I'm sure a public library has different needs/goals than an academic library, 
but I'm a strong advocate for open source software.  In addition to MS Office, 
Adobe Reader, Chrome and VLC, our general use student computers have 7-zip, 
Audacity, Firefox, and Notepad++, Paint.Net and WinSCP.  

I would certainly worry more about information collection from Google Chrome 
than about using OSS.  For that matter, you are already using VLC which is OSS 
too.  

In my previous position as a college IT manager, I required all computers to 
have LibreOffice, although I haven't pushed for that here yet.  It is on my 
agenda though.  It's my belief that we should provide the ability to 
use/practice software that patrons can also use at home without needing to pay 
a monopolistic company.  LibreOffice is highly compatible with Word and Excel 
and less so with PowerPoint (although entirely capable as presentation 
software) and is my daily driver for office needs.  I do have MS Office 
installed on my own system but only because I have to use Outlook.

Erich


On Friday, January 29, 2021 at 17:30, Charles Meyer eloquently inscribed:

> My esteemed listmates,
> 
> We’re considering adding software on the library’s public access computers.
> 
> I was wondering which applications others offer which your public or
> students have found helpful?
> 
> Do you offer any open-source programs like Libre Office, GIMP or Firefox?
> 
> We have MS Office (Word, Excel, Publisher, Power Point, Acrobat Reader,
> VLC Media Player, Chrome, and The Edge on the PCs now.
> 
> Thank you!
> 
> Charles.


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