Crossover office has made a lot of progress recently, I use it to run Office 
2007 and it is near rock solid. It never crashes my machine entirely, but 
sometimes when working with large files and in Outlook it will restart the 
application.

For regular everyday use, OpenOffice is more than enough, I just use it in the 
corporate environment so I need Outlook (although Evolution has a new MAPI 
connector in F11 so I will play with that too).

Tait

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On 
Behalf Of Steven F. LeBrun
Sent: Tuesday, June 09, 2009 12:56 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: Windows vs Linux

Tait Clarridge wrote:

-----Original Message-----

From: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]> 
[mailto:fedora-list-

[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>] On Behalf Of gmspro

Sent: Tuesday, June 09, 2009 9:49 AM

To: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>

Subject: Windows vs Linux





Hi,



Some people say that there are no alternative applications in linux for

these:



1.Microsoft office





I happily use Microsoft Office on Linux, OpenOffice+Evolution is coming close 
these days too.

Check out Crossover Office (google search it) to see what it is all about. It 
is basically WINE made easy.





2.Microsoft Visual Studio(for .net application)





No answer here... except that MS sucks?





3.Some games can't be run in linux like Fifa 2008,Cricket





Again, Crossover Office or Crossover Games might have support for these.





4.Latest Adobe application such as Adobe Flash,Dreamweaver etc





This is true, but I am just as happy with GIMP (as are a lot of people who use 
it for photo editing). Inkscape is a pretty good alternative for Adobe 
Illustrator.. but again Crossover Office or even WINE should be able to run CS2 
versions.





I think,Linux will overcome these things someday.



But there is one thing about linux is that "NO VIRUS IN LINUX".

What would you say?





That there is no possible way to say that ANY operating system cannot get a 
virus, it is a surefire way to get one.

Although there are lots of viruses for Windows out there, some exploits still 
exist across every platform.



Best bet is to get virus protection, no matter what OS you have.





Thanks.



-----------------------------------------------------

Do not take alcohol, it is harmful to health and mind.













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I have been quite happy with OpenOffice 3.0 as a substitute for Microsoft 
Office.  While OpenOffice may not have all the features of Microsoft Office, I 
never used all of the features of Microsoft Office.  The one piece that I have 
not explored yet is OpenOffice Base, when used with MySQL (or other databases) 
is a replacement for Microsoft Access.  Base lets you build reports and forms; 
I just have not had the time yet to master it.

I used Crossover to run Microsoft Office on Redhat 7.0 (many, many moons ago) 
and was not happy with it.  Will the Office programs ran just like they did in 
Windows, they made Linux also run like Windows -- needing to be rebooted 
several time a day.  Again, that was back in 2002; Crossover and Wine have gone 
through major improvements so I would be very much surprise to see that 
behavior still existing today.

The Mono project comes with Fedora and its IDE is MonoDevelop.  The Mono 
project allows you to develop and run C# and .NET applications.  There is also 
DotGnu for C# and .NET development.  You probably have to download the DotGnu 
source from their website http://www.gnu.org.software/dotgnu since there is not 
a DotGnu package in Fedora 10 (I do not know if it is in Fedora 11).

My preference is to use Eclipse and Emacs for development but alternatives are 
available.

As for games, I do not play enough of the heavy duty, graphical intensive games 
to say much hear.  I did get the game Physicus to run on Fedora 10 using Wine.  
Physicus is written to run on Vista and XP and does use 3-d  graphics.
--
  Steven F. LeBrun

Quote: "There are 10 types of people in this world, those that understand 
binary and those who don't."


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