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View Full Version : I'm trying Open Office IT'S FFREE



ROA44
21-10-2014, 5:53pm
After getting my new system up and running awhile ago I loaded Office 2000 on but due to DOCX, and not wanting to by 3 new versions of MSO$'s
I thought I'd try Yes Open Office. My only concerns were if some spread sheets I had been working on were going to transfer over successfully on to an organizations system I help out with at times. But they did so my wife is quite happy and is slowly working her way around it all be it slowly as she uses 13 at work. Which also means more money for camera gear. :). So if your low on $'s and wanting some new Office software give it a go IT'S FREE.

PS. You Don't have to buy a copy off Ebay.

ameerat42
21-10-2014, 5:54pm
Yep! G:D:Dd on yer. Been using it for years, also for the DOCx reason, but simply for portability.

ROA44
21-10-2014, 6:24pm
Had Tried it a long time ago but never really needed or did much with Office but am doing a bit more now so was pleased to find it so interactive with Office.

farmmax
21-10-2014, 11:35pm
Some government departments use Open Office. It is a very good substitute for Office. I use Open Office on the laptop. It is surprising how many people don't know about Open Office, so it is good you have reminded us.

Bax
22-10-2014, 1:23pm
What's the drama with docx?

I'm using open office also, again because of price. I did buy Office many many moons ago and lost track of the serial, Microsoft wasn't able to help me out so I vowed to never go back to them then.

ameerat42
22-10-2014, 2:34pm
The old MS Office I have does not open them. That's my :Ddrama:(.

Bax
22-10-2014, 2:53pm
You should be able to get a update that fixes that.

We had the same problem at work until they updated.

Having said that though, open office still wins out.

tduell
22-10-2014, 3:14pm
OpenOffice is a pretty good alternative to MS Office. I think LibreOffice (a fork of OpenOffice) is better.


Cheers,

Terry

ROA44
22-10-2014, 8:46pm
My issue with DOCX was that I would have to waste time trying to find the right download and try to get it up and running. So I thought instead of worrying about it I would give O/Office ago.
I also have gained a couple of relatively new laptops plus an older unit which I reloaded with Win7, without Office on them, so would have cost me nearly $500's free's good enough for me. I don't need all the stuff that MS has in it that a lot of people don't use anyway and I don't want Cloud.

It all comes back to $'s that I don't have so if by mentioning this, saves some one else on the site some $'s then I'm only to pleased to assist.

Regarding LibreOffice first time I've heard of it so will have to ask my IT son in-law about it as well.so thanks for your thoughts and great to hear others are happy with it.

Cheers for now.

ameerat42
22-10-2014, 8:48pm
:th3::D

jev
22-10-2014, 9:09pm
I'm using LibreOffice, not that different from OpenOffice if you ask me. Except for one thing: font embedding. LibreOffice has it, OpenOffice doesn't.

Note that both are not perfect in handling .docx documents. Where they thoroughly lack however is in their presentation tools (and, to a lesser extend, in their spreadsheet functionality).

MrQ
22-10-2014, 10:30pm
I've been using Libre Office on my Mac 'cos I can't stand the included Pages and didn't want to buy another copy of Word. I chose Libre Office over Open Office (they are both based on the same code) because of the way the licensing works - basically any features added to Open Office can be grabbed by the Libre Office developers and added to their software, but not the other way around. They are both good options though and you can't beat the price. :)

wasnapper
27-10-2014, 1:12pm
I use open office on the desktop and have no issues with it at all. I also use MS office 2003 on my laptop and found a compatibility pack on the MS site that enables opening and editing of files created in newer versions of office