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SoftMaker Rolls Out Office Suite for BSD, Linux, and Others

martin-k writes "Commercial office suite software is coming to FreeBSD, Linux, Windows, Sharp Zaurus and Windows Mobile. SoftMaker, a German developer, recently released SoftMaker Office, a multi-platform office suite that excels in Microsoft Office compatibility, claims to be much leaner and faster than OpenOffice.org and works on many operating systems, down to PDAs." While SoftMaker certainly isn't new, it is nice to see them roll out a finished suite as opposed to one-off programs.

13 of 275 comments (clear)

  1. Is there a space in the market ? by quiberon2 · · Score: 5, Insightful
    What makes Softmaker think there is room in the market for their product ?

    As far as I know, there are only 2 forces in the world; 'love' and 'money'

    OpenOffice.org has a monopoly in the 'distributed for love' channel.

    Microsoft Office has a monopoly in the 'distributed for money' channel.

    Who will buy Softmaker Office, and why ?

    1. Re:Is there a space in the market ? by Waffle+Iron · · Score: 3, Insightful
      What makes Softmaker think there is room in the market for their product ?

      Word processing software is a multibillion dollar market. Most multibillion dollar markets have dozens or hundreds of competitors. Why would you think that the limit on the number of vendors for this market is just two?

  2. more competition by gravesb · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I'm glad to see more competition in the office space. Open Office has its issues, and Microsoft Office is still the gold standard for the general public. There are plenty of players in the space, but more can't really hurt. What I really would like is to see a suite that doesn't ape MS Office, but comes up with unique ways to do things that are more effective. Of course this is almost impossible as the cost of retraining from MS Office is prohibitive in most environments, but if MS Office is making major changes that necessitate retraining anyway, then maybe there is an opportunity for the myriad "me too" office suites to move in an unique direction as well. Probably not, as most sheep will upgrade to MS Office, but the more players in the market, the more chance that people will switch come upgrade time.

    --
    http://bgcommonsense.blogspot.com
  3. why give a fuck about office compatability? by timmarhy · · Score: 4, Insightful

    i don't see why people are so obessed about being compatable with office documents. the whole point is to force office out, adding compatablity only give it greater leverage to change their formats and screw you over. far better to create a suite that uses open format documents in xml. while you continue to pander to the make everything compatable with MS products crowd, you will not win.

    --
    If you mod me down, I will become more powerful than you can imagine....
    1. Re:why give a fuck about office compatability? by bcrowell · · Score: 3, Insightful
      i don't see why people are so obessed about being compatable with office documents. [...] adding compatablity only give it greater leverage to change their formats and screw you over.
      That's a great strategy to make sure that Linux and OSS are a miserable failure with the 99% of the population that doesn't care about the Stallman stuff. People have huge quantities of documents already in Word format. If there's never any reliable way of translating them into an open format, then those people will never switch to an open format.

      the whole point is to force office out
      So you want to annihilate office, and then built an open-source utopia out of the ashes? Doesn't seem too practical to me. Maybe a better option would be to outcompete office, and let people switch of their own free choice. That's what worked for Firefox, which is basically the only OSS app that many ordinary people use.

  4. Re:how much better than OpenOffice? by swillden · · Score: 5, Insightful

    My experience with OpenOffice has not been nice. Two years ago, I used for serious stuff and, boy, did I regret it. This friggin' bug made me loose all pagination. They told me OpenOffice was production-ready. So they told me. They lied, they were just a buch of free software fanboys who never wrote more than 20 pages with the thing. So, this is from someone who actually had to used OpenOffice for more than 20 pages.

    Interesting.

    This is precisely the reverse of my experience.

    When I'm working on large, complex documents (100+ pages, lots of headings, lists, tables), I'm constantly terrified that Word is going to crash on me and destroy my work. I save frequently, and make backups every few hours.

    That's *why* whenever I possibly can I don't use Word. OpenOffice is so much more reliable, there's just no comparison, and it has been for the last three or so years. Especially when documents get big. Lately I'm leaning toward using LyX/LaTeX, which I think is an even better option for large, highly structured documents that need to be consistent and nice-looking. But I have a lot to learn before I can do that. LaTeX documents look so much prettier and more professional than any word processor output I've seen that I think it's worth the effort.

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  5. Chokes on big spreadsheets by massysett · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I've got a huge (17.5MB) spreadsheet that Excel handles, no problem. Excel takes about five seconds to open it and recalculates it in about a second.

    No Linux program I tried could handle this spreadsheet. Gnumeric and OOo both choke on it. If they even load it, they then take several minutes to recalculate it. KSpread doesn't even have all the functions that are in the sheet.

    So I was eager to try this new spreadsheet--PlanMaker, they call it. I downloaded it. Installation was really easy (to me, refuting the people who claim that it's too hard for ISVs to release proprietary binaries for Linux.)

    Planmaker has now been cranking one of my cores at 100% for about five minutes, just trying to get this worksheet open. Still hasn't opened it. Remember that Excel does this in about five seconds.

    If Gnumeric is any indicator, converting from the proprietary Excel file format isn't the problem. Gnumeric performed worse in its native XML format than it did with the Excel format.

    Yes, I can already see holier-than-thou geek saying that I shouldn't have a 17.5MB spreadsheet and, to tell the truth, this sheet is not as efficiently written as it could be. But part of the value of spreadsheets is that they allow non-geeks to put some simple data models together. Spreadsheets need to be able to cope with inefficiently written sheets.

    Excel can cope; nothing else can. Maybe Crossover is the next option to try.

    Planmaker *still* hasn't opened the sheet.

  6. Re:how much better than OpenOffice? by asuffield · · Score: 4, Insightful
    for business I use Word running under Crossover, because exact formating is crucial for me


    If exact formatting is crucial, why on earth are you using Word? It's really not very good at precisely reproducing formatting. It only works reliably if both systems have the same *printer drivers* installed (yeah, wtf?) - the rest of the time, it's pot luck whether things go where you want them, or get moved by half a millimetre, knocking all your carefully arranged lines out of position...

    If you want exact reproduction of formatting, use PDF. Or latex.
  7. Re:how much better than OpenOffice? by misleb · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Indeed. People should not be using a word processor as if it were a desktop publishing or layout application. That is what Quark/InDesign/PageMaker/etc are for. Word processors are for.. processing words. But people shouldn't use email to share large files or use spreadsheets as databases, but they do anyway. Unfortunately, Microsoft crams so many features into Word that using it for desktop publishing is just too tempting for some people. I've even seen people use Word to produce web pages! Ack!

    -matthew

    --
    "THERE IS NO JUSTICE, THERE IS ONLY ME." -Death
  8. Re:how much better than OpenOffice? by Constantine+Evans · · Score: 4, Insightful

    100% Microsoft Word compatibility is impossible. While complete compatibility with specific versions might be feasible, Word is notorious for being incompatible among versions.

  9. No OS X version? by Yvan256 · · Score: 5, Insightful
    ...FreeBSD, Linux, Windows, Sharp Zaurus and Windows Mobile.
    Great. They take the time to make a version for a pratically non-existant marketshare such as the Sharp Zaurus, but they skip over OS X? What are they smoking? And don't tell me that Microsoft Office is available for Macs, because it's also available for Windows and that didn't stop SoftMaker from making a version of their office suite for Windows. It's also not about a dev. suite cost, because it's bundled with all Macs, even the Mac mini.

    Bah, if they're aiming for "Microsoft Office compatibility", that means more Microsoft-formatted documents, not less. Vote with your usage, stick with OpenOffice and their open formats.

  10. Re:Worth every penny by flight_master · · Score: 3, Insightful

    A typical response from a smart-ass linux fag. This would make more sense if, a) I was a faggot. b) I was a smart-ass, and c) you weren't an anonymous coward.
    --
    "Free software" is a matter of liberty, not price.
  11. Re:how much better than OpenOffice? by SnowZero · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Funny you should mention that. I happen to know somebody who lost much of their PhD dissertation document after writing it in MS Word. It got corrupted in some subtle way, and then ended up making large portions of text unusable and unrecoverable. Most of the large MS Word documents you saw probably used master documents, as the GP mentioned. Of course, he is a "fanboy", and cannot be trusted, right? Your arguments, by contrast, are only based on "facts" (or a lack of medication).

    Of course, for large documents I don't know if I would trust OO.org either; I did my PhD thesis in LaTeX.