@cm0002 to Linux GamingEnglish • 1 day agoMicrosoft should be terrified of SteamOSwww.pcworld.commessage-square214arrow-up1348arrow-down116cross-posted to: [email protected][email protected][email protected]
arrow-up1332arrow-down1external-linkMicrosoft should be terrified of SteamOSwww.pcworld.com@cm0002 to Linux GamingEnglish • 1 day agomessage-square214cross-posted to: [email protected][email protected][email protected]
minus-square@jj4211linkEnglish5•1 day agoSadly, LibreOffice isn’t up to the task. However, more and more this stuff is done in browser anyway.
minus-square@jj4211linkEnglish2•1 day agoBasically when I open up an MSOffice file, if there’s anything vaguely complicated it will not look like the way the office user intended.
minus-square@[email protected]linkfedilinkEnglish3•1 day agoBeing done in the browser means it’s being done in the cloud which I’m personally not okay with. LibreOffice works well enough for my use.
minus-square@jj4211linkEnglish4•1 day agoYeah, but the O365 crowd is pretty much 99% tied to the cloud anyway they slice it (MS really wants you to work exclusively in OneDrive). LibreOffice may be able to handle it’s own documents fine, but interoperate with an MS Office user and it frequently is unable to be consistent.
Sadly, LibreOffice isn’t up to the task.
However, more and more this stuff is done in browser anyway.
What does libreoffice not do? And what about onlyoffice?
Basically when I open up an MSOffice file, if there’s anything vaguely complicated it will not look like the way the office user intended.
Being done in the browser means it’s being done in the cloud which I’m personally not okay with. LibreOffice works well enough for my use.
Yeah, but the O365 crowd is pretty much 99% tied to the cloud anyway they slice it (MS really wants you to work exclusively in OneDrive).
LibreOffice may be able to handle it’s own documents fine, but interoperate with an MS Office user and it frequently is unable to be consistent.