
Open Office - What's the Downside? 312
cclangi asks: "I'm a current Microsoft Office user, and I run a small business as a consultant (mining). I've read about Open Office and all the good things about it, but what about the downside? As a small business owner and semi-literate in things computer-ese (as a user, not as a developer or administrator), what support limitations are there for Open Office. I'm particularly interested in/concerned with compatibility of software for reports, spreadsheets and database apps that I might need to send to/receive from clients. As I've said, I've read the good stuff, and 'how easy it is', but what are things I need to be aware of before considering switching completely to Open Office? Comments and experiences would be welcomed." A couple of months ago, OpenOffice advocates had space to sound of on the reasons to switch to OpenOffice. Now, it only seems fair to give the dissenters a place to voice their own reasons. What are the reasons keeping you away from OpenOffice and on your current office suite?
Simple (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Simple (Score:5, Informative)
As much as I don't like M$, when you click a
Oo.o takes upwards of 30 cuz it has to load the Java libraries, etc, displaying the splash screen of doom in the meantime.
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Re:Simple (Score:5, Informative)
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Wrong, wrong, wrong.
Especially if you disable the Microsoft Office entry in the startup folder. With said shortcut disabled, Word is still orders of magnitude faster than java OO to startu
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It's easy to disable java. I never use it and haven't missed it yet. Startup and load times are very reasonable too.
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I desperately want to know how to disable Java and speed up OO, and I bet I'm not alone. Could you please explain or post a pointer to instructions? Thanks.
Speed Up OOo (Score:3, Informative)
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From the article you linked: "...go to Java options and disable them."
That is all it says on the matter. Where are these "Java options"? Do I have to apply them to each OO app seperately? Is there an OO settings utility? What's the deal?
This link is more helpful:
http://www.cyberciti.biz/motd-archive.php/20/how-t o-speed-up-open-office-org/ [cyberciti.biz]
And this older article is most illuminating:
http://software.newsforge.com/article.pl?sid=05/03
It seems a lot of features die if java is
Java runtime? (Score:3, Insightful)
Wait, this is still true? I thought that OO.org hasn't been Java-based since before v1.1.
Actually, APK (Score:4, Informative)
http://about.openoffice.org/index.html [openoffice.org]
The source is written in C++ and delivers language-neutral and scriptable functionality, including Java(TM) APIs.
This means the application has support for including Java routines to do things, much like VBA does for MS Office. Apparently you can remove this functionality to slim the install down and get it to run faster, too, but you don't have to start the Java runtime every time you start the application. The parent poster was incorrect.
Oops! Guess you fucked up again, chuckles!
Give my regards to Osama, you fucking Commie.
Re:Simple (Score:4, Informative)
Also, modifying OpenOffice.org's memory settings also help. A quick search at google turns out:
* http://element14.wordpress.com/2006/11/01/speed-u
* http://ubuntuforums.org/archive/index.php/t-9925.
You can easily go from 30 to 8 seconds of load time.
Peace!
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123. May not work that well on old machines. I have OO.org installed on my 300MHz laptop, but it's very unresponsive compared to Word 2003.
124. Has different notation for advanced functions in Calc than Excel. If you're used to it, however, it's not much of a downer. It also lacks some specialty functions with respect to Excel.
As you can see, there's not much bad to say of OO.org. It's one of those few products that's equivalent to, if not outright superior to, the closed-source counte
Re:Simple (Score:4, Informative)
Then conduct a review, bearing in mind that you will be paying for the M$ version every two years whether you want to or not, and pay for retraining costs as well as data conversion costs.
So swap to open office once or keep getting forced to swap M$ office every two years at a cost of thousands of dollars a time per desktop, especially when you add in M$ free bug testing program, the program they never stops making M$'s customer pay for their ill informed decisions.
There might be bugs in open office but at least your not paying for them. The M$ anti virus program, Onecare (their profits), the only anti-virus software that guarantees not to find viruses, WTF?
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On the issue of compatibility it's also worth noting that any macros in the document will not work in OOo but generally most issues are related to formatting and will not affect content. Also bear in mind that compatibility problems exists between different versions of MS Office as well - if you really care about the formatting and having a document displayed exactly the same on an
macros (Score:4, Informative)
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OpenOffice.org has UNO, which is basically the same thing, and is accessible to both the built-in macro language (a VB-like BASIC dialect) and external scripting languages. Even better, OOo can embed scripting interpreters so that you can write your macros from within OOo in any supported language.
To be fair, the developer documentation for UNO is found in the OOo SDK, and is obviously g
Slow start-up for one... (Score:2, Interesting)
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The App is great once it loads, but because I'm impatient (as well as my bosses, I have 8, did you get the memo?
The sharing features for GDocs are awesome, and it's a quick bookmark click to open up. It's not as smooth as NO once GD is running, but it's great for quick revisions and sharing to whomever else.
A few items.. (Score:5, Informative)
Next, there's just a lack of the robustness one expects with Office. Two quick examples:
A couple days ago I needed to blow out a fax cover sheet. Tried creating a New document and there weren't any templates at all preinstalled.
Nada clip art. If you're into searching, evaluating, downloading and installing as many 3rd party clip art galleries as you can find, you might be alright.
Anyway, I'm really trying to give it a shot, and for most things it is fine. However I keep stubbing my toes on stupid little things along the way, and it is starting to aggravate me.
Dan East
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It is inevitable that one software package will work slightly differently from a competing similar package. Add-ins, extras, templates will be different. What I like about OO is that you can make your own, and then share them with the world. - yes, s
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That was then and this is now.
The
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so you're the guy whose face became a dart board in the cubicles?
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I have never met anyone who didn't know how to use MS Word (or admitted it, at the very least). One thing I have to give MSFT credit for is they made Word pretty damn easy to use. I haven't used the new Office, but I have heard good things. You are comparing Office to a theoretical competitor that never was, which is not fair.
Who cares if Word was hard to use 10 years ago? MSFT Office became a defacto standard because they convinced people
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The one thing that MS did to make Word and Office quite usable (that HARDLY EVER gets implemented) is shared templates. Yes, even in the compa
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Under Windows? Probably everything - your SSN, your documents, your spreadsheets, and anything else on your hard drive ... after all, if its going to work like a real Windows app, you should always be left wondering "Where did my files go today?" Won't someone think of the anti-virus vendors?
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I bet you also did not use styles for formatting too. Try it, prefeably in OOo, but MSword knows the concept too (but chooses to pull out your nails for entertainment instead).
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You wrote a book in word? Man are you masogist or something?
No, he's a "writer". Anyone who writes in a layout program is, well, swatting a fly with bottle of bug spray.
I bet you also did not use styles for formatting too. Try it, prefeably in OOo, but MSword knows the concept too (but chooses to pull out your nails for entertainment instead).
Styles have LONG been the hallmark of good word processing -- and OOo's styles are just as bad as Word's.
The only thing I don't like about Word '07 is how they drank the cool-aid and made styles something fundamentally different from fonts in the UI... although they did give them a nice area all of their own, and added "style-sets" to make the concept work even better.
As to the topic at hand -- an
Line numbering and complex documents (Score:2, Interesting)
Now I like the OO ethos and idea, but I have invested too much time into learning how to get Word to do what I want to throw all that away (why I fear Office Vista).
All day long at work I need to create documents like this:
Section 1: no line numbers, special header/footer
Sections 2-6: line numbers every 5 lines, restarting at each page. And paragraph numbers (I use numbered lists), numbering cont
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"get really tired of people who complain about pagination. If you need your pages to flow exactly in a certain way you need to put page breaks and other controls in there. Someone sometimes is doing to change the font slightly or add a few words. Neither should throw your entire document out of wack and make you redo the whole thing. Page breaks, especially odd and even breaks are there for you.."
These are the same people who randomly push the ENTER key at the right-hand margin rather than let the words
Re:A few items.. (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Clip art in fax cover pages (Score:2)
"Like most so-called Linux evangelists, you're not listening. He wants to use clip art and templates. He wants to do exactly what he does with Word. He wants to use Open Office. If Linux wants to convert people to their OS, then FIX IT!"
The best reason to use OOo - its NOT Word. Its not supposed to be a Word clone any more than WordPerfect was ... its not like t
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Yes they should. If that's what they want to do then the software should be flexible enough to accommodate them.
Now you're just being silly.
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No, people who insist on "100% has to look the exact same including all the bugs" are being silly. Who cares if your 99-page document takes 98 (or 100) pages in OO? The world would be a better place if most people were forced to use a plain-text editor for a while. It would stop people wasting time doing things like adjusting their margins, font sizes, and line spacing so that they hit the
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Yes Word and Excel can be used to create some abominations (happily I have no experience of powerpoint), but if you're a small company you need to be compatible, it's as simple as that.
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You do realize that OO.org has a version that runs on Windows, right? Not everything is about Windows vs. Linux.
I use OO.org every day because I'm sick of paying M$ for a new version of Office that I don't need every couple of years, only because other people are using the
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Out here in the real world any experienced graphic artist will be glad to explain to you the value of a properly placed bit of clip art that calls attention to the contents of the fax, or differentiates between notifications, alerts, and alarms.
Bloated (Score:5, Informative)
formatting on complex documents (Score:4, Informative)
Also, before sending something out to a customer that I've written in OO, I check it on a machine that has Word or Excel or Powerpoint (whatever is appropriate) to ensure the formatting remains the same.
In prior versions, I noticed an issue with tracking changes, but I haven't looked at that recently, so I don't know if it still exists.
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before sending something out to a customer that I've written in OO, I check it on a machine that has Word or Excel or Powerpoint (whatever is appropriate) to ensure the formatting remains the same.
Why bother? Just convert it to PDF or print it to postscript. OO can render to both on any platform other than Windows. For Windows you need to install a generic PS printer driver for PS support. If you're sending documents to customers they generally don't need edit support. PDF allows for markup support
OpenOffice PDF export is a liability (Score:3, Informative)
Unfortunately, there is a rather fundamental bug [openoffice.org] in OpenOffice Writer that means that a large class of professional grade fonts don't get used properly when saving as PDF. This has been well documented for several years, but the OO team show no great interest in fixing it; they laughably classify it as a feature rather than a bug, and it's scheduled for "OOo Later". Meanwhile, the first you know about it is when your carefully crafted report/f
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No, that's a text editor, and you get one or more free with every mainstream OS on the planet.
Word processors -- as defined by the marketing of every major brand currently in existence, from MS Word to OSS tools like AbiWord and OOo Wr
spreadsheets (Score:4, Informative)
On the other hand, openoffice calc, the spreadsheet, has serious problems. It has nowhere near the functionality of excel for doing charts. As I recall, it doesn't have the ability to select arbitrary rows for your dataset. This is a killer for me. Sure, I could use a real plotting package, but that's more work than I want to go to.
I've also heard reports that calc is missing functions that are present in excel. This isn't really a big deal -- mainly because excel doesn't have all that many functions either. But I suppose for an excel "pro" it could be irritating.
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If OOo fails, "OSS is always second-rate"? (Score:2)
Microsoft Word doesn't handle large documents well. I find Gnumeric does many things better than Microsoft Excel. For years I've seen Microsoft Windows users needing to reboot their machines a lot for things I don't think they should have to. In Microsoft Windows 2000, I saw an app running with non-admin privileges crash the O
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Nothing bad I can think of (Score:4, Insightful)
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Apps designed around Office (Score:2)
Good enough for me but (Score:2)
Has this been fixed in the meantime?
Excel and the ribbon (Score:2)
Known issues (Score:5, Informative)
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With regards to the look of OpenOffice.org Impress presentations, they do tend to look quite bad with the default templates. (Maybe including some good-looking ones would be a nice thing to do for the future.)
However, you can download PowerPoint templates from Microsoft's site [microsoft.com] or even the program itself if you have it (even templates designed for PowerPoint 2007 if you use the Microsoft Office 2007 file format converter [microsoft.com] to convert to the older format) and import them into OpenOffice.org, then save them as
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From what I can recall of Word it too did auto completion and had an obscure checkbox to turn it off, similarly obscure to the OOo one. But it's 2.5 years since I used MS
Grammar (Score:2)
OpenOffice Calc (Score:2)
Calc on the other hand is absolutely impossible to use for my job. Anything more than a few hundred rows of data and it becomes literally seconds to do anything, like scroll. I typically work with thousands of rows of data (once per second baby) and tens of thousands isn't unusual. Excel handles this fine. And others have already mentioned how poor the charting is. Finally, The Save
I switched ... (Score:2)
Everything (Score:2)
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Upgrading/Uninstalling (Score:2)
So, I can't use the OO.o uninstaller. Since I can't download OO.o 2.0.x from the official site any more, I now have to find somewhere to download it.
Did I mention that this also prevents me from installing OO.o 2.1.0 because it
I don't get why people ask stuff like this (Score:5, Insightful)
It's not like it costs anything, or you have to uninstall MS Office to install OpenOffice or some other nonsense.
Download it, keep MS Office around for awhile as a backup, and start using OpenOffice. Try using it exclusively for a week, or month, or however long until you feel comfortable that it can do all you need it to do. Them, and only then, should you give MS the boot.
It would be absolutely retarded from a business perspective to proceed any other way - based on anyones advice, no matter how much of an "expert" they claim to be. Just try for yourself - if it fits your needs, great. If it doesn't, you still have MS Office installed, so there is no risk of it hurting your business.
No one knows your business better than you do. Maybe you have special needs OpenOffice can't meet. Maybe you don't. You won't know until you try it out.
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Oh? The time for a user to become familiar with a new interface costs nothing? The time to create new templates for routine reports costs nothing? The time to convert commonly used forms costs nothing?
Not true and you know it (Score:3, Insightful)
You and I and everyone else knows that 99% of what a business uses office for is not time critical tasks. It is opening .doc files attached to emails, commenting on a report, viewing a chart, adding 1-2 cells to a spreadsheet. The amount of time you design some giant new report or huge Excel 10 workbook large spreadsheet is minimal - you do those things maybe once, twice a month.
why calc for statistics? (Score:5, Informative)
I'm curious why so many people are concerned with the ability of calc to do statistics. Is this just a carryover from the MS Windows world where Excel seems to be used for all sorts of things it isn't well suited for? Why not do your stats in R [r-project.org], which is much more powerful than Calc or Excel?
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Statistics and spreadsheet usage are sufficiently different that even if you are familiar with Excel or Calc as spreadsheets, that in itself doesn't yield familiarity with the statistical functions. R is not that different from other programs for doing statistics and scientific graphics, so if people have any sort of background in those areas, they shouldn't need to learn a lot to use R. Are intro stat courses using Excel? I find that hard to believe given the criticism I've heard of Excel from statisticia
My openoffice grievances (Score:2)
Here are my complaints:
1. openoffice won't start, even in this filter mode, unless it has an X display that it's allowed to use. This is retarded since as a filter, it should never even start the GUI. To
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openoffice won't start, even in this filter mode, unless it has an X display that it's allowed to use.
I haven't tried this myself, but there's a dummy X server called Xvfb that comes with the standard X distribution. It accepts client connection but doesn't ever actually display things on a screen. I've read that it gets used a lot for this sort of thing.
(Actually, I just looked at the OO online help. It says that if you run it with the option "-headless", it will start without a display. YMMV, thou
What's Hot and What's Not (Score:3, Informative)
Definately the drawing portionm of open office is a real hot item that MS Office certianly lacks. Ii is like what those old Apple User liked about Appleworks, a nice drawing tool, but better on OOo with snap to object lines that make charting easy. Also lines with auto measurement (you know drawing lines like || ) also nice object Transparency and stuff like that.
The database looks like it is something great too but I haven't used it (shame on me). But as it's cross-platform it puts it light years ahead of Access in my book.
Can convert a lot more then MS can
Document conversion convert over Word Perfect and other files to Word that MS Word can't read.
What's not:
The presentation program is slow (some of the whizes in games dev should go in there and work on the rendering. It is functinally good, but is dog slow when it is presenting.
Not that I use Macros, but some documents (more so spreadsheets than Word documents) contain macros that OOo can't handle. Then again, some of those very documents not even Mac Office 2004 can handle either as the embedded code relies on Active X technologies (and the next version of Mac Office won't have VBA support either).
Font management is a noticeable bottleneck (at least on the Linux version, mac seems to work transparently, probably also in Windows), OOo maintins a seperate Font library, which means if you are installing Linuxc and OOo on a bunch of computers you have to install fonts twice, once in Linux and then again into OOo. (the fonts included are really good - and largely compatible to the MS basics, but I have a lot of ones I like beyond that too).
As for anyhting else I have been very happy, I don't do obsessivley huge spreadhseets and Writer handles styles and sauch in large documents quite fine to my liking. I probably use Writer and Draw the most and those are great apps.
Document Commenting (Score:2)
In Word, when I comment on something, I select the phrase that I want, and insert a new comment. The phrase I've commented on is given a different background color, the ends are
The Base application (Score:2)
Pictures (Score:2)
Surprisingly OO.o cannot copy & paste OLE embedded pictures in Linux as pure bitmaps. So create a Word document with pictures by copy & paste, open the document up in OO.o on Linux and you can see the pictures but you cannot edit them, copy them to edit in GIMP, or paste from GIMP into a Word document. OO.o on Windows doesn't have this restriction as it appears to use the native OLE engine.
The copy & paste restriction is confusing to users as if you are editing a OO.o document you can paste i
Why Don't YOU Tell US? (Score:3, Informative)
For many people (maybe even for you), Open Office is more than good enough for what they do.
For others (maybe even for you), the fact that Open<->MS office translations not being perfect can ruin your day -- but whether or not that's the case, is going to be something that you're gonna have to figure out on your own.
Things that I can suggest (in no particular order):
just more limited (Score:3, Informative)
There, I am a poweruser of MS word and MS powerpoint. Don't get me wrong, these are applications with a lot of flaws but I can get my work done with them despite that. Particularly ms word has a lot of strange bugs, layout problems, etc. But on the other hand it has nice grammar checking and spelling checking features and I know how to work around its more annoying bugs (thanks to years of exposure to them). Word also has nice features for collaborative editing, change reviewing, etc. Overall, it's a very nice word processor that is pretty much unchallenged in terms of features & usability by any other product.
Important for me is the cross reference feature which allows me to refer to sections and references or list items by number. This feature is not properly supported in open office. It has a cross reference insert dialog but it has serious limitations, including the inability to actually list numbered paragraphs and insert a cross reference to one in the document. The number of things you can actually reference is very limited (outline numbered stuff and figure captions) and also the way to configure how to reference is very limited. I've filed the bug before 1.0 and verified that it wasn't fixed for 1.1, 2.0, 2.1 and is currently being considered for 3.0. Basically, the ooo developers agree with me that the current dialog is too limited and also a usability nightmare.
The lack of this feature guarantees I will never use it for any serious writing and is also the single reason I wrote my Ph. D. thesis in framemaker instead of open office (word being just to unstable for such a long, structured document). I can live with the many other limitations but not the lack of cross references. Framemaker is a very lousy wordprocessor of course but great for working with long structured documents like a Ph D thesis with hundreds of cross references to images, tables, (sub) sections, figures, pages etc. Sadly it never really recovered from being bought by Adobe and recent versions did not really improve it much over version 5.x.
I could have used latex of course but I consider the whole concept of compiling & debugging a text just wrong + interoperability with everything else just sucks big time (and no pdf is not interoperable since it is basically a read only format).
My ideal word processor has yet to be invented. It would probably be a mix of the rigid structure provided by framemaker along with its flexibility for formatting and ms word's human friendly approach to actually inputting the text. I can't really think of anything that open office does well in this context except perhaps its drawing tools.
MS Word doesn't work for me, either (Score:3, Interesting)
I have some problems with Open Office(.org) ("OOO") that appear to be the same problems that I have had with Microsoft Word. (Word 97 versus Word Perfect Version 7 and Word Perfect 8; I've never upgraded because WP8 works fine for everything I'm doing). I've gotten full (non-upgrade) copies of Word Perfect 8 - at retail, off the shelf - for as low as $15.00, and in one case I purchased a second copy for $39.00 because it was the Professional version and included the Paradox database, so it was worth trying. I think when I first bought Word Perfect 8 it was around $100; I forget what I paid for WP7. I've been a heavy user of Word Perfect for over 20 years, going back to DOS version 4.1, simply because I have yet to have a formatting feature in Word Perfect I wanted that I couldn't get it to do.
I have often had problems with both Microsoft Word and OOO to do formatting that I want to work the way I want to. I have sometimes exported files from Word Perfect using RTF (Rich Text Format) and found that Word will damage the formatting when trying to import the file. (I think I did that because it wouldn't import .WPD files correctly or something, so I think that's when I tried RTF.)
I'm not a word processing bigot, I'd use Microsoft Word - or possibly something else - if it worked as good or better than Word Perfect. In fact, one time when Word imported one of the books I'm writing, it mangled the format of the header, and I liked the way it changed it better. I could not figure out how it had done it or how to duplicate it, but I went into Word Perfect, clicked on help, and looked it up, and in about 30 seconds I duplicated the functionality that Microsoft Word gave me by accident, which if I hadn't liked it, would have been an error.
I'll give you an example of one thing I can do in Word Perfect that I can't do in Microsoft Word. Changing headers on new chapters. I have a book (actually it's the second one I'm writing), it's over 500 pages, and one of the features of the formatting is that the left (even page) header has my name and the name of the book, and the right (odd page) header has the name of the chapter. The left header stays the same, the right one changes at the beginning of the chapter.
Now, in some rare cases there is a chapter that is only one page long, and is on a left page, so that's not an issue. It's when a chapter is at least two pages, the chapter header should change to the name of the new chapter. When I view the file after it's been converted to Microsoft Word / RTF format, sometimes the chapter header doesn't change or it changes in strange ways. And this misbehavior seems to resurface in OOO, too.
Come to think of it, I have a resume I do in Word Perfect that also gets mangled because of header or footer problems in Word/OOO
Also, I don't see - or I'm not sure - how to 'view codes' in Microsoft Word (or OOO) which I can see the internal formatting of a document and know what the program is doing (and even delete some codes, such as if I have an area that is incorrectly italic or bold).
Maybe I'll try copying the file over again and see how it looks, or I could try examining OOO's XML output and see what I get. One thing I do like with OOO is the PDF output feature, I'd like to be able to use it. Plus OOO's scripting is in Basic rather than the relatively esoteric Perfect Script, which the only other program I've seen that uses it is Novell's Groupwise e-mail program.
Another poster here mentioned submitting a bug report, and I think I'll do that (I hadn't thought of it). Of course, it might be that the behavior is wrong in Word, in which case it might not be considered a bug!
My Blog [paul-robinson.us]The worst downside: OOo has no future. (Score:3, Interesting)
If we encourage migration to an office suite, we cannot get away from lock-in. It should be the sort of thing we will not be switching away from in four years when it's clearly not the best office suite. And nobody who's looked at the issue can seriously think that OOo is going to make any dramatic progress in the next four years. It's a mess of spaghetti code, and the whole monstrosity is held together with duct tape and bailing wire. It may work OK now, but modernizing it for the needs of even the near future is not something that anyone can do.
Consider even the issue of startup times: Even Microsoft streamlined the code for fast startup in Office 97. For OOo this would be hopeless. It is hopeless. And it will remain hopeless. This is not the sort of ship we should board.
We'd be much wiser to jump onto something with a future, even if in the present, it is missing one or two features we might like. I personally am rooting for the KDE4 version of KOffice, since it will be so damn portable, progress is incredibly fast (even with a small staff of coders), and the code and plugin system is incredibly clean and future-proof.
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How so? NeoOffice works quite well for me, a lot better in fact than the included Microsoft Office 2004 demo, which seems to run in emulation mode on my Intel Mac Mini (don't tell me it runs in native mode, if that's the case MS should really be ashamed about the speed..)
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Ah, the memories. I spent a day at Reuters once, installing Excel on their NCR-PC8s (286). Excel came with a runtime version of Windows 2.1, because no one actually had it installed. Excel was the ONLY reason to use Wi
Use NeoOffice (Score:5, Informative)
Disclaimer: I am a founder of NeoOffice.org
Due to politics, OpenOffice.org has exorcised all reference that a perfectly functional, native, and Aqua port of OpenOffice.org exists for the Macintosh. It is called NeoOffice [neooffice.org]. If you want to use only software named "OpenOffice" on your Mac, yes, you have few options, but if you like GPL software go check out the real deal.
NeoOffice 2.1 is scheduled for release on March 27th. Not only do we continue to push forward with being the only truly native fully released Aqua-enabled office application suite for Mac OS X, there are several features included that aren't even in OOo on Linux, including:
NeoOffice is a GPL project and incorporates the best everyone has to offer to create the best product we can for our users.
OpenOffice.org is a political machine and to meet its own political goals is willing to restrict its users from compatibility requirements like OpenXML and VBA compatibility, not to mention failing to let users know other open source projects exist and are ready now, unlike their Macintosh vaporware. Their own users are hurt by their own desires for personal and political gain.
NeoOffice is free from all corporate influence, is truly GPL free software, and will always be so. If the lack of Mac support is your only reason preventing you from deploying OOo or its derivatives, it's sad that you didn't take the simple time to run a google search and just assumed the information the OOo website was all the larger OOo community has to offer.
ed
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The other reason that I am not crazy about Neooffice is that every time the discuss
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The easy solution is to not do what you're talking about doing. There isn't a good reason to ha
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The main computer at my workplace is a PowerMac G5 configured by my employer with MS Office. I use NeoOffice 2.1 on it instead. Seems pretty darn usable to me.
In fact, I also have an old beige PowerMac G3 tucked away in the storage room where I often take lunch breaks (so I can work on a story I'm writing, without interruptions). The new version of NeoOffice is pretty sluggish on that machine, to the p
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Unfortunately, now I have to get by with a copy of ThinkFree Office and use it's crummy Excel clone. At least it's cheap.
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However, your point about missing a spreadsheet app is notable. I have an occasional need to view and/or edit a spreadsheet. In fact, I use one each month to handle my bills and so forth. It's si
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I personally do everything in plain text, so you can all fsck off!
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Comment removed (Score:4, Insightful)
Burdened with macros (Score:2)