• @JubilantJaguar
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    -413 hours ago

    Honest question. In the era of collaborative document editing on browser-based platforms, who is using this software and what are they using it for? I work with documents for my job and it’s been literally decades since I used a local standalone word processor.

    • @[email protected]
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      75 hours ago

      I’m using it the same way I’d be using office.

      The collaborative document editing doesn’t apply to me.

    • @[email protected]
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      169 hours ago

      I need local font support far, far more often than I need collaborative editing. Plus, call me old, but I don’t like storing everything on a server in Virginia for Google to read.

    • @[email protected]
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      1812 hours ago

      I’d say it depends on what you do and how much collaboration with other people is involved. I have always used standalone clients, and I’m not a fan anything web browser based (or cloud in general). I started using LibreCalc instead of Excel for my job a few months ago. Now that I got used to it, I love it. It loads faster, has regex out of the box. Excel has already become quite enshittified, in my opinion.

      • CarrotsHaveEars
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        412 hours ago

        What you both said are true. It’s convenient to load a site and perform tasks to a degree what native clients can, and it’s also weird how since more than a decade ago we can’t agree on anything and now we are trying to do everything in a web client.

    • SayCyberOnceMore
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      1212 hours ago

      Yeah, mirroring the other comment here -it’s standalone app everytime for me. I’m a bit of a power user, so maybe it’s the extra functionality that just can’t be handled in a browser which already has 20 other tabs open, but live colab is … well, just not used that often.

      Sure, we’ll be tweaking cells in a spreadsheet now & again, but my technical documents are done by one person, then reviewed (comments, track changes, etc) by others for the audit trail.

      And I’m just not going to purchase a Microsoft product again.

      But I will contribute to Open Source… ODF has done great things.

    • @[email protected]
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      9 hours ago

      I almost never use it, but if LibreOffice can come in handy a few times a year, why not at least keep it installed?

      A lot of stuff is indeed browser based, so I probably spend more time in Firefox than in my code editor and terminal.

      But LibreOffice is welcome to live on 0.1% of my disk space!

      • @[email protected]
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        26 hours ago

        Onlyoffice by default comes as standalone local application suite and is not based on LibreOffice. It looks more modern/intuitive, but is less powerfull and feature rich than LibreOffice.

  • @Maroon
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    121 hours ago

    deleted by creator

    • @shortdorkyasian
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      20 hours ago

      Not immediately up-to-date at all times, but I use backports. Looks like they’re only a point release behind still. https://packages.debian.org/bookworm-backports/libreoffice

      The only time it gets behind by a full version is if Debian Stable is really long in the tooth and Backports can’t compile something due to a compiler or library being really old or if Backports hasn’t been created yet because Stable is young.