Microsoft Corp. is fighting for its life on the desktop and it is not where you think.
Windows remains important and the release, maybe even this fall, of Windows 7 is critically important. But what is more important is the continuation of Office, the hugely popular collection of office tools like word-processing, spreadsheet and presentation software.
Microsoft makes a ton of money on Office because it has become the de facto standard for the corporate desktop. Every large company has Office loaded and its employees have all learned how to use it. However, in recent years and with the decline of the world economy, more companies have been looking for ways to cut their IT costs. (And consumers have been, too.)
And so more are turning to free IT solutions, one of which is OpenOffice, the hugely successful suite of productivity tools that is offered for free in direct competition to Microsoft Office. As the name would imply, OpenOffice is "open source" software, meaning it is developed by developers that have donated their collective skills to the public good.
Already the software has been downloaded more than 50 million times and installed many times more than that all over the world on all kinds of computers. Part of that is the price (free) that makes it compelling for consumers, universities and businesses looking to cut costs. But part of the appeal of OpenOffice is the overall quality. After using the applications for a few weeks on my home computer I don't think most consumers will ever miss the brand-name Office product.
I think the sole exception to that is if you are a hard-core spreadsheet addict. For that, I think you will miss Excel. True, you can download all manner of add-ins for OpenOffice's version (called "Calc") and generally find enough ways to overcome any shortcomings of OpenOffice's spreadsheet, it is kind of a pain.
The presentation application, which is a competitor to PowerPoint, is called Impress. If you have not used PowerPoint a lot you won't notice the difference. If you are a PowerPoint Jedi, you will drive yourself insane (albeit slowly) by the differences. But for typical users there is plenty here and the price cannot be beat.
The database application, called Base, is aimed at Microsoft Access, the scourge of IT departments everywhere. It is interesting and clearly not going to replace Access any time soon but for home database projects it's plenty.
The basic drawing program also included is plenty good for what consumers need.
The real reason Microsoft is facing this challenge is pricing. Many of us expected Microsoft Works, the more basic version of Office, to be given away free by now but that hasn't happened. Instead Microsoft has more aggressively released a Home and Student version of Office for consumers that allows you to use Office at home for less than $100 (without Access).
The Professional version of Office with Access included continues to cost around $380 in a full version, which is about the cost of a basic Windows computer these days, which makes OpenOffice much more compelling.
You can download OpenOffice for free at www.openoffice.org and give it a try and see if it meets your needs.
(James Derk is owner of CyberDads, a computer repair firm and a tech columnist for Scripps Howard News Service. His e-mail address is jim(at)cyberdads.com)
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I think OpenOffice is a
I think OpenOffice is a great alternative, but it does not include a replacement for Outlook. Some reviews suggest that people use Thunderbird, but that is a replacement for Outlook Express, not Outlook. I have never seen a review which suggests an Outlook replacement which will easily synchronize with PDAs and Blackberrys. Do any of you have suggestions?
Open Office
Luckily you can buy the Outlook product separate but Open Office Suite is the best software I've found on this site:
http://www.openofficedownload.info
Don't be fooled by scammers
OpenOffice is FREE, while the site that you have pointed to tries to charge you $29.95.
Download OpenOffice directly from http://www.openoffice.org/ and it will cost you ZERO, none, nada.
Replacing Outlook
There isn't a killer Outlook replacement out there. The best (if you are a full blown IT dept) are the web interfaces offered by Scalix or Zimbra. Luckily you can buy Outlook as a standalone product. It is the built in calendaring, tasks and foldering of all these things that really make Outlook stand apart (and to a lesser degree contacts).
Outlook replacement
I use Zimbra Desktop, and I like it, except that it's still in beta and it seems rather slow.
It doesn't look like anything special, but it works well, and has a calendar, task list, briefcase, etc, like Outlook.
I particularly like the fact that it uses IMAP, not POP (Thunderbird uses POP), so you're viewing the messages as they appear on the server, instead of downloading whatever is new and deleting it from the server.
As well as connecting to a Zimbra server, Zimbra Desktop can also connect to Microsoft Exchange, so it's really worth considering as an Outlook replacement.
There are some plugins for
There are some plugins for thunderbird that adds the calendar features similar to Outlook
More MSWord options
Open Office offers a complete suite replacement for MS Office, but if you only need a free replacement for MSWord, there are more some more options:
Abiword. www.abisource.com Is a nice word processor, has not so much features as OpenOffice but support complex tables and is very ligth, can runs with very old hardware. Ported to several operative systems.
Jarte. www.jarte.com. Uses the rtf motor included with windows. So is an enhaced WordPad compatible with .doc files and including some features as tables and equations. For a small payment you get some extra features. The only bad point of this is that only runs on Windows.
Another comment: Once you are using Openoffice + Mozilla (Firefox + Thunderbird) + Gaim (free client for MSN messenger, Yahoo messenger and IRC) on Windows, and you verify that you can share files and interact with other people without problems, soon you will discover that nothing else ties you to Windows. Windows are Linux are just a platform to run you apps, if you have multiplatform apps that covers your needs, you are free to change the OS when you want. If you (of your company) have saved some money using free apps, why not save more using a free OS?
Outlook replacement
Evolution for windows. Has all the calendar, PDA synchronization you could want. Has been ported to Windows from Linux by the same man who did GIMP