Date: Thu, 04 Oct 2007 18:09:03 -0700 From: Frank Jahnke <jahnke@sonatabio.com> To: aryeh.friedman@gmail.com Cc: freebsd-questions@freebsd.org Subject: Re: good replacement for open office Message-ID: <1191546543.61533.202.camel@pinot.fmjassoc.com>
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> what would be a good replacement(s) for most of it's functionality > (word processing and spreadsheets are what matter to me) You really have to decide what you want to suite to do. Otherwise, your problem is underspecified. 1) Collaboration (complex). If you collaborate with colleagues who use Word (for example) then practically you have to use Word if you deal with complex documents. By "collaborate" I mean exchanging documents back and forth, with edits in each pass. Mine are always heavy in equations and chemistry. Run it in a virtual machine (VMware, Win4BSD, qemu/kqemu) on XP, W2K or 98SE. You probably don't need the latest and greatest version of Word unless you colleagues are very sophisticated. Word 2000 has been fine for me. 2) Document creation. If you only want to create documents, and Office compatibility is not that important, then there are many options: Abiword/Gnumeric are quite good if you want WYSIWYG (but do install all the extensions), the formatters TeX and groff are exceptionally powerful if you learn them well. Abiword does not read Word files well; Gnumeric has many short-comings in reading Excel (particularly for graphics) but is very good otherwise. Personally I use the groff family for all my complex documents, but I have used it for 25 years and know it inside and out. (Well, it was troff and friends long ago.) 3) Read-only. You can use Antiword to get the raw text, but you lose all formatting. It is a pretty lousy choice in my opinion. Textmaker/Planmaker do a very good job for this. 4) Mixture. If you have a general mixture of these tasks and don't want to set up a VM, use Textmaker. The programs are quite good, they are quite compatible with Office (but choke on obscure files I use regularly, as does OO.o and all the others), and much better than OO.o and Aibword/Gnumeric in my opinion if you like Word. They are also quite inexpensive -- you can often find them for $20 or so on sale from the publisher. Personally, I use groff (with chem, grap, pic, refer, tbl and eqn for all the heavy text formatting), VMware/XP/Office 2003, Win4BSD/W2k/Office 2000, Textmaker/Planmaker, OO.o, Abiword/Gnumeric, and Windows computers. What I use depends on what I am doing. Good luck! Frank
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