treetaxi wrote:
Microsoft Office is more popular and owns the ball, staroffice is free - where does it balance out for you?
While I'm a believer in Open Source Software, the reason I have OpenOffice.org installed at work is due to price. Our small company uses Windows 2000 workstations [since the primary programs being used are FileMaker Pro and a DOS accounting app called ACCPAC+]. But I could not justify the cost of MS Office on all 30 systems, so OpenOffice.org was a no-brainer. I've used it on my linux boxes for years, and have always been impressed by the features and stability [though at first the interface was quite difficult to get used to; at least when it was known as StarOffice [and was free at that point]].
The only reason I have purchased one copy of MS Office was due to the need for MS Access, which, until recently, OpenOffice.org did not have the equivilant of in their suite. Now they offer Base which works *very* well with Access files [and is a good front end to MySQL as well].
One of the disadvantages of not using MS Office is the lack of Visual Basic for Applications [many will see this as an advantage, since many VBA macros are simply viruses]. But when VBA is used for Good and not Evil, the macros can be quite useful. Since MS has just killed VBA in Office for the Mac, I think that now there is one less reason to develop VBA macros in MS Office, so hopefully down the road, this will become more of a non-issue for OOo as well [though i wonder what language future macros will be written in - macros *can* be quite useful when done correctly].
BTW, if you're using Mac OS X, OpenOffice.org [OOo] 2.0 is available for it too. Just make sure you install X11 from your Panther/Tiger install disc [e.mail/followup if you need more details on that].
As Robert said, cross-compatibility is a big plus for OSS apps. I can use my Mac at work with OOo and be able to walk to a Win2k PC and train the PC's user how to use that app, even though I've never touched it on a Windows PC!
/vjl/