12-25-2010, 04:00 PM
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#1
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Gator Country Silver
Join Date: Apr 2007
Posts: 13,485
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OpenOffice
Any reviews on OpenOffice by Oracle? I have read some reviews on CNET and no one has anything really bad to say about it.
Replacing the 6-year-old Dimension. I got an Acer tower that is really sweet, 4GB/640GB, 7200rpm, 3Ghz, Pentium chip set, wireless card installed, free delivery, $349 plus $23 tax from Office Max. Arrived in two days. That would be $600-$700 from Dell plus shipping, tax etc. The _ell with Dell.
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12-25-2010, 05:16 PM
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#2
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Mostly Harmless
Join Date: Apr 2007
Location: Tampa
Posts: 3,300
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It has been several years since I used it so I am sure things have improved. I found it to be a decent set of tools for light weight word processing and spreadsheet work. I found a number of Office features, especially from Excel that were lacking or inferior so I didn’t stick with it.
OpenOffice seems a decent set of tools unless you really use some of the advanced features of Microsoft Office. Clearly, the biggest advantage is saving the cost so it’s certainly worth your trying.
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12-25-2010, 05:58 PM
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#3
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Gator Country Silver
Join Date: May 2007
Location: Wherever I am I doing fine. I am here for a good not a long time.
Posts: 12,559
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I use it now and it works great for all my personal needs. However, those are very light. Excel offers more than the spreadsheet program but it still works fine for me to use on some personal finance stuff I track. The writer does exactly what I need it to.
Since I also have a work laptop if I ever need microsoft features I can just jump to that computer but for personal use I dont see the need to spend the money.
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12-25-2010, 06:08 PM
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#4
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Premium Member
Join Date: Mar 2008
Posts: 2,767
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I have never before heard of "Oracle Open Office" Apparently these schmucks are selling a rebranded version of the free openoffice?
OpenOffice has been good to me though.
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12-25-2010, 06:11 PM
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#5
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Administrator
Join Date: Apr 2007
Location: Green Cove Springs
Posts: 14,940
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Oracle got OpenOffice when they bought Sun computers.
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12-25-2010, 06:20 PM
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#6
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Gator Country Silver
Join Date: May 2007
Location: Wherever I am I doing fine. I am here for a good not a long time.
Posts: 12,559
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Still free at www.openoffice.org.
You might even miss that its oracle since there name doesnt even appear until the bottom of the page.
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12-25-2010, 06:28 PM
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#7
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Premium Member
Join Date: Mar 2008
Posts: 2,767
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OpenOffice is still free @ OpenOffice.org...
I don't think I'd pay for whatever Oracle has going on.
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12-27-2010, 08:13 PM
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#8
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Heisman Candidate
Join Date: Apr 2007
Location: Gainesville
Posts: 3,387
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I've used it for a couple years, and love it. I'm using one of the forks (for lack of a better term) called LibreOffice.
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12-28-2010, 06:27 AM
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#9
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Gator Country Silver
Join Date: Jun 2010
Posts: 10,013
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Yep,
I just got a new laptop for xmas and am going to download it soon. Don't want pay for any Microsoft product since it's so expensive.
I used OpenOffice back in 2004(?) and at first thought it sucked, but I've used it occasionally since then and haven't had many problems. For basic stuff, it should be fine.
The good thing is that does the basics and more importantly it's FREE!
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01-04-2011, 01:23 PM
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#10
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Gator Country Silver
Join Date: Jun 2010
Posts: 10,013
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Could someone explain why the new OpenOffice won't save the text document files into .doc Word files? I mean you can, but there's an error message indicating a possible format change.
I know they're their own extension (.odt) but it can't save properly without an error message warning you of the format changes, etc.
BTW, i like the program and don't have any real issues but it takes some getting used to.
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01-07-2011, 08:33 PM
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#11
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Heisman Candidate
Join Date: Apr 2007
Location: Gainesville
Posts: 3,387
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The Microsoft DOC format is a "closed" format. Meaning, they invented it but won't share the full specs/makeup with anyone else.
There are several word processing programs (OpenOffice being one of them) that can save in DOC format, but they had to reverse-engineer it to figure it out. Without the full specs from Microsoft, they can't recreate the DOC format 100%.
OpenOffice (and LibreOffice and all "sister" programs) are great because they are open source programs. Even the native OpenOffice document format (ODT) is "open," meaning they publish the full specs so anyone can use it.
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12-12-2011, 05:35 AM
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#12
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Redshirt Freshman
Join Date: Apr 2007
Posts: 205
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Works great!
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12-12-2011, 08:28 AM
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#13
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Gator Country Diamond
Join Date: Apr 2007
Posts: 47,063
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Fine for lightweight stuff, won't cut it if you're an advanced user of Excel/Access/etc. My dad says even the word proc stuff doesn't cut it for him since he does a lot of visual / print layout work within word.
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