|
I remember when PC-XT was introduced. They had a hard disk.
Unbelievable! Nobody had thought of it before, only "floppy" floppies. There's
a reason they were called so. Anyway, coming back to the XT, 640kB RAM was the
norm and if you could afford it, you had 1MB. DOS (we had two kinds, MS-DOS and
PC-DOS) was the only OS and it came in floppies. If your floppy went bad, you
were out of luck. Copy protection was the bread and butter of many people and
simple boot viruses were rampant.
|
Intellectual property has
the shelf life of a banana.- Bill Gates
|
Cut to 18 years later... 1GB, that's 1000MB, is insufficient memory and
hard disks are getting smaller in size but larger in capacity. Funnily enough,
most users use the computers (XT or the current multi-core PCs) for the exact
same applications as before. Office applications. Bill Gates is a visionary and
an opportunist. And I envy him, just like millions of others. Not for his
money, but for his killer instinct.
Office applications are the predominant reason computers are purchased
today, just as it was a decade ago. Internet and email come a close second. I
am not talking about the people in glass and aluminum buildings staring into
the computer screens all day long. The people I refer to are those who need to
focus on their business and customers, to whom IT is just another productivity
process. The computer is truly a tool for such people. And the office suite is
the reason they consider it a tool.
I am building up to all this and show how important an office suite is
to us today and the de facto application used is Microsoft Office. Pirated or
otherwise at
USD 324.97 on Amazon, it is still too expensive for many of us.
At this price, it will not be affordable for many of the "real life"
people I mentioned earlier. Instead, they might choose to use pirated copies of
the expensive office suite. What they don't know can hurt them. Pirated copies
can lead to some really heavy fines these days. They don't know that they have
a free alternative to the office suite that is better if not as good as
Microsoft Office.
OpenOffice.org is among the most popular open source alternative to MS
Office. Officially adopted by Sun Microsystems, but maintaining the Open Source
nature, it packs a heavy punch. There are a lot of internet sites that give you
a very good comparison between the two applications such as
http://www.techsoup.org/learningcenter/software/page4765.cfm . This article
will become too long if I launch a feature by feature comparison. Here are some
pointers to get you started in your search as you wade through the scores of
websites on this.
OOo is so popular that many organizations, large ones at that, use it
exclusively. There are dozens of websites that provide tips and tricks, most of
them are listed on the OOo website. They even developed a standard that
competes with Microsoft's standard for ISO certification.
Some facts
* OOo (OpenOffice.org) can handle
all MS Office file formats. It can seamlessly read documents, spreadsheets and
presentations. There are some limitations, one of them is that your pivot
tables in Excel will not import well. But, in my opinion, that should'nt be a
big hindrance for most of us.
* OOo will always be free. Free as
in Free Beer and also as in Free Speech. Updates to OOo will also be free. It
uses Open Standards, nothing proprietary, thereby lending itself to free
interchangeability with other applications that use the same standards.
* OOo is available as a portable
application. If you have ever had a dream of carrying your own office suite in
a thumb drive, complete with your own data, this is it.
* OOo might be a little slower
opening some complex MS Office documents, but these days a second or two hardly
matters with the ultra fast, multi-core CPUs.
* OOo files are smaller in size,
not that it matters these days, but it is a fact and I am stating facts. :)
* OOo will not feel like a totally
new system to MS Office users. There will be some differences, but you
encounter such differences moving from one version to another anyway.
* Support is a different ballgame
altogether. Microsoft provides support for MS Office. And you will find tons of
books, online material and forums for support. If you can afford to pay for the
software, support or books, you might not be interested in this article
anyways. OOo now has a similar support structure including books and paid
support. But then, there are tons of free support resources that you don't have
to pay for it, really. Just look at http://support.openoffice.org and you will
be pleasantly surprised.
* OOo has a
feature that Microsoft did not consider important. Creating pdf files directly
from within the suite. Any application in the OOo suite can create pdf at the
press of a button.
So what are you waiting for now? Go to http://www.openoffice.org and try
it out.
Next time: Importance
of back office applications.
Venkat Mangudi is an Open Source Evangelist and
Strategy Consultant based in Bangalore.
After having worked across Europe, Asia and the US, Venkat returned home to set up
a consulting firm called quite unimaginatively, Venkat Mangudi Consulting (www.venkatmangudi.com).
He can be reached at
This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it
Issue BG85 Apr 08
Related Items:
And then there was “Free”dom...
Change is constant
Doing, doing... Done!
IBM Joins Openoffice.Org Community
Of Malls and Flea Markets...
Only registered users can write comments. Please login or register. AkoComment © Copyright 2004 by Arthur Konze - www.mamboportal.com All right reserved |