Throughout the three years, I primarily used Google Suites (Docs, Slides, and Spreadsheet) as my main Office Suite to get things done ( with the occasional use of Microsoft Office on University computers, and thus, have not lost touch towards what it is actually like to use office). Of course, Ubuntu is not an “error-free” piece of OS, but, relative towards Windows 10, the OS is by far quicker, more stable, and in some ways, more intuitive to use. With this, using Ubuntu as my daily driver for three years has been fruitful, and apps such as spotify, Firefox, Google Chrome and others that you find on Windows 10 are also readily available on Ubuntu. Below is a snapshot of the latest Ubuntu 20.04 ( For those who know what Linux OS’s and Desktop environments are, I no longer use GNOME given that it can be unstable from time to time and have migrated towards Kubuntu with KDE Plasma installed, although Ubuntu does have some elements of “bugginess and instability”, by far, it is more stable than Windows 10 in many ways) Ubuntu 16.04 LTS is an open and free operating system supported, developed, and distributed by Canonical. This lead to the demise of Windows on my brand new HP Envy during my final year of university, where I installed Ubuntu 16.04 LTS (while backing up all my documents and files). Sometime back in 2017, I was absolutely frustrated with Microsoft Office and Windows 10 is “bugginess”, slow, and just simply frustrating end performance. Firstly, what is LibreOffice? How is it like to use (it’s pros and cons)? How is compatibility like with other office suites? And Lastly, who, if anyone, is LibreOffice good for?īefore we dive into this, a little background story is needed on why I personally, use LibreOffice with Google Suites online. This article will answer the following questions. Microsoft Office is, after all, the gold standard of Office Suites, so why on earth would anyone want to use something entirely differently? For others, LibreOffice might be linked with unprofessional, underdeveloped, and lower quality end-product compared to Microsoft Office. MS Office 2013/2016 do not write out the Strict format by default (it has to be selected).In a world where corporate entities predominantly use Microsoft Office, the name LibreOffice may not be in the dictionary of many of these entities. This issue is slated to be addressed in the next revision to ISO/IEC 29500. MS Office 2007 was supposed to be able to read this format (which was to be the same as ECMA-376 1st Edition), but Microsoft broke this. A lengthier analysis by the European Commission can be found here. The answer here indicates how LO handles these various formats. None of these versions are compatible with each other (i.e., are equivalent). ISO/IEC 29500 Strict / ECMA-376 2nd Edition (read only by MS Office 2010 read / write by MS Office 2013/2016).ISO/IEC 29500 Transitional (read / write by MS Office 2010/2013/2016 and Mac Office 2011).ECMA-376 1st Edition (read / write by MS Office 2007 read only by MS Office 2010/2013).It is also important to more clearly indicate which version of OOXML the statement “.xlsx and. Only Microsoft “fully” supports these formats. Does LibreOffice fully support Microsoft.
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