
If a friend or colleague asks you to recommend an office suite,
your first thought is likely to be Office for PC or iWork for Mac. But
both don't come cheap, which can make it a prohibitive cost for an
individual or small business. The need to run Office for compatibility's
sake is no longer as compelling as it was either, with a raft of free
alternatives all capable of opening even the latest Office document
formats with few problems.
Of those free alternatives, the granddaddy is OpenOffice, the first
serious rival to Microsoft Office. Despite losing its way of late -
leading to rival LibreOffice taking the lead, OpenOffice is now firmly back on track and making waves of its own.
For those uninterested in such rivalry, the key thing to note is that
OpenOffice will write and open most Office formats, while its
cross-platform nature means you can use it across Windows, Mac and Linux
without having to learn a whole new way of doing things. That compares
favourably to the Mac and Windows versions of Office, which are very
different beasts, making it hard to become experts across both.
OpenOffice ships with a document writer, a spreadsheet, a
presentation maker and many other modules. Everything you need to run
your business. OpenOffice also saves your documents in the open document
format (ODF) meaning that they can be opened within other office
suites, even Office itself.
Version 4.1.6 comes with the following changes (see changelog for more):
- Bug Fixes
- Update for the English dictionaries
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