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HP Drops Microsoft Word in Favor of WordPerfect

nexex points to this Financial Times article, which says that HP has dropped Microsoft Word from the software lineup in the personal computers it sells to customers. From the article: "The move follows a decision last week by Dell Computer, the number two PC maker, to replace Microsoft software. Both companies said they would offer WordPerfect productivity software from Corel of Canada instead of Microsoft's Works, a scaled-down version of its top-selling Office software." Nexex writes:"I think it should be noted, MS Works does include the full version of Word."

7 of 647 comments (clear)

  1. WP was the standard... by Planesdragon · · Score: 4, Informative

    People are used to using Office products as the 'standard', so why not give them an alternative that will operate approximately the same.

    Word is MS's crown jewel, but Word got where it is today buy stealing users from WP.

    Wordperfect is *still* used in the Legal Industry far more than MS office. When I worked at the NYS DEC a few years ago, I didn't have word on my shiney Dell PC--I had wordperfect, and so did everyone else in all of EnCon.

    Though it's a mind-boggling hack, Wordperfect and MS Word can and do talk to each other. In fact, having the two of them duke it out might be just the thing that OO needs to get some real work done on it, and get to be a usable beast...

  2. MS Works Suite by zerocool^ · · Score: 5, Informative

    MS Works does *NOT* always include word. The MS Works suite, full version ($99) includes word. The pre-installed version of works on your friendly OEM Computer MAY or MAY NOT have MS Word.

    Back when I worked for Best Buy a year ago, this was a big advantage of buying a sony computer. They included the full works suite. Many (read: HP / Compaq) only included the MS Works Word Processor, MS Works Spreadsheet, etc.

    MS Works Word Processor is a very stripped version of MS Word. It has no spell check, no auto format, and is missing many key functions of Word. As far as I could tell, it's existance was only to whet people's tastebuds to get them to buy office, because after using Word, trying to use "MS Works Word Processor" is a joke.

    ~Will

    --
    sig?
  3. Re:Real cost by Bilbo · · Score: 5, Informative

    I just bought a computer for my son from Dell, and by dropping the option for MS Office Professional, I saved close to $400. Now, that's Dell setting prices, not MS, but it still saves me a bundle. My son (just entering college) seems perfectly happy using OO.

    --
    Your Servant, B. Baggins
  4. Bzzzzt! Wrong. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative
    See http://biz.yahoo.com/hd/c/corl.html -- The Top Institutional Holders for Corel do not include MSFT.

    Thanks for playing.

  5. This is not true. by SlashChick · · Score: 5, Informative

    I feel the need to clarify on the following statement:

    "The legal profession still relies on it - your lawyer uses WordPerfect and most legal forms are available in that format."

    This is absolutely not true.

    Now, you may definitely argue that a larger proportion of the legal community relies on WordPerfect than does the general office community. However, the legal profession itself does not rely on WordPerfect.

    My father is a lawyer. I set up his law firm's computers. I've known many other lawyers and set up their law firm's networks. What you said was true 3-5 years ago, but most of them have now switched to Word.

    And as for legal forms being in WordPerfect format, with the hundreds of legal forms I have had to use, they have been in one of three formats:

    a) Hard Copy (as in, a piece of paper that you have to use a typewriter to type on)
    or, more often,
    b) PDF
    or
    c) a proprietary format that has to be used with a $5,000-$50,000 piece of crappy software.

    ALL of the government forms that a law firm needs are in PDF. Most of the other things that lawyers used to get in hard copy (for instance, the legal books that you see in their offices) are now available for a subscription fee via sites like FindLaw.com. About 50% of the forms that come through a lawyer's office are hard copy, 40% are PDF, and 10% are proprietary, and honestly, I haven't seen a WordPerfect law document in years. Most of the hard copy ones are saved directly to either Microsoft Word or PDF via Acrobat, so the number of hard copy forms will continue to decrease.

    From reading your post, it sounds like you haven't encountered WordPerfect in a couple of years, either, and are basing your opinions on what you saw a few years ago. The Internet is becoming quite integral to any lawyer these days, and as such, the number of non-Word proprietary formats for documents is decreasing rapidly (especially since there was a huge government initiative to convert everything to PDF.) Thus, your post was accurate as of a few years ago, but is no longer the case.

  6. Re:WP is flat out better by jag164 · · Score: 5, Informative

    Hmmm, I guess you've never dealt with large docs before? Around 800 pages of text, word starts to struggle while rendering typed text (intel 1.4)....your words come out in spurts. Same with a doc with ohh..lets say 70 figs (pngs) in about 50 pages...not to mention that fact that when you reopen your doc you should knock on wood that your figs are layed out the same as when you last saved it. Oh, and the constant disappearing cursor... and the....

  7. What Full Version? by jdreed1024 · · Score: 4, Informative
    "I think it should be noted, MS Works does include the full version of Word."

    Um, no it doesn't. Works Suite 2002 does. MS Works 6.0, however, does not. Works Suite 2002 is a new and different program (I think it's designed to replace Office - Small Business Edition). MS Works, which is a fraction of the cost of Works Suite 2002, has always included scaled down word processor and spreadsheet - it's only recently that those two applets have started res. Trust me - I've been using Works since version 2.0 in the DOS days. It never has, and never will, include a full version of Word.

    --
    There is no sig, there is only Zuul.