I too will attest to the reliability of open-office. I used it to
write 100,000 words for the podcasting book (which might get published
one day if I ever actually manage to finish it) and in 100,000 words
it never crashed once nor lost any data at all. This is when I became
a fan of it (it is also a good writing tool). I was even working with
a fairly arcane and intricate word template that the publisher used
for markup.

I was running it on linux, and I don't have a lot of experience with
the other packages (calc, draw, etc.) but these seem to work fine on
the rare and short occasions that I use them. For writing though,
oowriter is excellent (all of my developer.com articles are produced
on it as well). I do wish the drawing package was better though
(something more like omnigraffle than lego blocks :-) ).

Cheers

Dick

On Jul 21, 10:36 pm, edencane <[email protected]> wrote:
> Hey.
>
> What are you talking about? OpenOffice is great!
> Starts up in under 10 seconds on my box (Kubuntu 9.04)
> Never had it crash. The concept was to emulate MS office and that was
> done extremely well.
> I have no problem with non-responsiveness or sluggishness. Its fast
> and direct.
> (Admittedly opening the file open/save dialog takes long for some
> reason).
> .
> What hardware and OS are you running it on?
>
> I sincerely hope that this product will stay alive.
> As long as the several web office products are not feature complete,
> OO will be my favourite.
> Im so glad theres an alternative to gimicky, eye-candy driven, top-
> heavy MS office.
>
> The VM has the future. Doesnt matter which language the new office
> will be written in.
> There's going to be a office suite on the VM and hotspot is looking
> really good.
> All you need is bytecode.
>
> Kr.
> Luke.
>
> On Jul 21, 1:54 am, Massimo <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>
>
> > I hate to say it, but OpenOffice is a mess. Even on 3.1, it still
> > crashes during routine use, it's got long start-up times, the
> > interface is sluggish and non-responsive, the GUI design is clunky,
> > and the plug-in development is really complicated.
>
> > ThinkFree office suite is written in Java, and that has a way faster
> > start-up time, is way more responsive, and is far more stable than
> > OpenOffice. The big problems with ThinkFree were that it had a giant
> > irritating ad-banner, it tried to make you use it's web file hosting
> > rather than local files, and it doesn't do OpenDocument (or similar)
> > file formats.
>
> > I'd love to see a great free office suite built in Java. The demand is
> > there, but unfortunately, there is no direct financial incentive to
> > build such a product.
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