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#20
Free trials of office.. haha, people would keep installing them over and over like they do Adobe products :P
Free trials of office.. haha, people would keep installing them over and over like they do Adobe products :P
You guys need to differentiate between business application and personal uses. I believe that this video makes a good point in business perspective, in that; consistency is the key to efficiency and by standardizing your apps you can achieve a more efficient working environment.
I see, and that would be Word's fault without a doubt and not a problem with your system.used Word for awhile IT ATE THE CPU
If you say so, then it must be true for everyone.
The difference between free or open source and proprietary applications is mainly that in proprietary applications there are several layers of anticopy protection code that has to be processed with every operation in order to use proprietary software, which makes it inherently inefficient. There is absolutely nothing wrong with open source software except that microsoft and other for-profit software devlopers don't like it because they can't make any money off of it. Windows automatically blocks anything open source or unsigned because most developers of open source apps are not going to pay for a signed certificate from a company that is usually owned by another software corporation, not because there is anything wrong with the software.
As to the way microsoft is campaigning against Open Office.. that's nothing more than a typical microsoft response to anything they see as serious competition. If it wasn't a real threat to them, they wouldn't bother.
I use office because 1) It looks cool installed on my system, 2) I had the money to buy it, 3) It's better than OpenOffice, hands down, and 4) I'd rather use something that's more reliable than opensource.
I have used Open Office Portable on my Windows 7 PC to minimize component installment or new registry entries that would otherwise be orphaned if I remove the Open Office Portable suite. It was so buggy and it was very prone to crashes so I removed it after some time but I still have in on my USB. MS Office is admittedly better in my view, especially upon the arrival of MS Office 2010. I use only Wordpad and Paint on Windows 7 but I use Open Office on my Linuxes. Well, I'll be fair and state my verdict:
I shouldnt be making videoes like that if I were Micro$oft. People nowadays are wise enough to weigh the pros and cons of Open Office over MS Office and vice versa. We know its about business tactic, right??
Their video does have some strong points but on the other hand, it will do too little to make individual people switch to MS Office and buy their expensive suite and it will only cause rage among diehard Linux, Open Office and open source fanboys.
And it only makes people like us think that Micro$oft is getting a little worried about Open Office and the open source movement.
I have MS Ofice 07 and have recieved documents via email that were created in OO and I can't open them. I thought these were supposed to be compatible. I know on MSO 2003 I could open a OO document. I guess MS wants to make it difficult.