canada only it looks like fyi
It's it was saved on onedrive, it saves versions so you may be able to go back to a previous saved file. You might lose a bit of work depending how old the version is.
This might help: https://support.office.com/en-us/article/restore-a-previous-version-of-a-file-in-onedrive-159cad6d-d76e-4981-88ef-de6e96c93893
You can also try downloading Open office and opening the file in that to see if anything comes up.
I would quickly stop using Wordpad to write in. There are lots of free document writing programs that are a thousand times better and don't have the weird bugs Wordpad does.
I couldn't understand that either. Office for Mac 2016 is compatible with OS X 10.10.x for sure. I just checked Open Office out of curiosity and it says 10.10. (Yosemite) quite clearly:
You shouldn't use openoffice. The project is essentially dead. Use libre-office instead.
Assuming you mean https://www.libreoffice.org/ for personal usage, I think their calc module is absolutely adequate. One advantage it has over MS-Excel is you can use regular expressions in searching and replacing. Possible disadvantages:
Open died when Oracle bought it.
The entire dev team quit and made Libre instead - which pretty much instantly became the default Linux office package.
The real alternative is FreeOffice, which is specifically built for MS Office compatibility - whatever that may be worth to you. It's proprietary though, and essentially a demo version of their full, paid suite
Office comes as a subscription or as a volume licence. If you can't afford the subscription Uninstall it and install https://www.libreoffice.org/ or openoffoce
And Thunderbird for email.
All the functions non of the cost
know thy enemy:
"Bill Gates, the Microsoft founder and world’s second-richest man, took 59 flights in 2017 travelling more than 200,000 miles, according to the study by academics at Lund University. The report estimated that Gates’ private jet travel, which he has described as his “guilty pleasure”, emitted about 1,600 tonnes of carbon dioxide. That compares to a global average of less than 5 tonnes per person. Like the Honeywell report, the study suggested that private jet travel emits up to 40 times as much carbon dioxide per passenger as scheduled commercial flights. "
a "guilty pleasure" ?
an average person = 5 tonnes
bill gates and other filthy rich A-holes = 1600 tonnes
5 / 1600 = .0031 or 0.3%
1600 / 5 = 320 times as much as average person
https://www.libreoffice.org is a great FREE alternative to MS Word, Excel, etc.
Not built-in, but you can integrate it elegantly with web clients for email (~~Raindrop~~ Rainloop, etc) and LibeOffice Online. Didn't try the LO integration myself, but you can do so here.
don't look at it as only google voice. put it in an office package in a business context. and that is what google has been doing for some time now. we on the personal-use side get the benefit for free. but use any of the google services in a business, then there is the paid version of Google Workspace aka Google for Business -- that's where google makes money with a comprehensive office cloud business package which includes google voice but for business purposes -- just think office online package of services which of course include phone lines, namely lots of google cloud services being used in the office including google voice lines -- and of course business customers pay for it all with all that
to get some sort idea as to $ numbers, go see: https://workspace.google.com/pricing.html
Wenn OpenOffice aus anderen Quellen als der Offiziellen bezogen wird, sind gerne mal Spy und Adware mit beigelegt. Da können dann die OO-Entwickker auch nichts für.
Jetzt, da das Kind in den Brunnen gefallen ist würde ich empfehlen erstmal die komprommitierte OO-Version zu deinstallieren, diese kann man dann durch die offizielle Distribution oder gleich LibreOffice ersetzen. Dansch würde ich auf jeden Fall noch AdwCleaner drüber laufen lassen und mit einem sauberen Browserprofil weitermachen, wenn ich der Browserinstallation generell nich vertrauen würde.
Just use a free suite like LibreOffice and it does almost everything the average user will ever need. I donated to them as they are brilliant. Mac and PC. https://www.libreoffice.org/ There is another one but it has slipped my mind.
Depends on your goals, really. If you're trying to learn databases for programming, you'll want to get something like sql rather than access. Mysql community edition is free and would be like something you'll use as a programmer often. https://www.mysql.com If you're looking for something like Access, there's libre office Base https://www.libreoffice.org/discover/base/. It's similar but not exactly the same. If you need it to get experience specifically with access you'll need to get a copy of access. If you're in college they should have a license you can use through the school. If not you can get student discounts on it.
Sure! So the original idea was to make sure that contributors are credited in a way that really shows our appreciation. We have this page but it's not very exciting. So we thought we'd spend a month looking into various areas of the project (coding, QA, user support etc.), and give people virtual badges they can use on social media in thanks for their efforts.
This worked OK, but for the next one, we decided to get real, printed stickers. After a Month of LibreOffice, participants can request stickers through the post, showing that they are a "proud contributor". Yes, a sticker isn't the most fancy thing in the world, but people really appreciate having something real and tangible to show for their work, I've found.
And why twice a year? We could do it all year round, but we think it's good to make it a special event. Also, the timing is important – we do the Months of LibreOffice half way between major releases, so it generates some buzz in the community in what may be regarded as a "quieter" time.
Hope that helps!