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12 Ways LibreOffice Writer Tops MS Word

Open source office software is has gotten pretty good over the past decade or so; I got through grad school with OpenOffice (now known as LibreOfifice), and in my estimation was no worse off when it came to exchanging files with classmates than were friends with different versions of Word. Now, reader dgharmon writes "Writer has at least twelve major advantages over Word. Together, these advantages not only suggest a very different design philosophy from Word, but also demonstrate that, from the perspective of an expert user, Writer is the superior tool."

642 comments

  1. LaTeX by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    And there are an infinite number of reasons why LaTeX is better than both.

    1. Re:LaTeX by sosume · · Score: 5, Funny

      From the perspective of an expert user, Emacs is the superior tool.

    2. Re:LaTeX by Oddweb · · Score: 5, Funny

      And there are an infinite number of reasons why LaTeX is better than both.

      While I personally prefer LaTeX, it can be a lot more awkward to get into for most people than either of the offices.

    3. Re:LaTeX by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

      punch cards rule them all!

    4. Re:LaTeX by agrif · · Score: 5, Insightful

      From the perspective of an expert user, {thing the user is expert with} is the superior tool.

    5. Re:LaTeX by dgatwood · · Score: 3, Interesting

      And there are an infinite number of reasons why LaTeX is better than both.

      Until you find yourself writing your own document classes or other custom macro sets. Then, there are an infinite number of reasons why just about anything is better than LaTeX.

      --

      Check out my sci-fi/humor trilogy at PatriotsBooks.

    6. Re:LaTeX by crazyjj · · Score: 5, Funny

      You kids with your fancy punch cards. Hand-wiring is the only way to program!

      --
      What political party do you join when you don't like Bible-thumpers *or* hippies?
    7. Re:LaTeX by h4rr4r · · Score: 5, Informative

      No, a real expert uses VI.

      Nice try though.

    8. Re:LaTeX by SwedishPenguin · · Score: 1

      Especially if you're in grad school, and if you're in a computer science related field, I just can't see how anyone could miss it. It seems to be the most popular tool of choice around here at least for everyone from grad students to professors and even some undergrad students. Already in the first year of my programme, LaTeX were the preferred tool for submission of written assignments in the introduction to computer science course.

    9. Re:LaTeX by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      No, REAL experts use $FAVORITE_TOOL_OF_POSTER, clearly. Someday when you're all grown up you'll see the clear advantages of $FAVORITE_TOOL_OF_POSTER.

    10. Re:LaTeX by Rhodri+Mawr · · Score: 5, Funny

      ...and in the darkness bind them?

    11. Re:LaTeX by WillAdams · · Score: 2

      LyX:

      http://www.lyx.org/

      should address such awkwardness.

      --
      Sphinx of black quartz, judge my vow.
    12. Re:LaTeX by Sir_Sri · · Score: 3, Interesting

      We tried that and have a few people who still think like that, but now that journals outside of physics have moved away from LaTeX it's pretty much dead for us. None of our students know it when they come in, they're capable enough MS office users that they can do any of the formatting needed in office, so what does LaTeX get you? Marginally better equation editing, and a lot more work fighting with the document preparation than the actual writing. And then you're asked to submit documents in office format anyway for most internal or government documents because you don't seriously think the secretarial staff have any clue what to do with a latex document.

      10 years ago when I was an undergrad it was still a critical part of the experience to know how to use LaTeX. Now it's like forcing people to use IE6, there are some people still clinging to it for various reasons that are hard to change, but for everyone else office tools get the job done. Of course if your office training at the highschool level is bad you probably aren't any better off either way.

    13. Re:LaTeX by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, and none of those plug boards with pre-connectorized wires; real writers gnaw the insulation off with their teeth, twist the strands together, and cover the mess with electrical tape. If that was good enough for Gutenburg then it should be good enough for us.

    14. Re:LaTeX by OzPeter · · Score: 5, Funny

      From the perspective of an expert user, {thing the user is expert with} is the superior tool.

      No no no.
       
       

      From the perspective of a normal user, the expert is the superior tool.

      --
      I am Slashdot. Are you Slashdot as well?
    15. Re:LaTeX by ClickOnThis · · Score: 3, Informative

      And there are an infinite number of reasons why LaTeX is better than both.

      Until you find yourself writing your own document classes or other custom macro sets. Then, there are an infinite number of reasons why just about anything is better than LaTeX.

      Fortunately, you rarely need to do this. Either the generic classes are fine for what you need to do, or someone else has already written a class or macro for you. For example, many journal publishers provide LaTeX style/class files, and there are many custom ones available for PhD dissertations, etc. Just google for it and you'll probably find it.

      At the end of the day, I find that LaTeX documents simply look better than those created with word processors of any ilk. LaTeX's ability to control logical design (as opposed to visual design) is a great asset.

      --
      If it weren't for deadlines, nothing would be late.
    16. Re:LaTeX by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      true experts do not care about the flavor of the day. they only care about reliable, proven tools.

    17. Re:LaTeX by christurkel · · Score: 1

      Show me an emacs word processing mode and I'm sold. (No really I wanted one for years).

      --

      CDE open sourced! https://sourceforge.net/projects/cdesktopenv/
    18. Re:LaTeX by SwedishPenguin · · Score: 1

      If the secreterial staff can't handle a pdf, get new secreterial staff. I haven't submitted to any journals yet, but the conferences in my field all seem to have LaTeX templates and accept pdfs..

    19. Re:LaTeX by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Let's hope so. Ring or no ring, I'm not sorting a pile of unbound punch cards in the dark.

    20. Re:LaTeX by TheRaven64 · · Score: 5, Funny

      From the perspective of a vi user, an emacs user is a superior tool.

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    21. Re:LaTeX by TheRaven64 · · Score: 1

      For a lot of office scenarios, you probably don't want to be using LaTeX directly, you want to be providing a web front end with a set of fixed fields that generates a LaTeX document. This is how a lot of businesses use Word: via a custom wizard that takes inputs and inserts them into a template at the correct points.

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    22. Re:LaTeX by Mitchell314 · · Score: 2

      Right, emacs. :p

      --
      I read TFA and all I got was this lousy cookie
    23. Re:LaTeX by david.emery · · Score: 1

      No, a real expert uses VI.

      Nice try though.

      True. To edit the makefile for Emacs when it's not resident on a new machine. :-)

    24. Re:LaTeX by TheRaven64 · · Score: 2

      Maybe it's different for physics, but I've only come across one journal in computer science that required submissions in Word format, and it had a very poor reputation (slightly better than an unreviewed technical report, but only slightly). Most others now provide a Word template and a LaTeX template. You can easily spot the papers that used the Word one: they are the ones with kerning that looks crap.

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    25. Re:LaTeX by quintus_horatius · · Score: 1

      Bah. A pair of magnetized needles and a steady hand is all you need.

    26. Re:LaTeX by SirFatty · · Score: 1

      I bet you're a real blast at parties.

    27. Re:LaTeX by Rosy+At+Random · · Score: 3, Funny

      You don't make your own wires and tape?

      --
      Would you like a slice of toast?
    28. Re:LaTeX by ClickOnThis · · Score: 2

      so what does LaTeX get you? Marginally better equation editing

      Much more than "marginally" better, IMHO. It is a major PITA to input equations with a menu system. Furthermore, I have yet to see a word processor that allows a user to create equations that are anywhere near the visual quality of those typeset with LaTeX. There's just no comparison.

      --
      If it weren't for deadlines, nothing would be late.
    29. Re:LaTeX by Missing.Matter · · Score: 4, Insightful

      but now that journals outside of physics have moved away from LaTeX it's pretty much dead for us.

      As the parent said, most computer science related journals and conferences still use LaTeX, especially IEEE conferences.

      The biggest benefit of LaTeX I've found is that if your paper gets rejected, you can turn around and download the style from another conference or journal and with very few modifications have a new submission ready. Otherwise, the development time in my experience is very similar, and I'd consider myself highly proficient in both LaTeX and Word. That said, I usually write in LaTeX because version control is more straightforward.

    30. Re:LaTeX by Will.Woodhull · · Score: 2

      Dang youngsters who think they know something...

      The One True, Right, and Only Way to do good programming is hand printing, not writing. On Cobol coding sheets. With every glyph properly in its own little box.

      Do it right or the wrath of Grace will fall on you. Like maybe a whole millisecond of 10 gauge copper wire; that will weigh you down for sure.

      --
      Will
    31. Re:LaTeX by Dishevel · · Score: 0, Redundant

      Oblig xkcd

      --
      Why is it so hard to only have politicians for a few years, then have them go away?
    32. Re:LaTeX by doti · · Score: 2

      No, it will not. Lyx is a great tool to replace an "office" wysiwyg editor, but it won't get you "into" LaTeX, it'll just help a bit to break the wysiwyg paradigm.

      --
      factor 966971: 966971
    33. Re:LaTeX by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The real expert actually uses ed.

    34. Re:LaTeX by doti · · Score: 1

      Then, there are infinite more reasons why LaTeX is better.

      FTFY

      --
      factor 966971: 966971
    35. Re:LaTeX by doti · · Score: 1

      a lot more work fighting with the document preparation than the actual writing

      Funny, I find it's exactly the opposite.

      --
      factor 966971: 966971
    36. Re:LaTeX by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      Real programmers use butterflies.

      http://xkcd.com/378/

    37. Re:LaTeX by virgnarus · · Score: 5, Funny

      Bah. Talk about a Mickey Mouse way of doing it. Rather, you should be able to command the elements to rise from the earth and form into the necessary parts. Then, with a single word spoken from your omnipotent mouth, the beasts should gather and use the parts to construct a PC and program an editor of infinite perfection, using the blessed intelligence you've bestowed on their worthless feeble minds. Finally, with your wonderful gaze, the PC will gain sentience and operate the editor by itself, performing the work you've predestined upon it.

      As it uses the editor to expound the details of your immaculate glory, the beasts will simultaneously bow, exclaiming your great and powerful name. Forever and ever, amen.

    38. Re:LaTeX by _8553454222834292266 · · Score: 1

      What field are you in? LaTeX still rules in CS journals. Also, it is far more than "marginally better" for equation writing.

    39. Re:LaTeX by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Note that OOo (or wtfever it is now, fuck you Ellison) doesn't require input through a menu system -- the menu system just inserts text bits into a source-code box, where you can also just type your equations. The language is a bit like LaTeX, but obviously incompatible and less complete -- capability-wise, it's about like MS Word's equation tool, but you can type instead of click.

    40. Re:LaTeX by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It can ease you into it. Gradually as you need to do more complex stuff, you do more LaTeX within Lyx.

    41. Re:LaTeX by rmcd · · Score: 4, Insightful

      "More work fighting with the document preparation than the actual writing"

      My experience is exactly the opposite: With LaTeX you write your document and let LaTeX handle the formatting. Word is much more oriented towards ad hoc formatting. It's true that beginning LaTeX users usually don't understand this, but it's because they're trying to use LaTeX the same way they used Word.

    42. Re:LaTeX by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      journals outside of physics have moved away from LaTeX it's pretty much dead for us.

      Not that I would claim that it constitutes great social relevance, but pure and applied mathematics publications use TeX almost exclusively, and a graduate in mathematics who isn't fluent in LaTeX is seen as having a serious gap in their education.

      Having a bachelors in mathematics myself, I totally get it. Good luck properly formatting \displaystyle\sum_{n=1}^{100}e^n in word or open/libre office. You are highly unlikely to get the n=1 and 100 placed correctly without spending *way* too much time on it.

    43. Re:LaTeX by gwolf · · Score: 1

      I have been writing LaTeX for well over 25 years already. Well, while true (I learnt at my father's research center being 8 year old), lets brag a little less: I have been writing LaTeX for over 10 years already, and only once I have used own document classes and custom macro sets: To fine-typeset the only book I have published. My thesis, simple documents, articles, presentations, etc. required basically no changes, and the result is surely superior to what I'd have achieved in the same time had I used any "regular" word processor.

    44. Re:LaTeX by johanwanderer · · Score: 0, Troll

      Oblig xkcd :)

    45. Re:LaTeX by crazyjj · · Score: 2

      Real men use sheer force of will to solder.

      --
      What political party do you join when you don't like Bible-thumpers *or* hippies?
    46. Re:LaTeX by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Equations in LibreOffice can be input with a syntax similar to LaTeX. It also has an extension enabling you to use LaTeX for equations, though I haven't tested it personally.

    47. Re:LaTeX by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      True that, but I due to practical reasons I use Word anyway. When you work in a company, people will want to use your documents - edit, not only read - and the least common denominator is MS Office. Having worked 14 years in the industry, I can conclude that each company is like a big remix project. Everybody uses everybody else's documents - and don't expect to get cited for stuff others use from your reports or presentations.

    48. Re:LaTeX by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      If you aren't at liberty to use $FAVORITE_TOOL_OF_POSTER then there is something badly broken with the technology in question.

      The difference between a monopoly and a market leader is that you can easily ignore the market leader.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    49. Re:LaTeX by nschubach · · Score: 4, Funny

      I suppose there's an xkcd comic for the obligatory posting of xkcd comics...

      --
      Every time I start to have faith in humanity, I ruin it by driving to work between 7 and 8 am.
    50. Re:LaTeX by Anne+Thwacks · · Score: 2
      On Cobol coding sheets.

      Real men use Fortran, which needs Fortran coding sheets.

      --
      Sent from my ASR33 using ASCII
    51. Re:LaTeX by datavirtue · · Score: 1

      Oh yeah, I manually encode bcd and markup through dip switches on a digital trainer board and feed it through a parallel port to a command line on my PC which pipes the resultant gibberish into a file which is later dumped into a web interface and back down into my Android phone as a PDF. You guys suck.

      --
      I object to power without constructive purpose. --Spock
    52. Re:LaTeX by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      a lot more work fighting with the document preparation than the actual writing.

      What? If you have this problem, then you're probably fucking it up or brain dead. For every format I've wanted to write a document in, you just download a pre-made template. For stuff like homework, I whipped up a template in about an hour and a half. From then on, I didn't have to worry about Word's bullshit idiosyncratic behavior every time I typed "1. " or "- ".

      Not separating format from content is absolutely idiotic if you're editing a document of any considerable length. The initial time investment is marginally higher than word, but the time you save in the long run WAY more than makes up for it.

    53. Re:LaTeX by spike+hay · · Score: 2

      My pinky hurts.

      --
      If you don't understand any of my sayings, come to me in private and I shall take you in my German mouth.
    54. Re:LaTeX by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I read "fool"...

    55. Re:LaTeX by narcc · · Score: 1

      It's what we use for a variety of documents. A web front-end with some simple markup features creates a file in an intermediate format (easiest to generate/process) that is fed to another script to produce a LaTeX document according to some selected options. From there, a PDF or (in some cases) a DOC or ePub is generated.

      The documents look fantastic and the end-users don't need to know anything about LaTeX -- which really isn't something the average user can handle.

    56. Re:LaTeX by Baseclass · · Score: 1

      Bah, soldier crab based computing is the only way to go.

      --
      ^^vv<><>BA
    57. Re:LaTeX by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Another oblig xkcd

    58. Re:LaTeX by narcc · · Score: 1

      so what does LaTeX get you? Marginally better equation editing

      That should be "Significantly better equation editing". I've yet to find anything else that comes close in terms of speed and ease-of-use. Well, if you ignore the steep, but short, learning curve.

    59. Re:LaTeX by rvw · · Score: 1, Funny

      From the perspective of a vi user, an emacs user is a superior fool.

      FTFY!

    60. Re:LaTeX by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Everyone is wrong. Vi or die.

    61. Re:LaTeX by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      From the perspective of a normal user, the expert is the tool.

      You left an extra word in there, HTH.

    62. Re:LaTeX by tibit · · Score: 2

      I've done all the homework and projects in the graduate school using LyX, and there's something to be said for having makefiles and cron. When a new homework or project assignment was given, I'd set up a crontab entry to fire 30 minutes before the due time and run a script. The script would first do an svn checkout from a local repo where I committed my work-in-progress. Then it'd keep doing svn update followed by make and a checkin of the files to be submitted for as long as the svn revision kept changing (a grad student keeps working up to the last minute, you see). A separate crontab entry firing a minute before the due time simply did a checkout of the submittal file directory and ran make submit. The latter emailed or uploaded the output files wherever the assignments were supposed to go.

      The writeup was in LyX, and the programming work was done in some mix of octave, maxima, C++, fortran, ansys, C# and java, depending on what course it was for. The makefile would generate all the input for LyX, and any other files that were to be submitted. Those were tables, plots, abbreviated listings, program output. Finally LyX would be fired up from command line to generate the pdf(s). My experience is that you often get half a grade better score simply by submitting a clean and professional looking assignment. As a grader myself, I can no doubt appreciate not having to decipher yet another stack of handwritten scribbles.

      --
      A successful API design takes a mixture of software design and pedagogy.
    63. Re:LaTeX by Iron+Condor · · Score: 4, Insightful
      When amateur photographers gather, they talk about cameras. They all have their favorite tools, they all have the "best" gizmos with all the buttons and functions and they know exactly what they all do.

      When professional photographers come together, they talk about light. Composition. Art. The tool is uninteresting - a mere means to an end. And any one of a large number of them will do.

      --
      We're all born with nothing.
      If you die in debt, you're ahead.
    64. Re:LaTeX by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      While I personally prefer LaTeX, it can be a lot more awkward to get into for most people than either of the offices.

      That's why you have to use a lot of baby powder ... or lube. Lube works better ... but it's hell to clean up afterward.

    65. Re:LaTeX by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's all about timing.
      You get into the offices during worktime, into LaTeX at a more private time.

    66. Re:LaTeX by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      *sigh* ...

      combination of cat, echo, grep, and other such tools is the proper way to go for a true expert.

    67. Re:LaTeX by jellomizer · · Score: 1

      However you get hacked into rather quickly because your password is "God" or "AmGod"

      --
      If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
    68. Re:LaTeX by reub2000 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Professional photographers talk about equipment all the damn time. They have preferences for one brand or another. After all if their equipment is inadequate for the job or fails, then that's money they lost.

      The only real difference is that a professional is less focused on how new their equipment is. If that body had good weather seals when it was new and an exterior made of a tough alloy, then it's probably going to stand up to tomorrows job even if it isn't the latest model. If the lens is sharp and has big aperture, then it's still good.

    69. Re:LaTeX by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, well emacs has a command for that. shift-w-i-z and then space twice real fast

    70. Re:LaTeX by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Shhh, you're ruining it! The GP's dichotomy is beautiful, and the truth be damned.

    71. Re:LaTeX by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Obligatory xkcd: http://xkcd.com/378/

    72. Re:LaTeX by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You mean you have to use your hands? That's like a baby's toy!

    73. Re:LaTeX by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

      And my wife who seems to have an incredible knack for the artistic side of photography has made me nearly die on so many occasions when she took a potentially award winning photograph--only to have it be severely out of focus or motion blurred because she isn't also a virtuoso at the tool. The two go hand in hand.

    74. Re:LaTeX by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 2

      Much more than "marginally" better, IMHO. It is a major PITA to input equations with a menu system.

      You don't need the menu system in Word, it works more like LyX these days - you can type things like \pi and \sum_1^n, and it coverts them to the appropriate math symbols as you go. I think it's been that way since Office 2007. Of course, the menus (or rather, Ribbon) are still there, which is handy for more exotic stuff for which you don't remember the notation out of hand.

    75. Re:LaTeX by emblemparade · · Score: 1

      LaTeX is the technology, but LyX is the document processor (not word processor) that you want.

      I've made the switch from OpenOffice/LibreOffice to LyX and haven't looked back!

      For what it's worth, I work in academia and often have to create documents with complex bibliographies. I use JabRef to manage my bibliographic database, and it integrates so smoothly with LyX. My colleagues who are stuck with MS Word+Endnote are green with envy when they see my professional quality printouts.

      But the real benefit is pleasure of the WYSIWYM (what you see if what you mean) paradigm. When you're actually doing work, you want to think in terms of content, not in terms of how the printout will appear. LyX is just so perfect in this respect: I get to define the screen fonts that are comfortable for me as I work, while relying on LaTeX's power to make things render nicely in the end.

    76. Re:LaTeX by Sir_Sri · · Score: 1

      CS, and publishing in fact in CS. I don't think me or my boss have been asked for LaTeX in 4 years (he and I publish in different fields) so we gave up trying to do anything in LaTeX.

      He's networking distributed systems stuff, but migrating to video games, I'm full on AI/Games/Graphics stuff.

    77. Re:LaTeX by Sir_Sri · · Score: 1

      if you're using the built in MS equation editor, and used to it LaTeX is only marginally better. I just helped typeset a book in Word full of equations, and made a several hundred powerpoint slides using the same equation editor and it's not great but it's not bad. If you care to invest in a decent equation editor for word it makes the process much better, and in the end it's not really much harder than Latex.

      Waterloo (I'm not affiliated with waterloo) had a great guide a number of years ago on how to do your thesis in Word, with guides for all of the equations etc. From that point on it seemed to be pretty clear the way the wind was blowing.

    78. Re:LaTeX by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I originally started using Open Office because the equation formatting was better than Word (and more convenient for quick things than LaTeX).

      I think the advantages have flipped now, though, so that the equation editing is better in Word than the default OO/LibreOffice.

      However, there *is* an extension, TexMaths, that allows you to use LaTeX in OO/LibreOffice, though, and it's beautiful:

      http://roland65.free.fr/texmaths/

      I wish they would make this the default editor in LibreOffice -- it's like my dream equation editor. If it was seamlessly integrated in OO/LibreOffice I would have no second thoughts about returning to Word.

    79. Re:LaTeX by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      They need a +1 profound moderation. What you said is some deep stuff and can be said about virtually any hobby.

    80. Re:LaTeX by Just+Some+Guy · · Score: 1

      And there are an infinite number of reasons why LaTeX is better than both.

      ...and an infinite-minus-one number of reasons why Markdown is better than LaTeX (the "-1" being math typesetting). I don't remember the last time I opened a word processor to write something new as opposed to reading a document that's been sent to me. Instead, I'll open a new editor tab/pane/buffer and start typing good ol' barely-formatted text. And with Pandoc, I can trivially convert that beautiful plaintext file to HTML, Word, EPUB, LaTeX, or almost any other document format.

      LaTeX is wonderful and I have nothing bad to say about it, but I personally only use the subset of its abilities that Markdown supports in a much easier, simpler manner.

      --
      Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
    81. Re:LaTeX by hairyfeet · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Exactly. I had a customer who knew Xres like the back of his hand and it took him ages to switch over to Photoshop simply because he knew where everything was and had custom plugins for Xres and trying to switch his workflow over damned near put him at square one.

      And who cares about writer? writer for the most part has NEVER been the problem with OO.o and now LO, because Writer always got the lion's share of attention. it'll still turn heavily formatted Word docs into Word salad which is why i give it to home users and not businesses, but it does that less and less and HAS come a long way.

      What sucks is the rest of the suite. hand any Excel jockey a copy of Calc and he'll laugh you right out of the room, there are too many things the Excel Jockeys use that just isn't there, likewise with Access and love it or hate it Access is used a LOT in SMBs.

      So quit focusing on the only thing that works and instead focus on the things that don't. To use a /. car analogy it'd be like trying to sell a car with half the side caved in with "But it has a REALLY great set of tires"...what good is that if the rest of it is crunched? maybe instead you should just give up completely on businesses since compatibility will always be a problem, and instead focus on making more user friendly designs for the home users? after all both Apple and MSFT are focusing on home users, why not LO? Makes sense, they have less worry about backwards compatibility or compatibility with MS Office for that matter.

      Anyway we should probably give the LO guys another year and a half before we say anything anyway, having to clean up a codebase that goes back to the mid 90s can't be easy and I'm sure once they have made it more modular and easy to maintain the improvements will come fast, so lets just let them do their job and see what comes out the other side.

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    82. Re:LaTeX by interkin3tic · · Score: 1

      From the cheap and lazy guy's perspective, the program that I already have installed on my computer is the superior tool.

    83. Re:LaTeX by crutchy · · Score: 1

      REAL experts don't use scripted languages like php, they use asm

      i use php so i guess i'm no expert either :)

    84. Re:LaTeX by crutchy · · Score: 1

      what was so funny about parent? informative, or even interesting maybe. funny? some people just have an awkward sense of humor me thinks

    85. Re:LaTeX by BlackPignouf · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Not exactly :
      Amateur photographers talk about gear.
      Pro photographers talk about money.
      Masters talk about light.

    86. Re:LaTeX by crutchy · · Score: 1

      either that or they were stupid enough to think he was referring to "offices" as in real ones that people "get into"... maybe offices with people using LaTeX have awkward shaped doors

    87. Re:LaTeX by crutchy · · Score: 1

      TEDDS (by CSC) is a dog of an add-on to Word, but I think it would be less so in Libre (its also Word version-specific, which is a pain, but I guess they have to make money somehow)

    88. Re:LaTeX by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you take a non computer person or a non computer coder (come to think of it that could be the same thing), and tell them that they have to use all this extra brackets and functions instead of just typing they may tell you to go screw yourself while they use something that is easier to them.

      Typing :
      \documentclass[12pt]{article}
      \usepackage{amsmath}
      \title{Title of Foo}
      \date{}
      \begin{document}
          \maketitle

      before they type one letter of that they want to type is not going to make them want to use LaTeX.

      --anon cause this post will be -5 troll in a matter of seconds. I was not trolling. Just pointing out what the everyday person will say/think.

    89. Re:LaTeX by Grieviant · · Score: 1

      The wind isn't blowing that way just because you think it is. Even simple things such as anchoring floats at the tops and bottoms of pages has always been an inconsistent nightmare in Word. Both MathType and the Microsoft equation editor produce crappy looking regular equations, and the inline results are unspeakably horrendous.

    90. Re:LaTeX by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm going to have to agree to disagree on this one. If the style/class does exactly what you want, then perfect. If not, good luck. Search usenet and the answer to "how do I ..." is often "write a python script to pre-process it because latex isn't a document it's an utterly shit programming language and you need to work around it's deficiencies by using a real programming language to do something that should be simple.".

      It makes me laugh when Don Knuth mentions writing a book on programming languages because he already wrote one (5, in fact) on how NOT to design a programming language.

    91. Re:LaTeX by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This makes me think about guitarists: how most of them want to talk about nothing but gear (which I find boring after a while) as opposed to those who want to talk about composition, modes, tonal centers, etc.

    92. Re:LaTeX by CAIMLAS · · Score: 1

      Yeah, and:

      * Amateur craftsmen talk about whether Mikita or Black and Decker is better, whereas professionals talk about construction theory.
      * Amateur combatants talk about which firearms are better and why, whereas professional combatants talk about the pros and cons of different ways to kill.
      * Amateur netadmins talk about which brand of switch is better and professionals talk about how you can possibly arrange a network to get packets from one point to another.

      You're confusing theoretical with professional. Amateurs are all talk about what can be done, not how to do it. (By this qualification, most sales and management are amateurs.) Professionals are about getting the job done and getting it done right - but significantly, getting it done at all. Professionals do, and the mechanics to get there are what is important.

      (You're also conflating the topic on the presumption that there's a clear line.)

      --
      ~/ssh slashdot.org ssh: connect to host slashdot.org port 22: too many beers
    93. Re:LaTeX by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      From the perspective of the expert user, the normal user is a tool.

    94. Re:LaTeX by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      hand any Excel jockey a copy of Calc and he'll laugh you right out of the room,

      Have you tried it lately? It's not what you think.

      Almost all competent "Excel jockeys" will be running and productive with Calc in minutes. It's the ones who've learned to use "the one spreadsheet application that binds them all" by rote that struggle with a different tool.

    95. Re:LaTeX by Sir_Sri · · Score: 1

      The wind isn't blowing that way just because you think it is.

      Of course not, but in all of these things you're guessing what people will do in the future. As I say above, neither my boss (networking/distributed systems/games nor myself (AI/games/previously graphics) have been asked for anything to be done in LaTeX in 4 years, but we have been asked in about half our cases for documents to be "Word" documents. 5 years ago I definitely was doing stuff in LaTeX for siggraph and other places, but by now most places seem to be content with Word Docs.

      Even if we were asked to produce a LaTeX document now, we'd probably do most of it in google docs or, if we had the money, a sharepoint collaborative word editing environment and then copy it into LaTeX for final formatting.

      Even simple things such as anchoring floats at the tops and bottoms of pages has always been an inconsistent nightmare in Word. Both MathType and the Microsoft equation editor produce crappy looking regular equations, and the inline results are unspeakably horrendous.

      Visually you can't distinguish between the equations I create in word (in either case) from those done in LaTeX, if setup properly. By default they do have their own distinct style I agree. As to your first point, about anchoring floats I agree, word doesn't handle it consistently, nor does it cope gracefully with changing between A4 and letter paper sizes on the same document, or a lot of other things. But my suspicion is that is why we're being asked for word docs more and more, people are shifting to MS publisher and grab the word doc, and reformat it to their liking for publication. Not that I've ever seriously used publisher to have any sense of how good or bad an idea that is, my suspicion is that people are fleeing InDesign or whatever the adobe equivalent is. Again, I'm not sure that's a good plan, that's just what we've been seeing the last few years.

      At this point even the ACM is providing word document templates http://www.acm.org/publications/submissions, though I think siggraph is still only providing some word templates, it seems to be trending in the direction of Office docs. But in another couple of years this whole discussion may be mooted by things like google docs.

    96. Re:LaTeX by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No WYSIWYG = no deal. Furthermore, as a language it's ill designed (too many meta characters, content / layout separation not as good as in HTML) and it's default output looks horrid and trying to use something else always bites you in the arse later. I'm a physicist and have several books quite obviously typeset using Latex and reading speed suffers from the bad fonts and aesthetically the general layout is just crappy and tacky. Also, preparing a Latex document is 10% writing, 90% fiddling and mucking about. In Word or Writer, after writing I spend minutes rather than hours so I'm generally finished in about 15% of the time it used to take me in Latex.

    97. Re:LaTeX by Greyfox · · Score: 1

      This is true! If you've never used LaTeX, I suggest you Google it! Go on. I'll wait...

      --

      I'm trying to teach myself to set people on fire with my mind... Is it hot in here?

    98. Re:LaTeX by cusco · · Score: 2

      Having done desktop support for a long time, I noticed by the time Office 4.3 came out that 90 percent of users used less than ten percent of the options available. I don't think that percentage has gotten any higher since. I'll never create a pivot table or use any text formatting more complex than nested bullet points, and as long as I can create a form with protected text I really don't give a rip about 98 percent of the 'advanced' features that either MS Office or Libre Office have and neither will 90 percent of the rest of the public.

      I install Open Office/Libre Office for one reason; price. As long as it does everything that I need it to do (and my 1996 copy of First Choice did that) I see no reason to cough up hundreds of dollars just to be able to lay out a resume or track project expenses. If Microsoft ever manages to cram copywrite laws down the throats of the Third World governments you'll see adoption of the free competition (Linux, OO/LO, Gimp, etc.) explode.

      --
      "Think about how stupid the average person is. Now, realise that half of them are dumber than that." - George Carlin
    99. Re:LaTeX by Grieviant · · Score: 1

      Visually you can't distinguish between the equations I create in word (in either case) from those done in LaTeX, if setup properly.

      Is it so? From what I remember, the combination of Times Roman Italic + Symbol + Euclid fonts in MS Word / MathType / Scientific Word are not the same as Computer Modern in Latex. Not a drastic difference, but noticeable. What really annoyed me the most was how inline equations would always increase the line spacing. Maybe this been fixed in the more recent Word Templates?

      There will always be people in science and engineering who are simply too lazy to learn Latex. It's like the people who work exclusively with a certain math package like Matlab (or a pet programming language) and flatly refuse to learn anything else, even when better options are available for the task. We can't let them win by abandoning the better tool for the more popular one! :-)

    100. Re:LaTeX by cavreader · · Score: 1

      A large percentage of mid-size to large corporations have been using Office for so long that changing over to something else is unthinkable. There are just too many potential issues raised during the decision process. Anyone suggesting the change would need to be able to persuade those who are against it. They would need to convince people that their existing documents will still render correctly and that is a tall order. They would also need to convince the decision makers that document sharing with other organizations will still work correctly. From a personal standpoint you can use what ever you like but when you work for someone who has standardized on Office you will usually stick with it at home because that's what you are familiar with.

    101. Re:LaTeX by PRMan · · Score: 1

      And yet MS Office for home only cost me $99 for 3 licenses (and I've installed it more than that as computers have expired without hassle). At $33 per computer, I think I can afford the real thing.

      --
      Peter predicted that you would "deliberately forget" creation 2000 years ago...
    102. Re:LaTeX by mvdw · · Score: 1

      What sucks is the rest of the suite. hand any Excel jockey a copy of Calc and he'll laugh you right out of the room, there are too many things the Excel Jockeys use that just isn't there, likewise with Access and love it or hate it Access is used a LOT in SMBs.

      ...Except if you want more than 255 columns. The Excel blows and Calc rocks.

    103. Re:LaTeX by reboot246 · · Score: 1

      BS! A pen or pencil and a piece of paper are all you ever need.

    104. Re:LaTeX by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It was funny, intended or not. Next time, make fun of your own whoosh instead of insulting the mods. It will look better for you.

    105. Re:LaTeX by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Yes, in other words, use Vim!

    106. Re:LaTeX by Tracy+Reed · · Score: 1

      Amateur programmers discuss syntax. Professional programmers discuss semantics.

      Amateur generals discuss tactics. Professional generals discuss logistics.

      I bet there are a lot of these...

    107. Re:LaTeX by hairyfeet · · Score: 1

      That is why it is SOP to install it on all consumer machines I sell. the problem with using it in businesses is unless the ONLY interactions you do is strictly internal then you risk seriously screwing yourself as it looks unprofessional when they open your spreadsheet or doc in MS Office and its salad, and of course the same thing goes the other way. this is also why i don't recommend it to college kids as most of the teachers use MS office 2K3 or 2K7 and you hand them a complex doc made in LO and you can watch your grade get dinged when it comes out looking like shit.

      Of course this is not the fault of LO as they are trying to reverse engineer a proprietary data format but this is why I said they should bypass business completely and work on a more user friendly home version. as you rightly pointed out home users simply won't touch a good 90%+ of the features but the features they DO use could be MUCH simpler and more intuitive. For example make sure there are several templates that conform to what your average school paper requires, make some presets to help users use Base for home budgeting or maybe make a wizard for Calc that helps them figure expenses.

      Since both Apple and MSFT think the future is consumers this would give LO a chance to be ahead of the curve and if they can get widespread home adoption this could in turn put pressure on MSFT to make sure that LO docs open correctly in MS Office. Remember trying to keep up with someone else is always a losing game, the way to win is to make the other guy conform to you. I truly think LO could do this but they need to really focus on the much larger home market and make things as simple and intuitive as possible.

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    108. Re:LaTeX by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Integrating documentation + raw data using standard software build tools and other unix system features such as shell / make / awk / etc.

      Oh - the data changed? let me rebuild the document.

      Oh - it changes every day on tuesday? let me setup a cron job to rebuild the document, so it is always up to date.

    109. Re:LaTeX by Gadget_Guy · · Score: 1

      Except if you want more than 255 columns. The Excel blows and Calc rocks.

      Sure, in a 10 year old version of Excel. In one from 5 years ago, the column limit is 16,384. I guess the increase came with the 2007 file format.

    110. Re:LaTeX by Nemyst · · Score: 2

      The difference is that I can take notes in real time in LaTeX, but I never could do that in Word, not with all the messing around the GUI. I can recognize Word's strength as being more approachable, but once you've developed a framework with LaTeX and are familiar with the syntax and commands, you can write extremely fast.

      This is very much a case of using the least terrible software. I'd jump onto a more modern language than LaTeX anyday, but none has appeared thus far that can match its flexibility and reach.

    111. Re:LaTeX by mvdw · · Score: 1

      From that link:

      Excel 2010:

      Worksheet size 65,536 rows by 256 columns

      Sorry, 256 columns. My Bad.

    112. Re:LaTeX by mvdw · · Score: 2

      Just ignore that post of mine; I clearly can't read. Those limits apply to Excel 2003. Excel 2010 does indeed have 16384 columns.

    113. Re:LaTeX by Trogre · · Score: 1

      When amateur astronomers gather, they talk about telescopes.

      I have observed this, and couldn't help but think of Edsger Dijkstra.

      --
      "Nine times out of ten, starting a fire is not the best way to solve the problem." - my wife
    114. Re:LaTeX by jrminter · · Score: 1

      I detest the modern versions of Office. Word 5 was a productive tool - versions after that were increasingly bloatware; Office 2010 was the last straw. I spent the last year transitioning to LaTeX. I have templates for technical reports, presentations, and reports of analysis (I specialize in microscopy and image analysis.) The combination of R, Sweave, and LaTeX, and shell scripts or batch files makes many projects very fast to reproduce when new data is added. This tool chain works quite well with git for version control - much better than the Microsoft "track changes." Microsoft keep breaking VBA to the point I will not use it for anything new.

      The best part that I have found as a scientist is that I can create a directory hierarchy for a project, keep the source code and report under version control with git and have all the needed data in the appropriate place in the path. When the project is done, i do one final build of the analysis/report as a quality check and then use tar/gzip to make a compendium for archiving. When I need to reproduce an analysis, months later - everything is there. This has improved the quality of my work significantly compared to when there was a lot of point/click/copy/paste involved. it is also especially helpful in the middle of a project when I want to try a "what if" scenario or if a client wants to fine tune the sample set - or tosses in "just one more" before a tight deadline. Really reduced the number of "Mylanta moments" for me.

    115. Re:LaTeX by cusco · · Score: 1

      We take laptops down to my in-laws in Peru every year, and I always install Open Office, and when I set up their user accounts I make sure to set the default text file format to RTF, and spreadsheets to whatever the oldest Excel format (95/98 I think). If they or their kids want to become experts they'll figure out how to to change the file format on their own (one has, no one else has bothered.)

      I'd like to see MS be forced by their big corporate/government customers to accept a standardized file format, but I don't know if it will ever happen.

      --
      "Think about how stupid the average person is. Now, realise that half of them are dumber than that." - George Carlin
    116. Re:LaTeX by reve_etrange · · Score: 1

      It is a major PITA to input equations with a menu system.

      I agree...in fact, I enter my equations in LibreOffice via the intuitive syntax.

      --
      .: Semper Absurda :.
    117. Re:LaTeX by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

      As a professional advertising photographer for over 30 years, I'd have to respectfully disagree. With the quality of lenses today, any brand would work. Notice I said 'lenses'. Bodies are even more irrelevant. What we are spending the most money on recently is software and studio lighting...especially since there's been advances in led light panels for product photos. Light. That would be the 'photos' part of 'photography', or 'light painting'.
      Now posers pretending to be professionals...well you can read all their posts at dpreview.com. And yes, they're all gearheads.
      Having an expensive camera system doesn't make you any more a photographer than a nice set of slippers and a tutu makes you a ballerina.

      No, I think Iron Condor got it right the first time.

    118. Re:LaTeX by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well spoken.

    119. Re:LaTeX by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Linux experts use VIM ;)

    120. Re:LaTeX by manu0601 · · Score: 1

      Indeed LaTeX is better, but as soon as you collaborate on the document with computer illetrates, it gets unusable.

    121. Re:LaTeX by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A "non computer person" is a "computer person" that hasn't been taught properly.

    122. Re:LaTeX by Bacon+Bits · · Score: 2

      I find that using a tool that has been designed to do the job I'm interested in doing is the most useful and produces the best results for the time I'm investing. LaTeX is a typesetter. Word is a document editor. I use LaTeX when I care about document layout. I use Word when I care about document content. 99% of the time, my job is to produce useful content. I use Word 99% of the time.

      --
      The road to tyranny has always been paved with claims of necessity.
    123. Re:LaTeX by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think you and the previous poster are talking about different groups of 'professional photographers'. You're talking about people who have to get that particualr shot, or they don't eat. The previous poster is talking about people who take endless photos of sunsets and leaves.

    124. Re:LaTeX by tangent3 · · Score: 2, Funny
    125. Re:LaTeX by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Marginally better equation editing, and a lot more work fighting with the document preparation than the actual writing.

      So what you're saying is, you have no idea how to use latex. Just finished my thesis, I spent maybe 2-3 hours total on fixing some minor formatting issues using my university's thesis template. Show me one grad student that didn't spend tens of hours on their thesis formatting in Word.

    126. Re:LaTeX by vlueboy · · Score: 1

      Interesting you should mention this:

      Word is much more oriented towards ad hoc formatting.

      If we remove the specifics of what you mentioned for a second

      It's true that beginning ______ users usually don't understand this, but it's because they're trying to use _______ the same way they used __________

      It reminded me how I used to overcompensate with car returns on my first few word-processor sessions given my earlier Typewriter "brain-damage."

      MY relatives in their early sixties never actually get over that, actually. It's either every 80 chars or... type a grand total of one massive block of text as your email or wallpost... sometimes without punctuation.

      More power to them chaotically speaking when they also never cared for the need to turn off CAPSLOCK in said messages. There may also be the quaint sighting of the office memo formatted haphazardly in spaces, waiting to fall like a house of cards when any single line needs a quick edit.

      So all this reminiscing now comes to show how we at slashdot dreams bi-yet-similarly goofy dreams with our tools, but there is a dark underworld on the local office and non-geek global internet.

    127. Re:LaTeX by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      FTFY to myself:
      s/It's either every 80 chars/It's either < ENTER > every 80 chars/
      Forgot that HTML gets eaten up here on slashdot.

    128. Re:LaTeX by Ocker3 · · Score: 1

      I'm not sure even Randall would go That meta yet, right??

    129. Re:LaTeX by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As requested...

      http://xkcd.com/378/

    130. Re:LaTeX by fatp · · Score: 1

      I know LaTeX, M$ Word and LibreOffice Writer (actually also OpenOffice.org Writer). My thesis and resume was written with LaTeX, so you can say it earned me my job. But I don't really understand the advantage of LaTeX.

    131. Re:LaTeX by staalmannen · · Score: 1

      No, REAL experts use $FAVORITE_TOOL_OF_POSTER, clearly. Someday when you're all grown up you'll see the clear advantages of $FAVORITE_TOOL_OF_POSTER.

      export FAVORITE_TOOL_OF_POSTER=acme

    132. Re:LaTeX by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bah. Talk about a Mickey Mouse way of doing it. Rather, you should be able to command the elements to rise from the earth and form into the necessary parts. Then, with a single word spoken from your omnipotent mouth, the beasts should gather and use the parts to construct a PC and program an editor of infinite perfection, using the blessed intelligence you've bestowed on their worthless feeble minds. Finally, with your wonderful gaze, the PC will gain sentience and operate the editor by itself, performing the work you've predestined upon it.

      As it uses the editor to expound the details of your immaculate glory, the beasts will simultaneously bow, exclaiming your great and powerful name. Forever and ever, amen.

      There's an EMACS mode for that. I could never get the key sequence right, though.

    133. Re:LaTeX by msoftsucks · · Score: 1

      I totally agree about all of the other broken stuff. Especially Access. I have on numerous times tried to use Base (or whatever the db component is called) but each and every time I've gone back to using Access. The number one failure is the report writer component of Base. I've used the Sun add-in, but it just doesn't cut it. When I go to the forums to explain what has prevented me from using LO on a regular basis, I get beaten down that I should move on and code it in a more serious language and db. I shouldn't even bother looking at Base. The whole point of Access and tools like that, is to provide a very quick way of performing small db tasks. I don't need a full development for such tasks, just an easy way to manipulate data. We work in an information economy, and the actual cost of Office Pro is negligible compared to not being able to perform these tasks. So in most cases, I just go back to using Office and Access for my day to day tasks.

      --
      Quit playing Monopoly with Bill.
      Linux - of the people, by the people, and for the people.
    134. Re:LaTeX by mathfeel · · Score: 1

      We tried that and have a few people who still think like that, but now that journals outside of physics have moved away from LaTeX it's pretty much dead for us. None of our students know it when they come in, they're capable enough MS office users that they can do any of the formatting needed in office, so what does LaTeX get you? Marginally better equation editing, and a lot more work fighting with the document preparation than the actual writing. And then you're asked to submit documents in office format anyway for most internal or government documents because you don't seriously think the secretarial staff have any clue what to do with a latex document.

      10 years ago when I was an undergrad it was still a critical part of the experience to know how to use LaTeX. Now it's like forcing people to use IE6, there are some people still clinging to it for various reasons that are hard to change, but for everyone else office tools get the job done. Of course if your office training at the highschool level is bad you probably aren't any better off either way.

      I did not know LaTeX when I started graduate school, but picked it up soon enough after realizing that it's such an amazing tool to take mathematical lecture notes. Many years later, with various macros, short-hands, packages, scripts accumulated, I find that when I need to make a document, not just the mathematical one, I immediately fire up vi and start typing \documentclass...(actually I have a two key shortcut to immediately load a pretty general template).

      If a student cannot go online and find something like "The Not-So-Short Guide to LaTeX" and pick it up immediately, I'd have doubt of him/her ability to master a technical subject worthy of a dissertation.

      Now, if this is a humanity department, I will probably be more sympathetic to the said students.

      --
      The only possible interpretation of any research whatever in the 'social sciences' is: some do, some don't
    135. Re:LaTeX by crutchy · · Score: 1

      mods in a lot of cases are nutcases. there was no whoosh to make fun of. but each to their own i guess

    136. Re:LaTeX by TheRaven64 · · Score: 1

      The documents look fantastic and the end-users don't need to know anything about LaTeX -- which really isn't something the average user can handle.

      Let's face it - it's something that most users can't handle. It's a programming language with no concept of scoping and no structured flow control and no formal separation between content and markup or between semantic and presentation markup. I'd love to see a review of TeX by Dijkstra...

      The only way to use LaTeX is via metaprogramming. I use a set of semantic markup tags in TeX syntax in chapter files and then a load of ugly goo in a document class and a preamble. When I want to generate ePub, I parse the semantic markup, ignore the preamble stuff, and just spit out corresponding semantic XHTML that I can then style with CSS.

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    137. Re:LaTeX by wisty · · Score: 1

      Actually, I'd imagine that professional photographers mostly just bitch about bad clients, discuss places where you can find interesting subjects, talk about how overrated some famous photos are, and so on.

    138. Re:LaTeX by dbIII · · Score: 1

      What sucks is the rest of the suite. hand any Excel jockey a copy of Calc and he'll laugh you right out of the room

      It's just a spreadsheet guys. It's nothing special. More than half the stuff in there can be done in MS Works or an old copy of Lotus123 FFS only just by clicking on different things or different syntax. About the only difference is graphing, and graphing is a joke in MS Excel compared to just about anything else that does it unless you are doing badly labelled pie charts for powerpoint slides.

    139. Re:LaTeX by dbIII · · Score: 1

      The point is that it's not the only "real thing" in town but just one of many.

    140. Re:LaTeX by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And yet MS Office for home only cost me $99 for 3 licenses (and I've installed it more than that as computers have expired without hassle). At $33 per computer, I think I can afford the real thing.

      At 0€ for as many installations as I want, I too can afford the real thing. The real thing being LibreOffice that is.

      I used to send documents in both opendocument format and m$ format to who needed it. But since I have never gotten anything back in return from m$ users, even after asking (can you put that in pdf or csv or ...), I now only send opendocument format.
      Let the m$ users figure it out themselves.

    141. Re:LaTeX by dbIII · · Score: 1

      However if you really need that big a spreadsheet you are using the wrong tool anyway. Importing badly formatted CSV data can give you big spreadsheets that way but sensible preprocessing can give you something that actually makes sense in a spreadsheet and is viewable instead of the useless equivalent of a 1:1 scale map of the USA.

    142. Re:LaTeX by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Map the 'Control' key to be at the left of the 'A' key (as the Gods themselves intended it to be when they brought the keyboard to mortals) and your pinky will thank you ;)

    143. Re:LaTeX by Joce640k · · Score: 1

      the beasts should gather and use the parts to construct a PC and program an editor of infinite perfection

      Isn't that how Emacs was created?

      --
      No sig today...
    144. Re:LaTeX by Compaqt · · Score: 1

      Well, so what is it again?

      MS Office is for complete noobs who can't find their way around a menu?

      Or for "jockeys"?

      The point is that OpenOffice is OK for a huge number of businesses. Not 100%, but not 0% either.

      Now moving on to some actual points regarding Excel/Calc: Excel beats Calc in number of functions.

      Secondly, Excel has an easy-to-use macro language (Basic) and a nice recorder that gets you up to speed, plus a great editor that lets know which properties are available just by pressing the . key.

      Calc has a very difficult Basic dialect. The recorder doesn't give you a leg up, it confuses you more by recording in weird UNO format. And it doesn't have Intellisense, so you're supposed to guess which objects and properties an object has.

      --
      I'm not a lawyer, but I play one on the Internet. Blog
    145. Re:LaTeX by reub2000 · · Score: 1

      So anyone who takes one step out of the studio is a poseur. Also a lot of the talk about brands has more to do with vendor lock in than actual brands.

    146. Re:LaTeX by DMUTPeregrine · · Score: 1

      No, the real experts use ED. ED IS THE STANDARD TEXT EDITOR! REAL EXPERTS USE WHAT THEY WANT, GET THE JOKE, AND GO BACK TO ED! ED MAN! MAN ED!

      And, of course, the lameness filter doesn't like classic ED humour.
      Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipisicing elit, sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua. Ut enim ad minim veniam, quis nostrud exercitation ullamco laboris nisi ut aliquip ex ea commodo consequat. Duis aute irure dolor in reprehenderit in voluptate velit esse cillum dolore eu fugiat nulla pariatur. Excepteur sint occaecat cupidatat non proident, sunt in culpa qui officia deserunt mollit anim id est laborum.

      --
      Not a sentence!
    147. Re:LaTeX by Rysc · · Score: 1

      Uh, not really.

      Lyx only "eases you in to" LaTeX in that it makes it easy to do simple things such that you feel obliged to learn LaTeX in order to get your document from "It's there but nothing looks right or works right" to "Mostly correct." LyX is not a WYSIWYG LaTeX editor! It's a GUI LaTeX builder for people who already know LaTeX.

      A WYSIWYG LaTeX editor would work almost exactly like LO Writer and just become LaTeX on save.

      --
      I want my Cowboyneal
    148. Re:LaTeX by meiao · · Score: 1
    149. Re:LaTeX by silentcoder · · Score: 1

      >They have preferences for one brand or another.

      This is true but less severe than among amateurs. A much bigger issue is that brands tend to require sticking to. Nikon lenses don't fit on Canon bodies - so once you choose one or the other you have to keep buying that brand.
      This makes the initial decision much more import. In all cases there are various considerations that professionals look at.
      A good example: there is a huge load of amateurs in my country who all buy canon's and always buy the very latest model. The result is a huge and thriving second hand market for Canon products- as a professional nearly all my studio equipment was bought second hand (since I know that age of tool and quality of tool are not the same thing). That saved me a fortune. I couldn't have done that if I went nikon.

      Technically the two are virtually on par (though Nikon's lens sensor technology is inferior - Canon took the hit of adding more sensors a few years ago which made previous lenses incompatible with new bodies and made them lose a lot of sales but they have the benefit now of more powerful sensoring. Nikon stuck with their old three-prong connectors and now their censors and auto-adjusters aren't as powerful - but it's a small difference to studio photographers who mostly do manual settings anyway).
      The technical differences are really tiny either way - so the real professionals tend to care more about the economic differences, and those are much more determined by where you live than anything else.

      --
      Unicode killed the ASCII-art *
    150. Re:LaTeX by Custard+Horse · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately the 10 percent unused feature set is not the same for the 90 percent of users.

      Some poor soul somewhere is stuck in a Venn diagram where Open Office/Libre Office have literally no features that they require.

    151. Re:LaTeX by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      From the perspective of an expert user, {thing the user is expert with} is the superior tool.

      No no no.

       

      From the perspective of a normal user, the expert is the superior tool.

      Close.

      From the perspective of a normal person, people who claim expertise are absolute tools.

    152. Re:LaTeX by hairyfeet · · Score: 1

      That is why I think the smart move would be for LO to target home users instead because as I said you don't become #1 by trying to copy the leader in a mature market, you become #1 by becoming the leader in a new market and let everyone else try to copy you.

      Think about it, all of the software out there is trying to fit the SMB enterprise mold when the largest segment out there by far is home users. i think MSFT got this when they introduced the ribbon, which is easier for new users that 14 levels of sub-menus but frankly its still not all that easy or intuitive unless you have already learned some basics of office software and lingo.

      So instead what LO should do is look at the jobs that home users have, book reports for school, letter writing, budgets, keeping up with addresses, maybe doing a family tree, and focus on making THOSE jobs as intuitive and easy as can possibly be done. Imagine if when you had say Writer running by banging the mouse all the way to the left a tab system popped out that gave you tabs going down the left side with useful actions based on templates? That is one thing that Jobs always got right as he would say you can't focus on the tech but focus on the consumer and make things THEY would like, that would make things easier for them to use. Nobody has really focused on the home market for this kind of software and would let LO get ahead of the game instead of constantly trying to play catch up with MSFT.

      In the end if all LO does is play catch up with MSFT they'll always be a day behind and a dollar short, if they want to beat them then they need to give users a compelling reason to switch and by focusing on the home user they could do just that. they could still have the standard LO for business use, but have a version specifically for the needs of the home user designed to make their lives easier. Maybe once they are done with the rewrite maybe we'll see someone with vision try that but by then it may be too late, as MSFT may be slow to get on the ball but when they decide to go somewhere they have the money to make it happen and as i said the ribbon is a step in the right direction, just poorly executed.

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    153. Re:LaTeX by V+for+Vendetta · · Score: 1

      With the quality of lenses today, any brand would work.

      Methinks you confused lenses with Photoshop there.

    154. Re:LaTeX by kleinesRaedchen · · Score: 1

      Using VI is far more punishment than even a VI user deserves.

    155. Re:LaTeX by Will.Woodhull · · Score: 1

      Amateur slashdotters discuss memes. Professional slashdotters make memes.

      Just taking this thread to its logical conclusion.

      ("Oh, him? He's a real meme-maker, he is. He got karma out the wazoo.")

      --
      Will
    156. Re:LaTeX by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You kids with your fancy punch cards. Hand-wiring is the only way to program!

      Dijkstra, is that you?

    157. Re:LaTeX by caution+live+frogs · · Score: 1

      The kerning looks like crap? So you mean the journal editors take the text that is sent to them, and just paste it into the final page layout?

      No academic journal in which I have ever published has ever printed ANYTHING (aside from graphs/figures) in the font or format in which it was submitted. If the kerning looks like crap, then the editor in charge of assembling the page layout is at fault. If the figure looks bad, blame the author (or the reviewers for not asking them to revise it, which I do every time I get a crappy figure sent to me for review).

    158. Re:LaTeX by Will.Woodhull · · Score: 1

      Fah. Fortran is only good for abstract science stuff. To do anything in the real world, like managing the business end of a fleet of nuclear submarines, you need Cobol.

      I learned Fortran the hard way: had to punch the cards myself. And empty the bit bucket at the end class (last period of the day).

      Oh, for all the kiddies out there: FORTRAN for FORmula TRANslation: first compiled language, circa 1955. COBOL for COmmon Business Oriented Language: first real compiled language, circa 1960, developed with speed typists in mind. (Hence arithmetic operations were spelled out: "ADD", "MULTIPLY" rather than "+", "*". The bottlenecks were different back then.) Bit bucket: the tray under the punch card machine that caught the little bits that were punched out of the Hollerith cards. Later on, a guy named Chadless developed pre-perfed cards where the holes were made by folding back the tabs rather than punching through the card; these were called Chadless cards. So naturally the stuff that accumulated in the bit buckets of the older Hollerith punch machines became known as chad. (Loose chad was not good, it would get into the guts of the punch card machines and cause jams, or worse, get carried into the computer room itself in card decks, and break card readers and high speed tape machines.)

      --
      Will
    159. Re:LaTeX by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So if I talk about light, can I be a master too?

    160. Re:LaTeX by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I am a clinical neurophysiology fellow. When I started collaborating on papers, I made drafts in LaTeX and sent them in to my attendings. "I couldn't open your word file," they replied by email. I love them, but their tech workflows are horrible--although, I'll grant, largely because of the limited repertoire of software allowed on the hospital/univ computer systems. Word for anything with text. PowerPoint for any graphics. They do scientific posters in PowerPoint. I get that a lot of people actually do this, but I find it appalling. When we review EEGs and we find an interesting pattern, one of the profs does a screen cap to the clipboard, then pastes it in a brand-new ppt. The Word files have ad hoc formatting applied to every paragraph. Everything's in Arial. (Well, that's changing as more of them get Win7 on their work computers.)

      The sole and most important communication skill learnt by our residents is how to make a powerpoint for a "talk." They don't call them "talks" anymore, actually, because the focus is always on the projected ppt. Although you can make notes that are only visible on the PC and not on the projector, no one does that. Everything they want to say is up on the screen. They read verbatim from it. One time, a resident even read his typo verbatim, as if he didn't know the term. If you ask them any kind of question about their "talk," the uniform answer is "I'm getting to it"; which, properly translated, means "I know I made a slide with something like that on it, and it's coming up, so just wait till we get to it, I have no idea what I'm talking about."

      Okay, simply ranting, obviously. But writing my draft paper in emacs using LaTeX was a lot less painful than doing a properly styled Word doc with references, although Mendeley desktop eased the latter part quite a bit. Idk, maybe Texmacs is the reasonable alternative although I can still see people quivering with fear about an unfamiliar product.

    161. Re:LaTeX by marcosdumay · · Score: 1

      Of course Emacs is superior. What do you write LaTeX with? Ed?

    162. Re:LaTeX by TheRaven64 · · Score: 1

      Depends on the typesetting process. A lot of journals that are published by academics, rather than by publishing companies, generate the final version by just taking the camera-ready manuscripts from the authors and overlaying their own header and footer (with page numbers, paper names, and so on).

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    163. Re:LaTeX by jimicus · · Score: 1

      I did wonder how ed got written.

    164. Re:LaTeX by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And a lazy expert uses vim.

    165. Re:LaTeX by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The point is that OpenOffice is OK for a huge number of businesses. Not 100%, but not 0% either.

      Wow.. so somewhere between 0 and 100% of businesses will find open office useful. What a fucking awesome insight. Only in your brain is that statement "THE POINT", for the rest of us.. its drivel.

    166. Re:LaTeX by phazemstr · · Score: 1

      I work as a professional photographer and I can agree with this. I do a lot of in studio or on location commercial work. I often assist other photographers on shoots and set up lighting. I tend to have a lot more conversations about grip equipment preferences than cameras, though it may be due to my area of expertise.

      --
      Nothing to see.
    167. Re:LaTeX by dead_cthulhu · · Score: 1

      If you weren't already at +5, I would have given you my last mod point. When I was still taking university courses, I lost count of the number of papers (and not just for science classes, but liberal-arts classes as well) where OO Writer or MS Word decided to mangle formatting. The worst was when submitting outlines. Within an hour of online LaTeX tutorials, I was able to write such and have everything formatted properly. Actual proficiency came far later but even the initial results made me a convert. I started with Kile when I was still a total n00b, and now just do all my documents in emacs. Haven't looked back.

    168. Re:LaTeX by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      so what does LaTeX get you? Marginally better equation editing

      Much more than "marginally" better, IMHO. It is a major PITA to input equations with a menu system. Furthermore, I have yet to see a word processor that allows a user to create equations that are anywhere near the visual quality of those typeset with LaTeX. There's just no comparison.

      I agree but I think the real reason to use latex is that it's incredibly fast to use. Once I took the time to learn it(undergrad) it has gotten so that I can not just typeset after the fact but actually DO math in latex. It's so very natural to read latex and convert it to expressions in your head that I ditched paper and pen in my third year and did all my work in a text editor on my laptop in Latex.

      On a side note, why is Latex even in this discussion? Latex is a markup language not a word processor. If anything related to Latex should be in here it might be Latex ide's like Texmaker and the plugin for eclipse.

    169. Re:LaTeX by RockDoctor · · Score: 1
      I don't think I've ever heard a professional photographer talking about art, at least with respect to their profession. Art has got almost nothing to do with (say) documenting the integrity of several hundred welds on a high pressure gas line (photographs of the ultrasound scan). Or evaluating the compositional trends along a hundred-foot of mineral exploration core so you can work out if it's worth mining. Or getting six houses photographed today to get their pictures up onto the house-sales website.

      Did you by any chance mean to write that "When professional Art photographers come together, they talk about ... Art?"

      --
      Birds are not dinosaur descendants;birds are dinosaurs, for all useful meanings of "birds", "are" and "dinosaurs"
    170. Re:LaTeX by hawk · · Score: 1

      Now, now.

      I've only needed medical attention grousing emacs once.

      Of course,that's one more than all other software products put together, but. . .

      hawk

    171. Re:LaTeX by hawk · · Score: 1

      That's because professional photographers. Don't have to deal with e macs or ms word!

      hawk

    172. Re:LaTeX by hawk · · Score: 1

      LyX is spectacular for writing complex equations and being able to edit them for the keyboard.

      It was the reason I switched from Mac and word 5.1 to unix fifteen years ago. You can write a matrix full of integrals,maneuver about it, and then edit it without your fingers having to leave the keyboard for the mouse,

      hawk

    173. Re:LaTeX by hawk · · Score: 1

      so it's finally catching up with OpenOffice 4 or 5?

      In 2002 or so, I had OO installed on a couple of lab machines. A couple of my students discovered the pseudo-TeX input method for equations, and it was installed othe rest by request. They pretty much all switched over withoutprprodding.

      And Word on Mac did a decent job until 6.0 . . .

      hawk

    174. Re:LaTeX by RockDoctor · · Score: 1

      this is also why i don't recommend it to college kids as most of the teachers use MS office 2K3 or 2K7 and you hand them a complex doc made in LO and you can watch your grade get dinged when it comes out looking like shit.

      I've heard this assertion multiple times ; you sound as if you've actually seen it happen, and be a problem. I've occasionally had problems going in one direction or the other, but I've never seen that happen without the file actually being corrupted totally (like it's lost the tail 30%, or there's a 4096 byte long segment of nulls somewhere in the middle), consonant with some sort of transmission or copying error.

      But I don't think it's that common. I'm an intermittent student with the Open University (http://www.open.ac.uk), one of the largest and longest-established distance-learning universities in the world. Their standard computing support for students, since 1999 IIRC, has included a CD with Windows and Mac (and lately, links to Linux) versions of Star Office. I mean OpenOffice.org, I mean LibreOffice. More recently they just send you the links. Document submissions are required to be in Word format, and editable (so the examiners can annotate their comments) and are required to be sent as a single zip file with various naming regulations for different courses (which will protect, hopefully, against the transmission errors mentioned above), delivered through a web-interface to what is probably an (S)FTP(-approximately) back-end.

      Now, at something like 260,000 students and 7,000 tutors (mostly volunteering part-time for the OU, while working full-time at many other institutions), you'd think that they would make appropriate warnings about this problem. I've never heard a thing about it - no mention in the paperwork ; no mention in discussion at the bar with approaching a hundred other students I've been on field courses with ; not a whisper ; no anecdotes ; nothing. Nada. Zip. Zilch.

      How many actual cases of this causing an un-recoverable problem have you seen?

      And how many of those were un-recoverable because one side or the other of the transaction was just being an arsehole?

      As an example of defence against such problems, I would routinely include in my zip-file, the document ; any diagrams as separate PNGs (line art) or JPEGs (photos), appropriately named ; any supporting documents (such as a programming project file) ; and finally, a PDF of the presentation, as it's meant to be. Put the whole lot into a zip, triple-check ; upload to the submission server ; receive receipt. (The back-end does some consistency checks on the zip.) I've never once had a hint of any problems from my tutors. Nor have I heard of anyone else having a problem.

      Oh, there is one other possible reason : the advice to students is to keep the formatting of documents simple. Because they're not meant to be fancy pieces of high-faluting art-work ; they're dull tedious unimaginative reports on experiments, on research tasks, discussions of understanding of a subject ... But fancy pretty-work is explicitly required to not be submitted. Maybe that's the problem - people using fanciness that's not necessary? Or even, horror, students not reading the instructions before doing their tasks?

      --
      Birds are not dinosaur descendants;birds are dinosaurs, for all useful meanings of "birds", "are" and "dinosaurs"
    175. Re:LaTeX by hairyfeet · · Score: 1

      Funny that your UID is "MSoftsucks" when you have run smack dab into the arrogance of the FOSS community. This is why I gave up on Linux as a whole, i would point out a problem that would be trivial in mac or Windows and either get told what an idiot I must be for not spending two hours in CLI working around the problem or to get told "You don't need that" which is what you got told with base. Well if base is so fucking pointless, why include it? Why waste man hours on a tool that in the same breath you say is pointless?

      This is why FOSS breaks down, because like communism there simply is no motivation to make thing better. if the developer likes things the way they are, even if its a bigger PITA for everyone else? tough shit its not changing. look at how VLC still can't pause a video by clicking on it, something every other player has done since the fricking 90s. But the devs don't care, to them its not important, so it never gets fixed.

      Say what you want about MSFT but at least the public CAN influence the direction. people hated Vista so they went in and fixed what people hated and came out with Win 7, i believe we'll see the same thing with Win 8. Look at what you cited, Access. MSFT has spent millions continually improving Access because people like you have found it a useful tool for business. Can't fault you there, i myself have used VB+Access on occasion and when one has a small job that needs doing involving a DB there is no easier tool out there. But with FOSS short of hiring an entire development team and forking it yourself as you got to see they simply won't listen. They see no problem with YOU wasting a ton of time in a tool that is much bigger in scope than what you require so tough, it ain't getting fixed.

      Ultimately the devs I've dealt with in FOSS treat users with very thinly veiled contempt. they only care about scratching THEIR itches and if it works for you? Fine, if not? don't care. As a wise old linux admin that gave up on the desktop for a Mac told me "Its always 80% there and it NEVER gets any better. the devs get a new itch to scratch and things get tossed and new bugs piled on top of old, but it never gets any closer to being feature complete" and I think he really nailed it. For most of us the cost of Windows or Office is negligible compared to the hours of frustration we'd deal with trying to use the FOSS alternative. My time is a minimum of $35 an hour, at that rate less than 3 hours worth of BS has paid for Windows and another 2 has paid for Office and like you trying to fight tools like Base simply aren't worth the money saved.

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    176. Re:LaTeX by cthulhu11 · · Score: 1

      Posers parrot simplistic platitudes.

    177. Re:LaTeX by cthulhu11 · · Score: 1

      LaTeX was a bunch of syntactic sugar for TeX as a reaction to the greater ease-of-use of Scribe. TeX itself was a mess. Nightmare to get to install and run and came with support for exactly one typeface. Feh.

    178. Re:LaTeX by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      To quote of one of my favourite comic strips ( http://www.somethingofthatilk.com/index.php?id=135 ):

      "Your paper makes no goddamn sense, but it's the most beautiful thing I have ever laid eyes on."

  2. In defense of Word headers/footers by crazyjj · · Score: 5, Informative

    For at least the last three versions of Word, you can do pretty much anything you want in Word headers/footers. You can put in text boxes, graphics anywhere on the page, etc. I used to use Word headers to put in background graphics for the whole page.

    I think a lot of people mistakenly think that Word headers are limited to the little box at the top of the page and don't realize that you can use them to put pretty much put anything, anywhere on the page. It will automatically take anything you do while in header/footer edit mode and put it in the background and replicate it on every page. Not sure if LibreOffice does that too or not, but I think the article makes it sound like Word's header and footer are a lot more restricted than they actually are.

    --
    What political party do you join when you don't like Bible-thumpers *or* hippies?
    1. Re:In defense of Word headers/footers by X0563511 · · Score: 1

      ... why on earth would you want to put a header anywhere other than the page header? Are there not other functions that do the job better?

      --
      For large sets, this will be our guide even unto death, for the LORD will work for each type of data it is applied to...
    2. Re:In defense of Word headers/footers by crazyjj · · Score: 3, Insightful

      It's a very quick and easy way to lock down a complex background layout that replicates on every page and isn't easily changed or screwed-up by a clueless user.

      --
      What political party do you join when you don't like Bible-thumpers *or* hippies?
    3. Re:In defense of Word headers/footers by narcc · · Score: 3, Funny

      why on earth would you want to put a header anywhere other than the page header? Are there not other functions that do the job better?

      No way, man! When I need a bunch of copies of the same thing, I just type out everything in the header and then just hold down the "Enter" key until I've got all the pages I need. Before I found that out, I had to retype my document over and over. I save hours of work!

    4. Re:In defense of Word headers/footers by slack_justyb · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Except for the bazillion times the user wants to remove my name from the header and put theirs and suddenly there isn't a background.

      But boy you hit the nail on the head on this technique, by all means it's hackish at best, and goes to show some of the quirkiness that one has to learn to use the Microsoft Office suite like a pro. I'd dare say that combine the quirks one must learn and the constant tossing of every feature in every single spot drowning you out, MS Office is the PHP of productivity software.

    5. Re:In defense of Word headers/footers by Archtech · · Score: 1

      Is this a record for the number of replies before getting back on topic?

      --
      I am sure that there are many other solipsists out there.
  3. Number One! by Kagato · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It doesn't have that stupid Ribbon UI interface!

    1. Re:Number One! by TheNinjaroach · · Score: 3, Insightful

      It doesn't have that stupid Ribbon UI interface!

      Is Ribbon really that stupid? I kind of like that part of Office.

      What I hate is text formatting and the way that Outlook will randomly change my font color between words. That is a UI that's broken as hell but most people don't even seem to care...

      --
      I went to eat some animal crackers and the box said, "Do not eat if seal is broken." I opened the box and sure enough..
    2. Re:Number One! by Shimdaddy · · Score: 1

      Different strokes I suppose -- I love using the ribbon.

    3. Re:Number One! by Missing.Matter · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Yes, everyone hates the ribbon interface! That's why Office 2010 has sold over 200 million copies. You'd think if it was so universally reviled and killed productivity (as slashdot claims with no proof), people would have stopped buying Office at 2007. Fact is the ribbon was designed from user feedback, and while slashdot trolls can cite himself and his 5 immediate co-workers as people who do not like the ribbon, Microsoft can point to thousands of data points and usage metrics to explain why the Ribbon is in fact a better UI.

    4. Re:Number One! by Tough+Love · · Score: 2

      Different strokes I suppose -- I love using the ribbon.

      I prefer real toilet paper myself.

      --
      When all you have is a hammer, every problem starts to look like a thumb.
    5. Re:Number One! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "That's why Office 2010 has sold over 200 million copies" Try buying 2007 now then! (good luck) I also note that the initial sales figures where lower than word 2007 despite the number of new computer users.....

    6. Re:Number One! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

      No because someone else in the org upgraded and will now hand out only 2010 files... It spreads like a virus.

      Or companies have an agreement with MS to buy the latest version so they can get a discount on something else.

      2 inches of wasted space for functions I only use once and awhile. It is a toolbar within a toolbar, with the menu burred so you can not get at all the cool things it does...

    7. Re:Number One! by rgbscan · · Score: 2

      I bought it for my new laptop but hate the ribbon. However, the huge student discount was very alluring, and they don't sell Office 2007 anymore and I like to stay legit. Plus, on the Mac, at least you still get the menus in conjunction with the ribbon. Just because someone bought it is not an endorsement of the ribbon.

    8. Re:Number One! by TheRaven64 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      There are a few reasons to dislike the ribbon. If you're on a small screen, it uses a lot more real estate than the menus. They don't have the shortcut keys next to all of the options, which means that you don't learn the shortcuts for commonly used things as easily as you do with the menu. Finally, unlike the old toolbars, the ribbon does not allow you to put commonly used but unrelated things on the screen at the same time.

      There are several reasons to like the ribbon. It does better on Fitts' Law metrics than a traditional menu, due to significantly larger targets. This is especially true on large screens. The larger display for each menu also means that you don't need as many submenus or even pop-up panels.

      The real problem with it is that it has a different set of advantages and disadvantages to the old menu plus toolbar. For any given workflow and screen size, it may be better or worse, but you can't toggle back to the old UI if it's worse.

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    9. Re:Number One! by Kagato · · Score: 3, Informative

      Office 2010 sold licenses because Office XP went EoL.

      Sit someone down who's been using office since the 90's with Office 2010 while still being saddled with Windows XP (extremely common in the corporate environment even today). Tell them to find Save As. Watch even the most mild mannered person get physically angry because it's not in an obvious place. The UI components when first released assumed that people would be using Vista (which obviously didn't happen for most companies).

      Oddly enough I don't mind the ribbon UI on Office 2011 Mac, but that's because it still have a standard menu bar up top that gives me a choice between ribbon or traditional menu UI. Though I would be hard pressed to actually buy Office Mac on my own because LibreOffice really does 99.9999% of what I do and is free.

    10. Re:Number One! by geekoid · · Score: 4, Insightful

      That's a bad comparison.
      I like the ribbon, but those numbers ar ebusiness that just buy whatever the version is, and computers that come with it; regardless if anyone uses it.

      If I buy a new computer for my home, it's likely to come with a version of word. A home version, or a trail version. Those get counted as sales even though I will never use it in the home. I prefer google docs.

      If MS didn't have the ribbon, they would have 'sold' just as many.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    11. Re:Number One! by CubicleZombie · · Score: 2

      I have a bought and paid for licensed copy of Office 2010 in front of me, open right now.

      And I hate it.

      Everyone I know who uses it does so because it came on their PC or because it's a site license. I have never met anyone in person who actually prefers the Ribbon.

      --
      :wq
    12. Re:Number One! by Missing.Matter · · Score: 0

      Office 2010 sold licenses because Office XP went EoL.

      Support for Office 2003 continues until 2014 however. Also why wouldn't they switch to Open Office if it's that much better?

      Sit someone down who's been using office since the 90's with Office 2010 while still being saddled with Windows XP (extremely common in the corporate environment even today). Tell them to find Save As.

      You mean under file->save as? Same place it's been since the 90s? Or alt+f+a, same shortcut it's always been? What exactly is the problem here?

    13. Re:Number One! by Missing.Matter · · Score: 1

      I think 200 million people buying it is, especially since the next best option, OpenOffice/LibreOffice is free. Especially since we're talking about productivity software. Let's say Word 2010 took 3 minutes to print a character you type to the screen. Do you think 200 million people would buy it? No, of course not, because it makes them less productive. This is the degree to which slashdot would have you believe the ribbon makes you less productive. Yet it's running at tens if not hundreds of thousands of companies around the world. Why isn't global productivity grinding to a halt?

    14. Re:Number One! by virgnarus · · Score: 1

      Tell me about it. They really need to stop putting interfaces on top of their UIs.

    15. Re:Number One! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There are shortcuts to everything in the ribbon. For example, want the whole document justified: ctrl+A, then hit the alt key and type HAJ one after the other (i.e. not at the same time) and bam justified. The shortcuts are a little clunkier, but there is one for literally everything. Just hit the alt key and wait a second and they will all pop up in a step-wise fashion.

      Additionally, you can create your own tabs, change the quick access toolbar and create your own hotkey combinations. You just need to find the right spot in the options.

    16. Re:Number One! by DiegoBravo · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I'm sure Microsoft can point to millions of users in lots of statistics and hundreds of focus groups about people liking clippy.

    17. Re:Number One! by Missing.Matter · · Score: 1

      Like I said, your anecdotes are meaningless in the context of 200 million copies sold. I know just as many people who like it as you know who don't.

    18. Re:Number One! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      yes, that's the same as the old poster for dog shit - 10,000,000 flies can't be wrong. It sells a lot of copies because people feel locked in to upgrading because microsoft changes the formats every version. Thus one can't read the new documents they get in email and have to upgrade as well. It is just microsoft taking advantage of their market position.

      I don't know of any area where LibreOffice is not superior to Microsoft Office.

    19. Re:Number One! by Rude+Turnip · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Where to start, where to start...
      I've been using Office since Office 95 (and Slashdot since 1998) and the ribbon is the greatest improvement to the suite. The ribbon can be hidden by pressing control-F1 if you're worried about screen space. It completely exposes the functionality of Office, where as menus hid it. In other words, the ribbon makes the Office interface more inviting and makes it easier to explore new functionality. This also means co-workers no longer ask you how to do things with Office because it's easy to figure it out themselves. Shortcut keys only have material value when commands are hidden in a menu system. You can right-click any button in Office and add it to a quick access toolbar. You can also customize the ribbon if you like.
      There is one computer in our office using Office 2003, the last version before the ribbon. It's now considered a pain to use because it's stuck with the menu instead of the ribbon.

    20. Re:Number One! by CubicleZombie · · Score: 3, Informative

      What I'm trying to say is, 200 million sold doesn't equal 200 million who prefer the new look and feel. If we generously say that half of those actually like it, then there's the other half who are using it because it was forced on them. No other company and no other product could get away with that.

      But it's moved a lot of people to Open Office because they find it easier to use. And that's a good thing.

      --
      :wq
    21. Re:Number One! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The real problem with it is that it has a different set of advantages and disadvantages to the old menu plus toolbar. For any given workflow and screen size, it may be better or worse, but you can't toggle back to the old UI if it's worse.

      Yes, exactly that! That should be the rule behind every UI redesign. Unless there is some backend change that makes the UI unusable, give them the option of the old one. That is what drove me nuts about the Firefox change in the UI, no ability to switch back. You can hide it so that only super duper powerusers or those well-versed in the Googlefoo but in the end, the better choice is: more options for people, not less.

    22. Re:Number One! by autocannon · · Score: 0

      There is no File menu. You click the "Office" icon that resides next to the traditional Save button. For first time users, that icon is not obviously clickable. Those initial moments are very infuriating. Some people just cannot figure out that it can be clicked, and need to be told.

      That said, I've grown accustomed to the ribbon and don't hate it like I initially did. Still problematic finding things that aren't used regularly, but with use it becomes more obvious how they've grouped things together.

    23. Re:Number One! by EvilBudMan · · Score: 1

      No it's sold that many because of people upgrading their OEM licenses when they have to replace that XP machine. Office 2010 has nothing to offer that Office 2003 didn't do just as good or better. I hate it.

    24. Re:Number One! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      All of your dislikes are false. It uses less real estate in compacted mode, and about the same in expanded. There are shortcut keys for all options (hit alt and let go, don't hold). You can put common things on the top as pinned actions (next to the save icon).

    25. Re:Number One! by phayes · · Score: 1

      As the sanding goes: there are lies, damn lies & statistics.
      Your vaunted numbers are a lie as others have pointed out and are thus meaningless

      --
      Democracy is a sheep and two wolves deciding what to have for lunch. Freedom is a well armed sheep contesting the issue
    26. Re:Number One! by Mikelikus · · Score: 2

      Well, you have two simple features: minimize ribbon and the quick access toolbar. If you use both of these features you have as much screen real estate as you can hope to get and allows you to put commonly used but unrelated things on the screen. Of course, you can customize it as one Anonymous Coward described in a reply to your post and define custom keyboard shortcuts. I understand people dislike the ribbon for any number of reasons except those that are not reasons at all, please review office one more time.

      Anyway, you are correct when you say that it brings a different set of advantages and disadvantages, however that is La Palice worthy as (almost?) anything that is comparable does bring one different set of advantages and disadvantages.

      --
      -- Would it be acceptable to just put my name on my sig?
    27. Re:Number One! by Missing.Matter · · Score: 5, Informative

      here are a few reasons to dislike the ribbon. If you're on a small screen, it uses a lot more real estate than the menus. They don't have the shortcut keys next to all of the options, which means that you don't learn the shortcuts for commonly used things as easily as you do with the menu. Finally, unlike the old toolbars, the ribbon does not allow you to put commonly used but unrelated things on the screen at the same time.

      The AC mentioned these points but I want to reiterate them so more can see, since you're modded +4 insightful yet you're completely uniformed:

      1) I've done the calculation: From the top of the screen to the top of the page, the default ribbon layout in Word uses THE SAME vertical space than the default menu+toolbars in open office writer. Further, you can minimize the ribbon by double clicking on it. Can't do that with toolbars. Further still, the ribbon scales better to the screen size; whereas the ribbon adjusts the size of buttons, keeping them visible on the screen, the menu system will hide them in a drop down list.

      2) There are keyboard shortcuts to every feature in the ribbon. Press Alt and follow the letters. This is more discoverable and provides more functionality.

      3) You can put any shortcuts you want in the quick access toolbar at the top of the screen, or you're free to customize the tabs in any way you wish including adding your own tabs.

    28. Re:Number One! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I bought it for my new laptop but hate the ribbon. However, the huge student discount was very alluring, and they don't sell Office 2007 anymore and I like to stay legit. Plus, on the Mac, at least you still get the menus in conjunction with the ribbon. Just because someone bought it is not an endorsement of the ribbon.

      You can install Office 2007 with an equivalent licence from Office 2010.

    29. Re:Number One! by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      This years version of office sells for the same reason that this years version of DOS does.

      It's a monopoly legacy product.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    30. Re:Number One! by the_B0fh · · Score: 1, Informative

      Yet another moron who thinks a forced upgrade = users liked or wanted the damned ribbon

    31. Re:Number One! by Missing.Matter · · Score: 4, Informative

      There is no File menu

      Thanks for commenting on a product you haven't used. You have not used Office 2010, because if you had, you would see the big colored tab with the word "File" in it.

    32. Re:Number One! by Anne+Thwacks · · Score: 1
      Try buying 2007 now then

      Ebay is your friend

      --
      Sent from my ASR33 using ASCII
    33. Re:Number One! by Missing.Matter · · Score: 1

      Hard to say that for productivity software. Slashdot contends that the ribbon decreases productivity. If this were true, why would people even buy Office 2010 after experiencing a productivity decrease with 2007? If this were true, why hasn't the marketshare of Open Office increased dramatically? If 200 million people are out there using this software and it's slowing them down so much, where is the global outrage outside of Slashdot?

    34. Re:Number One! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      People buy 15.6" laptops with glossy screens at 1366x768 resolution. That doesn't change the fact that a matte screen with a 1600x900 resolution is flat-out better.

    35. Re:Number One! by Missing.Matter · · Score: 2

      You're trying to claim that Microsoft has a monopoly in office suites? Sure they have a majority marketshare but a monopoly? With options like LibreOffice, Google Docs out there which are free and incredibly easy to switch to, where exactly is the monopoly?

    36. Re:Number One! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you double click the ribbon headers, it goes into minimized mode, where it takes up approximately the same amount of space as a traditional menu. Also, while it may not show "Ctrl-X" on the ribbon, it will show you that Alt-H,X will accomplish the same thing.

    37. Re:Number One! by TheRaven64 · · Score: 2

      From the top of the screen to the top of the page, the default ribbon layout in Word uses THE SAME vertical space than the default menu+toolbars in open office writer.

      But you can turn off all of the toolbars, and still have everything reachable form the menus in less mouse movement than from a hidden ribbon (although more from an unhidden ribbon).

      2) There are keyboard shortcuts to every feature in the ribbon. Press Alt and follow the letters. This is more discoverable and provides more functionality.

      Unlike the more conventional shortcuts, these are not side-effect free. They change the currently exposed tab on the ribbon. If you have your quick access tab open, and you save with alt-f-s (for example) instead of control-s, then you will now have the file menu open and need more mouse movement to return to the old state.

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    38. Re:Number One! by JonathanCombe · · Score: 5, Interesting

      I think there is an awful lot to dislike about the ribbon interface. For example in Excel in 2003 if I wanted to insert a row, I'd go "Insert -> Row". In the ribbon I have an insert tab which allows me to insert lots of things but none of them are a row. No if I want to insert a row I have to press the Insert button on the Home tab and select the option from the drop down on there. How is it any easier when I have two Insert options and there is no way to know which one I need to use to insert something without clicking through both of them of and hunting for the option.

      There are similar problems with Word. For example if I want to insert an object, I use the Insert tab then select object on the drop down. But if I make the window a little narrower it becomes just an icon and it's not exactly obvious until I click on it what that might do. If I make the window narrower still, to the width of the document, it puts the object button under another drop down labelled Text. So I have to click a box marked "Text" to insert something that is NOT text? This is better how?

      Then there other features like the fact the "File" menu now takes over the entire window of the program.

      Now with the old system I had drop down menus which makes it much quicker to go through and find all the options then go through the ribbon, click each button and navigate through all the various drop downs off those buttons. The pull down menus also made it very easy for me to find the keyboard shortcuts for an option, so I can quickly learn to use the program more efficiently. All this is now hidden in the help system - it is not obvious what the keyboard shortcuts are and I suspect users new to the system will keep reaching between the mouse and keyboard for even simple things because the keyboard shortcuts are hidden away.

      However for me the worst of all is the inconsistency. In years gone buy these things were defined in a style guide so if I used one program I could quickly get familiar with others as many of the options would be called the same and in the same menus (e.g. Edit for the clipboard functions, file to save, open, close, print and so on). Once I'd learnt one program it made it much easier to find my way around other programs. Yes the menus may be illogical in places (e.g. Find, a read only option, on and Edit menu) but at least once the user has learnt these oddities they can easily navigate around other programs. The toolbar was a useful addition to this, making common options a single click away, and the user could customise them to their hearts content. Now we're stuck with a horrible interface (in my opinion) that has very few possible customisations. Worse as Microsoft has patented it, it stops other application writes from using the same interface - thereby making Microsoft programs have different interfaces from other vendors and increasing the learning curve of non-Microsoft applications.

      Sorry but I'm just NOT going to be convinced the ribbon is a good idea.

    39. Re:Number One! by bluemonq · · Score: 1

      Ribbon? I just use keyboard shortcuts.

    40. Re:Number One! by Missing.Matter · · Score: 1

      But you can turn off all of the toolbars, and still have everything reachable form the menus in less mouse movement than from a hidden ribbon (although more from an unhidden ribbon).

      Not sure I buy that. Less mouse movement maybe, but the targets are larger in Office, so it's unclear which interface has less target time according to Fitts Law. I think the Ribbon still wins overall since there is more functionality within 2 clicks than in the old menu.

      Unlike the more conventional shortcuts, these are not side-effect free. They change the currently exposed tab on the ribbon. If you have your quick access tab open, and you save with alt-f-s (for example) instead of control-s, then you will now have the file menu open and need more mouse movement to return to the old state.

      I see what you're saying, but you chose a bad example since that particular shortcut does not change contexts. Either way, if you're using keyboard shortcuts to save time ostensibly your hands should never be on the mouse. Thus it doesn't matter what context you're in, it's the same situation you're at with the old menu system: a series of keyboard shortcuts with the addition of visual feedback for to get to an item you never used before, thus keeping your hands off the mouse longer, thus increasing productivity.

    41. Re:Number One! by TechyImmigrant · · Score: 1

      > where exactly is the monopoly?

      In the file format.

      And Visio. Visio is actually good and better than the competition.

      --
      I should use this sig to advertise my book ISBN-13 : 978-1501515132.
    42. Re:Number One! by phoenix_rizzen · · Score: 3, Informative

      Our school district stopped buying Office at 2003 because of the ribbon interface. Since you can't buy licenses for Office 2003 anymore, we use the "downgrade license" in 2007 and 2010 to install 2003.

      We have a few staff members that have laptops that came with 2007/2010 pre-installed, and after trying to use it for a month or so, they all come crawling back asking for 2003 to be installed.

      We also use OpenOffice.org on our Linux stations, and make OO.o available to our Windows users.

      So my anecdotal evidence includes just under 3500 co-workers, and just under 14,000 students.

      My personal beef with the ribbon is that there's no organisation to it. It's just a mishmash of large icons, small icons, text, jumbled together.

      A toolbar has every icon the same size, and organised according to a grid.

      A menu has every entry the same size, and organised according to a grid.

      And, the biggest thing, is that if you turn off the annoying "personalised menus" feature, everything is in the same place, everytime. Nothing moves, nothing jumps around.

      The ribbon may have it's uses. But I've yet to find one.

    43. Re:Number One! by Missing.Matter · · Score: 1, Informative

      The file formats are pretty portable. I can open a docx or xlsx file in LibreOffice or Google Docs handily. Office even opens and saves open office files formats just fine. Where's the format lock-in?

    44. Re:Number One! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It has far fancier shortcut mechanism. Just try and press alt (don't have to hold it) - the shortcuts appear next to each option and you can traverse ribbon like a menu with single or double letters, so for example you can place text from a file single-pressing in order: ALT, V, O, T -> activate shortcuts, select Insert tab, select Object option, select Text from file...

      I think it's more intuitive than having global shortcuts with random symbols ('cause there are only so many two key combinations..). Even more so when you take into account that having multiple namespaces (each 'level' can use the same symbols as others) you can base those shortcuts on some mnemonics.

    45. Re:Number One! by war4peace · · Score: 2

      1. If you have a small screen, pretty much every text editor will take sizable chunks of your screen. Just right-click the Ribbon and hide it if that's your thing.
      2. Shortcut keys appear if you hover your mouse over a button, if you've set that in Word options. There's really no excuse for being lazy and not configure your editor but instead choose to complain about its lack of features.
      3. You can also customize the ribbon to put unrelated things in a toolbar (hint: quick access toolbar).

      Bottom line is that if you're supposed to squeeze the most out of a text editor, any professional one would do, as long as you care to learn it. Sure, each has some advantages and disadvantages, but really, in the end it's a matter of what you're more comfortable with using.

      --
      ...gis sdrawkcab (usually not responding to ACs; don't bother posting as AC)
    46. Re:Number One! by pruss · · Score: 2

      I worked hard to let our IT people let me have Office 2003 on my new laptop. For unknown commands, I much prefer visually scanning a vertical list of text-based options rather than a messy two-dimensional arrangement of icons. Let's say I want to do something insert-ish. So, I press alt-i, and now I have a nice vertical text-based list of fairly self-explanatory commands that I can scan very quickly. And if I want I can then neatly navigate with the down-arrow to it without bothering with the mouse.

      I guess I still really like PalmOS's UI design guidelines: use text instead of icons. :-)

    47. Re:Number One! by Anomalyst · · Score: 1

      What I hate is text formatting and the way that Outlook will randomly change my font color

      Of what possible use are font colors in an email? If you send it to me it gets stripped to plain text anyways, so I will never see the lolcats background in your "personalized" email style. Similarly, my outgoing is plain text, unencumbered by thousands of extra bytes in an kludgy MS "attachment". If I need to use more advanced formatting, I will send an odt document as a real attachment. Are you one of those deranged people that longs to send their SMS messages in comic sans?

      --
      There is no right to feel safe thru security vaudeville at the expense of everyone's freedom, privacy and tax money.
    48. Re:Number One! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Fitts Law only applies if both users only navigate using a mouse.

      If navigation is done via the keyboard (no, not shortcuts, navigation, as in Alt+F, right arrow, right arrow, down arrow, etc) the menu bar wins hands down, partially because that type of navigation, while somewhat possible with the ribbon, is absolutely, completely unintuitive.

      As a user used to using menu based UIs and preferring the speed and accuracy of keyboard navigation, the new word is worthlessly difficult to navigate no matter the screen size.

    49. Re:Number One! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      On small screens: right click and set autohide on the ribbons. Then they behave sort of like menus.

    50. Re:Number One! by pruss · · Score: 1

      Isn't the hierarchical nature of this basically just like the menu/submenu system, except that instead of a linear list popping up each time you press a successive key (for instance alt-i, n, r to insert a cross-reference), you get a messy two-dimensional array of icons? It seems to me that one can scan a linear list of text labels much faster than a two-dimensional array of icons, even if there are tooltips beside all of them (are there?).

    51. Re:Number One! by Anonymous+Brave+Guy · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Yes, everyone hates the ribbon interface! That's why Office 2010 has sold over 200 million copies. You'd think if it was so universally reviled and killed productivity (as slashdot claims with no proof), people would have stopped buying Office at 2007.

      Your underlying point has merit, but your logic is also flawed.

      For one thing, Slashdot, like the Office user base, is not a single person with a single mind. Different people have different preferences. In particular, most users of most software products are not so-called power users. The Ribbon interface works well for people who are not power users, and most such people do seem to prefer it once they get used to it, as Microsoft's usage data suggested they should.

      However, that does not mean that the significant subset of Office users who really do intimately understand their way around a tried and tested combination of keyboard shortcuts, toolbar icons, menu commands, dialog tricks and so on will appreciate having the new UI and the underlying models forced on them as well. The Ribbon caters very much to cosmetic hacks and a quick-and-dirty approach. Don't bother defining styles, structuring your document systematically, or understanding how to present your data effectively! Just slap the format with the most "clever" borders on every table, format paint your headings so they're all the same colour that is a bit like your corporate standard, and use some random combination of bold, italic, faked small caps, underlining, colours, background colours and all-caps if you want to emphasize something. Oh, and if the spacing's not quite right, just hit enter a couple more times. Of course, MS Office has been going down this path for a long time and has never been shy about who it was aiming at, but the emphasis on the Ribbon pretty much seals its fate as any sort of productive tool for power users.

      As for your 200 million sold copies statistic: the overwhelming majority of people who use MS Office do so because it came with their computer, it's their corporate standard at work, or it's the only thing they ever heard of so they pirated it. Microsoft sells about three individual licences a decade for Office applications and about a bazillion copies through mass licensing or preinstallation deals every year. The number of sales really doesn't tell us anything meaningful about what the people using Office actually think of the new ribbon.

      --
      If you disagree, post your argument. (-1, Overrated) isn't your personal censorship tool for views you don't like.
    52. Re:Number One! by dyingtolive · · Score: 2

      Comic sans is an excellent font. I send all my emails lime green on white in 14 pt comic sans all the time.

      --
      Support the EFF and Creative Commons. The war is coming, and they're supporting you...
    53. Re:Number One! by AmiMoJo · · Score: 2

      If you're on a small screen, it uses a lot more real estate than the menus. They don't have the shortcut keys next to all of the options, which means that you don't learn the shortcuts for commonly used things as easily as you do with the menu.

      Look in the top right hand corner. There is a little upward facing arrow that looks like a caret. Click that and the ribbon will collapse and give you more space. Now press the Alt key and a display all the keyboard shortcuts for the (now hidden) ribbon. Press the shortcut you want and it will show further applicable shortcuts.

      Finally, unlike the old toolbars, the ribbon does not allow you to put commonly used but unrelated things on the screen at the same time.

      Right click on the ribbon and using the context menu you can customize both the quick access bar and the ribbon itself. All commands are available.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
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    54. Re:Number One! by Kagato · · Score: 2

      That assumes a linier upgrade path. Companies just don't work that way. A lot of them went from Office XP to Office 2007. Office 2003 only worked with XP plus and it came out during a time when a lot of companies were doing OS upgrades. They don't like to deploy office suites until they have a year or two of service packs and fixes out.

      I will note I did make one mistake. The file -> Save As was an issue with Office 2007 that was corrected with Office 2010. The problem is you didn't see Office 2010 really start getting deployed until mid 2011. So that's a number of years of irritation with the Office 2007 product. I'm quite sure Office 2007 would have made more sense if people went to Vista, but that obviously didn't happen.

      As far as why more companies don't go with Open Office, well, first off, until recently Oracle really clouded the waters on what the future of the product would be (fall out from the Sun acquisition.) Secondly, the folks making the decision are most likely Microsoft Certified Professionals. I think there is some baias, but I also think it's a much safer career move NOT to rock boat. Finally, there are bound to be folks that *shudder* use MS Access.

    55. Re:Number One! by elashish14 · · Score: 2

      No, Office 2010 has sold over 200 million copies because it's tied to Microsoft. We know what tactics MS uses to get high market share. People don't willingly buy MS products - they buy them cause they 'have' to (whether it means that some organization doesnt support anyone that doesn't use it, or because they're incapable of learning something else). Once Office 2003 stopped being sold, the only choice on the market was the Ribbon. Don't account all those sales of 2007 and after to the fact that people liked it - rather, it was merely the only choice.

      Aside from that, I don't have numbers or studies to back it up, but my guess would be that a lot of those licenses sold were corporate, where you basically take what you're given and nuts whether you like it and are productive on it or not.

      --
      I have left slashdot and am now on Soylent News. FUCK YOU DICE.
    56. Re:Number One! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you happen to use Word 2007+ with The Ribbon, double-click on one of the Ribbon headers, like "Home" or "Insert". It magically disappears. Single-clicking the header or using Alt codes (Alt-H-...) will temporarily make it show back up, but it'll autohide once done.

      Double-click on the header again to have it pop back into normal mode. as before.

    57. Re:Number One! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's a bad comparison.
      I like the ribbon, but those numbers ar ebusiness that just buy whatever the version is, and computers that come with it; regardless if anyone uses it.

      If I buy a new computer for my home, it's likely to come with a version of word. A home version, or a trail version. Those get counted as sales even though I will never use it in the home. I prefer google docs.

      If MS didn't have the ribbon, they would have 'sold' just as many.

      How about the spelling and grammar check feature? Use that much? (<F7> for the old timers or click Review then Spelling & Grammar for the Ribbon users). Valid point though.

    58. Re:Number One! by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 2

      No because someone else in the org upgraded and will now hand out only 2010 files... It spreads like a virus.

      That's BS, not Insightful. There was no file format change between 2007 and 2010, and they will happily open each others' documents.

      Or companies have an agreement with MS to buy the latest version so they can get a discount on something else.

      Do you have any references to an example of such an agreement? I've worked in several MS shops (one was a "gold partner"), and it's the first time I hear about something like that. I do distinctly recall that we were still using Office 2003 several years after 2007 came out.

    59. Re:Number One! by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 2

      Sit someone down who's been using office since the 90's with Office 2010 while still being saddled with Windows XP (extremely common in the corporate environment even today). Tell them to find Save As. Watch even the most mild mannered person get physically angry because it's not in an obvious place.

      Someone who'd been using Office since the 90's would start looking at "Save As" by looking for "File". Which, in Office 2010, is not only in the same spot as it was in XP/2003 (top left corner - it's the first Ribbon tab from the left), and has the same "File" caption on it, but it's even highlighted in blue. And, after you click on it, "Save As" is prominently featured among the list of actions on the left side of the screen (which looks like it's a menu coming out of "File").

      Screenshot.

    60. Re:Number One! by slack_justyb · · Score: 1

      This also means co-workers no longer ask you how to do things with Office because it's easy to figure it out themselves

      Wha?! I've never known a co-worker to just figure anything out for themselves. Usually upgrades to Office 2007 and 2010 and met with people ready to behead me for upgrading them. They lack the time to "figure it out themselves" because they have work to do, that's not getting done because there is no way to get what they used to know done.

      The "exposes the wealth of Office" argument is a good one, if people weren't busy trying to get work done. The Ribbon change might expose functionality but no one realizes it. It's just like how people might see a missing child walk into a store and never know it, unless they were specifically looking for that child. Unless, someone knows exactly the function they are wanting to use, the ribbon will not help them find it.

      Seriously, the grand-parent summarized all the good that the ribbon could possibly have.

    61. Re:Number One! by Missing.Matter · · Score: 0

      So my anecdotal evidence includes just under 3500 co-workers, and just under 14,000 students.

      And I can speak for 200 million people who have bought and used Office 2010 every day in the same way you can speak for those 3.5k coworkers and 14k students the vast majority of whom you've probably never spoken to.

      My personal beef with the ribbon is that there's no organisation to it. It's just a mishmash of large icons, small icons, text, jumbled together.

      The organization is very clear, and not that different from the old menu system. The primary structure is the tabs, analogous to the menu titles of the old system. The secondary structure is the groupings in each tab, analogous to menu items. The tertiary structure is group items, analogous to menu flyouts. Aside from the home tab, which uses common icons found in all word processing software to represent Bold, indent, etc. the function size indicates a fourth structure. For example, in the references tab the insert citation function is very large, whereas style or manage sources is smaller, since they are less used. Also aside from the home tab every uncommon icon is accompanied by a text description and a hovertip that tells you what the function does. This cannot be done in a regular menu because the hover gesture is used to open flyout menus.

      A toolbar has every icon the same size, and organised according to a grid. A menu has every entry the same size, and organised according to a grid.

      And yet a toolbar and menu contain items that don't lend themselves to being the same size and in a grid. For example, the toolbar contains a style box... which shows text for styles. Why not show the actual styles applied to text as in Word? The constant size/grid layout of the menu also does not scale well. It handles low resolutions by hiding items which you have to expand. The ribbon adjusts icon sizes so that more items are on screen at more resolutions.

      And, the biggest thing, is that if you turn off the annoying "personalised menus" feature, everything is in the same place, everytime. Nothing moves, nothing jumps around.

      While things may move on the ribbon spatially, they never do items always maintain the same position in the hierarchy I described before. Further, while context tabs may appear and disappear, this is for good reason, as the items are only functional for a specific context. This has more benefits than drawbacks.

    62. Re:Number One! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My complaint with the ribbon is simply that it's inconsistent. There's a tab for everything except for core functions. So it's like "ribbon for some things, not ribbon for others."

      Menus were consistent.

      I think this is part of what people mean when they complain about not being able to find functions (aside from the organization within tabs issue).

      Someone (Libre Office?) needs to make a tabbed menu that *is* consistent, where everything is under a tab.

    63. Re:Number One! by kyrsjo · · Score: 1

      You never had to handle complex documents, do you?

      Oh, and MS office's odt etc. functionality? Its a joke, it produces documents that are usable in either suite...

    64. Re:Number One! by schroedingers_hat · · Score: 1

      Why isn't global productivity grinding to a halt?

      .... I see what you did there you sly bastard!

    65. Re:Number One! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      1) You would have to provide a breakdown of sales, and
      2) You would have to prove that productivity is the sole factor in sales
      ...for that number to have any meaning.

    66. Re:Number One! by Missing.Matter · · Score: 0

      However, that does not mean that the significant subset of Office users who really do intimately understand their way around a tried and tested combination of keyboard shortcuts, toolbar icons, menu commands, dialog tricks and so on will appreciate having the new UI and the underlying models forced on them as well.

      I'm one of those users who have been using Office since the 90s, and was very used to the old menu system. I adapted fine and prefer the ribbon, so it always makes me wonder whether these people who dislike the ribbon are numerous or simply very loud. As you can tell I lean toward the latter. I think they are a small group and my personal experience with others combined with usage statistics seem to back up my position.

      The Ribbon caters very much to cosmetic hacks and a quick-and-dirty approach. Don't bother defining styles, structuring your document systematically, or understanding how to present your data effectively!

      While office does allow for the quick and dirty document as you say, it has plenty of features for the advanced user. Honestly, it's just a tool and if the majority of people find it easier to use, does that make it bad because they could have a "better" document if they typeset with LaTeX? No. The majority of documents out there *deserve* a quick and dirty treatment because their purpose is to get a point across. The ribbon however allows easier access to more features, so the "quick and dirty" user who never heard of styles and cross references and table of contents can now discover those features insert them without a hitch. I see more and more documents produced with these features and they're better for it.

      Microsoft sells about three individual licences a decade for Office applications and about a bazillion copies through mass licensing or preinstallation deals every year. The number of sales really doesn't tell us anything meaningful about what the people using Office actually think of the new ribbon.

      The telling part is that these numbers are for Office 2010, 3 years after the ribbon was introduced. When something is a productivity dog, word gets around fast, as evidenced by Vista. If businesses who adopted Office 2007 were seeing major productivity hits (and 2007 sold at a rate twice as fast as 2003, so it was a major seller as well), you can bet Office 2010 with the same interface wouldn't have been as big a seller as it was.

    67. Re:Number One! by Missing.Matter · · Score: 1

      That assumes a linier upgrade path. Companies just don't work that way. A lot of them went from Office XP to Office 2007. Office 2003 only worked with XP plus and it came out during a time when a lot of companies were doing OS upgrades. They don't like to deploy office suites until they have a year or two of service packs and fixes out.

      While this is true, I think more people would have avoided 2010 if 2007 was such a productivity killer, just as they avoided Vista. Office 2007 sold very well, and if the general consensus was that the ribbon absolutely killed productivity (just as was the general consensus that Vista killed productivity) we would see very different sales numbers for Office 2010.

    68. Re:Number One! by amicusNYCL · · Score: 1

      In the file format.

      It's a zip archive of XML files with a different extension. Is it the zip format or the XML format that you have a problem with? It's not even a weird zip format, 7zip can open any docx or xlsx file and show you the folders and XML files that it contains. You can even rename it to a .zip file and even Windows XP will show it correctly with the default zip handling in explorer.

      Where's the monopoly included in all of that? It almost sounds like they're using well-defined formats to aid with compatibility. LibreOffice has zero problems reading or writing docx files.

      --
      "Our two-party system is like a bowl of shit looking at itself in a mirror." - Lewis Black
    69. Re:Number One! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There is no File menu. You click the "Office"

      It looks like you are using Office 2007, not 2010. Your point is still valid though...

    70. Re:Number One! by Anonymous+Brave+Guy · · Score: 2

      I'm one of those users who have been using Office since the 90s, and was very used to the old menu system. I adapted fine and prefer the ribbon, so it always makes me wonder whether these people who dislike the ribbon are numerous or simply very loud.

      The trouble is, no one person's individual experience is even close to meaningful on the scale we're talking about. We could just as well observe that I, personally, don't much like most kinds of toolbars in most applications, and I don't much like the Ribbon either, as much because of the discoverable menu structure it simplifies (or over-simplifies, for someone like me) as because of the toolbars it more obviously replaces. I'm quite sure I'm not alone, but I honestly have no idea how widespread my opinion is, only of the pattern I see in comments from a still relatively small group of other posters on-line.

      While office does allow for the quick and dirty document as you say, it has plenty of features for the advanced user.

      It really doesn't. It has a handful of features that are useful for serious documents but most users don't know about. It's still somewhere around 2/10 on the professional document production scale.

      Honestly, it's just a tool and if the majority of people find it easier to use, does that make it bad because they could have a "better" document if they typeset with LaTeX?

      Please notice at this point that I didn't say anything about LaTeX being a better alternative. For the vast majority of users, I don't think it is, as I mentioned in another post.

      --
      If you disagree, post your argument. (-1, Overrated) isn't your personal censorship tool for views you don't like.
    71. Re:Number One! by BlackSnake112 · · Score: 1

      And it is color coded to boot. Blue for word, green for excel, red for power point (well power point is evil so red fits), and yellow/gold for outlook.

      The person who said there is no file menu was correct with the 2007 versions. The 2010 versions have the file menu. Were there many people who liked the office button?

    72. Re:Number One! by Missing.Matter · · Score: 0

      For example in Excel in 2003 if I wanted to insert a row, I'd go "Insert -> Row"

      The insert tab is for inserting objects into the document. You'll notice none of those functions modify the layout of the document. However, the best way to insert rows and columns is to right click on the actual row, column, or cell and click insert. Clicking on the cell, and then going to a menu to do this operation makes no sense.

      But if I make the window a little narrower it becomes just an icon and it's not exactly obvious until I click on it what that might do.

      As the window gets narrower, the icons get smaller. There is never an icon without a label, as far as I can tell. The benefit of this is better scaling for smaller screens. Whereas a standard menu would simply hide these options by truncating the menu or toolbar, the ribbon can adjust until it gets very very small, where each group is a single icon.

      Then there other features like the fact the "File" menu now takes over the entire window of the program.

      I like this because it allows easier print and new documents menus. I've never encountered an instance where I needed to see the document at the same time I was browsing the file menu.

      Now with the old system I had drop down menus which makes it much quicker to go through and find all the options then go through the ribbon, click each button and navigate through all the various drop downs off those buttons. The pull down menus also made it very easy for me to find the keyboard shortcuts for an option, so I can quickly learn to use the program more efficiently. All this is now hidden in the help system

      Searching the old menu takes time O(m*n*p) to go through each menu (m), all the menu items (n), and all the flyouts (p). Since the ribbon displays menu items and flyouts at once, searching the ribbon takes time O(n*m) to search everything.

      Further, keyboard shortcuts are learned by pressing alt. You then follow the letters just as you would in the menu interface. Any user of the old interface should know this, and any novice user probably doesn't care either way since they don't tend to use keyboard shortcuts for anything more than copy and paste.

      However for me the worst of all is the inconsistency. In years gone buy these things were defined in a style guide so if I used one program I could quickly get familiar with others as many of the options would be called the same and in the same menus

      This is a pretty rosy picture of the past. There is no "style guide" that forces developers to do anything, and interface are inconsistent between applications, ribbon or no ribbon. Is "preferences" under "file", "edit", or the "tools" menu? Further, other applications do use ribbon menus. Solidworks comes to mind as an example. Microsoft even offers tools to add ribbon interfaces into your application.

      Now we're stuck with a horrible interface (in my opinion) that has very few possible customisations.

      You can create your own tabs and add any functions you please to it. You can customize any existing tab to your heart's content. You can even pin functions to the quick access toolbar. How is this any worse than a single toolbar? It's the same as a toolbar with tabs.

    73. Re:Number One! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And is there *any* way to reduce the size of the ribbon?
      I don't want the screen to suddenly shrink to 300-400 pixels vertically if I try to manipulate something!
      While Writer lets you take your pick: No toolbars, 3 rows of toolbars, or anywhere in between.
      You can change font size and icon size, use all icons, all text, or both.
      I have about 70 pixels for the menu, the toolbar, and the top ruler--how many pixels is the ribbon?

    74. Re:Number One! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      From the top of the screen to the top of the page, the default ribbon layout in Word uses THE SAME vertical space than the default menu+toolbars in open office writer.

      Yet, I can move toolbars around and put them on the side of the window, which is useful if you have a widescreen laptop and have more horizontal space than vertical space. You can't do that with the ribbon.

    75. Re:Number One! by Nemyst · · Score: 1

      Or, you could take a solid day to familiarize yourself with it and then see whether your productivity increases or decreases.

      The problem is that people HATE change, even if after the change they find themselves in a better position. The UI could be the best thing since sliced bread (though I won't say that it is) and people would still balk and whine about it.

      I for one find it much more elegant, intuitive and compact than cumbersome menus.

    76. Re:Number One! by Samantha+Wright · · Score: 1

      Office 2010 lets you customize the ribbon exhaustively, actually.

      --
      Bio questions? Ask me to start a Q&A journal. Computer analogies available for most topics!
    77. Re:Number One! by westyvw · · Score: 1

      Office would sell that many copies if they removed the user interface and replaced it with random bouncing icons. With lock-in nothing really matters, no metric of usability counts.

    78. Re:Number One! by Lost+Race · · Score: 1

      Shortcut keys only have material value when commands are hidden in a menu system.

      What the hell? I keep both hands on the keyboard 99% of the time when using a reasonably well-designed UI for a task that isn't inherently mouse-driven. For a word processor I should never have to touch the mouse at all. Shortcut keys are how work gets done.

    79. Re:Number One! by unixisc · · Score: 1

      If one has been using previous versions of MS Office, the ribbon completely disrupts one's workflow. Sure, one can hide it, but one can't replace the tabs w/ the menu bar, which is what would allow one to use the workflow of previous versions. Yeah, one can use various keystroke combinations - I do in Excel - but one doesn't always remember all of them, which is where the menu bar becomes handy. The problem is not so much the presence of the ribbon as much as the menu bar being gotten rid of. Otherwise, ribbons are actually fine replacements for the various floating toolbars.

    80. Re:Number One! by RubberMallet · · Score: 5, Informative

      Apparently you've never tried to round trip an ODF file from LibreOffice to MS Office and back to LibreOffice have you. Microsoft CLAIMS to support ODF, but the hard reality is.. MS Office does not support Open Office files... it appears to, but they've intentionally broke it so that it looks like ODf files are crap... when the reality is MS is playing dirty games.

      Try this... create a Calc spreadsheet with a formula... something simple like =LEN(B1) and type a short text string in B1, open it in MS Office and take a look at your formula field. Nice eh? MS Office strips off the formulas. Surprise, now your spreadsheet is useless.

      Open a docx file in LibreOffice and chances are something will fall off... because Microsoft's "documented" Office Open XML format is NOT actually what they use for docx. Surprise... again.

      The list goes on. The file formats are not portable.. they give the appearance of working and being portable, but they are not. If the document is simple, it will mostly work, but if it has any mid-level content, it'll fail... either way (LIbreOffice to MSO, or MSO to LibreOffice).

      How do I know? I actively participated in the development of OpenOffice from 1.5 through to 3.3, and then LibreOffice from 3.3 to now.

    81. Re:Number One! by RubberMallet · · Score: 1

      Ask a random person on the street, or better yet, a customer standing in the software section of your local mega mart if they've heard of Microsoft Office. The answer will invariably be yes. They have it on tehir home computer already, they use it at work, they've seen the TV commercials.

      Now ask that same person if they've heard of OpenOffice.org or LibreOffice, or Calligra... and they will give you a blank look.

      Why have people bought Office 2010? Because it's the only choice they are aware of.

    82. Re:Number One! by UnknownSoldier · · Score: 1

      > Oddly enough I don't mind the ribbon UI on Office 2011 Mac, but that's because it still have a standard menu bar up top that gives me a choice between ribbon or traditional menu UI.

      THIS, a thousand times over. This is one of the things I love about OSX version of Office -- I can *choose* if I want to use the menu or the ribbon. For some tasks, the menu bar is far faster, for others the ribbon is faster. Microsoft tries to ram their One True Way (ribbon) down PC users is the height of arrogance. Stop treating your power-users like idiots.

    83. Re:Number One! by TechyImmigrant · · Score: 1

      Have you managed to get it to display an embedded visio object with working smartshapes? Thought not.

      --
      I should use this sig to advertise my book ISBN-13 : 978-1501515132.
    84. Re:Number One! by naich · · Score: 1

      If you could put the ribbon down the side of the screen then I wouldn't mind it so much. My screen is far wider than it is tall, so vertical space is precious whereas the sides of the screen are usually filled with wasted blank spaces.

    85. Re:Number One! by dbIII · · Score: 1

      I've only just shifted an office full of people onto the version with the ribbon and they've stopped inviting me to the pub on Friday lunch. They hate it. It's still only a few months so they may eventually get to like it more than the previous interface but for now they dislike it. It confuses me a bit (because I rarely use it) but after a bit of time I can always find what I'm looking for and point that out to the user. My opinion doesn't matter since I don't have much to base it on, but none of the people that use it daily in my workplace seem to think much of it yet.
      However I still see the main failure of things like MS Word as still having the same insane handling of images in documents it had well before MS Office95. They don't anchor properly and you can waste vast amounts of time trying to get them onto the correct page of a changing document.

    86. Re:Number One! by chrismcb · · Score: 1

      It doesn't have that stupid Ribbon UI interface!

      Is Ribbon really that stupid?

      Yes.
      Yes it is.
      The ribbon is a 2d sticky menu. Something like what existed back in days of Windows 1. The ribbon makes it harder to do things. The ribbon was created to look different than the previous version of Office.

    87. Re:Number One! by chrismcb · · Score: 1

      . The larger display for each menu also means that you don't need as many submenus or even pop-up panels.

      The real problem with it is that it has a different set of advantages and disadvantages to the old menu plus toolbar. For any given workflow and screen size, it may be better or worse, but you can't toggle back to the old UI if it's worse.

      There are no submenus on the ribbon. The ribbon is just one big menu. The difference between the old style menus/toolbars and the ribbon is I can do everything with the old style that can be done with the ribbon. But I can't do everything with the ribbon that could be done with the old style. Most things that took my one click before now take 2 or 3.

    88. Re:Number One! by chrismcb · · Score: 1

      It completely exposes the functionality of Office,

      Except the stuff that is hidden. And yes there are items that could easily be found on the old menus/toolbars that aren't on the ribbon.
      My biggest problem with the ribbon is the amount of extra mouse clicks it takes to do something. They did do some things right with the ribbon, like automatically changing the font. But that could have been done with toolbars as well.

    89. Re:Number One! by chrismcb · · Score: 1

      Wow, you got it exactly right, except where you are wrong: 1) The default Ribbon layout is roughly TWICE has high as the default toolbar layout. The default toolbar layout is Caption/Menu/Standard Toolbar. The ribbon? A larger caption, a "menu", and the ribbon which is about the height of three toolbars. You could hide the toolbars, have as much functionaility and still have more space (only a few pixels, remember the caption is taller)
      2) There were keyboard shortcuts to every menu item. You have to look at each menu, or each ribbon, discoverability about the same
      3) There is room for only a handful of buttons in the quick access toolbar. Unlike the multitude of toolbars and buttons from before.

    90. Re:Number One! by chrismcb · · Score: 1

      Not sure I buy that. Less mouse movement maybe, but the targets are larger in Office, so it's unclear which interface has less target time according to Fitts Law. I think the Ribbon still wins overall since there is more functionality within 2 clicks than in the old menu.

      This may be true, but there is WAY fewer items that can be access with 1 click than before. I find that for a lot of what I want to do, I am click 2 or 3 times, when before I clicked once.

    91. Re:Number One! by chrismcb · · Score: 1

      Fact is the ribbon was designed from user feedback, and while slashdot trolls can cite himself and his 5 immediate co-workers as people who do not like the ribbon, Microsoft can point to thousands of data points and usage metrics to explain why the Ribbon is in fact a better UI.

      Pretty much everything at Microsoft is designed from user feedback. But there are ways to guide that feedback. The ribbon was designed from way less user feedback than you thick. The ribbon's main purpose is to look different then 2007
      Most of the data points that point that the "ribbon" is a better UI isn't actually ribbon related.
      Let me ask you, what would you prefer, a menu or a toolbar? The ribbon is just a sticky menu, a step backwards.

    92. Re:Number One! by jc79 · · Score: 1

      Worse as Microsoft has patented it, it stops other application writes from using the same interface - thereby making Microsoft programs have different interfaces from other vendors and increasing the learning curve of non-Microsoft applications.

      Sorry but I'm just NOT going to be convinced the ribbon is a good idea.

      This is exactly why the ribbon is a good idea, for Microsoft at least. Why make it easy to switch away from MS products? Anything that increases vendor lock-in is good for MS.

    93. Re:Number One! by DahGhostfacedFiddlah · · Score: 1

      "Insert Row Below" is Alt->JLE. "Insert Row Above" is Alt->JLA.

      I know this because as soon as you hit Alt, the ribbon shows the shortcuts for the next step. If you're in a table, you see that the "Layout" tab is invoked with "JL", and once you press those, the "Insert Row Below" button is invoked with "E".

      If you're using the mouse to do these things, you're doing it wrong. If you're doing a lot of table-related work, your fingers will quickly learn the keystrokes for you.

    94. Re:Number One! by Missing.Matter · · Score: 1

      If there are certain features you use over and over just pin them in the quick access. It can hold as many functions as you want.

    95. Re:Number One! by Missing.Matter · · Score: 1

      The default toolbar layout is Caption/Menu/Standard Toolbar

      No, the default layout in Writer is Caption, Menu, Toolbar, Toolbar, Ruler. The distance between the two from the top of the window to the top of the document is the same. If you scroll down in the document, the difference is a whole 21px, less than one toolbar.

      You could hide the toolbars, have as much functionaility and still have more space (only a few pixels, remember the caption is taller)

      If you have the same functionality without toolbars, what is the point of toolbars? No, you loose all the functionality of the toolbars! Of course, if you hide ribbon, you don't lose any functionality because they are still 1 click away, and you have the same vertical space as the menu system without toolbars (actually more, see below)! If you are hurting for vertical space, the minimized ribbon is far superior to menu without toolbars.

      only a few pixels, remember the caption is taller

      The caption is taller but the ribbon tab menu is smaller. Actually, if you do the math (which you should because you seem to be basing your argument from incorrect assumptions), the caption + menu is 1px *taller* than the caption + ribbon menu. Thus for the minimized ribbon you have 1px more vertical screen space than with menu without toolbars. And you can bring back the ribbon in 1 click whereas the toolbars.

      There were keyboard shortcuts to every menu item.

      I don't know about Office 2003, but Libre Office writer is certainly missing shortcuts.

      There is room for only a handful of buttons in the quick access toolbar. Unlike the multitude of toolbars and buttons from before.

      The quick access toolbar can hold as many functions as you want. It goes until it runs out of space, and then puts options in a drop down. For even more space, put it below the ribbon. If you minimize the ribbon you have a familiar caption,menu,toolbar interface. If you have only one toolbar row in writer, the behavior is the same (to hide items once you run out of horizontal space).

    96. Re:Number One! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And what if I don't want to have to memorize a hundred stupid 10-pixel icons and what they do.

      TEXT ASSHOLES! WHY DID YOU GET RID OF THE TEXT!

    97. Re:Number One! by Rude+Turnip · · Score: 1

      There is more to Office than word processing. Even then, there is more to word processing than typing.

    98. Re:Number One! by amicusNYCL · · Score: 1

      Just to clarify, we're moving the goalposts from Word/Writer to Visio, correct?

      --
      "Our two-party system is like a bowl of shit looking at itself in a mirror." - Lewis Black
    99. Re:Number One! by jimicus · · Score: 1

      Rumour has it (and I can't be bothered to google, so you'll have to chase it up for yourself) that Clippy had the potential to be really useful.

      The rumour essentially states that in an early pre-release version of Office '97, they'd put together some sort of clever algorithm that could figure out if you were lost and bring up Clippy in such cases. So you'd only see if it you really needed it. Apparently the algorithm worked quite well.

      A senior manager (possibly Gates himself) demanded that Clippy came up more often. The algorithm was castrated into something that came up every time you typed "Dear Sir".

    100. Re:Number One! by phoenix_rizzen · · Score: 1

      Working on the helpdesk for 10 years, you'd be amazed at just how many of those 3500 employees I've spoken with. :) A much larger percentage than your random 200 million users. :D

      And you just described the problem with the ribbon: it's a mishmash of 4 different sizes of icons, some in colour, some b&w, some with text labels, some without, and the different sizes aren't even aligned to a grid of any kind.

      And the different styles drops-downs (font, style, etc) *DO* show the style in the drop-down. At least in Office 2003. Maybe in XP, don't recall off-hand. And, if you use a real word processor like WordPerfect, you can even get live updates of highlighted portions of the document as you hover over the different styles/fonts in the drop-downs (something you can't do with the ribbon).

    101. Re:Number One! by Missing.Matter · · Score: 1

      it's a mishmash of 4 different sizes of icons

      There are only two sizes of icons, full size (40x40) and quarter size (20x20).

      some in colour, some b&w

      Not sure what this has to do with anything. There are B&W and color icons in Word 2003/XP, Open Office Writer, Word Perfect, etc. It's not a feature unique to the ribbon.

      some with text labels, some without

      The only icons without text are the most common ones like bold, justify, bullets, etc. Everything else is labeled at full resolution. Constrast this to OO Writer for example no icons have a text label.

      and the different sizes aren't even aligned to a grid of any kind.

      There is clearly a grid. Small icons are stacked 3 high and are aligned with eachother. This is the same height alloted for large icon + text label. The only icons I could see you referring to as unaligned are the ones on the home tab. This is no different than two toolbars stacked on top of eachother, and not an inherent problem with the ribbon design.

      And the different styles drops-downs (font, style, etc) *DO* show the style in the drop-down. At least in Office 2003.

      I haven't used Office 2003 in 5 years, so I don't recall. I'm comparing against Open Office Writer. In both, however, this feature is not prevalent throughout the application. For example, chart styles, object styles, cell styles, etc. This is especially evident in apps like Power Point, where styles are more important. With the Ribbon, there is ample room for an icon indicative of an animation or transition, which is more helpful than just a word and a tiny 16x16 icon.

      And, if you use a real word processor like WordPerfect, you can even get live updates of highlighted portions of the document as you hover over the different styles/fonts in the drop-downs (something you can't do with the ribbon).

      This is false. In Office 2010, style previews are updated in realtime as you hover over different styles. At any rate, the ribbon has no bearing on the ability to implement this feature.

  4. Journalist telling me how product he uses by postmortem · · Score: 5, Insightful

    is better than one he does not use.

    Not defending Word here, but MS PR can also write article '12 ways word tops writer'.

    1. Re:Journalist telling me how product he uses by Derekloffin · · Score: 3

      Indeed. Personally, I find all 12 of those points meaningless. I'd rather have some simple things, like a working web view, or having the ability to search and replace across paragraphs, or how about just letting me access all the F'ing auto format options (although as I recall Word had that issue too, just with slightly less annoying hidden untouchable options).

    2. Re:Journalist telling me how product he uses by crazyjj · · Score: 2

      I would write "12 Reasons Why I Agree With You."

      --
      What political party do you join when you don't like Bible-thumpers *or* hippies?
    3. Re:Journalist telling me how product he uses by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Web view" I do not even know what you would need that for ! so I guess it is a niche even if one that you value. still there is one, how is it broken ?

      auto format options are included in the auto correct options [Tools]->[AutoCorrect options]

      To clarify this "search and replace across paragraphs" I assume you mean to search and replace for things that span *both* the end of one paragraph and the start of the next. if you just want the end or start then click [more options] in find and select [regular expressions], $ is end and ^ is start. You need the alt search plug in to search across paragraphs (the paragraphs are stored separately so doing this internally is hard), but I do hope this is fixed, even though I have not ever had to do this myself.

    4. Re:Journalist telling me how product he uses by Rei · · Score: 1

      I'm still trying to figure out, in OO, to make it format numbers in 1,234.56 format when my locale setting is 1.234,56. Just because my locale setting is one way doesn't mean that I only ever deal with numbers in that format, and I don't want to have to change my locale just to enter numbers in different formats (especially when I'm dealing with *both* in the same document).

      --
      This administration is so incompetent that they cover their tracks with bigger tracks.
    5. Re:Journalist telling me how product he uses by Sparton · · Score: 1

      Just because my locale setting is one way doesn't mean that I only ever deal with numbers in that format, and I don't want to have to change my locale just to enter numbers in different formats (especially when I'm dealing with *both* in the same document).

      It would still be a pain in the ass work around, but I think you could settle on the one locale you want to type numbers in, and where you want it to appear as something else, just do a bunch of nested =SUBSTITUTE() to convert one currency into another for display purposes. Just make sure you use cell styles to clearly show what's an input-here cell and what's an output-in-different-locale cell.

    6. Re:Journalist telling me how product he uses by QuincyDurant · · Score: 1

      The author concedes this, in part:

      To be fair, you could make a similar (if probably shorter) list of Word's advantages that would include superior outlining and cross-reference systems, as well as grammar checking.

    7. Re:Journalist telling me how product he uses by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I use both office suites.

      Listing features is easy. There's no comparative discussion on usability and ability to get tasks done quickly between the two products. I'm still wondering how to select a table in Libre/OpenOffice Writer...

      As for other products in the suite, in Impress, I curse and swear when clicking on the frame and clicking on the text makes a big difference. Same problem in Draw. Sure I understand it's due to the backend design (frames are frames and text is text), but you are not thinking about how users actually use it. I get stuff done faster in Word, Powerpoint and Excel (I don't have Visio but fortunately Draw doesn't suck as much as the rest), and I don't think it's all due to my familiarity with each product.

    8. Re:Journalist telling me how product he uses by Compaqt · · Score: 1

      No, I'm sorry, there's no way you can write that detailed of a piece without having extensive experience with both products (not just writing one-off letters).

      Besides, it's a welcome relief to the thought that says Word is better in every way. It's not.

      If you've ever used Word or Writer for serious work, you know how true his points are. Picking out a few:

      -Word doesn't have Page formats. Glaring omission that leads to weird workarounds in big documents.
      -Word crashes for big documents. YMMV, but for me writing huge 200-page documents with pictures, screenshots, diagrams, etc., I know it's going to crash once a day.

      --
      I'm not a lawyer, but I play one on the Internet. Blog
    9. Re:Journalist telling me how product he uses by Rei · · Score: 1

      A pain, yes, but not a bad idea. :) Thanks.

      --
      This administration is so incompetent that they cover their tracks with bigger tracks.
    10. Re:Journalist telling me how product he uses by mikechant · · Score: 1

      I'm still wondering how to select a table in Libre/OpenOffice Writer...

      Table menu->select->Table

      or Ctl-A x 2

      Tricky eh?

  5. No way by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Whoever the writer is hasn't used either product much in a collaborative setting. Libre/Open Office has come a long way, but it still has a long way to go to rival Word. I've yet to load any Word file and have it look the same as it does in Word, and that's a deal breaker in a collaborative setting.

    1. Re:No way by h4rr4r · · Score: 2

      Seems unfair to pick that direction. Why is that not Word's fault?

      It is also why I always send important documents in pdf, I have seen different versions of Word render documents very differently.

    2. Re:No way by Sir_Sri · · Score: 1

      Because the standard MS uses is now public.

      PDF is good for the final version of a document, but not for collaborative editing. Whether or not MS gets its shit together for Skydrive/sharepoint and lets us edit documents as conveniently as google docs does remains to be seen, but that would be very appealing in a corporate setting.

    3. Re:No way by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Unfortunately, I keep Word around for a single document: my résumé. Other than that, Libre Office would work well enough for my purposes.

      OTOH, I have recovered several important MS Word documents that Word had completely hosed up. Just load them into Libre Office, then save them as MS Word format, and suddenly they're readable again in MS Word.

    4. Re:No way by Tough+Love · · Score: 1

      I've yet to load any Word file and have it look the same as it does in Word, and that's a deal breaker in a collaborative setting.

      In the long run, it sounds to me like a deal breaker for Microsoft Word.

      --
      When all you have is a hammer, every problem starts to look like a thumb.
    5. Re:No way by h4rr4r · · Score: 2

      That is false.
      The docx Word 2010 produces does not follow the documented standard.

      Even if it was true, the openoffice/libreoffice document types are actually publicly documented.

    6. Re:No way by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I've yet to load any Word file and have it look the same as it does in Word

      And I've yet to load any Word file in Word and have it look the same with a different default printer selected than on the machine that created it.

    7. Re:No way by TheRaven64 · · Score: 3, Informative

      Because the standard MS uses is now public.

      If you're referring to OOXML, then perhaps you should take a look at how Word does in the OOXML conformance test suite. Last time I checked, there were about 10,000 test failures.

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    8. Re:No way by mspohr · · Score: 1

      You send out your resume as an editable Word document?

      --
      I don't read your sig. Why are you reading mine?
    9. Re:No way by flimflammer · · Score: 1

      ....What? Why is that not Word's fault? Is it Microsoft's job to ensure that their formats are being loading properly in all third party software?

    10. Re:No way by mspohr · · Score: 2

      I've yet to load any Word document into a different version of Word and have it look the same.
      This does not appear to be a deal breaker for anyone.

      --
      I don't read your sig. Why are you reading mine?
    11. Re:No way by h4rr4r · · Score: 1

      Because they don't follow their own documented standard and refuse to add functionality to read other documented standards to their software.

    12. Re:No way by bubkus_jones · · Score: 1

      Some places request that you send it in that format, and any other format would be ignored.

    13. Re:No way by muuh-gnu · · Score: 1

      > Seems unfair to pick that direction. Why is that not Word's fault?

      Because Word is the incumbent. If you as a contender want to talk to the incumbent, you have to learn the incumbents preferred language But LibreOffice gains a significant amount of users, this unfair requirement will not be valid any more.

      It is important to remember that LibreOffice is fighting an uphill battle here, and this is by definition not fair, so you dont have to play fair. The incumbent did not win his top-of-hill position by playing fair, but by lockin deceit.

      One possible way to gain foothold is abuse of authority. Leverage whatevery you have to push LibreOffice. If you can force LibreOffice on somebody, do it without remorse. Require anybody less influential and depending on you to communicate with you through LibreOffice. If you can, hurt them financially and tell them why. Drive the cost of using MSO up, while making LO look like a good way to cut costs.

      The people do not really need MSO, they're just addicted to it. The detoxification therapy may not a pleasent experience for them, but it is their fault they got addicted in the first place and helped making other people addicted.

    14. Re:No way by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      A resume is a pretty simple document type to keep an entire copy of msoffice around for. There's nothing in a resume that should be impacted by using ANY other alternative. It simply should not be that large or complex.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    15. Re:No way by omnichad · · Score: 1

      You can't reliably parse text from a PDF (PDF mostly has no concept of paragraphs - just glyphs on a page). And how are they going to use their keyword scanner otherwise?

    16. Re:No way by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      Then defecting to an entirely different product should not be a problem then. It doesn't even have to be Free Software. It could be one of those commercial Win32 competitors that have been marginalized.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    17. Re:No way by ichthus · · Score: 1

      It is Microsoft's job to follow their own standard (OOXML). They can't even ensure that their formats are being loaded properly between the carious revisions of their own product.

      --
      sig: sauer
    18. Re:No way by mspohr · · Score: 1

      I've submitted my pdf resume to web sites which parse it in real time. They seem to do a reasonable job of parsing it as I rarely have to fix anything.
      Someone has figured out how to do it. It can't be that hard.

      --
      I don't read your sig. Why are you reading mine?
    19. Re:No way by tibit · · Score: 2

      There is nothing "standard" about what MS is doing. It's smoke and mirrors. I did a couple proofs of concept for unbelieving superiors who bought into this "standard" stuff. It's a joke of a standard.

      Here's a lovely tidbit that indicates how bad things are: you open an old word file in Office 97 format, and save it as docx, all using latest office. You then inspect it, and there's a little flag that basically tells word to format it as if it were old Office 97 or whatever. Yes, it's a docx file that merely carries the behavior expected of the old doc file. There's no documentation anywhere about how to implement that flag. A whole lot of docx documents has this flag set because, guess, what, they where effectively imported from old doc into docx. There is no way to handle this without reverse engineering what Office 97 did, and documenting its behavior.

      Never forget that it doesn't appear that MS wrote the opendoc standard first and then worked off of it, in a clean room fashion, in implementing their xml office file format support. Nope. They were at best documenting things as they went, and the only "standard" is the microsoft implementation of it in their office product. If you try and come up with your own implementation, you'll run into endless slightly incorrect statements, slight bits of missing information, slight smoke and mirrors; the general feel of the standard is that it was someone's second thought, never meant to be used for implementing anything, but merely used to appease the (rightful) "oh noes vendor lock-in" crowd. Smoke and mirrors, that'll be all there's to it.

      Yes, the opendoc standard does IIRC correctly document the xml schema and whatnot, but that's a far cry from implementing the formatting engine. Merely knowing the data structures is only one side of the medal. Similarly, if you were to attempt reverse-engineering the old document stream format, you'd only end up with how they represent the document data in the stream (doc is an OLE compound storage file). You still need to know how all this data drives the formatter to produce the visible output. And that formatter, ladies and gentlemen, is so intertwined with the details of the underlying GUI engine in Windows, that expecting a pixel-identical output is absurd unless you'd reverse engineer and produce a formal spec of the formatter code from old Word, and do the necessary work of documenting how it interacts with the font rendering system -- because that's also anything but trivial.

      --
      A successful API design takes a mixture of software design and pedagogy.
    20. Re:No way by omnichad · · Score: 1

      It's certainly possible, but it's more similar to how an OCR does it minus the actual deciphering of characters. Open a PDF file in notepad and you'll have an idea how hard it is (it's not a binary format at all if you have no pictures). Most systems that do an accurate job rendering it to plain text render the PDF and then try to reproduce the spacing/formatting in text form.

      If ALL you want is the keywords, there are easier ways of getting the text out, but they aren't all reliable.

    21. Re:No way by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      That is false. The docx Word 2010 produces does not follow the documented standard.

      Office 2007 does follow Ecma-376 1st edition, but not 2nd one (aka ISO/IEC 29500).

      Office 2010 supports read support for ISO/IEC 29500 Transitional and Strict, and write support for Transitional only (not for Strict).

    22. Re:No way by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      2007 did not support the ISO spec, because that came out long after it was released (Ecma spec was pretty much what Word did, but ISO changed quite a bit in it).

      2010 supports ISO spec, but only in its transitional mode, not strict.

    23. Re:No way by pipatron · · Score: 1

      Do you enjoy working for such extremely stiff and bureaucratic companies? :)

      --
      c++; /* this makes c bigger but returns the old value */
  6. Am I the only one in the world that likes Ribbon? by sandytaru · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I like the Ribbon layout. Go figure. After an initial "what the hell?" week I got used to it, and now I don't even notice it or think about it.

    --
    Occasionally living proof of the Ballmer peak.
  7. Don't these features interfere w/ compatibility? by WillAdams · · Score: 2

    The note that one can use Libre Office as a replacement for FrameMaker is interesting though.

    The one feature I've always wanted to see in Word was for the style formatting area to have each paragraph style be a pop-up menu which one can click on (or better still tab to) and change the current paragraph style w/ the keyboard.

    --
    Sphinx of black quartz, judge my vow.
  8. But for raw sadism. . . by smittyoneeach · · Score: 1

    . . .nothing beats lighting off the VBA editor, putting a leash on MS Word, and walking it around the block like your dog. Although, as noted above, Emacs remains far above the fray.

    --
    Get thee glass eyes, and, like a scurvy politician, seem to see things thou dost not.--King Lear
  9. It's free. by cpu6502 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I made a big mistake when I bought MS Office. I spent ~$150 and used it to update my resume. Have done very little else with it.

    For us casual users the free version of Open/Libre Office can save a lot of money. PLUS writer doesn't come with the stupid ribbon interface. (Where's the find menu option? Where's spellcheck? I don't want to play Where's Waldo? with my software.)

    --
    My AC stalker: " I personally agree with your posts most of the time, but that won't keep me from modding you troll"
    1. Re:It's free. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      erm, the find menu is on the first ribbon. in the right corner. it says "Find". it took me maybe 2 seconds to locate. bad example.

      however, it just took me a minute to find the spell check option. great example!

    2. Re:It's free. by b0bby · · Score: 1

      it just took me a minute to find the spell check option.

      F7 still works fine in 2010...

    3. Re:It's free. by antdude · · Score: 1

      So did I, but (Open/Libre)Office couldn't handle my resumes' formattings. :(

      --
      Ant(Dude) @ Quality Foraged Links (AQFL.net) & The Ant Farm (antfarm.ma.cx / antfarm.home.dhs.org).
    4. Re:It's free. by CaseCrash · · Score: 1

      however, it just took me a minute to find the spell check option. great example!

      Spell check? Who still uses that? The green and red squiggly underlines totally removed the need to ever use spell check.

      --
      No, that link you posted to a web comic we've all seen a hundred times is not "obligatory."
    5. Re:It's free. by johnnysaucepn · · Score: 1

      So, the upshot is that LibreOffice is great, as long as you rarely have to use it?

    6. Re:It's free. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hell even google docs can do what most people need a word program to do.

    7. Re:It's free. by Anonymous+Brave+Guy · · Score: 1

      The red and green squiggly lines drove me to stop using the provided spelling and grammar checks in Word almost completely. It turns out that I misspell few enough words that a red-squiggly is far more likely to be Word either not knowing a word or assuming I'm in the US even though I'm using British English than it is to be a spelling error on my part. The green-squigglies have been a joke from the beginning and remain so to this day. I'll typically do a quick final check before I send a document to anyone else, which usually finds no genuine errors but does spot the occasional typo or doubled word from time to time, but that's an on-demand feature that doesn't require the use of anything squiggly.

      --
      If you disagree, post your argument. (-1, Overrated) isn't your personal censorship tool for views you don't like.
    8. Re:It's free. by sandytaru · · Score: 1

      If all you're doing is resumes, term papers, etc, then Libre office is fine. But I'm managing thousands of pages of documentation, and I've found that I just prefer what Word 2010 can do compared to Open Office or Libre Office. Fortunately, my business paid for it, so it's no skin off my nose.

      --
      Occasionally living proof of the Ballmer peak.
    9. Re:It's free. by swillden · · Score: 1

      I made a big mistake when I bought MS Office. I spent ~$150 and used it to update my resume. Have done very little else with it.

      For casual uses like that, I think Google Docs is an even better choice. Not only is it free, you don't have to download or install it, and you don't have to worry about keeping track of where you left that resume file two years ago last time you needed to update it. It's right there in your docs list. It may have gotten buried under a lot of other stuff if you use Docs a lot, but there's a search bar. You also don't have to worry about backing it up, and sharing it with someone is trivial, and you know they'll be able to read it (not that it's that hard to generated and mail a PDF).

      The downsides are, obviously, that it lacks some features (but not stuff a casual user would care about), and that it doesn't work well off-line. On the other hand, how often are we off-line these days?

      (Disclaimer: I'm a Google engineer, but I don't work on Docs and my comments aren't an attempt to pump the product for financial gain. I've just become a big fan since I started using it heavily for work and then home, and now find LibreOffice annoyingly limited. I used to be a big fan of OOo/LO, back from when it was StarOffice.)

      --
      Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
  10. Re:Am I the only one in the world that likes Ribbo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    Did you like Microsoft Bob as well? How long have you been a member of the communist party?

  11. Usability by spike+hay · · Score: 2

    Libreoffice writer is more annoying to use than Word, but it's not so bad. I use LaTeX/vim for the vast majority of what I write. It actually does what I tell it to do, which is better than any WYSISWG program.

    What's really bad is Impress. It's a complete mess from a usability standpoint. When I need to make a presentation, I use Powerpoint. I should figure out how to use LaTeX instead.

    --
    If you don't understand any of my sayings, come to me in private and I shall take you in my German mouth.
    1. Re:Usability by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I use both Powerpoint and Impress, and other than the ribbon interface, I really haven't noticed a difference usability-wise. Of course, I'm not a novice user, so usability has to be *really* bad before I start to notice an affect on my productivity.

    2. Re:Usability by SwedishPenguin · · Score: 1

      I use beamer for presentations and love it. I never tried to do anything serious in any of the WYSIWYG tools though so I can't really compare.

    3. Re:Usability by TheRaven64 · · Score: 1

      I used Keynote for a couple of years before switching to beamer. It's not perfect, but it would take a lot to persuade me to switch back - and Keynote is supposed to be one of the better WYSIWYG tools. It does lack the PowerPoint misfeature of automatically shrinking your text to fit it into the box, which has caused a lot of PowerPoint presentations containing bullet points that are illegible to anyone in the audience who left their binoculars at home.

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    4. Re:Usability by elashish14 · · Score: 1

      Another vote for Beamer. The only gripe that I have is that you have to Google basically every formatting change you want - getting rid of the navigation toolbar, changing the bullet style, etc. This is not unlike everything else in Latex, but the options can get fairly obscure so it can be a slightly bigger hassle. Also, if you're writing raw latex yourself, inserting columns can be unwieldy, but I haven't made a presentation since I started using vim-latex, and I imagine that would make things a lot easier.

      On the other hand, the themes are remarkably elegant and documents are very professional. When I used Beamer in school, people consistently told me that my slides looked more professional and readable than anyone else's. Also, the transitions are easy to make and the formula editing is obviously the best out there.

      Here are some more suggestions, including Powerdot which is a good alternative to Beamer as well (slightly less complex perhaps): http://wiki.lyx.org/LyX/Presentations

      --
      I have left slashdot and am now on Soylent News. FUCK YOU DICE.
    5. Re:Usability by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      agreed, and at least for simple presentations, apple's keynote is simply stunning. it's as far beyond powerpoint, as powerpoint is beyond impress.

      i fell in love with it the moment when, upon dragging a text box, it automatically displayed guide lines for almost every relative offset you'd be interested in. it's almost impossible to make an ugly slide with keynote, unless you really try. it also makes very smart use of dual displays.

      it's too bad it's only for mac; i'll miss it when apple inevitably fucks up mac os x and i go back to linux.

    6. Re:Usability by EvanED · · Score: 1

      I've been impressed with the Keynote presentations I've seen; I really wish I could get it for my PC.

      Unfortunately, as I've become a little fond of saying, I don't want to spend several hundred to over a thousand dollars on presentation software, even if it does come with a free computer. :-)

  12. Re:Am I the only one in the world that likes Ribbo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yes. You are. Great Job!

  13. The Real Problem with Libre/Open Office by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I've used several variants of Libre/Open Office and I've found one fundamental problem with all of them. The developers insist on copying MS Word's brain dead interface.

    One time, I was trying to do a vertical layout that should have been simple. After fighting with Open Office for about an hour, I gave up assuming that the Open Office developers just hated their users. So I broke down, fired up the Windows machine and started using MS Word.

    What did I discover. All the brain cell killing UI design had been copied exactly from MS Word. So I will continue to use Libre Office and I will curse Microsoft every time I find a hard to use feature.

    To the Libre Office developers, I say it's okay to branch from MS Word's UI, especially on the obscure features. Most of the users that can't deal with a different UI barely do more than change fonts anyway.

  14. Re:Am I the only one in the world that likes Ribbo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I like the Ribbon layout.

    Yes, I think you're the only one. In my company, of the 500 or so users, not one likes the ribbon. Many hate it.

    On the other hand, there are some features that some people really love in office 2007 & 2010 (for example, excel spreadsheets can now go beyond 64k rows).

  15. Formatting features are not the killer app anymore by DeadDecoy · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If I wanted superior formatting control, I'd use LaTeX. The primary reason I'm stuck with MS Word, and sometimes google docs, is due to superior collaboration tools: change tracking, multiple views for revision and final draft; identifiers for whose made changes where (provided the userid has been setup properly); notes/comments in the margins.

    For the record, I haven't taken the recent version LibreOffice for a spin. But from what I remember of OpenOffice, these features were not that functional. I thought OpenOffice was a decent piece of software, but it's still based on prior definitions of what a documenting software has been, rather than what it could be.

  16. Re:Am I the only one in the world that likes Ribbo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I didn't get the hate for Ribbon either...till I realized that it was mainly all the people who had memorized all their shortcuts and exactly which obscure menu had the function/tools they needed to use. They were the power users of old, and suddenly they were castrated, and they were back to being on the same level as MS noobs. To make matters worse, the ribbon interface actually made the MS Office suite of software easier to use for noobs and probably made these same power users feel threatened.

    I was never a power user of Excel/Word/Power Point 2003, but I always found them to be exceedingly frustrating to work with. Sure, if your work requires you to master those tools, I'm sure you'd get really good after months/years of use, but to a new user, the tons of nested menus with features hidden away made MS Office use an exercise in frustration.

    Then I used Office 2007, and once I realized the orb was the file menu (that, I agree was a terrible decision), I found myself using tons of new features that I could never have known about or discovered in Office 2003. The quality of my Word documents, Powerpoint presentations and Excel files greatly improved. I actually find the interface extremely useful because everything is arranged in a logical manner and it is fairly easy to find the tools you need to use without having to spend tens of minutes trying to find the feature in some hidden menu.

    Not to say that Word and Office doesn't have its fair share of issues (formatting documents consistently in Word is just a nightmare. I had to write my doctoral thesis in Word because my adviser did not know to use or care about LaTeX), but as far as the new ribbon interface goes, it certainly seems a big improvement over the old Office interface.

  17. Unicode consistency by Yewbert · · Score: 1

    Word could be improved for some hardcore uses by getting rid of every last vestige of non-Unicode compliant font usage propagated in the name of backward-compatibility. And make all codepoint usage uniformly hexadecimal and accommodate double-byte codepoints in VBA, and stop trating Symbol font so weirdly. Harumph.

    If LibreOffice gave me the power and flexibility to deal with Unicode properly, I'd jump on it for at home. At work,... always gonna be stuck with Word.

  18. Re:Am I the only one in the world that likes Ribbo by hawkbat05 · · Score: 2

    I'm with you on this one. Sure it took getting used to but now I find it much easier than browsing through multi-level menus. Plus it's really just a glorified quick access toolbar and you can do a lot of customization as to what commands are on it. I could live without the File menu taking over my whole window though.

  19. no more article by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Page unavailable after 20 comments. That must be the weakest server in the history of /. .

    1. Re:no more article by Samantha+Wright · · Score: 2

      Who says it was after 20 comments? None of them appear to have RTFA. The article may never have existed!

      --
      Bio questions? Ask me to start a Q&A journal. Computer analogies available for most topics!
  20. Re:Am I the only one in the world that likes Ribbo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What pisses me off is that what used to be a straightforward step-by-step wizard (say, creating labels) now has all the buttons across a ribbon in no particular order (no, it doesn't start from the left, the "Create Labels" button that Create Label (singular) is not what you want to push).

  21. Re:Am I the only one in the world that likes Ribbo by UnknowingFool · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The problem with ribbon I have is that it assumes what I need and don't need. It works fine until I have to do something that isn't easily found. Then it is hidden two or three menus deep that I have to use MS help or the Internet to find. I could customize the ribbon but that requires precognition that what I want is not obvious.

    --
    Well, there's spam egg sausage and spam, that's not got much spam in it.
  22. Beemer by getto+man+d · · Score: 3, Informative

    When I need to make a presentation, I use Powerpoint. I should figure out how to use LaTeX instead.

    Check out the Beemer class; it's handy but not exactly pretty. However, you can find some decent templates floating around the net.

    1. Re:Beemer by TheRaven64 · · Score: 2

      I like the Singapore theme with beamer: it's clean and minimal. here's an example I created recently. The overall structure is beamer with the Singapore theme, the diagrams are done with TikZ, the PDF annotations with pdfmarginpar and the code listings with the listings package. The really nice thing is that you can compose all of these things, so I have some code listings embedded in TikZ drawings: listings does the syntax highlighting and then TikZ places that box somewhere and draws a background behind it and a border around it. TikZ also works really nicely with beamer's build support. Once you've written the diagram, you can just insert \pause commands and you'll get one page with everything before that and one with everything before and after it (but before the next \pause). This makes it really easy to do diagrams where parts appear as you're talking - you do the final version and then insert the build steps at the end. You can also hide things, but that's usually not ideal because the final version that people download typically won't have the build effects, so people who download the slides will see a mess (see any recent Apple presentation for examples of this same problem in Keynote).

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      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    2. Re:Beemer by EvanED · · Score: 1

      I use Latex for pretty much any document that isn't plain text, and it's great. (That's not true. It's a PITA to use and in many ways is almost unforgivably awful. (In particular, the error messages it gives you are frequently about as helpful as punching you in the face.) But compared to everything else, it's great.)

      But I don't understand the practice of making presentations in Latex. Latex's big strengths are that you specify the logical form and it will automatically take care of the layout. In other words, you provide the content and it provides the form. The problem is if you want to override its form decisions, it can be like herding cats.

      The problem is that, to a unique extent for presentations, the form is almost as important as the content. It's always true that form matters to some extent -- if uoy dont bleve me, imagne my hole post loked like dis; wood u rd it? -- but for presentations it's acutely so.

      There are a few reasons this is so. First is that bad presentations are so easy to tune out. (In fact, they're hard to not tune out!) If you want your audience to know what you're talking about, you need to keep their attention. Tied up with this is the fact that presentations go at the speaker's pace, not at yours. If you explain something badly in something written, your reader can just look back a few sentences and give it another try. Not possible with a presentation. So it's important to not lose people in the first place and simultaneously get them back if you do.

      Presentations also often have a different goal than something written, and as a result have a different audience. I'm biased by working in academia a bit, but consider a conference. The goal of paper you publish is to (1) convince people that you solved an interesting and/or important problem and (2) provide enough information about what you did that people can build on your work. People who read your papers will often have an active interest in doing so, because they think it will help them with what they're doing. (Not always, if it shows up in a reading group or class or something.) Contrast with a conference presentation. The goal of one of those is threefold: (1) advertise your paper so that people read it, (2) plant seeds in peoples' minds so that if in 6 months they have a problem that is related they'll think of your work and can go look up the paper, and (3) trigger related thoughts in the minds of the audience to spawn discussion. Most of the people in the audience don't have any active reason to watch your presentation other than "this may be interesting" -- and if you let them down by delivering a bad presentation, they'll ignore you and you've forsaken your goals.

      Imagine a corporate motivational speaker or something (doesn't matter much how BS you consider that sort of thing) which stood up there with a monotone voice giving a boring-ass presentation. It almost doesn't matter what the words coming out of his mouth are; he's not going to be a motivational speaker for long.

      So what this means is you have to try harder during presentations to keep the interest and attention of your audience than you usually do. Many of the things you do here are organizational, but not all. Others are visual. Presentations should almost always be far more visually-based than written forms, using pictures in preference to written or mathematical descriptions. There are many people who say that presentation slides shouldn't have mathematical expressions on them. I don't go quite that far, but they're certainly a strong smell -- a slide with a bunch of math is likely to lose a large portion of your audience. (Another Latex strength down!) If that slide doesn't involve you saying "the important thing to note" followed by something really simple, it's a near certainty.

      And stuff like "I want this picture to be here on the slide" is pretty much exactly what Latex was designed to not do. You can do it, but it isn't pretty. And while there's a strong argument to be made that PowerPoint's desig

    3. Re:Beemer by EvanED · · Score: 1

      Wow, that turned into longer than I expected. :-) Sorry for anyone who actually reads it.

    4. Re:Beemer by serviscope_minor · · Score: 1

      I like the Singapore theme with beamer: it's clean and minimal.

      I wouldn't call that minimal. It's got that weird thing across the top of the page with the mini titles and diamonds.

      --
      SJW n. One who posts facts.
  23. Re:Am I the only one in the world that likes Ribbo by ChaoticCoyote · · Score: 2

    You're not alone. I like the ribbon.

    It's a helluva lot better than a thousand menu layers.

  24. Re:Am I the only one in the world that likes Ribbo by thetoadwarrior · · Score: 2

    I've had to only just use it because my new employer uses office (I use libre office at home) and no, ribbon is shit.

  25. Ishas and Ofifice by Gaygirlie · · Score: 2

    It does seem like LibreOffice's spell- and grammar-checking-tools still need some work, though.

  26. Broken link 403 Forbidden by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Getting 403 Forbidden

    You don't have permission to access /applications/how-libreoffice-writer-tops-ms-word-12-features-1.html on this server.

  27. About half of those ways were just . . . by InvisibleClergy · · Score: 3, Insightful

    . . . "Guys, we have a styles system! And it's better than Word's!"

    From the title of the article, I was expecting 12 distinct and separate features, not 6 features and a treatise on how awesome Styles are in LibreOffice.

    I am counting hyphens as another point in styles, because the hyphens point is essentially "You can specify this with styles too!"

    1. Re:About half of those ways were just . . . by Tough+Love · · Score: 0

      Unlike you perhaps, I found that each and every point is interesting and would likely affect my work flow.

      --
      When all you have is a hammer, every problem starts to look like a thumb.
    2. Re:About half of those ways were just . . . by Tough+Love · · Score: 1

      And apparently I found a Microsoft moderator

      --
      When all you have is a hammer, every problem starts to look like a thumb.
    3. Re:About half of those ways were just . . . by JakartaDean · · Score: 1

      . . . From the title of the article, I was expecting 12 distinct and separate features, not 6 features and a treatise on how awesome Styles are in LibreOffice.

      You're right, but I think it's an important point because Word and Powerpoint completely break styles using bullets or numbers. I first noticed this when I was moving a document back and forth between Word and OpenOffice, and I thought OO was to blame. However, years more experience with Word and Powerpoint have convinced me that some drunk programmer screwed up something basic back in 1998 and nobody can find the fault. I have documents where changing the style from Heading 2 to Heading 3 changes the indentation of all Heading 3 paragraphs. I have slides in Powerpoint where adding and deleting lines changes the colour of the number/bullet. I don't go around trying to break these things, they just get into documents and never let go. I've had it with documents using compatibility mode, saved in the latest file format and started from scratch in Office 2010. The one feature I really want to use is broken. Drives me batty.

      --
      The subject who is truly loyal to the Chief Magistrate will neither advise nor submit to arbitrary measures (Junius)
  28. Re:Am I the only one in the world that likes Ribbo by bemymonkey · · Score: 2

    You're not alone. I just don't like the fact that it requires actual processing power to work, unlike a regular old Word 2003-style menu... this results in keyboard shortcuts lagging on slow machines (such as netbooks). Other than that, I actually quite like it - much easier to find stuff if you're actually new to Office or haven't used the application for a while...

  29. Forbidden features! by metrometro · · Score: 4, Funny

    You don't have permission to access /applications/how-libreoffice-writer-tops-ms-word-12-features-1.html on this server.

    1. Re:Forbidden features! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Clearly the advantages of LibreOffice are too advanced and nuanced for mere mortals to understand, only the few enlightened may view such wisdom.

    2. Re:Forbidden features! by present_arms · · Score: 1

      same here

      --
      http://chimpbox.us
    3. Re:Forbidden features! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

      You people REALLY need to stop reading the articles. Clearly this is having a negative effect.

    4. Re:Forbidden features! by gfxguy · · Score: 1

      Ditto... must have gotten slashdotted so they had to block it.

      --
      Stupid sexy Flanders.
  30. Re:In defense ofAlso correcma Word headers/footers by djsmiley · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Sigh :(

    --
    - http://www.milkme.co.uk
  31. Secret? Slashdotted? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Is anybody else getting 403 forbidden when hitting the link?

    1. Re:Secret? Slashdotted? by Tough+Love · · Score: 1

      Here is an abstract at least.

      --
      When all you have is a hammer, every problem starts to look like a thumb.
  32. Ways number 13 and 14 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    13. Incompatibility
    14. General shittiness

    1. Re:Ways number 13 and 14 by Tough+Love · · Score: 1

      Points in favor of Microsoft Word:

      1. Incompatibility
      2. General shittiness

      In other news, self-flagellation is on the rise.

      --
      When all you have is a hammer, every problem starts to look like a thumb.
  33. Google Cache by codemachine · · Score: 4, Informative
    1. Re:Google Cache by Tough+Love · · Score: 1

      Wow, Google monetizing their cache much? Two popup ads per click.

      --
      When all you have is a hammer, every problem starts to look like a thumb.
    2. Re:Google Cache by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Thank you

  34. So, did anyone even read this article? by Keyslapper · · Score: 0

    Is it just me or did nobody posting here actually read the article?

    I know I didn't. Why? Well, the F'n thing is 403'd. How are we supposed to read an article we can't bloody get to?

    And since we can't get to this article, are we supposed to just assume there really are 12 ways A is better than B?

    And how did this even get posted if the article is no more than a tease?

    Sorry for the rant, but I was really wanting to see if there was anything in there I didn't already think of.

    1. Re:So, did anyone even read this article? by Derekloffin · · Score: 1

      I skimmed it. It apparently got slashdotted since then.

    2. Re:So, did anyone even read this article? by BravoZuluM · · Score: 1

      I had the same result, so I started reading the comments to see if others were able to read the article. And then...oh yeah...this is Slashdot. At least the posters read the title or the comments would be off topic. :-)

    3. Re:So, did anyone even read this article? by Keyslapper · · Score: 1, Funny

      Interesting. So they got slammed, and the nancyboy admin decided to 403 that one page. Never seen that response to a slashdot avalanche. I'll dig it up later I suppose.

      Oh, by the way, they have LOTS of interesting looking articles from the home page! <evil grin>
      Check them out! http://www.datamation.com/

      MuaHaHaHa!!

      I just know I'm screwing my karma, but what the hell.

    4. Re:So, did anyone even read this article? by ThorGod · · Score: 1

      I skimmed through the points, and I'm not impressed. Probably the most interesting area is how Writer offers more control over exporting to PDF. You can specify image compression levels, what page gets displayed on a 'preview', and other parts of the exported PDF. (It didn't say that you could create/modify the PDF's Table of Contents, and I bet you can't. That would have been a big bonus.)

      The rest of the points sounded like comments someone who doesn't actually use Word would make.

      -Can't modify styles by some hierarchy.
      --I'm still unclear what they mean by that. I can easily modify styles in Word and have them reflected throughout the document.

      -Some comment about how Word relies on a standardized "Normal" template. They mention Writer maintains a standard template, too, but somehow they liked Writer's implementation better. (Not a good enough explanation for that.)

      -They mention Writer has "true WYSIWYG header/footers"...which Word does, too.

      For someone with experience using Word in a professional/academic setting, their points were under developed and just not all that good. The one area they had me really interested, PDF exports, they didn't go into enough detail on. If Writer can actually output decently useful PDFs, then that's a major selling point! Move that point up to Num1 instead of Num 11 or wherever it was.

      --
      PS: I don't reply to ACs.
    5. Re:So, did anyone even read this article? by JackDW · · Score: 1

      Though don't tell LibreOffice you want "PDF A/1-a" format (i.e. embedded fonts) because if you do, it will generate a broken PDF that Acrobat Reader(!!) will not be able to open.

      "There was an error processing a page. Invalid colorspace."

      Maybe having fewer options makes it easier to test for this sort of thing. I bet Word's PDF exporter has been tested with Acrobat Reader...

      --
      You're an immobile computer, remember?
    6. Re:So, did anyone even read this article? by sandytaru · · Score: 1

      Oh, I read it, hoping it would point out all the features I need in Word were actually incorporated into Libre Office now too. Nope.

      --
      Occasionally living proof of the Ballmer peak.
  35. Re:Broken link 403 Forbidden by qrwe · · Score: 1

    Same here. Anyone found a working link?

    --
    There are 2 types of people in the world - those who understand decimal and those who don't.
  36. All these things are irrelevant in the office by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I love Openoffice/Libreoffice, but they really need to start focusing on more than the basics of Microsoft Word. I really don't care if Microsoft Word or Libreoffice does tables better or prints better PDF documents. All this is completely irrelevant to me because both Word and Writer gets the job done regardless who thinks they integrate those basic features better. If Libreoffice wants to get better, they need to improve their database integration because it's absolutely horrendous, even with the provided opensource ODBC drivers which work half the time and others don't work at all. When they do work, they don't work right with writer or Calc. Even the Microsoft Office Third party ODBC drivers for Postgresql or Mysql works 1000000 times better than for Libreoffice, and the database integration in MS Office is more integrated and easy to do. Should also note that MS office stuff is better documented than Libreoffice in these technical issues. And for office work, database integration is key and Libreoffice just plain sucks on that.

    Hell, if Libreoffice wants to just compare those basic features to being better than word, I could say Abiword is 100 times better than both of them combined. This article is just dumb.

  37. Re:Broken link 403 Forbidden by M1FCJ · · Score: 1

    Their own front page has the broken link. After a frantic call from an MS Lawyer, they must have decided to pull it down, I guess...

  38. Re:Cue Microsoft shills by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    God forbid anybody likes a product from Microsoft! Therefor they MUST be on Microsoft's payroll!

    Software is a tool. Use the right one for the job. If you like Open/Libre/Staroffice over Office... Good for you. I don't. Stop trying to 'convert' me, all you're doing is annoying me and wasting my time.

  39. Re:Am I the only one in the world that likes Ribbo by Missing.Matter · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Isn't that the problem with any interface? Due to limited screen space, they can't make every option available in a menu system or the ribbon system (which is really still a hierarchical menu, just a different layout). So they have to make obvious the most common features, and hide some of the more esoteric ones. The benefit of the ribbon is that 90% of the functionality of Word is available in 3 clicks or less. With the old system, many more options were hidden in multiple layers deep. So much so, that people started requesting functionality to be added that has been there the whole time, because they couldn't find those features in the menu layout.

    At any rate, if you really need to, you can customize the ribbon layout in Office 2010 in pretty much any way you choose.

  40. LibreOffice is great... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...when per-user productivity is so low that you can't justify the cost of MS Office.

  41. TROFF by goombah99 · · Score: 1

    No No TROFF on a daisywheel printer is the only way to produce goodlooking documents fools! it has been down hill from there.

    --
    Some drink at the fountain of knowledge. Others just gargle.
  42. Re:Broken link 403 Forbidden by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Search the address with Google, get the preview to appear (double arrow to the right of the link) and select the cached version (you may need to skip an ad).

    It's forbidden for me even if clicked on Datamation's main page! Talk about paranoid...

  43. Re:Formatting features are not the killer app anym by loufoque · · Score: 2

    Putting latex files under revision control just works. Doesn't work so well with word/openoffice.

  44. They have one huge disadvantage: Landscape mode. by Beardo+the+Bearded · · Score: 1, Interesting

    There's one major flaw in OO or LO. That's the difficulty of changing a document to Landscape mode.

    Word: Click Landscape radio button
    OO: Search on google for the tutorial, edit a template, save, open the new docume... you know what, I don't know. It's a PITA and it's a killer PITA that's probably the biggest reason there isn't a bigger market share. Half the documents I write are in landscape mode.

    And I use Ubuntu at home (with significant modifications), I've contributed to one of the projects, and I've done life-critical assembly programming for money.

    If I think it's a PITA, 80%+ of the potential users will think it's impossible.

    --

    ---
    ECHELON is a government program to find words like bomb, jihad, plutonium, assassinate, and anarchy.
  45. OpenOffice LibreOffice by MacColossus · · Score: 1

    The original post states "I got through grad school with OpenOffice (now known as LibreOfifice)," I thought OpenOffice was still OpenOffice and LibreOffice is a fork project of OpenOffice based on reaction to Oracle's purchase of Sun.

  46. Re:Am I the only one in the world that likes Ribbo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No, you aren't, apparently. But I personally don't like it, probably because my "What the hell?" phase has lasted for about a year and there are still some things I struggle to find or that are hidden in inconvenient locations (and, yes, I know I can reconfigure the Ribbon, which I regularly waste more time trying to do in order to solve the problem that what it thinks are commonly-used features aren't what I think are commonly-used features). I don't begrudge Microsoft the observation that some people like the Ribbon interface. Obviously some people do prefer it. Fine. More power to them. What I really hate them for is not offering the option of a "classic" menu layout in the Windows version of Office. What were they thinking?

  47. Love Libre but... by EmperorOfCanada · · Score: 1

    Love Libre but the MS Word spell check is way better. I doubt I can type two paragraphs without Libre saying I have misspelled a word that is, in fact, spelled correctly. Nice to see that Libre is pulling away from the creepy Oracle version.

    1. Re:Love Libre but... by Sparton · · Score: 1

      I doubt I can type two paragraphs without Libre saying I have misspelled a word that is, in fact, spelled correctly.

      I still love when OO claims that "monetization" isn't a word. I'm still trying to figure out if that's a mistake or a purposeful omission.

  48. Re:Am I the only one in the world that likes Ribbo by Yewbert · · Score: 3, Informative

    I don't mind the ribbon much one way or the other - but I still find myself getting more use out of an extensively customized Quick Access Toolbar than out of the ribbon itself.

  49. Scribe by david.emery · · Score: 1

    LaTeX without the ugliness... Still my favorite document production system.

  50. Re:Am I the only one in the world that likes Ribbo by crazyjj · · Score: 5, Funny

    I can top it. It miss Clippy. I thought the Ewoks and Jar Jar were cute. And I liked disco.

    --
    What political party do you join when you don't like Bible-thumpers *or* hippies?
  51. Re:Am I the only one in the world that likes Ribbo by itsdapead · · Score: 1

    Let's see:
    Using more screen real estate at the top of the window just as the industry is moving to 16:9, 1080p screens with more horizontal space: FAIL. (especially c.f. the palette used in the previous Mac version).
    Dynamically hiding icons or drastically changing their appearance depending on the window width.... have wide/narrow layouts maybe, but continually juggle the layout as you resize? FAIL.

    With two such fundamental design fails, Is there a need to go any further?

    (There's also the nice new equation editor that only works in one font, Callibri, when most of the universe specifies either Times or TeX Computer Modern for equations, but that's not a ribbon fail).

    --
    In a survey of 100 programmers, 111111 thought that duck-typing was a good idea.
  52. Re:punched cards by ygslash · · Score: 1

    ...and in the darkness bind them?

    Only if you remembered to number the cards.

  53. Re:Am I the only one in the world that likes Ribbo by Mr+Z · · Score: 2

    What I don't like about the ribbon is that there are many functions I used to use regularly that were always on screen. Now they're spread out across many different ribbon tabs, and sometimes where they ended up is non-intuitive for me. What used to be a simple click turns into an Easter egg hunt.

    Perhaps if I used Office daily, I'd develop the appropriate muscle memory. But, I only use it a few times a month, and it's usually different apps -- this week it's Excel, next week it's PowerPoint.

    I don't care if "zoom", "increase font size", "merge and center", and "fill with color" all belong on logically different tabs based on their function. For me, they all belong on the "I use this regularly" page.

  54. What? by brit74 · · Score: 2

    I use LibreOffice on my computer. While I don't use it much, I haven't used MS Word in years. I generally find LibreOffice to be harder to use and less professional-looking than MS Office. How do I know? A few months ago, we were putting together some documents for work. Other people in the office were using MS Office and I was using LibreOffice. Sending documents back and forth between us mostly worked, although there were sometimes things that didn't appear in the LibreOffice version of the document (if I remember right, it was some image data in the headers and footers and sometimes signatures wouldn't show up in LibreOffice). I was sometimes surprised when I looked at a document in MS Office because I'd suddenly discover that something important wasn't showing up at all in LibreOffice and there was no indication that something was supposed to be there. Also, formatting had a tendency to get messed up. Don't get me started on getting charts to format correctly on LibreOffice. When I'd go over to my coworkers computers and look at/adjust the document in MS Office, it was generally a better experience (even though I haven't used MS Office in years). My conclusion was that MS Office was just plain a better program and LibreOffice has some usability issues and looked like it was a number of years behind MS.

    I use LibreOffice because it's free - that's the only reason. If both were free, I'd use MS Office. But, for someone who wouldn't spend a lot of time using LibreOffice/MSOffice, it's just not worth my money to buy a copy of MS Office.

    1. Re:What? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Did you at any point author documents from scratch in LibreOffice and save in ODF formats to send to your colleagues? Not that i'm suggesting that LO is the better product, it still has a long way to go, it started from a pretty flakey codebase and has probably taken more man hours to become usable than a from scratch office suite would have, but it's not really fair to base your judgements on how well it handles another suite's native format.

    2. Re:What? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Totally agreed. My experience with my coworkers has always been a strong testimony for MS part. OO disregarded the formatting totally and kept its own screwed-up format whenever I saved the document. It was a nightmare for my colleague to remake the formatting. Repeatedly.

      OO does a very bad job in terms of compatibility with MS office. It has always been this way. So, one wonders, what did they do during all those years? It stayed almost always incompatible. I know MS format was not open, bla bla, but, listen to the corporate users of OO: the first thing they want is *compatibility*.

      Lots of people would start using OO in the business world if you told them this thing is just 100% compatible with MS office despite OO's usability quirks/worse experience to use than MS, etc.

      Math in OO is hell, damn thing never worked. True, MS has problems in that part as well. However, it's way more smooth.

      I recently had to try Crossover (~$60) and PlayOnLinux (free) to aid wine (??). Crossover is more decent with half the price of Office itself still with equation editor problems. I don't really know why wine can't do a decent job by itself either. The reason Crossover exists is wine just can't tie the loose ends after doing the major part.

    3. Re:What? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So your argument is that when interacting with people using $PROGRAM, it is easier using $PROGRAM than using $OTHER_PROGRAM, so $PROGRAM must be better than $OTHER_PROGRAM?

  55. Re:Formatting features are not the killer app anym by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Revision control is only a collaboration tool to those who haven't used real collaboration tools.

  56. mmm, Embarassing: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You don't have permission to access /applications/how-libreoffice-writer-tops-ms-word-12-features-1.html on this server.
    Embarassing isn't it ?
    Only private circle has access to this piece of ^%$
    ?

  57. Re:Cue Microsoft shills by Tough+Love · · Score: 1

    Here they come.

    See, here they are.

    --
    When all you have is a hammer, every problem starts to look like a thumb.
  58. Pages and Keynote! by goombah99 · · Score: 2

    Man I dislike the ribbon. But even more I dislike how word 2011 puts all your embedded figures and textboxes in these weird hierarchy of wrappers I find impossible to manipulate. I can't find anything that word 2011 does better than 2008 did.

    When I want to lower my blood pressure I turn to apple Pages. man what a breath of fresh air. It too has a different interface than the old word, but it is very very self consistent so the learning curve is fast. unlike the ribbon which is required for some functions, the toolbar is not required for any function, it is just for convenience.

    There is exactly one problem I've had with Pages that is a show stopper. The folks at Zotero have a stick up their ass about trying to make zotero compatible with apple. They say it is because it is an undocumented API. but it is just xml, easy to read, and easy to figure out how to add end notes into. Various people have shown how to do this with perl scripts. but no Zotero somehow has this apple-hate vibe.

    Thus endnotes are crippled on Pages.

    I wish apple would implement their own bibliography system in pages in a way like zotero.

    --
    Some drink at the fountain of knowledge. Others just gargle.
    1. Re:Pages and Keynote! by SkimTony · · Score: 1

      I've never used it myself, but some of the researchers I support are partial to Bookends. It happily supports both Pages, Word, and NisusWriter (and some others?). I think the original impetus for the switch was the EndNote/Word/MacOS X version hodgepodge that made support a nightmare a few years ago.

    2. Re:Pages and Keynote! by Martin+Blank · · Score: 1

      Nisus? Wow... I haven't heard that name in years. I used to use Nisus Writer on a Mac Plus and loved it because it was far smaller than Word (it ran from a floppy, two if you wanted the dictionary), very powerful, and easy to use. I still kind of miss it.

      --
      You can never go home again... but I guess you can shop there.
  59. Re:Am I the only one in the world that likes Ribbo by UnknowingFool · · Score: 2

    What you're missing is that before the ribbon it was easier to self discover the menu option that was needed and it wasn't buried 3 menus deep. As for customization, I already told you that while I can customize the ribbon, it requires precognition that I need to customize the menu. So I will need to memorize every single tab/button arrangement to know that something I will need isn't easily found before I start working on a document. If it is something I use all the time, customizing the ribbon makes sense but otherwise, I'm spending too much time looking for things.

    --
    Well, there's spam egg sausage and spam, that's not got much spam in it.
  60. Re:Am I the only one in the world that likes Ribbo by Sir_Sri · · Score: 2

    This is it. Lots of people had behavioural understanding of how to use the old menu system, and it had 2 decades of inertia behind it. But that didn't make it a good way to do things. For all the new users (3rd world, and high school kids learning) the old system didn't really click with their understanding of how computers behaved. It very much represented things as layers of types of computer operations, not types of tasks you want to perform.

    They've taken some time to get it improved, and there are certainly areas for improvement, but the user experience, and the learning curve for the ribbon are vastly preferable to the old system.

  61. 12 Ways MS WORD Tops LibreOffice Writer by who_stole_my_kidneys · · Score: 2, Informative

    1. Has a vastly larger market share then LibreOffice. 2. You can get support on it though millions of forums, tech net articles. 3. Virtually no training need to introduce it in to an already existing windows echo system. 4. Its supported by coders that are paid to fix problems, not volunteers. 5. Integrates seamlessly with other Microsoft Office Products 6. Integrates seamlessly with Share Point. 7. Microsoft has been doing this for years, Libre is still "new" to the game and im sure there are others but im tired of typing and have to get back to work.

    1. Re:12 Ways MS WORD Tops LibreOffice Writer by Samantha+Wright · · Score: 1

      ...actually, the LibreOffice code base is only a year or two younger than the Word codebase; StarOffice 1.0 was released in the mid-eighties. Like Linux, there are also a lot of paid contributors. Of course, you're a half-hearted troll, and half of your other points are crap, but it's pertinent trivia.

      --
      Bio questions? Ask me to start a Q&A journal. Computer analogies available for most topics!
    2. Re:12 Ways MS WORD Tops LibreOffice Writer by El_Oscuro · · Score: 1

      3. Virtually no training need to introduce it in to an already existing windows echo system.

      I have been using Word in that Windows ecosystem since the days of WFW 3.1/Word 6. When I first started using Word 2007 a few years ago, I couldn't figure out how to print. So I asked the system admin and he didn't know how either, except to use the old DOS shortcut CTRL/P. I now use it today as it works for practically all programs regardless of platform. DOS, your ultimate productivity tool!

      4. Its supported by coders that are paid to fix problems, not volunteers.

      In 1993, I was trying to create a help file for Visual Basic. The Microsoft documentation said any word processor which supported RTF would work. Of course the non-Microsoft one I had didn't, so I bought Word 6.0. It didn't work either. Apparently, the latest version of Word was not compatible with the latest version of VB. So I called Microsoft and had to pay an extra $35 to get a patch for an issue which should have never existed in the first place.

      --
      "Be grateful for what you have. You may never know when you may lose it."
  62. Re:Formatting features are not the killer app anym by Idbar · · Score: 1

    Well, you can always use LaTeX and Git and...

    Kidding, kidding, but by having superior tools I guess you also meant more user friendly.

  63. Forbidden by sproketboy · · Score: 1

    Why bother? The site is down.

    1. Re:Forbidden by Chrisq · · Score: 1

      Why bother? The site is down.

      That's one way its better. On the microsoft site you might waste time reading about Word

  64. Re:Am I the only one in the world that likes Ribbo by apcullen · · Score: 1

    Yes. You are the only one.

  65. Re:OpenOffice LibreOffice by uigrad_2000 · · Score: 2

    You are correct.

    Only the slashdot summary makes this mistake. The actual article is written by someone who knows a lot more about the subject than the slashdot submitter and the slashdot editor who approved this story.

    --
    Free unix account: freeshell.org
  66. LibreOffice is better for technical writing by SplashMyBandit · · Score: 1, Informative

    I've done work (including international work) as a trained technical writer (in the Information Mapping methodology). I have to say that I much prefer LibreOffice to Word. The reason for this is that LibreOffice is fairly simple and doesn't get in your way (Clippy may not be visible anymore, but the 'help' that actually hinders is still there behind the scenes in Office - so you end up wrestling with it).

    I couldn't read the article (got the Permission Denied error), but find that Word beats LibreOffice on the default style templates supplied. The coloring of tables is excellent in Word, while the LibreOffice styles are not as easy on the eye. LibreOffice completely kicks Word when it comes to PDF export. Exporting PDFs from Word is a nightmare, not only do the PDFs come out borked but it actually can foobar the original Word document too (since it can re-format the document as it attempts to figure out how to render the PDF) - that is so brain-dead.

    The other thing I've noticed is that LibreOffice is much more responsive to user input. For some reason Word 2011 on the Mac is dog slow, uses a lot of CPU in the background even when you are idle (not typing) and crashes. This is most unlike other Mac programs. I used to think Office on Windows sucked because of Windows, with my Mac experience I have come to the realization that it is Microsoft Office that is the dog, and I simply cannot recommend it for use (and can't understand those that would, unless they don't know any better, or don't write professionally so never see the pain points).

    Oh yeah, if you are more serious then paying for Adobe Acrobat is a good idea. Beats LibreOffice on functionality and result (although not on price), and is superior to MS Office (although not on price). For really scientific/technical stuff LaTeX is king, and even has easy to use interfaces like LyX (http://www.lyx.org/) to ease use for beginners.

  67. Re:Am I the only one in the world that likes Ribbo by virgnarus · · Score: 1

    Yeah, no kidding. I especially like the feature with it where I can minimize it and never see its ugly face ever again.

  68. Printing envelopes by WarJolt · · Score: 1

    MS Word just seems to make printing envelopes painless.
    Try it with libreoffice. I bet you won't find it as easy.

    Copy and pasting addresses is faster than handwriting them.

  69. Re:They have one huge disadvantage: Landscape mode by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Bollocks I use both Word and LO Writer and they have very similar and very easy methods of changing between Portrait and Landscape

  70. Re:Don't these features interfere w/ compatibility by michael_cain · · Score: 1

    And after decades, I'm still waiting for Word (or LibreOffice) to add the typographic notion of a floating display: a block of image/text/whatever that has to stay together, but can automatically float to the top of the next page if there's not room at the current point of the current page, with text continuing to fill so the current page doesn't have extra white space at the bottom. It's an important feature in books and most technical reports, and the automatic bit is critical in large "living" documents that are revised regularly. Troff could manage it more than 30 years ago; LaTeX for almost as long.

  71. Wrong from the beginning, why read the rest? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm hardly a champion of Office but I stopped reading after the first bullet because it is flat out wrong. The "browse by object" feature has been available for several iterations of Word: it is the set chevrons at the bottom of the vertical scroll bar. Click the circle between the chevrons to select the type of object.

    1. Re:Wrong from the beginning, why read the rest? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I read it anyway, so I can comment on other things that were wrong. I use Word in a Microsoft shop at work, but often use OO/LO on Linux at home, so I have experience with both.

      6. Hierarchical styles: I made Word templates with styles based on other styles (instead of being based on Normal) way back in Word 2003. (Of course, I also used item 4, styles with multi-level lists in that version for weird purposes - to disable the automatic assembly of list paragraphs into lists because it did it incorrectly if you did any real edits - and at that time the only way to do this was to define them from VBA macros; the normal GUI would put any list format you define into the style gallery on your computer instead of putting it into the template, making it useless to share among a group, so the article is very right on #4.)

      8. Custom Properties: I've been using them in Word. I've been referencing my custom "Product Name" and "Version Number" styles in fields in the document. They're right next to the other document properties. However, since they added the ribbon, the command to access them does not appear in the ribbon, and the only way to use it is to add to the quick access toolbar.

      10. Table of Contents Options: Word's TOCs use the TOC 1, TOC 2, ..., TOC 9 styles. You can customize them in your template, designing the TOC entries for every heading level differently, and you can remove the leader dots if you wish; they're part of the tab that is part of that style. You can also define other styles to have heading levels, and define custom tables of contents that show any arbitrary combination of styles, though it requires delving into the field code arguments to do so.

  72. Re:Am I the only one in the world that likes Ribbo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    To be honest from a usability point-of-view, it's a lot better than the menu layout. Remember that the RIbbon layout came out after there were so many request for EXISTING features. Some features required were way hidden to deeply from a KLM model evaluation.

  73. Re:Am I the only one in the world that likes Ribbo by flimflammer · · Score: 1

    You really speak personally for all the users at your company and they all dislike the ribbon? Really? You're not exaggerating even a little bit to make your point of view look stronger?

  74. Re:Am I the only one in the world that likes Ribbo by TheRaven64 · · Score: 1

    The Help menu on OS X contains a search field at the top. This will search help, but it will also search menu items. For example, if I type 'utf-8' into it in Safari, it will return a single item, and when I select it it will open the Text Encoding submenu of the View menu and highlight the Unicode (UTF-8) option. It makes finding things in submenus a lot less painful.

    --
    I am TheRaven on Soylent News
  75. 403 Forbidden by fustakrakich · · Score: 1

    They don't say which version of Word. I suspect it's 5.5 for DOS

    --
    “He’s not deformed, he’s just drunk!”
  76. Wordperfect by TCPhotography · · Score: 1

    FOREVER!

    1. Re:Wordperfect by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I know a professional writer who still uses one of the way old DOS versions, where it is literally a wall of text and no options on the screen at all. I asked him once why he used it and he said, "why the heck should I change, I want to see what I have written, not how it looks or what I got 'wrong.'"

    2. Re:Wordperfect by danlock4 · · Score: 1

      This isn't as much of a problem now as it was 20 years ago, but for fast typists, WP5.1x for DOS was the easiest and fastest by far. Other software rendered the text too slowly, couldn't keep up, etc. When a person's paycheck was dependent upon the person's line count and turnover time (e.g. in professions such as transcription), speed was essential.

      --
      To .sig or not to .sig, that is the question.
  77. Official LaTeX support please by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    LaTeX is a great for writing equations, but oh man it sucks for tables and other visual things. The countless hours I've spent just helping someone to use LaTeX for trivial things is insane.

    Few problems to mention:

    Error resiliency, one can keep on writing incorrectly and it still compiles and produces PDF/DVI. Well that's great but when you do end up with fatal error, the debugging becomes really pain in the ass. Having whole list of errors one might have written weeks ago.

    Images, really embedding images can sometimes be exceptionally hard to do it just right.

    Tables, same problem! Font sizes, ...

  78. Re:Formatting features are not the killer app anym by stephanruby · · Score: 1

    I thought OpenOffice was a decent piece of software, but it's still based on prior definitions of what a documenting software has been, rather than what it could be.

    That's one of the reasons I love Google Docs and Google Calendar. Those projects do not try to replicate Word and Outlook, they only compete obliquely with them.

  79. My story by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    I tried using Writer for a month. I tried really hard to get used to it. There were several places that showed how Writer was not sufficient for my needs, most things were just general annoyances of an unpolished product (the awful paste mechanism that needed a special dialogue box not to copy the origin formatting for one). But one thing stuck out that made me switch back. In particular, writer has a lot more trouble with non-English character formatting than Word does. It got to the point where Writer would even crash when I tried to paste non-English characters. After that, I gave up and went back to word.

  80. Several of his point are not true by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    1. "Word has a pane on the left side of the editing window that uses headings as a tool for moving through a document. However, with Writer's Navigator, you can jump back and forth in a document not just by heading styles, but by any type of object you care to name: tables, frames, graphics, comments, links, or anything else you care to name."

    In Word: For each of the styles that you want to appear in the Navigator, right-click it and choose Modify; in the Modify dialog click the Format button and choose Paragraph. In the Paragraph dialog, set an Outline Level to reflect where that style sits in the heading hierarchy. Now you are not only navigating using those styles, you can also see where in the heirarchy of your document they exist.

    2. "The Styles and Formatting Window...of its functionality is also available in Word, but several layers down -- an arrangement that discourages users from adding the elegance of styles to their workflows."

    Much of its functionality is available by right-clicking in Word, including: updating the style to match the current selection, modifying the style, selecting all the paragraphs with that style, removing the styles, and more.

    "Besides, when you can easy apply a style to the document directly as an experiment, then change it just as easily, previews become redundant."

    In Word you can modify a style to match the paragraph that the insertion piont is sitting in, with one right click. This is the ultimate preveiw-in-place feature.

    3. "In Word, you can adjust all the usual page features, from margins to the number of columns. But different page orientations and designs can only be added as a kludge...:

    Here are the kludgy instructions: 1. At the beginning of the new page orientation, select Page Layout > Breaks > Section Break (choose any of them). 2. Select Page Layout > Orientation > Portrait or Landscape. 3. Select Page Layout > Breaks > Section Break (again choose any of them).

    "...and all paragraphs have the same alignment."

    I assume you mean paragraphs on a page have the same _orientation_ (such as horizontal, vertical, or angled) and not _alignment_ (such as left justified, right justified, and fully justified). To insert rotated text: 1. Insert > Shapes > Text Box. 2. Enter your text, table, graphic, whatever you want into the text box. It's like a miniature text document. (The term "text box" doesn't do it justice). You can format and style it like any other text on your page. 3. Grab the green handle at the top of the text box and rotate the box to any angle you want.

    I would go on with the other points the author made, but as someone who is expert at Word, I am too busy actually producing results to correct an amature's faulty beliefs about the tools of the trade. But I will close with this:

    As you become more expert at your profession, you will notice that you care more about the product that you produce and less about the tools that you use to produce it.

    William Rice
    http://www.packtpub.com/authors/profiles/william-rice

    1. Re:Several of his point are not true by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      For each of the styles that you want to appear in the Navigator, right-click it and choose Modify; in the Modify dialog click the Format button and choose Paragraph. In the Paragraph dialog, set an Outline Level to reflect where that style sits in the heading hierarchy. Now you are not only navigating using those styles, you can also see where in the heirarchy of your document they exist.

      In other words, go through a lot of steps in order to turn things like tables that aren't headings into headings so that you can fake out the navigation system.

      Much of its functionality is available by right-clicking in Word, including: updating the style to match the current selection, modifying the style, selecting all the paragraphs with that style, removing the styles, and more.

      I think he's talking about having an HTML-style style sheet, and being able to change it after the fact. (actually, now that the site is back up I see that he's not, but he totally ought to because being able to copy styles between existing documents is fucking awesome.)

      Sort of like how I have a techdocument.dotx that I painstakingly set up all the font styles in so that all my technical documentation uses the same 10pt courier for commands, italics for variables, etc etc etc. Except that if I decide that my variable names should be underlined and function names should be bold courier instead, editing techdocument.dotx won't do a damned thing for me, I'd have to go back through all of my dozens of documents and manually edit the style (at least word automatically updates all the text using that style at that point).

      as someone who is expert at Word, I am too busy actually producing results

      You remind me of the people who tell me Linux will never get anywhere because its too hard to go through all these obscure text documents to configure anything. And then rattle off "oh just go into the registry and change the {512351A-351B-12291492F} DWORD to 28" to configure something. Section breaks to rotate pages? Why can't I just right click the page and say "turn right"? I'd accept the answer being "Page break to landscape page" so that I have an explicit barrier between where text should be portrait in case I go back and add more text before the break, but a section break of any kind?

      Now, I'll buy the author not knowing how to use a textbox to turn text sideways.

  81. Wish I could read the link... by whitroth · · Score: 1

    "You don't have permission to access that page on this server".

              mark

  82. Re:Am I the only one in the world that likes Ribbo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You know what? I *prefer* Clippy over the Ribbon interface. At least I could dismiss him with a click or nuke Clippy forever by doing "custom install" and disabling it. The Ribbon UI? There's no option to disable it and go back to the "classic" interface. I can live with the Ribbon as an OPTION, or even as the default UI, but leaving it as the only way to interact with the UI is just cruel. It's like having an unremovable Clippy.

    Resistance is futile. You will assimilate the Ribbon.

    Thanks, Microsoft, for negating all my previous experience and offering me no other choice.

  83. Re:Am I the only one in the world that likes Ribbo by Politburo · · Score: 1

    Have you tried the item that says "Step-by-step Mail Merge Wizard"? It can't get much more obvious than that....

  84. Re:Am I the only one in the world that likes Ribbo by Eirenarch · · Score: 1

    I do like it. I really don't get it why people are so upset with it. Now the hot corners in the new Windows 8 desktop - that sux.

  85. Re:Am I the only one in the world that likes Ribbo by pkinetics · · Score: 1

    I found that once I started using the scroll wheel to cycle through the different ribbons I became less annoyed with the increased menu clicks. I still prefer keyboard shortcuts.

  86. Re:Am I the only one in the world that likes Ribbo by Politburo · · Score: 1

    Self discovery is overrated. It takes all of two seconds to type it into help and get the answer.

  87. Re:Am I the only one in the world that likes Ribbo by CaseCrash · · Score: 3, Funny

    I can top it. It miss Clippy. I thought the Ewoks and Jar Jar were cute. And I liked disco.

    You like things that everyone else hates, so...... you're a hipster?

    --
    No, that link you posted to a web comic we've all seen a hundred times is not "obligatory."
  88. Re:They have one huge disadvantage: Landscape mode by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yep - they're so easy, it was quicker just to bitch about the parent being wrong than to actually explain how it's done to prove him wrong.

  89. Re:Am I the only one in the world that likes Ribbo by TheVelvetFlamebait · · Score: 2

    To make matters worse, the ribbon interface actually made the MS Office suite of software easier to use for noobs and probably made these same power users feel threatened.

    I'm not sure I would ascribe so much psychology to it. The interface changed significantly, and everyone who was used to the old interface found the new interface counter-intuitive and difficult to use, so they raged. It's what users do.

    --
    You know, there is a difference between trolling and pointing out the flaws in your reasoning. Just saying.
  90. Re:Am I the only one in the world that likes Ribbo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Meh, just do what I do: Rotate your display 90 degrees as well as your head. Now the ribbon is along the 9 in the 16:9 display.

  91. Re:They have one huge disadvantage: Landscape mode by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative

    Are you joking? Menu : Format / Page. Then check "orientation : landscape" in the Page tab.
    (translated from the French menus, may be slightly different on your computer)

  92. Re:Formatting features are not the killer app anym by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think you meant friendly to Word users.

    LaTeX and Git are _way_ more user friendly, IME. I fought tooth and nail to use LaTeX in law school instead of Word, although I lost most of those battles. Word is an fscking nightmare for me. It'd be a nightmare for everybody, I think, if they understood the alternatives. Most users, including both Word and LaTeX users, just hack away until they get the document they want. With Word you get monstrous markup which is impossible to unwind. With LaTeX even a monkey ends up with a damned good document, both in source form and PDF.

    The only real criticism I have about LaTeX (specifically pdflatex, at least) are error messages. Word doesn't have error messages; instead you just get something other than what you wanted. But with LaTeX the entire document fails to typeset, and the error messages are just too cryptic. Still worth it, though.
    I spend less time backtracking a typo in LaTeX than trying to tease out a decent formatting in Word.

  93. Editors... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well, actually, for me Adobe InDesign is the best text editor AND layout tool ever created. It uses the latex engine (or at least the algorithm) to render text, has amazing style controls, deals great with TOC and cross-reference indexes, very-well written help, etc. etc. Ok, you'll have to learn a little bit of typography and stuff, but, hey, I believe software is going to make every one dumb and incapable of solving problems by themselves. There should be some work to do to use software and computers.

  94. Org-mode! by gwolf · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I was recently introduced to Emacs' org-mode. It is really GREAT. I never looked into it before, as I thought it was basically a to-do list manager â" But no. I am currently using it mostly as a word processor (well, for semi-complex documents, as it makes little sense if your documents have no structure at all) and for presentations. And I'm still only beginning to love it (and am sure I'm truly underutilizing it).
    True to the WYSIWYM mode, you work with a regular plain text file. There is a good deal of markup, but quite easy to learn (i.e. /italics/, *boldface*, =code=, nested/itemized lists with hyphens, etc.), and with three keystrokes, you export to your favorite format. C-c C-e b shows the document as a (inter-linked) HTML page, C-c C-e d compiles it with LaTeX into a PDF, etc.

    1. Re:Org-mode! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      ...and with three keystrokes, you export to your favorite format. C-c C-e b shows the document as a (inter-linked) HTML page, C-c C-e d compiles it with LaTeX into a PDF, etc.

      You have no idea how sad this looks to normal people, do you?

    2. Re:Org-mode! by LittleImp · · Score: 1

      You are missing the point. Nobody actually cares what kind of editor you or anyone else uses. It is just a nostalgic reminder of the pointless editor-wars in days of yore.

    3. Re:Org-mode! by gwolf · · Score: 1

      Oh, but you have no idea how easy and productive it is for me to have one easy-to-edit source, regardless of whether I'm on a text terminal on the other side of the planet or on my main desktop. Or how great it is to have one source produce the finished article, the HTML-friendly (and clean!) version, and the PDF presentation. Or how convenient it is to be able to 'git blame' a file and see exactly who did what and when.

      If other people find it sad, I find their workflow sad. No, I don't claim I'm in the majority use-case. But the tools work best for me — And I'm sure some learning can be of large benefit to anybody.

  95. Re:Formatting features are not the killer app anym by TheRaven64 · · Score: 1

    You can actually do most of this in LaTeX too. My latest book is about Go and was written while the final spec was still in flux, so it got a lot of iterations through copyediting before the final version. I used latexdiff to produce PDFs indicating all of the changes since the previous version, including insertions and deletions. I have it integrated into my build system, so I can just specify a subversion revision number and have it give me a diff against that one. You can also use standard tools for revision control and for small changes just look at the raw diff without typesetting it.

    OpenOffice does have change tracking, but somehow the performance is terrible. On a large document, with changes visible, on a 2.2GHz quad core i7, it took several seconds for each character I typed to show up.

    --
    I am TheRaven on Soylent News
  96. Re:Am I the only one in the world that likes Ribbo by Missing.Matter · · Score: 1

    What you're missing is that before the ribbon it was easier to self discover the menu option that was needed and it wasn't buried 3 menus deep.

    It was easy to self discover, how? By doing an exhaustive search on the menus? Because they're not that intuitive. For example, in OO if I want to edit a bibliography, I have to go to Tools-Bibliography Database. If I want to add the bibliography to the document I have to go to Insert - Indexes and Tables - Bibliography Entry, where I can either add an item to the document's biblography database (which is separate from the bibliography database in the tools menu for some reason) or I can add a specific entry. Then to insert the actualy bib to the document you go to the oh so intuitive Insert - Indexes and Tables - Insert - Indexes and Tables, where you can insert among other indexes and tables, the bibliography.

    In Office 2010, all these options are found under References - Bibliography.

    Or how about my favorite, changing page orientation. In Open Office, it's under Formant - Page - Page. Why is such a common function as changing page orientation, among other things like page dimensions and margins hidden so well?

    I already told you that while I can customize the ribbon, it requires precognition that I need to customize the menu.

    Again, how is that different compared to the old menu. It's a provable fact that more options are deeper in the old menu system. Given this, how is it less likely you'll need to search for a feature in the old menu system? You make no sense.

  97. Re:Am I the only one in the world that likes Ribbo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Your first sentence is not true. The second is. Interesting that you seem to imply the second is because of the first. Isn't there some name for that kind of logical fallacy?

  98. Re:They have one huge disadvantage: Landscape mode by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Quit trying to spread this crapola.

    In LibreOffice, to change a document to landscape, just do "Format/Page/Orientation/Landscape."

    That's it. You are done.

    This is a fundamental operation that has been with *all* wordprocessors since the very beginning.

    (Yes, there are other word processors besided even Word and Writer.)

  99. Oh boy... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Here we go again.

  100. Re:They have one huge disadvantage: Landscape mode by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In OO: Format|Page| Click on Landscape button. (I can remember doing it this way since starting to use OO, and I just checked to make sure I wasn't high.) I can't say I've ever had to edit templates to do this. I'm not saying you can't do it this way, but the question is why would you when it really is much easier.

  101. hold it there.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Damn AC, Stop bringing facts into this, no one registered here wants that.... Get back to hiding in the background snickering like the rest of the ACs :)

  102. Re:Am I the only one in the world that likes Ribbo by crazyjj · · Score: 3, Funny

    so...... you're a hipster?

    I have a MacBook and iPad to prove it.

    --
    What political party do you join when you don't like Bible-thumpers *or* hippies?
  103. Re:They have one huge disadvantage: Landscape mode by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    While this doesn't take templates into account, it's not rocket surgery.

    While editing document...
        a) right click (just like lots of other formatting operations)
        b) choose "Page..."
        c) click "Landscape" orientation radio button.

    Oh the horrors.

  104. beauty is in the eye of the beholder by sdnoob · · Score: 1

    no surprise to me that this guy (browse his other articles here http://www.datamation.com/author/Bruce-Byfield-6030.html - obviously a pretty big fan of open source and linux) can find 12 reasons why *HE* thinks libreoffice writer beats microsoft word.

    but for every one person like this, there's a hundred + that can easily flip that around (word beats writer)

  105. Re:Am I the only one in the world that likes Ribbo by UnknowingFool · · Score: 2

    It takes 2 seconds if you know the exact terminology Help expects. Otherwise it can take a while then you go to Google and use your terminology (which is more common) and someone else tells you the MS terminology. Or if it was self discovery, you would have been done already.

    --
    Well, there's spam egg sausage and spam, that's not got much spam in it.
  106. Re:Formatting features are not the killer app anym by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    If the problem is about using binary files, you can now save LibreOffice files in an uncompressed flat XML format (.fodt for text files). This might create problems with images though (I'm not sure how they are handled, maybe with base64), unless you link them, but LaTeX would have the same ones.

  107. Re:Am I the only one in the world that likes Ribbo by EvilBudMan · · Score: 1

    Of course because they are faster with someone that has the skill to use them.

  108. Re:They have one huge disadvantage: Landscape mode by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Change to landscape mode: (From the menu) Format -> Page -> (On the Page tab) check Landscape.
    To change the setting for a page style (which is a powerful feature), open the Styles window, select Page styles, right click style to modify, check Landscape on the Page tab.

    Keep this message as a reference for future use. :)

  109. Re:Don't these features interfere w/ compatibility by WillAdams · · Score: 1

    IME one doesn't want stuff floating / moving around while editing --- leave that for when actually building the pages.

    --
    Sphinx of black quartz, judge my vow.
  110. But it doesn't work with .docx files by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Too bad LibreOffice still doesn't work with the .docx files almost everyone uses nowadays. Sure LibreOffice can open them, but with a lot of formatting issues. And if you SAVE a .docx file with LibreOffice it will get FUBAR'd.

  111. Table styles, anyone? by K.+S.+Kyosuke · · Score: 1

    The note that one can use Libre Office as a replacement for FrameMaker is interesting though.

    If only it had table styles... The way I see it, the two office packages simply have different sets of weaknesses. Call me a whiner, but I'm still waiting for a sane solution of the document preparation process problem. Troff has a nice pipelined architecture, but poor page layout capabilities, not to mention the obscure input format. TeX has great output quality, but again, page layout quickly gets obscure and writing code for it is unbelievable mess. (Sorry, I live in the 21st century, we have much better languages that the token sequence substitution stuff with no useful abstraction mechanisms for larger programs. LuaTeX fixes this a bit, though.) FrameMaker has a sane GUI input component, unlike Word and Writer, but it's proprietary and a larger install than both. And horribly monolithic. XML based tools nicely abstract a part of the problem (the definition of the meta-model for documents), but at the terrible cost of being partly backwards-compatible (idea-wise) with the unbelievable crap called SGML. I won't comment on the failure called XSLT, which combines the richness of a first-order functional language, popularity of LISP and succintness of XML notation in one neat package, since I would have to spew around words that the spell checker wouldn't pass through.

    At least, they should finally implement table styles. Their absence is not funny at all.

    --
    Ezekiel 23:20
  112. Envelope printing by QuietLagoon · · Score: 1
    LibreOffice Writer still cannot print envelopes (I've tried both Monarch and #10 envelopes). The last version that could print envelopes properly and easily was Open Office 3.3, Since then then envelope printing must have been "fixed" or "enhanced", and it doesn't work properly.

    .
    I have never had a problem printing envelopes with any version of Microsoft Word.

  113. Re:Am I the only one in the world that likes Ribbo by UnknowingFool · · Score: 1

    The examples you are giving is that LibreOffice doesn't place things where Office does. That isn't the same as self-discovery. As for customizing the ribbon, how do I know that I need to customize the ribbon before I know that it doesn't have the option I want. I first have to search all the ribbons then help or whatever to find my option. At that point I can decide if the feature is important enough to customize the ribbon. That's as silly as asking me do I know where I misplaced my keys. If I knew where I misplaced my keys, they wouldn't be misplaced. Is that any clearer?

    --
    Well, there's spam egg sausage and spam, that's not got much spam in it.
  114. Simply stumped by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Am I the only one that noticed how the article misrepresented the MS side of things? Don't actually want to defend Word, but I've really used almost all of the features the article says are missing or unusable without a hitch.

  115. #1 is LO image layout doesn't suck like Word by Peter+Amstutz · · Score: 1

    The #1 aspect of Writer that is superior to Word is in handling floating inline images. It isn't rocket science, but Word seems intentionally designed maximally piss off the user:

      1) Images don't actually end up where you drop them. You move it to where you want it on the page, then Word randomly decides to lay it out somewhere else.

      2) Captions by default are separate from images, so you move the image and the caption stays behind. Worse, if you are editing text earlier in the document causing the image to move, the caption ends up in some other random location.

      3) Images and captions in the body often end up wandering around the page and laid out overlapping the header or footer.

      4) Sometimes you move an image or a caption, and it just vanishes. (It may not technically be "gone", but if you can't find it to click on it, it might as well be).

      5) Anchoring to a specific page doesn't work if text stream position of the image isn't also on that page. Again, incredibly annoying if you are editing text earlier in the document.

      6) Images are considered part of a paragraph for layout, sometimes resulting in half a page of whitespace on the previous page because Word randomly decided it can't fit both the paragraph and the image in the available space, and refuses to split the paragraph across pages.

      7) If you click on an image and say "change picture" to replace the image with, say, an updated image of identical dimensions, it will forget that you had resized the image and force you to redo all the tweaking to sizing and layout you had already done.

    Clearly, Word's image layout is stuck in 1995 because to actually fix it would break the ten billion Word documents already out there, but it is worth pointing out that LibreOffice has far saner and more predictable behavior in every case.

    I wonder how many heart attacks have been caused by blood pressure spikes in frustration over Word's terrible, buggy, asinine layout algorithms?

    1. Re:#1 is LO image layout doesn't suck like Word by Sparton · · Score: 1

      Weird. Most of the points you've listed seem to be my coworker's experience using Writer, not Word. He had to stop working on a document because of how the images would just destroy itself, and no one else with Writer could get the *png's to not spaz out when a line of text was added as well.

      The only thing I agree with you on is captions; I never have much luck with them in Word, but have found them very serviceable in Writer. I don't use that feature much, though.

    2. Re:#1 is LO image layout doesn't suck like Word by LinuxIsGarbage · · Score: 1

      Generally I like MS Office. I can't comment on LO-Writer, but recently in MS Word 2010 I created a document with inline images. Fragile at best is how I describe it. After creating the document and previewing it on screen I printed it out and gave it to a co-worker for review. One of the graphics moved down 6" on the page and was cut off. The electronic copy didn't have that at all.

      My boss looked at the electronic copy. He changed one word and highlighted it. The entire document fell apart at that point. Line lengths inexplicably changed, moving page breaks, and even after hard page breaks (which should realign everything) inline graphics randomly moved around. I've decided I'm going to have to declare bankruptcy and start the document from scratch (export the text to plain text and rebuild it).

      I have memories of working on document in Word 2003 many years back. I remember adding an inline graphic. I click to drag it up an inch. Suddenly it flew DOWN 6 pages in the document. Undoing and trying again resulted in the same thing.

      All this said I know Excel is generally robust (though I've had problems interacting with charts from different versions, and cell colouring in different versions). In my experience it is a lot faster and stable than Open Office / Libre Office.

      As far as alternatives, generally I've found Softmaker office works well. Better than Open Office / Libre Office
      http://www.softmaker.com/english/

      2008 Old version is free:
      http://www.softmakeroffice.com/

    3. Re:#1 is LO image layout doesn't suck like Word by Qzukk · · Score: 1

      All this said I know Excel is generally robust (though I've had problems interacting with charts from different versions, and cell colouring in different versions). In my experience it is a lot faster and stable than Open Office / Libre Office.

      I've never had it crash, but Excel 2010 has graphical glitches out the wazoo when it opens documents in "safe" mode: columns that don't scroll, clicking cells sometimes highlights them permanently, screen "tearing" while scrolling, etc. They all go away when I tell it to reopen the document for editing, but I have to wonder how safe the mode is...

      --
      If I have been able to see further than others, it is because I bought a pair of binoculars.
  116. great concept , horrible implementation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The ribbon as a concept is great: a toolbar in which you can put any kind of control.
    However, when i use it there are just to many irregularities to it:
    When you click the start tab on the ribbon, the ribbon doesn't show you save/save as/ ... options, instead it opens up completely covering everything.. so it's not really a ribben anymore.
    To then still alow for quicksave, they add toolbars again.. only now it's only one extremely limited toolbar position on the window border frame. (where in my opinion an application has no business putting anything as this is operating system territory)
    the ribbons are tabbed bars, meaning alot more clicks to switch between the different ones.
    You can't arrange ribbons on the right side and left side etc.
    in outlook the send email button is NOT on the ribbon and it is impossible to get it on there, it is in fact on the form.
    In general , lotsof the buttons on the ribbon are oversized.
      If you'd improve the ribbons by shrinking the buttons on them down so they'd be the smallest size with the same utility, and make it so ribbons can be positioned side by side and anywhere on the window with docking. you'd actually end right up at the old toolbars.

  117. Re:They have one huge disadvantage: Landscape mode by Brett+Buck · · Score: 1

    Agreed, it can be done and the parent post was overblown. But it *is* in a stupid and non-intuitive place and it took me a heck of a long time to find it, too. Just irritating.

  118. Re:They have one huge disadvantage: Landscape mode by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There's one major flaw in OO or LO. That's the difficulty of changing a document to Landscape mode.

    Is this a joke?
    Format->Page...->Page->Orientation->Landscape

    In case you want to see how hard that was to find.

  119. Re:Cue Microsoft shills by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It must be because you are acting like an enormous cock drinking douche bag.

  120. What do some of you expect by future+assassin · · Score: 1

    One is a commercial product that keeps a monster company afloat the other is done by a community of I'd say mostly volunteers? So what if LO has some issues for what you get its like getting a Yaris that has uncomfortable seats and missing 30HP and getting it for free or buy it from Toyota for $11K hmm....

    --
    by TheSpoom (715771) Uncaring Linux user here. I have nothing to add to this but please continue. *munches popcorn*
  121. Re:Am I the only one in the world that likes Ribbo by tokul · · Score: 1

    Due to limited screen space,

    they created f...ing ribbon which takes same amount of space as menu line and two or three toolbars and provides ten times less features.

  122. 01001110 01101111 00100001 by uncqual · · Score: 4, Funny

    01010010 01100101 01100001 01101100 00100000 01101101 01100101 01101110 00100000 01110000 01110010 01101111 01100111 01110010 01100001 01101101 00100000 01101001 01101110 00100000 01100010 01101001 01101110 01100001 01110010 01111001 00101110

    --
    Why is there an "insightful" mod and why isn't it "-1"? If I wanted insight, I wouldn't be reading /.
    1. Re:01001110 01101111 00100001 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wow, you've got 1's and zero's. All we used to have for programming were O's.

    2. Re:01001110 01101111 00100001 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      010001000 110111101 101110001 001110111 010000100 000011110 010110111 101110101 001000000 110110101 100101011 000010110 111000100 000011100 100110010 101100001 011011000 010000001 101101011 001010110 111000100 000011101 110110100 001101111 001000000 111011101 101001011 011000110 110000100 000011011 100110010 101110110 011001010 111001000 100000011 001110110 010101110 100001000 000111001 001100101 011000010 110110000 100000011 101110110 111101101 101011001 010110111 000111111

    3. Re:01001110 01101111 00100001 by parkinglot777 · · Score: 3, Funny

      01010010 01100101 01100001 01101100 00100000 01101101 01100101 01101110 00100000 01110000 01110010 01101111 01100111 01110010 01100001 01101101 00100000 01101001 01110011 00100000 01100010 01101001 01101110 01100001 01101110 01111001 00101110

      Fixed...

    4. Re:01001110 01101111 00100001 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      01010010 01100101 01100001 01101100 00100000 01101101 01100101 01101110 00100000 01110000 01110010 01101111 01100111 01110010 01100001 01101101 00100000 01101001 01101110 00100000 01100010 01101001 01101110 01100001 01110010 01111001 00101110

      4f 72 20 69 6e 20 68 65 78 61 64 65 63 69 6d 61 6c 2e

    5. Re:01001110 01101111 00100001 by hsu · · Score: 1

      for i in 01010010 01100101 01100001 01101100 00100000 01101101 01100101 01101110 00100000 01110000 01110010 01101111 01100111 01110010 01100001 01101101 00100000 01101001 01101110 00100000 01100010 01101001 01101110 01100001 01110010 01111001 00101110
      do
      echo -n `echo 2 i $i p | dc` | awk '{ printf "%c", $1 }'
      done

  123. 16 GB? by tokiko · · Score: 2

    The main reason for crashes in LibreOffice appears to be system memory. With sixteen gigabytes of RAM, Writer has yet to crash any document that I have opened -- something that I can't say about Word.

    Does anyone else think that having to have 16 GB of ram to prevent your word processor from crashing is a bit excessive?

    1. Re:16 GB? by formfeed · · Score: 1

      The main reason for crashes in LibreOffice appears to be system memory. With sixteen gigabytes of RAM, Writer has yet to crash any document that I have opened -- something that I can't say about Word.

      Does anyone else think that having to have 16 GB of ram to prevent your word processor from crashing is a bit excessive?

      OP didn't say it takes "16 GB of ram to prevent your word processor from crashing" but "With sixteen gigabytes of RAM, Writer has yet to crash any document"

    2. Re:16 GB? by slack_justyb · · Score: 1

      Not if the document you are working on is around 2.4GB in size. Actually that is quite common for some of the technical manuals we write. GASP! an IT department that writes documentation! Now you know I'm lying ;-)

    3. Re:16 GB? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Extremely excessive!

      Even the 2GB the article claims for decent performance in Writer is pretty ridiculous.

      You could run Windows 7 in a 1GB VM hosted a 2GB Mac Mini running OS X and comfortably edit a 200 page Word document and have no performance or stability issues. Everything else might run poorly at that point, but Word would be fine.

      And embeddable Custom Properties have been part of Word since at least Word 2000 and I'm pretty sure they were present as far back as Word 95, maybe even Word for Windows 2.0.

  124. Re:Am I the only one in the world that likes Ribbo by Missing.Matter · · Score: 1

    The examples you are giving is that LibreOffice doesn't place things where Office does. That isn't the same as self-discovery.

    Sure it is. Let's say I open Word and I want to add a biliography. After scanning the tabs, the obvious one is References, with second place being Insert. Then all the options are right there in front of me. In Writer, Insert is the most obvious menu, but there is no option for bibliography. There's an option for indexes and tables, and even in there the option to add a bibliography is missing, but hidden under the nondescriptive "Index and Tables."

    The old menu requires you to carefully search through each flyout in each menuto find something. In the ribbon, those flyouts are all open at once, so what is an O(n^2) search in the old menu, is a O(n) search in the ribbon. Due to this design, the chances are the function you want is only 2 clicks away at most, and if you don't know where it is finding it should take less time, and at the very most you'll relegate yourself to the help box much faster if something is not present on the ribbon menu.

    As for customizing the ribbon, how do I know that I need to customize the ribbon before I know that it doesn't have the option I want. I first have to search all the ribbons then help or whatever to find my option. At that point I can decide if the feature is important enough to customize the ribbon. That's as silly as asking me do I know where I misplaced my keys. If I knew where I misplaced my keys, they wouldn't be misplaced. Is that any clearer?

    You still haven't answered how this is different than any other interface? How do I know I have to customize the menu interface before searching through the menu interface. Your complaint is not specific to the ribbon at all.

  125. Re:Am I the only one in the world that likes Ribbo by Missing.Matter · · Score: 1

    Ten times less features? Looking at a default install of Open Office Writer, I see 46 features within 1 click. In Word I see 42 features within 1 click. Features within 2 clicks are much higher in Word than Open Office Writer.

  126. 200 million copies of a default suite by dutchwhizzman · · Score: 2

    It didn't sell 200 million copies because it was the best program available, but because companies got bundles, have upgrade contracts and are already using older versions. Since the older versions no longer get updates, or will not get them in the near future, companies decide to upgrade. They seldom re-evaluate the competution, but just buy "the lastest version" and get unpleasant surprises like a lot of users not being able to do their regular work with the ribbon.

    If they would seriously investigate what office suite would be best to purchase, before accepting the bundle or upgrading to the latest version of what they already have, I'm fairly certain that about half, maybe more of those 200M would not have been sold. Yes, I'm saying half. Word 2010 may be an annoyance, but it's still one of the better document editors around for general office use by office staff.

    --
    I was promised a flying car. Where is my flying car?
    1. Re:200 million copies of a default suite by Missing.Matter · · Score: 1

      Like I said, classic slashdot logic. Businesses around the world are running entirely on Office, and of course it could *never* be because the software has any merit. No, it must be that people don't realize there are "better" options like LibreOffice out there. So you're trying to tell me that a hundred million people out there bought Office 2007 and productivity took a nose dive, and then they went on to buy the SAME software after nothing got done at the company? That's a pretty big stretch of logic if you ask me. Not buying it. We're talking about a population of 200 million here, where these corner cases you think represent the whole population have really no bearing.

      If people were so unproductive with Office 2007, you would see a major increase in adoption of competitors like LibreOffice and Google Docs. You certainly wouldn't also see EVEN MORE people buying in to Office 2010, with the same ribbon interface.

    2. Re:200 million copies of a default suite by Dr_Barnowl · · Score: 1

      Fine ; send me the links to the peer reviewed papers that prove that the Ribbon is more productive.

      Which is more likely - that businesses just replace Office as their machines go out of commission, or that they performed a systematic experiment to determine which was more productive? Do you have a single example of a business that actually even attempted to measure productivity in office applications?

      Never mind Office still being *supported*. People buy newer copies of Office because they can't buy the older ones when they expand their business, it reaches critical mass, and then they just migrate everyone to the new version.

    3. Re:200 million copies of a default suite by RubberMallet · · Score: 1

      Pick an "average" man or woman on the street and ask them what programs they can use to write a letter or build a spreadsheet. Assuming they even know what a spreadsheet is, you can pretty much count on every single one of them saying MS Office. They don't use it because it's the best product, they use it because it's there on the computer at work, and it's on a PC they buy from the local shops. If LIbreOffice was installed, most people would simply use it without even knowing anything was any different.

      People complain about Windows crashing and problems with viruses, but how many look into the alternatives? Virtually zero. They just suck it up and keep plugging along with a broken OS. Sometimes they will ask for help re-installing... most times they wont. Sometimes they will think to install or update their anti-virus software... most times they wont. They just complain the computer is too slow and reboot in hopes it'll magically sort itself out.

      People are lazy and computers are an appliance to them.. they use MSO because it's there, and MS knows this.

  127. ODT format by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sure, I have no doubt there's a better writing tool than Word. Word has become a bloated mess since the late 90s.

    But the problem with LibreOffice is when a new user is embarrassed when they send what was saved as an unreadable ODT file to their VP. Unless that's changed now.

  128. Re:Don't these features interfere w/ compatibility by jfengel · · Score: 1

    And Interleaf about 20 years ago, for those who prefer something WYSIWYG. I have yet to encounter a visual editor as good as that one, that did what I need for those kinds of documents.

    Word and other word processors do have that all-things-to-all-people-who-put-words-on-paper (or now, on-the-web) problem. But they've all spent decades pursuing features I can't imagine anybody using, while missing stuff that anybody who has to set up a large document will use all the time, and that Interleaf and LaTeX had forever.

  129. Grammar check? by formfeed · · Score: 1

    Open source office software is has gotten pretty good

    Now if they only added a decent grammar check.

    1. Re:Grammar check? by w3c.org · · Score: 1

      Yeah, and "LibreOfifice"? Please.

  130. LaTeX is the answer to only one question today by Anonymous+Brave+Guy · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Unfortunately, about 99.997% of documents written today are not academic papers or theses written to comply with the house style of a few hundred journals and a few hundred major institutions.

    Even if they were, LaTeX's typesetting power now looks like the first car with an internal combustion engine: a revolutionary advance in technology at the time, that is now so antiquated and incompatible with modern standards that it has little value outside of its niche except as a historical curiosity.

    Your argument about LaTeX controlling the logical design is well-taken, but unfortunately it never really did that, because in practice it conflated content and presentation to such an extent that you couldn't really separate them in anything beyond trivial cases.

    The TeX family remains the preeminent tool for exactly one task today: typesetting maths. And that's only because no-one else has yet created another set of tools and fonts for doing so that doesn't suck.

    --
    If you disagree, post your argument. (-1, Overrated) isn't your personal censorship tool for views you don't like.
    1. Re:LaTeX is the answer to only one question today by kyrsjo · · Score: 1

      I don't know how you use LaTeX, but in my experience, you usually don't need to fool around with the sourcecode of the classes - and I've been using it for ~7 years (and quite a bit, too) - and OpenOffice some ~10 years, since version 1.0. One exception where you might be mixing presentation and content quite a bit is if you're designing a poster or a graphically complicated presentation - but then exact placement of figures/boxes/drawings/text usually matter a bit more than for the standard report or article.

      TL;DR: If LaTeX is the model T, the rest are either horse-carts or trying to figure out the correct shape for the wheel.

    2. Re:LaTeX is the answer to only one question today by serviscope_minor · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately, about 99.997% of documents written today are not academic papers or theses

      No, and, unfortunately 99.997% of documents written today look like complete ass.

      comply with the house style of a few hundred journals and a few hundred major institutions.

      Good thing company's don't have house styles or anything.

      Even if they were, LaTeX's typesetting power now looks like the first car with an internal combustion engine: a revolutionary advance in technology at the time, that is now so antiquated and incompatible with modern standards that it has little value outside of its niche except as a historical curiosity.

      If, by "modern standards" you mean documents looking like ass, then yes, LaTeX doesn't conform to modern standards. If TeX's typesetting is so antiquated, then how come it looks better than all but the best professional packages? How come modern wordprocessors and web browsers don't do decent line breaking?

      Your argument about LaTeX controlling the logical design is well-taken, but unfortunately it never really did that, because in practice it conflated content and presentation to such an extent that you couldn't really separate them in anything beyond trivial cases.

      It did it better than anything else, and it's mostly good enough. There's a bit of futzing to set up the document, which you have to change if you change styles. After that, it's all logical markup.

      The TeX family remains the preeminent tool for exactly one task today: typesetting maths. And that's only because no-one else has yet created another set of tools and fonts for doing so that doesn't suck.

      So... it's the best because noone has made anything better? Well, that's tautology.

      --
      SJW n. One who posts facts.
    3. Re:LaTeX is the answer to only one question today by Anonymous+Brave+Guy · · Score: 1

      No, and, unfortunately 99.997% of documents written today look like complete ass.

      Sad, but probably true. It's not because they weren't written in TeX, though.

      Good thing company's don't have house styles or anything.

      And do you know a lot of companies who have taken the time to develop a custom LaTeX class to match that style?

      Before you answer, keep in mind that LaTeX can't comply with many house styles without going as far as something like XeLaTeX, on typeface grounds alone.

      If, by "modern standards" you mean documents looking like ass, then yes, LaTeX doesn't conform to modern standards. If TeX's typesetting is so antiquated, then how come it looks better than all but the best professional packages?

      Because a lot of word processor-level software, including both packages we're talking about here, also doesn't support serious modern typography yet.

      How come modern wordprocessors and web browsers don't do decent line breaking?

      Some of them do, and certainly serious DTP software for producing professional work does.

      Others don't, though sometimes for usability reasons. It's not as if no-one on the Word team has heard of Knuth-Plass or they don't have someone smart enough to implement it, but it does have a downside in terms of shifting text around. It doesn't bother me using it interactively, but I'm not a typical Word user, and I suspect Microsoft have long since done their homework on this one.

      In any case, any credit TeX earns with its advances in H&J it immediately loses again by not knowing how to keep a line of text within the designated margins, a typographical absurdity far worse than anything Word or Writer has ever done to anyone. And then we start to talk about how TeX doesn't even pretend to support sensible vertical spacing, and it becomes a punchline.

      --
      If you disagree, post your argument. (-1, Overrated) isn't your personal censorship tool for views you don't like.
    4. Re:LaTeX is the answer to only one question today by Anonymous+Brave+Guy · · Score: 1

      One exception where you might be mixing presentation and content quite a bit is if you're designing a poster or a graphically complicated presentation - but then exact placement of figures/boxes/drawings/text usually matter a bit more than for the standard report or article.

      The trouble is, something as simple as inserting a diagram becomes "graphically complicated" in TeX world. Typesetting a table, or a pull quote, or basically anything that isn't one of the handful of common typographical treatments in the standard toolbox becomes complicated. Then you get to "advanced" concepts like page layout or documents that contain more than one stream of text, and TeX is basically a non-starter.

      TL;DR: If LaTeX is the model T, the rest are either horse-carts or trying to figure out the correct shape for the wheel.

      Sorry, but I just don't see how that's true at all. TeX has a neat H&J algorithm, by far the most powerful and easy-to-use system of any tool I know for handling math, and a default font designed specifically to work well when setting that math. And that's about where its strengths end today, even against everyday word processors, never mind high-end DTP systems, unless you are working with an organisation that has invested far more effort into custom class and package design than most places ever do. And even then you're still losing to the high-end DTP software, even if you beat the word processors.

      --
      If you disagree, post your argument. (-1, Overrated) isn't your personal censorship tool for views you don't like.
    5. Re:LaTeX is the answer to only one question today by dgatwood · · Score: 1

      Before you answer, keep in mind that LaTeX can't comply with many house styles without going as far as something like XeLaTeX, on typeface grounds alone.

      There are some things that LaTeX can't do even with XeLaTeX that are trivial in even a basic HTML renderer—adding the CSS min-width attribute to a box, for example—you can approximate it by precomputing the typeset length of the string, but it's still an approximation, and takes a screenful of LaTeX code just to define the command.

      With the addition of a handful of typographical features such as continuation lines (the "Blah blah (cont'd)" bit at the top of a page when something with a heading is split across a page break), modern HTML and CSS could do pretty much anything LaTeX can do, but far more cleanly, with proper separation of presentation from content and a much better programming model (none of this macro mess).

      --

      Check out my sci-fi/humor trilogy at PatriotsBooks.

    6. Re:LaTeX is the answer to only one question today by dgatwood · · Score: 1

      How come modern ... web browsers don't do decent line breaking?

      Because the page designer didn't specify the required CSS. Browsers have supported automatic hyphenation for at least a couple of years.

      --

      Check out my sci-fi/humor trilogy at PatriotsBooks.

    7. Re:LaTeX is the answer to only one question today by serviscope_minor · · Score: 1

      Because the page designer didn't specify the required CSS. Browsers have supported automatic hyphenation for at least a couple of years.

      HTML/CSS is meant to separate content from presentation, so why don't they do it by default? And, I've never, ever seen a web browser typeset as well as TeX.

      --
      SJW n. One who posts facts.
    8. Re:LaTeX is the answer to only one question today by serviscope_minor · · Score: 1

      Sad, but probably true. It's not because they weren't written in TeX, though.

      Well, TeX looks decent by default, at least the basic typesetting does. You have to put in considerable effort to break that. By default the basic typesetting on word processors looks awful and you have to put in a ton of effort to get it to be even in the same ballpark as TeX defaults.

      And do you know a lot of companies who have taken the time to develop a custom LaTeX class to match that style?

      Er, no, because they use word. And they take the time to make or comission custom styles. If they used LaTeX, they'd do the same there.

      Before you answer, keep in mind that LaTeX can't comply with many house styles without going as far as something like XeLaTeX, on typeface grounds alone.

      Er, huh? XeLaTeX adds super-advanced extra typography. Are you claiming that many house styles would require XeTeX to match their default Word templates? You must move in very different circles from me.

      Some of them do, and certainly serious DTP software for producing professional work does.

      I think you're missing the entire point of this thread, which is about LaTeX versus wordprocessors. Very few people use DTP software.

      Others don't, though sometimes for usability reasons. It's not as if no-one on the Word team has heard of Knuth-Plass or they don't have someone smart enough to implement it, but it does have a downside in terms of shifting text around. It doesn't bother me using it interactively, but I'm not a typical Word user, and I suspect Microsoft have long since done their homework on this one.

      Possibly, but it seems somewhat doubtful to me. It could easily be added as a paragraph style.

      In any case, any credit TeX earns with its advances in H&J it immediately loses again by not knowing how to keep a line of text within the designated margins, a typographical absurdity far worse than anything Word or Writer has ever done to anyone.

      Are you talking about hanging punctuation? Or are you talking about the times where it can't figure out how to make it fit, so it gives up and noisily warns you about badness 10000? If you're ignoring those you're essentially ignoring TeX saying "I can't figure out how to not make this look like crap" and then complaining that the results look like crap. Sometimes, rarely, human intervention is needed.

      Though unless you're doing something really unusual, like very very long words or very narrow columns then it just works.

      --
      SJW n. One who posts facts.
    9. Re:LaTeX is the answer to only one question today by colinrichardday · · Score: 1

      How do I do PStricks in HTML/CSS? How do I put math into SVG?

    10. Re:LaTeX is the answer to only one question today by Anonymous+Brave+Guy · · Score: 1

      Agreed on all counts.

      I used to expect that features from higher-end DTP packages would slowly filter down to word processors over time. However, these days, I tend to find irritating and absurdly simply limitations even in supposedly state-of-the-art DTP software instead, and word processors don't seem to be innovating at all.

      Instead, I'm now coming round to the view that the combination of a mark-up language with reasonable semantics, a presentation language, and a scripting language are going to get there first. I don't think it will be HTML, CSS and JavaScript, at least not in anything close to their form today; all of these carry way too much historical baggage from a time when we hadn't yet realised how much potential the basic model had, and they are underpowered and inflexible as a result. But they've shown beyond any doubt firstly that the three-way separation of content, presentation and dynamic behaviour is effective, and secondly that a lot of people understand that model well enough both to write in those languages directly and to write tools for other people who need them.

      I suspect someone is going to come along and render products like Word, Writer and even InDesign obsolete in the relatively near future, by creating a document writing and editing tool based on:

      • a moderately customisable mark-up language
      • a presentation language with the kind of power CSS has in its selectors but way more power in areas like layout and typographical control
      • a very accessible scripting language
      • a suite of front-end editors for each area and related tools that emphasizes ease of use, productivity, and actually helping people to write well, not just adding arbitrary shiny
      • powerful collaboration and back-office integration features for those who need them
      • flexible import/export including out-of-the-box support for a few common formats, not trying to be able to reproduce some other software's results perfectly, but enough that you can get your basic data into the new software and you can generate things like PDFs, and finally
      • a clean plug-in architecture to solve more advanced problems (such as typesetting math, for example) than the standard formatting engine and scripting language can sensibly handle.
      --
      If you disagree, post your argument. (-1, Overrated) isn't your personal censorship tool for views you don't like.
    11. Re:LaTeX is the answer to only one question today by Anonymous+Brave+Guy · · Score: 1

      Well, TeX looks decent by default, at least the basic typesetting does.

      I respectfully disagree. The defaults include allowing the badness problem with overly long lines, absurd vertical spacing settings, and using Computer Modern. The latter is a brilliant piece of engineering, in terms of the legibility it maintains in the difficult field of mathematical typesetting potentially with poor quality reproduction of printed material, and an aesthetic horror by just about any other typographical standard.

      Er, no, because they use word. And they take the time to make or comission custom styles. If they used LaTeX, they'd do the same there.

      I don't think it's reasonable to compare the effort and cost likely to be involved in those cases. I suspect that there are only a relatively small number of people on the entire planet who could produce a good LaTeX class for a non-trivial document format, even assuming that the required formatting and layout would lend itself to the way LaTeX typesets pages at all. As evidence of this, I submit the fact that LaTeX3 was the next big thing somewhere around the Dark Ages and still is today.

      XeLaTeX adds super-advanced extra typography.

      You mean like using Unicode characters and OpenType fonts?

      I think you're missing the entire point of this thread, which is about LaTeX versus wordprocessors. Very few people use DTP software.

      And even fewer use LaTeX, I imagine. In any case, I think the point of this thread is that LaTeX is only of any real value to most people if someone else already wrote the class file and packages to do exactly what they want, which is usually not the case and never could be.

      If you're ignoring [badness warnings] you're essentially ignoring TeX saying "I can't figure out how to not make this look like crap" and then complaining that the results look like crap. Sometimes, rarely, human intervention is needed.

      And yet every other piece of software on the planet seems to at least manage to fit text within horizontal margins without a human to hold its hand. What the TeX engine does when it allows a line to simply overrun by a few characters is the worst possible solution to the problem that I can imagine. It really did take several years before I realised that it was actually doing so by design and not just a bug they hadn't fixed yet; the idea that anyone might consider that acceptable behaviour hadn't even occurred to me.

      Though unless you're doing something really unusual, like very very long words or very narrow columns then it just works.

      Well, in that case, all I can say is that a remarkably unlikely proportion of the documents I used to write using TeX-family software must have been doing something really unusual, because I seemed to run into both the overlong line problem and the vast vertical spaces problem several times in almost every non-trivial document I wrote. The sad thing is that I'd even see those problems make it into the production versions of published papers, conference proceedings and the like.

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    12. Re:LaTeX is the answer to only one question today by Anonymous+Brave+Guy · · Score: 1

      How do I do PStricks in HTML/CSS?

      Probably by using the HTML5 <canvas> element and some combination of the JavaScript libraries that have been written over the past few years.

      How do I put math into SVG?

      By embedding MathML, much the same way as you would include it in an XHTML document.

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    13. Re:LaTeX is the answer to only one question today by Anonymous+Brave+Guy · · Score: 1

      HTML/CSS is meant to separate content from presentation, so why don't they do it by default?

      Because hyphenation is, for the most part, a bad thing as far as readability goes. The only reason it's used as much as it is in the TeX world is because the TeX world defaults to full justification, which is also mostly a bad thing as far as readability goes. On the web, we typically default to left-justified text and natural horizontal spacing, because it's almost always easier to read.

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    14. Re:LaTeX is the answer to only one question today by colinrichardday · · Score: 1

      As for your second point, if I put MathML within an SVG as would in an xhtml document, it doesn't render on Chrome/Opera/Firefox/IE. It might render on Safari, but I don't have a Mac on which to test that.

    15. Re:LaTeX is the answer to only one question today by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      LaTeX's big advance for me is that it's NOT wysiwyg: I can leave the fiddly typesetting shit to the computer, which will be more accurate than I ever could, and focus on content.

    16. Re:LaTeX is the answer to only one question today by don.g · · Score: 1

      And yet every other piece of software on the planet seems to at least manage to fit text within horizontal margins without a human to hold its hand. What the TeX engine does when it allows a line to simply overrun by a few characters is the worst possible solution to the problem that I can imagine. It really did take several years before I realised that it was actually doing so by design and not just a bug they hadn't fixed yet; the idea that anyone might consider that acceptable behaviour hadn't even occurred to me.

      pdflatex and the microtype package help immensely with this, by letting TeX stretch the glyphs horizontally a little bit. Not enough for you to notice, but enough for the gaps between the words to be small enough for you not to notice either. Microtype rocks.

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    17. Re:LaTeX is the answer to only one question today by Anonymous+Brave+Guy · · Score: 1

      The trouble is, mathematically perfect typesetting often doesn't look right to the human eye. If you want your document to look good, using high quality fonts and reasonable default spacing will go quite a long way, but in the end there's no substitute for a considered look from a real person.

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    18. Re:LaTeX is the answer to only one question today by Anonymous+Brave+Guy · · Score: 1

      FWIW, before I posted that, I did the obligatory Google and checked out the first promising MathML-in-SVG demo I found (about halfway down the first page of results) to make sure my information was still relevant. That page rendered fine for me in both Firefox and Chrome on Windows.

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    19. Re:LaTeX is the answer to only one question today by Anonymous+Brave+Guy · · Score: 1

      Yes, the microtype package certainly advanced the state of the art in some respects. It's one of the few bits of software I've ever seen that attempts to do optical margin alignment properly.

      Alas, as you mentioned, its scope is rather limited. In particular, significant parts of microtype (including font expansion) don't work with the XeTeX family AFAIK, so you can't readily take advantage of it when using good quality OpenType fonts.

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    20. Re:LaTeX is the answer to only one question today by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Holy Shit... for someone that kept yammering about the virtues of DTP you're virtually clueless. Go to a bookstore and open 20 books at random from various sections of the store and tell me that most of them were left-justified and not full justified with hyphenation.

      I know you say "on the web", but TeX and LaTeX are applications for printed book material... to try to associate full justification and hyphenation as something peculiar to the "TeX world" just proves you are full of shit.

    21. Re:LaTeX is the answer to only one question today by Anonymous+Brave+Guy · · Score: 1

      Go to a bookstore and open 20 books at random from various sections of the store and tell me that most of them were left-justified and not full justified with hyphenation.

      The fact that a lot of books are typeset in that way does not imply that doing so makes the text easier to read.

      Other things being equal, using hyphenation also fits more content into less space, which is typically a major concern when publishing books. Adding a scroll bar on a web page is free, but adding more pages to a book is not.

      Obviously fully justified text also gives a more solid outline to the text block. This is important in applications such as newspaper printing, where often very narrow columns are used with limited whitespace available to set each article apart from the rest.

      However, even in book publishing, full justification is not a universal practice. The most beautiful book I have immediately to hand — Tufte's The Visual Display of Quantitative Information — is typeset with its text left-justified.

      In any case, this is all rather a straw man, because we weren't talking about books. The question was about HTML and CSS, and I was talking about typography for reading on-screen, which is both how HTML and CSS are used and increasingly how we read documents prepared using a word processor or similar tool as well. There has been proper research on the effect of justification on readability, as a few moments with Google would have told you if you'd bothered to search before you started insulting me, and the conclusion was that fully justified text can slow down reading speed significantly.

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    22. Re:LaTeX is the answer to only one question today by serviscope_minor · · Score: 1

      You're trying to argue about two different things here. I am not.

      The debate is whether Tex is better than word processors.

      I know full well that most people use word processors, not tex so there is less expertise around in TeX. Noone's debating that. The debate is which is better, given an equal footing.

      I respectfully disagree. The defaults include allowing the badness problem with overly long lines, absurd vertical spacing settings, and using Computer Modern. The latter is a brilliant piece of engineering, in terms of the legibility it maintains in the difficult field of mathematical typesetting potentially with poor quality reproduction of printed material, and an aesthetic horror by just about any other typographical standard.

      Sevaral points: TeX makes a huge fuss if it overruns a line. Sure, it will overrun, but I'm struggling to remember a time where I've been given a document where that happens. With normal length words on normal sized paper it is very, very rare.

      CM fonts are a matter of opinion, I suppose. I quite like them. But TeX is perfectly capable of typesetting eith Type1 and TrueType fonts and has been for years. As long as you can get the font metrics into TeX, it can typeset it.

      You mean like using Unicode characters and OpenType fonts?

      Didn't LuaTeX alreay do unicode? And also, yes, OpenType is pretty much super-advanced typography. We're comparing largely to wordprocessors here. When was the last time you saw a word-processed document with ligatures? Never mind swashes...

      And yet every other piece of software on the planet seems to at least manage to fit text within horizontal margins without a human to hold its hand. What the TeX engine does when it allows a line to simply overrun by a few characters is the worst possible solution to the problem that I can imagine. It really did take several years before I realised that it was actually doing so by design and not just a bug they hadn't fixed yet; the idea that anyone might consider that acceptable behaviour hadn't even occurred to me.

      Not only does it overrun, it prints a hugh black box next to it as a dire warning (unless you're in final print mode). Knuth wanted his book to look excellent, so if it didn't he wanted to know as noisilyas possible so that he could fix it. The design makes sense from that point of view.

      But like I said, it happens exceptionally rarely in practise.

      Well, in that case, all I can say is that a remarkably unlikely proportion of the documents I used to write using TeX-family software must have been doing something really unusual, because I seemed to run into both the overlong line problem

      Yeha, frankly that is weird. If you're using A4/Letter and one or two column, there's quite a lot of letters per column, to the point where even hyphenation is rarely needed. Do you word-wrap figures, or use really narrow table paragraphs or something?

      and the vast vertical spaces problem several times in almost every non-trivial document I wrote.

      You've got to break somewhere and TeX prefers to break at natural breakpoints rather than mid paragraph. You can set the relative weighting between the two, I believe. But yes, that's something modern DTP packages do better. Not word processors though. They just run on and break, regardless of whether you are even in the miiddle of a long section heading. And yes, I've seen documents with a page break mid section heading. I've never seen TeX do that.

      sad thing is that I'd even see those problems make it into the production versions of published papers, conference proceedings and the like.

      So? That's got nothing to do with TeX. I've seen many offences against typography in journals, including ones not published with TeX. I've even seen conference proceedings with papers in word dumped in as PDFs, where the styles don't even remotely match and the entire thing is formatted as ragged right.

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    23. Re:LaTeX is the answer to only one question today by Anonymous+Brave+Guy · · Score: 1

      These posts are getting long now, so I'm going to condense my reply a bit.

      TeX may make a "huge fuss" about long lines. Other software simply doesn't do the stupid thing that could never possibly be right.

      TeX may be capable of using some other font formats, but as soon as you switch away from CM, all the subtle spacing corrections when typesetting equations tend to be slightly off, because they were fine-tuned for that specific family of fonts.

      OpenType isn't just for "super-advanced typography". It's the industry standard format for supplying professional grade fonts, often the only format those fonts are available in these days, and it has been for many years now. And in any word processor or DTP software, the fonts installed on your system just work.

      All the major word processors have options for widow/orphan control, for keeping all lines in a paragraph together in the same text block, and for keeping a paragraph together with the following line. This covers the basics as far as page breaking is concerned. None of the major word processors thinks it's a good idea to start adding an inch of extra space between each pair of adjacent paragraphs to pad out a page vertically just because some large block of content that doesn't fit has to move onto the next page.

      If we're talking about comparing on an equal footing, I don't see how you can possibly argue that TeX-related tools are better than any modern word processor in any of these areas. At best, TeX allows daft results and requires the user to manually mess around and reprocess their document to fix something that no other software would have got wrong in the first place.

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    24. Re:LaTeX is the answer to only one question today by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I disagree, Word, LO produce poor quality typeset, LaTeX doe not, LO is quickly improving now some market droid and Engineers and Typographers are fixing bugs. Word output has and does look awful even with the M$ fonts.

      The OO copy M$'s bugs was ideotic, but if I can look at the output and say ugley or OK that says it all.

      Finally, LaTeX separates document structure from content, and that is a good thing.

    25. Re:LaTeX is the answer to only one question today by serviscope_minor · · Score: 1

      TeX may make a "huge fuss" about long lines. Other software simply doesn't do the stupid thing that could never possibly be right.

      TeX was designed to make good looking documents. By that definition, the stuff other software isn't any more right either becasue it looks bad. TeX gives up if it looks bad, and won't pretend all is OK.

      TeX may be capable of using some other font formats, but as soon as you switch away from CM, all the subtle spacing corrections when typesetting equations tend to be slightly off, because they were fine-tuned for that specific family of fonts.

      Really? Euler seems to work fine. Also, since we are still comparing to word processing stuff, the maths typesetting is about the least important (nothing comes even close to TeX, frankly in that regard). For notmal text, it can use any metrics from any font just fine.

      It's the industry standard format for supplying professional grade fonts,

      You're again simultaneously comparing TeX to word processors and "professional grade software". Let's stick to word processors, like the original thread. Yes, OpenType is super-advanced typography, including things such as swashs and ligatures etc. These things simply don't happen in any word processed document I've ever seen. Frankly, most wordprocessor users wouldn't even know the difference between different kinds of horizontal dashes even if such a dash was to run up and bite them on the leg.

      Also, Luatex supports microtypography and opentype, so I'm not even sure what we're arguing about.

      All the major word processors have options for widow/orphan control, for keeping all lines in a paragraph together in the same text block, and for keeping a paragraph together with the following line. This covers the basics as far as page breaking is concerned.

      A big part of the point was not even that wordprocessors don't have the nice features, it's that they're all massive amounts of extra effort to use, since they're not on by default.

      Compare a document produced by a non-advanced TeX user and a non-advanced word user. The document made by the former will look better because it does sensible things by default.

      None of the major word processors thinks it's a good idea to start adding an inch of extra space between each pair of adjacent paragraphs to pad out a page vertically just because some large block of content that doesn't fit has to move onto the next page.

      Try \raggedbottom, it might be more to your taste than the default.

      If we're talking about comparing on an equal footing, I don't see how you can possibly argue that TeX-related tools are better than any modern word processor in any of these areas. At best, TeX allows daft results and requires the user to manually mess around and reprocess their document to fix something that no other software would have got wrong in the first place.

      My argument is tha basically every aspect of wordprocessed documents look bad by default. The way almost everyone uses them is by setting fonte, sizes, etc by hand because its more obvious than using styles. Documents are a horrible mismash of styles, poorly justified, badly hyphenated with no ligatures, microtypography or any other things which make large amount of text easy to read.

      Every single point of style {needs to be}/{is} done by hand. The result is that wordprocessed documents look almost universally awful unless produced by and hand tweaked by an expert.

      On the otherhand you have TeX which basically does everything right by default except for \raggedbottom and an occasional failure to be able to typeset something to its satisfaction which requires a bit of tweaking by the end user.

      I'm honestly astonished that you can argue that TeX is worse in this regard. The amount of messing around in a wordprocessor is vastly greater to get documents up to even remotely the same quality.

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    26. Re:LaTeX is the answer to only one question today by Anonymous+Brave+Guy · · Score: 1

      Perhaps we'll just have to agree to disagree on this one.

      IME, quite a few businesses of all sizes do have a house style that uses something other than a standard Windows/Mac operating system font. This is not some niche idea that is only used by elite design studios with $1,000+/seat DTP software. That font will almost certainly come as OpenType, which will work out of the box in any major word processor.

      Moreover, almost every major word processor does have support for at least basic OpenType features like automatic ligatures and different number styles these days. LibreOffice Writer is way behind the field on this one, and currently seems to be obsessed with some niche font technology and supporting international character sets to the extent of making the entire formatting UI incredibly cumbersome.

      Just having the ability to use modern fonts without jumping through arcane hoops puts almost anything else ahead of TeX these days. And having the right font is going to matter far more to the overall appearance of a document than the fine-tuning of the Knuth-Plass H&J algorithm, which is pretty much the only rock solid win TeX has left.

      I'm honestly astonished that you can argue that TeX is worse in this regard. The amount of messing around in a wordprocessor is vastly greater to get documents up to even remotely the same quality.

      It really isn't. In fact, if you're not using full justification, simply choosing a good font and enabling a handful of basic settings in your word processor if they aren't on by default will get you better-looking results almost every time than using some TeX or LaTeX variant and enabling a handful of similarly routine settings such as the \raggedbottom that you mentioned.

      I think you're still imagining how word processors and fonts worked ten years ago, instead of comparing the TeX family of today (which has barely changed in that time) with modern office software and font technology (which have evolved beyond recognition over the same period).

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    27. Re:LaTeX is the answer to only one question today by dgatwood · · Score: 1

      If you're ignoring those you're essentially ignoring TeX saying "I can't figure out how to not make this look like crap" and then complaining that the results look like crap. Sometimes, rarely, human intervention is needed.

      Sadly, even such simple things as em dashes in UTF-8 confuse XeLaTeX as shipped, resulting in overfull hbox errors. (Hint: it is always legal to wrap after one.) And if you don't use UTF-8 characters, it also confuses LaTeX by default, but in different ways. (Hint: it is never legal to wrap before an em dash.)

      I resorted to starting from XML and programmatically adding wrap hints (zero-length hspace) in the right places to make LaTeX behave. By contrast, every word processor written or released in the past five years gets this right, every text editor, and every web browser. Thus, there's at least one case where LaTeX can require a lot more work to get something that looks good than a word processor does.

      XeLaTeX adds super-advanced extra typography. Are you claiming that many house styles would require XeTeX to match their default Word templates?

      The main benefit of XeLaTeX is that it supports modern fonts without the need to manually create metafont files for them. That and support for UTF-8. Although you can probably work around both features if you had to, XeTeX does make life a lot more bearable if you're using custom in-house fonts.

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    28. Re:LaTeX is the answer to only one question today by dgatwood · · Score: 1

      HTML/CSS is meant to separate content from presentation, so why don't they do it by default?

      Because automatic hyphenation was added a couple of years ago and CSS has been around since 1996. Changing to use automatic hyphenation by default would thus break existing content. By convention, new features in CSS must be opt-in, not opt-out.

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    29. Re:LaTeX is the answer to only one question today by marcosdumay · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately, about 99.997% of documents written today are not academic papers or theses written to comply with the house style of a few hundred journals and a few hundred major institutions.

      LOL. Around here 99.997% of the documents are nested lists made to comply with the style of a single big entity. Yet, that style is dictated for Word (that can't even handle nested lists well), go figure.

    30. Re:LaTeX is the answer to only one question today by ClickOnThis · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately, about 99.997% of documents written today are not academic papers or theses written to comply with the house style of a few hundred journals and a few hundred major institutions.

      Fair enough. But that's what the generic styles/classes are for. See my original post.

      Even if they were, LaTeX's typesetting power now looks like the first car with an internal combustion engine: a revolutionary advance in technology at the time, that is now so antiquated and incompatible with modern standards that it has little value outside of its niche except as a historical curiosity.

      One might say roughly the same thing about plain-text-based programming languages, yet people still use them. Instead of evolving into WYSIWYG systems, we seem to have replaced plain-text editors with IDEs for programming. Arguably it wouldn't hurt to do the same thing for a document-preparation markup language such as LaTeX. Perhaps this has happened already; I haven't kept track. Syntax highlighting gets you part of the way there.

      Your argument about LaTeX controlling the logical design is well-taken, but unfortunately it never really did that, because in practice it conflated content and presentation to such an extent that you couldn't really separate them in anything beyond trivial cases.

      I disagree; it very much did (and does) allow control of logical design, whereas WYSIWYG systems generally don't. In practice, LaTeX offers well-designed defaults that you can tweak with minimal effort. Of course, you can expend much more effort if you want to make detailed customizations, but that's true of WYSIWYG word-processors too. Arguably, someone who is willing to put that much effort into document design should be willing to face the effort involved with more detailed LaTeX customizations.

      The TeX family remains the preeminent tool for exactly one task today: typesetting maths. And that's only because no-one else has yet created another set of tools and fonts for doing so that doesn't suck.

      I would put it much more broadly: The TeX family remains the preeminent tool for creating documents that look professional. I'm not naïve about the allure of word processors. I use them when I have to (I'm rushed, don't care what the document looks like, or need to interact with other non-LaTeX users.) But what bothers me is how naïve word-processor users can be about the poor, unprofessional quality of the documents they produce with them.

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    31. Re:LaTeX is the answer to only one question today by Anonymous+Brave+Guy · · Score: 1

      But that's what the generic styles/classes are for.

      But the generic styles/classes are bland, cookie-cutter implementations of about half a dozen basic document types. They were reportedly never even intended as more than examples, but they caught on and became ubiquitous because it's so damned hard to write better alternatives in LaTeX.

      Where are the classes for magazines and three-fold brochures and concert posters and children's books?

      And where are the classes that don't make documents that look so boring I want to put myself out of my own misery before I have to read more than the first two paragraphs?

      One might say roughly the same thing about plain-text-based programming languages, yet people still use them.

      Sorry, but I don't see your analogy at all here.

      I disagree; it very much did (and does) allow control of logical design, whereas WYSIWYG systems generally don't.

      How does it allow control of logical design? I mean, sure, you can define macros to do whatever you want if you can get your head around the eccentric programming language. But out of the box, LaTeX has only the most basic elements in its semantic repertoire: titles and subtitles, hierarchical sections, ordered and unordered lists, that sort of thing. And of course every major word processor also comes with basic document templates and default styles of a similar level.

      In practice, LaTeX offers well-designed defaults that you can tweak with minimal effort.

      Sorry, but I don't accept either of your premises there. As I've argued in various other posts in this discussion, I don't think LaTeX's defaults stack up particularly well by modern standards, and I certainly don't think tweaking them requires "minimal effort". On the contrary, simple things like setting up your own table or heading numbering or list styles in LaTeX are absurdly overcomplicated compared to using pretty much any modern word processor. And of course if you want to do anything more substantial than a bit of light tweaking, you are about to enter a world of hurt.

      Arguably, someone who is willing to put that much effort into document design should be willing to face the effort involved with more detailed LaTeX customizations.

      I think that would be a rather challenging argument to support. The effort involved is prohibitive for almost anyone.

      The TeX family remains the preeminent tool for creating documents that look professional. [...] But what bothers me is how naïve word-processor users can be about the poor, unprofessional quality of the documents they produce with them.

      You're really making two implications here: firstly that word processors necessarily or primarily produce poor quality results, and secondly that TeX is a good tool for producing good quality results.

      I certainly agree that there is an education problem with word processing, because it's so easy to do things the quick and dirty way, but equally I think the people who run into that would struggle using TeX at least as much. On the other hand, for a moderately skilled user, someone who has at least learned to use their software with some proficiency and knows which options are off by default but really shouldn't be, it's not hard to produce reasonably professional-looking results in most modern word processors with only a very modest amount of work. Once again, this is something I've addressed in more detail elsewhere in the discussion, but today's word processors have significantly higher standards particularly in terms of typographical and layout control than those of a few years ago, and many of TeX's traditional advantages simply don't apply any more.

      As for your more general comment that the TeX family remains the preeminent tool for creating documents that look professional, I couldn't disagree more. If you want to create a professi

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  131. Re:Formatting features are not the killer app anym by jfengel · · Score: 1

    I recently had to stop editing a document in LibreOffice because it couldn't handle the change tracking. That's an important feature to me, and for a document that size (about 30 pages) it was far too slow to use.

    It's also under-powered, and lacks some important tools that MS Office has had for years. I found an old copy of Word 2003 laying around, and it handled my document just fine.

    I still use LibreOffice; in fact, for most stuff I find that Google Docs suffices and has the advantage of not having to install anything and I can edit from anywhere. But when I need to use change tracking, that old copy of Word is the only option.

  132. Re:Formatting features are not the killer app anym by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Then "real collaboration tools" are for stupid people.

  133. WordStar by gbr · · Score: 1

    WordStar 7.0d. Only way to go.

  134. Re:It's free, and free is a very good price by OldGunner · · Score: 1

    I refurbish old PCs and, working with the Knights of Columbus, donate them to needy families with kids who will benefit from having a functional PC, even if it is 6-8 years old.

    Free software is incredible valuable, as these are families that don't have $150 for productivity software, or $75 for antivirus. I load these systems with Open Office, Avast, Chrome, Picasa, and similar packages. No adware, no trialware, just good, functional software.

    The only downside is that one High School deducted 15 points from a student's paper because it was not submitted in Word 7 format. Ugh!

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  135. Greeting Cards - the killer feature Linux lacks! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I know no one will ever see this, but there is no easy way to make a greeting card in Linux! I still have Microsoft Publisher 2000 in a VirtualBox image of W2K just to make greeting cards. Click click click and you have it. No fuss, no measuring and laying out, just change the text and print. Libre/Open/WhateverOffice has no templates, no wizards, nothing. Linux is DOA on the desktop until there's some way to make greeting cards.

  136. Re:Am I the only one in the world that likes Ribbo by UnknowingFool · · Score: 1

    Let me explain this slowly: your suggestion to someone not finding something was to customize the ribbon. My point is that you cannot know to customize the ribbon without precognition. This is true of menus, ribbons, whatever. It is not a solution to the problem at all. The solution is to make the option easily and self discoverable. The ribbon makes it harder to do by MS purposefully obscuring what it considers less used feautures 2 or 3 menus deep. With the old way, it was there and more easily discoverered.

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  137. Re:They have one huge disadvantage: Landscape mode by PARENA · · Score: 2

    Wait, what? In LO, I right click the page, select "Page..." and in there you can click the landscape radio button. Click OK and done. Or am I not getting exactly what you meant?

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  138. UNO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    1. UNO
    2-10. See, in general, 1.

  139. Re:They have one huge disadvantage: Landscape mode by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Don't worry - he's got his MCSE - for money.

  140. Only one flaw by formfeed · · Score: 1

    Disclaimer: I am not employed by Microsoft and although I haven't checked the mail today, I don't expect there to be a check from Oracle.

    I have been using OpenOffice exclusively for the last nine years. I even was able to use it at work.
    But: I had one case years ago where the footnotes should (a) restart at every chapter but (b) show up all at the end of the document with chapter headings in between. (And I know, neither Openoffice nor Word are intended for publishing, but that's how it is IRL.)

    With some tricks Word could do it, StarOffice couldn't (and Openoffice still can't). I wrote to the forum at Sun, only to be told that I either don't know what I'm doing or that I'm requesting a feature nobody needs.

    That's not a singular case. Developers at Sun were quite agressive towards people who had different opinions about GUI or feature decisions. The bibliography project had some interesting ideas, but none of that has been integrated for years. I hope it changes, once LibreOffice is running well enough to look at designs.

  141. No Normal View? Still doesn't beat my trusty Offic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You know what's missing from LibreOfffice through? The real deal breaker? No option for "Normal View" (Or "Draft View") in the word processor. Just "Print Layout" and "Web Layout". It feels like I'm always typing in Preview Mode.

    It's still better than Office 2010 though. But you know what works better than the two of them? Office 97. I'm baffled how a word processor can go from 35 MB to 600 GB and still do the same thing for me, albeit 20x slower. I'm sure there must some new feature's added with every new version, but for the life of me I've never had to use them

    Office 97 > LibreOffice > Office 2010

  142. And where's "12 significant ways to beat both"? by Anonymous+Brave+Guy · · Score: 1

    The sad thing is that there are so many horrendous usability issues and functional limitations with both packages that these comparisons feel a bit like asking whether the guy hurtling to the ground at 98% of terminal velocity is in more trouble than the guy who reaches 98.5%, without anyone considering that giving either a parachute would have made a lot more difference.

    I can't understand how market forces haven't yet driven anyone to create a general document editor that actually caters to what modern users want to do. Developing a program on this kind of scale is a serious project, and taking on Microsoft front and centre is probably a fool's game, but it's not as if you'd need a 500-strong team for years to do vastly better than any current word processor or mainstream DTP package, and Not Being Word isn't the commercial suicide note it used to be now that the dominant applications are the ability to (a) collaborate effectively within an organisation and (b) produce PDFs or other mostly "final" representations for external distribution.

    Can't we Kickstarter enough funding for a small team of smart people with the right mix of skills to spend a year building something actually good?

    --
    If you disagree, post your argument. (-1, Overrated) isn't your personal censorship tool for views you don't like.
  143. Re:They have one huge disadvantage: Landscape mode by Beardo+the+Bearded · · Score: 1

    Are you kidding me?

    I'll have to check that out once I get home, thanks.

    --

    ---
    ECHELON is a government program to find words like bomb, jihad, plutonium, assassinate, and anarchy.
  144. Re:Am I the only one in the world that likes Ribbo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I've been using MS Office since Office 95 and I had very little trouble adjusting to the Ribbon. I found it easy to use and intuitive, and it took me maybe a few days to completely learn my way around it. Now I actually prefer it to the menus of old.

  145. Re:Don't these features interfere w/ compatibility by Anonymous+Brave+Guy · · Score: 1

    That's an old argument in favour of typesetting systems like TeX and friends.

    The thing is — and I write this as a guy who now produces serious documents directly in InDesign — it doesn't actually seem to disrupt much of anything in practice. InDesign uses a TeX-style H&J algorithm, so things do occasionally jump around slightly as you're editing. Since you're concentrating on typing, more often than not at the end of a paragraph if you're typing very much, and the layout effectively updates instantly on any modern computer, it's all quite stable by the time you pause to review what you just typed. Ditto for anchored frames that shift up and down a sidebar as you edit the main text, for example.

    Of course, if you're working on a "chaotic" layout where typing a single extra character really can trigger a huge change like shifting a half-page float from the bottom of page 10 to the top of page 11, a perfectly sensible alternative is to have a dedicated story editor that is WYSIWYG up to a point but then display full page layout reflows in a separate window/panel/something.

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    If you disagree, post your argument. (-1, Overrated) isn't your personal censorship tool for views you don't like.
  146. Re:They have one huge disadvantage: Landscape mode by tibit · · Score: 1

    The heck? To me, all the formatting belongs in the Format menu. Why the heck did MS put page formatting under the File menu is beyond me. I always found it counterintuitive. I think that anyone arguing that Page formatting in the Format menu in OOo.org/LO is somehow bad have just never really critically looked at their daily work environment: it's a confounding mess and they merely grew used to it over the years.

    --
    A successful API design takes a mixture of software design and pedagogy.
  147. Re:Formatting features are not the killer app anym by formfeed · · Score: 1

    Agreed, but most non-techies wouldnt even think of LaTeX. If you write anything with more than 4 pages and want wysiwyg, Open|Libre Office styles are just wonderful.
    Word used to be that way, but now hides all these features, because that's where they see their market. And if all you do is a letter or a sign in ComicSans for the break room, that's just fine. Just like all these websites made with a click and publish tool (or even Word) are just fine.

    I thought OpenOffice was a decent piece of software, but it's still based on prior definitions of what a documenting software has been, rather than what it could be.

    Unfortunately, it still feels that way. The document format could do so much more. And if you think of the format like you think of a programming language, Open|Libre Office could allow more variations, even if it isn't offered by the standard gui.

  148. Re:Am I the only one in the world that likes Ribbo by Missing.Matter · · Score: 2

    You don't need to say it slower. I understand what perfectly what you're saying. I just think you're wrong.

    My point is that you cannot know to customize the ribbon without precognition. This is true of menus, ribbons, whatever.

    This is not the point you made originally. You're backtracking now. You asserted that the problem with the ribbon is that it assumes what you need and don't need and hides the rest. Now you say this is a problem with any menu system. So we are in agreeance now.

    It is not a solution to the problem at all.

    I'm not so sure this problem needs to be solved at all. How often do you need to find uncommon functions. By definition... not often. If you find you do need one often, just make a shortcut. You seem to want an interface that can read your mind and always activate the function you have in mind. This is unrealistic.

    You make this assertion that "The ribbon makes it harder to do by MS purposefully obscuring what it considers less used feautures 2 or 3 menus deep. With the old way, it was there and more easily discoverered." But you have yet to substantiate this. I have provided several examples and reasons why the ribbon makes functions more easily discoverable. Let me enumerate and expand them for you and add a couple more.

    1) The ribbon layout decreases search time. Finding a function in the old menu takes time O(m*n*p) where m is the number of menus, n is the number of items in the menus, and p is the number of flyouts. Finding a function in the ribbon takes time O(m*n) where m is the number of tabs and n is the number of items in the tabs.

    2) The layout of the ribbon allows for more items to be displayed at once. Thus the number of items 2 clicks away are much higher than in the old menu. Thus the need to drill down into sub menus is decreased compared to the old menu.

    3)The ribbon uses icons and words to represent functions, which makes them not only easier to remember but easier to scan quickly. In a menu system you have to read each of the words, one after another to find the one you want. And sometimes, a picture is a better representation for a function, like a style or a shape or a chart. For instance, the ribbon allows plenty of space to visualize all of the text styles. Rather than reading "heading 1" "heading 2" "text body" etc... as in Open Office Writer, you see them visually in Word due to the Ribbon.

    4) The ribbon has more logical groupings for functions due to more space. Like the example I gave, Bibliography functions are under reference. In the old menu system, several related functions might be spread across different menus.

    5) Context specific ribbons bring together common tools. For example with graphs, all graph functions are available in context tabs. In the old menu system, they try to replicate this with context toolbars, but the toolbar changes depending on the part of the graph you have selected. So rather than having everything in front of you, you have to click on the different chart pieces to try and find the function you want. Not very discoverable.

    Now, how exactly does the old menu system beat these features of the ribbon in terms of discoverability?

  149. Re:Am I the only one in the world that likes Ribbo by Tuan121 · · Score: 1

    Totally agree. It's very helpful to see all the options on each tab right away. If they are in the menu, they are hidden under submenus etc, and it's just text. In the ribbon, what you want to do is also somewhat graphically displayed. For example, I want to turn numbers into percent, I click the "%" sign. I don't go into Tools->Format->Percent etc.

    So no, you are not alone in liking the Ribbon. I bet that most people still making fun of the ribbon after all these years (it's been what, 5 years?) haven't actually tried to use it.

  150. Re:Am I the only one in the world that likes Ribbo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Have you used Office 2010? Because I could've sworn I remember seeing all four of those options on the same tab. The first one. Requiring a grand total of a single click to get to.

    And even if they weren't, the Ribbon is as customizable as the toolbars of previous versions of Office. You could always make your own "I use this regularly" tab, with the bonus feature of being able to hide little-used features on other tabs.

  151. Re:Formatting features are not the killer app anym by elashish14 · · Score: 1

    That's in development

    Like others mentioned, subversion and git aren't bad tools either, though I guess they wouldn't be worth the effort unless the project is of textbook proportions.

    --
    I have left slashdot and am now on Soylent News. FUCK YOU DICE.
  152. Re:Am I the only one in the world that likes Ribbo by MikeyC01 · · Score: 1

    So add them to the "Quick Access Toolbar" up at the top of the window and you're golden. Don't like the toolbar there? Click on the drop-down and have it displayed below the ribbon. Don't like the ribbon taking up space? Click that same drop-down and minimize the ribbon.

    Want to copy them from computer to computer? You can do that too!

    Copying Office Quick Access Toolbars

    When I first saw the ribbon in Office 2007 I was apprehensive but I've come to really like it.

  153. Re:Am I the only one in the world that likes Ribbo by Mr+Z · · Score: 1

    Actually, I have to admit, I'm on the first generation of the ribbon in 2007. I haven't upgraded to 2010 yet.

  154. Re:Formatting features are not the killer app anym by Anonymous+Brave+Guy · · Score: 1

    I've had the "pleasure" of using Google Docs when organisations I've worked with adopted it as their corporate standard.

    Google Docs competes with Word in about the same way that a basic text editor with a distributed version control system does, except that Google Docs is slightly more interactive and much more likely to corrupt your document.

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    If you disagree, post your argument. (-1, Overrated) isn't your personal censorship tool for views you don't like.
  155. Line numbers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Oh did they finally get the f***ing page numbering right. Just a simple menu point, and an option not to have a line number on page one and two. I don't want to use some field that I put in the footer -- this takes away 30% of the usability for a lot of my friends kthxby

  156. Re:It's free, and free is a very good price by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The only downside is that one High School deducted 15 points from a student's paper because it was not submitted in Word 7 format

    then you failed by not defaulting the save format to ms word.

  157. Re:Am I the only one in the world that likes Ribbo by Americano · · Score: 1

    These can all be placed on the quick-access toolbar, or you can customize the ribbon so that "Mr. Z's Favorite Commands" shows up in the ribbon as a tab, which you can easily customize to add whatever items you wish to.

    It requires some time and attention to get these things set up, but I don't see anything you're saying "I wish I could..." that's impossible with the ribbon interface, or even all that difficult with the ribbon interface. Anecdotally, I find the Ribbon much easier to customize than the old menu system was.

  158. Fatal compatibility flaws by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Just this morning I presented a semester long research project. I had written it in LibreOffice and saved it as PPTX, in order to present my work. LibreOffice horribly mangled my content to the point where object locations, transitions, images were all off. Some images were flat out missing. I found out about this half an hour before presenting, LibreOffice may be great for some, but when any money or reputation is on the line just use Microsoft Office.

  159. Re:Am I the only one in the world that likes Ribbo by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

    Keyboard shortcuts all remain the same, by the way, so those who used them wouldn't care. It's about mouse muscle memory only.

    With respect to orb (the Ribbon term for it is "pearl") for the file menu, there was enough negative feedback on that that it was actually changed to just read "File" in Office 2010.

  160. Re:They have one huge disadvantage: Landscape mode by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    As I recall, you can even make it a one-click fix by putting a button for orientation on a taskbar... if you use it that frequently.

  161. Re:Am I the only one in the world that likes Ribbo by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

    It's actually one feature that I'm surprised is not pervasive yet. Search over all commands in the application is extremely useful, especially for the more complicated suites like Office or VS.

    It's slowly trickling down elsewhere - e.g. we've added something like it in VS11 (with more filtering features, but that's feasible because it's a product for developers who can handle and appreciate that complexity), and, I believe, most Java IDEs have had similar for a while now. But why not e.g. add it to the standard Win32 menu control? Or, in frameworks which have UI actions as first-class entities regardless of their placement (e.g. WPF commands, or Qt actions), provide a stock widget to search through all actions available in the current context.

  162. Re:Am I the only one in the world that likes Ribbo by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

    I don't care if "zoom", "increase font size", "merge and center", and "fill with color" all belong on logically different tabs based on their function. For me, they all belong on the "I use this regularly" page.

    That's what the Quick Access toolbar (the thingy on the left in the title bar) is for.

  163. Libre is better except... by miles+zarathustra · · Score: 1

    1. Libre/Open office needs to figure out that tables are NOT spreadsheets. When I select a row and hit ^X, it should delete the entire row, not just the data. Same with moving rows.

    2. Libre/Open office makes it nearly impossible to hide text. With word, there is a formatting option, "hidden." With Libre, you have to set up a rule, write a bunch of Visual Basic, access a database.... I exaggerate, but not much.

    One note: I'm working on a document in Open Office that's about 450 pages on a netbook with 1 gig of memory, a single 1Ghz processor, and it's perfectly usable. (Ubuntu netbook remix)

    1. Re:Libre is better except... by ratboy666 · · Score: 1

      I would argue that, since table creation allows selection of rows/colums, there is a natural separation between table format and data.

      I am not sure what MS Word does in this case, but there is a detail in LO. Table format changes could be made easier.

      As to hidden text -- Format/Character.../Font Effects and select "Hidden". Of course this interacts badly with "WYSIWYG". The text disappears.

      Neither View/Nonprinting Characters not View/Hidden Paragraphs restores them to view. Arguably View/Nonprinting Characters should, but it seems the definition of "Nonprinting Character" doesn't include characters formatted as Hidden.

      But the whole point of Hidden seems strange. It is either a comment (so use that feature), or conditional text. Hidden means you typed it, and never want it.

      The Help for LO uses the conditional method -- and, since there is a possibility for viewing the text, View/Hidden Paragraphs now works (as does double-clicking). Since character properties are meant to be consistent with each other (that is italic/bold/underline etc. consistent with hidden), this is arguably correct. What I don't understand is why Hidden is there at all. (I suspect for MS Word compatibility, mostly).

      Anyway, Hidden attribute text works like the rest -- Find will find it, for example (although you still don't SEE it).

      So -- the misfeature here is that Hidden can be treated as a character attribute (and it can, it's just... weird).

      --
      Just another "Cubible(sic) Joe" 2 17 3061
  164. Spandex is more comfortable by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And there are an infinite number of reasons why LaTeX is better than both.

    I guess you can make stretchy pants (you know, to wear in your room... for fun) out of Latex,
    but I much rather prefer light blue Spandex myself.

    --
    Nacho Libre

  165. Not all advantages.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I love the advantage where Writer fails to let the network know it has possession over the write ability of a file.
    So the last person who opened it in excel still shows as the user who has it open.

    I'd really like to see a fix on this. Its quite annoying.

  166. Re:Am I the only one in the world that likes Ribbo by kyrsjo · · Score: 1

    I hate it, not for being what it is, or for "threathening my superiority" - I hated it just for being different from the old versions.

    Why? Today I use word approximately once per year, for filling out some form that has been created by the administration. This almost-never use frequency does not warrant learning a new type of interface, so I looked for a way to switch back to the old style which I know (like you could with winXP - switch back to the win2000 style of menus etc.). It didn't exist, and the forums I tried to ask on was full of trolls insisting in that it was better.

    Maybe it is better, maybe not - I really don't care. It stands between me and what I need to do, and it refuses to move aside. So therefore, the only thing left was to hate it...

    (It should probably be mentioned that this word-editing session ended with me unzipping the docx, editing the XML with EMACS, rezipping it and adding the extension. All that to fix a well-known bug where clicking the correct button in the UI doesn't change the lock status of the document. So I was quite fed up already...)

  167. Re:Am I the only one in the world that likes Ribbo by mdielmann · · Score: 1

    This is the key difference between menus and toolbars. Words have an inherent meaning - if you're literate, you can at least read it, and probably infer its meaning. Pictures require a cultural context, which changes over time. For instance, when's the last time you saw a 3.5" floppy disk, outside of the toolbar in most applications? How do I teach my kids that this means "save file"? "Well, this little blue box with the little white box, that means save. Why? Well, long before you were born..." The obvious conclusion is that at some point I'm going to have to learn a new icon, even if I don't know what it's going to be yet. And this gets back to the self-discovery. When you peruse menus looking for that one feature you need, even if you have the wrong name for it you should be able to have an idea of what the names there do mean, and find the right one. The up side is, if you have the wrong name for it, you'll have at least heard of the right name by the time you find it.

    --
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  168. Re:Am I the only one in the world that likes Ribbo by jyx · · Score: 1

    At any rate, if you really need to, you can customize the ribbon layout in Office 2010 in pretty much any way you choose.

    Except to look like the old menu & toolbar combination

  169. Re:Formatting features are not the killer app anym by serviscope_minor · · Score: 1

    Revision control is only a collaboration tool to those who haven't used real collaboration tools.

    Spoken like someone who doesn't know how to use revision control.

    --
    SJW n. One who posts facts.
  170. Unicode support by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Not sure about any other features. I personally am in the process of moving over to LaTeX for all my personal documents, but I often need to edit documents written in hebrew. LibreOffice does not support editing the documents from the word format that contain the hebrew codepoints, and frequently mucks the formatting to the extent that my thesis advisor has yelled at me for using a non-microsoft product.

    PS - I've changed advisors, the guy had a toxic personality that stifled any chance to grow academically. But the point was valid. Compatibility improvements (Impress spits out ppt files that can't be opened with office), and better RTL support are top of my list.

  171. Re:Am I the only one in the world that likes Ribbo by Missing.Matter · · Score: 1

    Yes, you need to go further. With respect to vertical screen realestate, when maximized, from the top of the screen to the top of the word document, Word and Writer use the SAME amount of vertical space. Further, you can minimize the ribbon and bring it back in a single click. Cannot do that with toolbars in writer. Especially on a 1080 screen, this is not an issue.

    Second, icons are not hidden until the window is about 960px wide, and only the least used functions are grouped at that point. Most used functions like font tools are not hidden until the window is around 440 pixels. Note that toolbars will also hide functions depending on window size. The different and benefit of the Ribbon is that large icons are turned into small icons before they are hidden, allowing more functionality to be present at smaller resolutions compared to the toolbar.

    There's also the nice new equation editor that only works in one font, Callibri, when most of the universe specifies either Times or TeX Computer Modern for equations, but that's not a ribbon fail

    The font is Cambria Math, and you can change it as long as you have a font that supports all the math. I've done it just fine.

  172. 8th point is incorrect by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Word has had the ability to set custom properties since at least Word 2003, so the 8th point ("only Writer includes the ability to add properties") is flat-out wrong.

  173. Re:Am I the only one in the world that likes Ribbo by sandytaru · · Score: 1

    I changed Clippy over to the kitty cat and never minded it again.

    --
    Occasionally living proof of the Ballmer peak.
  174. Re:Am I the only one in the world that likes Ribbo by Nemyst · · Score: 1

    I believe they've learned since Office 2010 sheds the orb for a more traditional File tab (which looks a lot like a large menu).

  175. Phillip Jecty by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I love libre Office.

  176. Re:They have one huge disadvantage: Landscape mode by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If you are choosing "Format Page" why do you then need to click on a "Page" tab? Shouldn't it be on that tab already? What else was it thinking I wanted to format when I chose "Format Page"?

  177. Emacs Pinky by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This will probably be lost on the vi users. Emacs does indeed hurt. Powerful editor. Powerful hand strain.

  178. Re:It's free, and free is a very good price by cpu6502 · · Score: 1

    >>>The only downside is that one High School deducted 15 points from a student's paper because it was not submitted in Word 7 format

    That teacher would get bitch-slapped.

    --
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  179. Correlation is not causation by salesgeek · · Score: 1

    Microsoft has sold 200 million licenses of word. Of that number, many were part of license programs that expire. For example, my company had a license that would renew each year, and would apply to only the current version of the Microsoft products. Another factor in the number of sales: old versions of office cannot open docx format files. A final factor is that many companies (and individuals) replace their PCs every 3-5 years and portions of old versions of Office typically don't work on newer MS operating systems. For example, Outlook 2000 would not work on Windows Vista.

    All of the above issues are economic issues and tend to be more important to large scale buyers than largely cosmetic features like replacing a menu and tool bar with a ribbon. I'm glad you personally like the ribbon. Someone has to.

    --
    -- $G
  180. dictionary by williamyf · · Score: 1

    OpenOffice's/LibreOffice's dictionary can't hold a candle to Word. Neither in English, nor in Spanish.

    Sorry, I know is trollish, but I had to vent it!

    --
    *** Suerte a todos y Feliz dia!
  181. "Death to Word" article on Slate by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It’s time to give up on Microsoft’s word processor.
    By Tom Scocca|Posted Wednesday, April 11, 2012, at 7:28 AM ET

    Today, it's become an overbearing boss, one who specializes in make-work. Part of this is Microsoft's more-is-more approach to adding capabilities, and leaving all of them in the "on" position. Around the first time Clippy launched himself, uninvited, between me and something I was trying to write, I found myself wishing Word had a simple, built-in button for "cut it out and never again do that thing you just did." It's possible that the current version of Word does have one; I have no idea where among the layers of menus and toolbars it might be. All I really know how to do up there anymore is to go in and disable AutoCorrect, so that the program will type what I've typed, rather than what some software engineer thinks it should think I'm trying to type.

    Word's stylistic preferences range from the irritating—the superscript "th" on ordinal numbers, the eagerness to forcibly indent any numbered list it detects—to the outright wrong. Microsoft's inability to teach a computer to use an apostrophe correctly, through its comically misnamed "smart quotes" feature, has spread from the virtual world into the real one, till professional ballplayers take the field with amateur punctuation on their hats.

    http://www.slate.com/articles/technology/technology/2012/04/microsoft_word_is_cumbersome_inefficient_and_obsolete_it_s_time_for_it_to_die_.html

  182. Re:Am I the only one in the world that likes Ribbo by Compaqt · · Score: 1

    The strange thing is, who are all these "noobs"?

    High-school kids in 2007 were using Word for the first time?

    What did they use prior to that? 5-year olds can run Word (or Writer).

    --
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  183. Re:Am I the only one in the world that likes Ribbo by Compaqt · · Score: 1

    See, I actually appreciate that, for some, the Ribbon might be more appropriate. That's great (for you).

    If there were a competitive marketplace, every office program writing to a standard format (like OpenDocument format), some with ribbons, others with menus, others with vim keybindings, life would be awesome.

    The reason people complain is that the Ribbon is forced upon them by some Program Manager in a monopolist's Office team.

    --
    I'm not a lawyer, but I play one on the Internet. Blog
  184. Re:Don't these features interfere w/ compatibility by Compaqt · · Score: 1

    I can't say for sure now, but can't you do that with frames and the appropriate settings on other paragraphs' styles?

    --
    I'm not a lawyer, but I play one on the Internet. Blog
  185. Non-Word is a Resume NONO by vlueboy · · Score: 1

    Yup. I found out the hard way TWICE. Normal letters and office handouts don't fare so badly, but resumes are the most easy to mis-convert computer layout system that is mainstream out there:
    1) bullet points always mess up by disappearing, getting retabbed in the wrong direction, or using some silly glyph
    2) Fonts and spacing looks wrong
    3) If you're lucky that 1 and 2 isnt' bad enough, your carefully crafted ODF [that got too-quickly exported to DOC] shows up in the hands of your 5 interviewers, but is no longer in the compacted one-page fit you so carefully battled your text into becoming... because everything repaginated without your knowing.

    In fact, this may be your recruiter's fault --they go in there and add a company letterhead to customize your contact info adding bit-rot when resaving and potentially killing even a well-converted but unstable house-of-cards document.

    Lacking office during my one serious linux-only period, I got the free and legal Word 2003 Viewer for windows. The downside was that dual-booting to Windows just to test against a hated MS product gets tiresome. And believe you me, if you become uninsured + unemployed then job boards, recruiters and dream postings will pull you to customize more times than you can mind OpenOffice has behaved with your formatting house-of-cards... you probably will make changes to your resume every week and have several parallel versions stashed, each with monthly changes. It's only a matter of time before you realize you messed up, but potentially losing job leads is a bitter experience.

  186. for example? r.e. those who haven't used real coll by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    So... can you educate us with an example or two of a real collaboration tool?

    Revision control is only a collaboration tool to those who haven't used real collaboration tools.

  187. not to dispute their findings, but... by smash · · Score: 1

    ... 10 data points is not conclusive proof that LibreOffice is "better than word". I can cherry pick features Word has that LibreOffice does not (far more than 10 of them), does that mean that Word is superior?

    As with many things, it depends on what you consider important. The ability to use word or other office applications in scripts, automatically update via WSUS, integrate with sharepoint, be 100% compatible with other MS office users, etc may be more important to some.

    --
    I run: Windows, OS X, Linux, FreeBSD. Just because you have a hammer, doesn't mean everything is a nail.
    1. Re:not to dispute their findings, but... by ratboy666 · · Score: 1

      It is easier to use LO in scripts. It can be run "headless".

      Indeed, LO is often used in scripts (as unoconv) to convert document formats.

      I can't really speak to your other points, except to note that they are all related to the MS software universe.

      Yes, I wouldn't mind cherry-picked features. Try to stay away from pure UI, though -- workflow, editing, formatting, compatibility are in scope, as are philosophy, design and stability.

      --
      Just another "Cubible(sic) Joe" 2 17 3061
    2. Re:not to dispute their findings, but... by smash · · Score: 1

      If you're IN the MS software universe, like the vast majority of businesses, then MS-centric things are important.

      --
      I run: Windows, OS X, Linux, FreeBSD. Just because you have a hammer, doesn't mean everything is a nail.
  188. Re:Formatting features are not the killer app anym by DeadDecoy · · Score: 1

    Ya, but when everyone around you uses word or google docs in a collaborative fashion, it's much harder to convince everyone else to go with revision control+latex. WISYWIG+built in revision control ends up being the path of least resistance when including non-engineer folks in the loop. Plus it's easier to edit someone else's content without having to parse the LaTeX syntax every time.

  189. Re:Formatting features are not the killer app anym by DeadDecoy · · Score: 1

    Nice. I look forward to that update. I hope it's compatible with docx; that would make it easier to transition between the two.

  190. Re:Formatting features are not the killer app anym by loufoque · · Score: 1

    I tried using word in a collaborative fashion once, it was a mess. If anyone opened the file with a more recent version of word than the rest, it magically made the file only work with that most recent version. And it's just a mess to exchange files by email and remember which version is which. It's also impossible to work in parallel on different parts of the same document.
    It just doesn't work.

  191. Most important feature he missed: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Libre- and OpenOffice make the difference between mark-up (eg Heading 1, Heading 2, ...) and formatting way more obvious (and did so since a long time), making it easier to maintain large documents (in Word esp. in the early 2000 aera for nearly all documents I got a "heading" was actually just another paragraph with manually applied different styling options).

  192. Some details (like facts) wrong... by chiark · · Score: 3, Interesting
    I'm all for bigging up the best solution, however something really isn't right with this article. Yes, this is slashdot and I'm about to commit Karmacide by defending a Microsoft solution... The author of this article seems at best uninformed at worst out to mislead when it comes to some of these points. Let's pick one.

    Advantage: Hierarchical Paragraph Styles.. "since every style is based on Normal"

    Let's examine that. The first four properties of a style in Word 2010, sitting open next to me.

    -Name
    -Style type
    -Style based on
    -Style for following paragraph

    So a Style can be based on any other style, or (no style) should you want to start from blank. Does that sound like a hierarchy? It does to me, and I use it as one. Set up what you want. Knock yourself out. It works, and allows you to create a hierarchy.

    His piece on list styles/bullets seems slightly ill informed too, as is the tirade on headers and footers, tables of contents... Word can do what is described.

    Custom properties, linked to fields, are extensively used by many organisations and what he's describing sounds more like Word than Writer to me. That one has me really confused as metadata management is really quite good in word.

    In short, I know Word quite well and I think the 'advantages' that are being proposed as Writer advantages are simply down to the author's lack of knowledge.

    I fully expect flamebait moderation for this, but it would be nice if someone could point out where I'm wrong!

  193. OFV makes non MS-origin docs unusable w/ MS apps by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Basically a canonical example of FUD: "If it's not from MS, don't trust it!".
    You can explain to your Client or your Dad that "This is OK; I'm using LibreOffice". Explain to them the concept of FUD and how they're being made fools of by MS.

    And if they choose to understand, it still won't matter. "Office said it's dangerous; I'm not putting it on my computer, and I don't have time to listen to you."

    "Office File Validation is used to validate that Binary File Format files conform to the Microsoft Office File Format. The user will be notified of possible security risks if files fail to conform to the format."

    To demonstrate...
    Create or edit a document with a non-MS editor and save it in a MSOffice format e.g. .doc, .xls.
    Now, try to open it in MSOffice 2010+ (or office 2003/2007 with the addin)

    Depending on your configuration, you will see one of two messages:
    “Office File Validation detected a problem while trying to open this file. Opening it may be dangerous”
    “Office has detected a problem with this file. To help protect your computer this file cannot be opened.”

  194. 01010111 01101000 01111001 00111111 by Internetuser1248 · · Score: 1

    Regardless of which of the previous posts are true, the consensus seems to be 'real men waste time and effort doing everything in the hardest most complicated possible way.' As a fake man, I use whatever language/environment combination allows me to complete the project as desired in the shortest amount of time. This means IDE's like visual studio and eclipse, and for making games I use unity3d. Sure there are a lot of restrictions like the inability to easily add libraries and the opaqueness of certain aspects of the physics engine and graphics pipeline. But I am trying to put out basic proof of concept prototypes and if I can get it done in a week with a few efficiency issues, I will take that over getting it done in 3 months on a lower level where I have complete control. Like I said, I am just not a real man.

    1. Re:01010111 01101000 01111001 00111111 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      this.upvote( );

  195. Re:Am I the only one in the world that likes Ribbo by The_Noid · · Score: 1

    1) The ribbon layout decreases search time. Finding a function in the old menu takes time O(m*n*p) where m is the number of menus, n is the number of items in the menus, and p is the number of flyouts. Finding a function in the ribbon takes time O(m*n) where m is the number of tabs and n is the number of items in the tabs.

    If the total number of items is the same, then the search time would be the same. But lots of options are not IN the ribbon, and for those the search time is a lot higher.

    3)The ribbon uses icons and words to represent functions, which makes them not only easier to remember but easier to scan quickly. In a menu system you have to read each of the words, one after another to find the one you want.

    Menus also have icons. Thus the menu has both the icon AND the word. In the ribbon I have put my mouse over each icon, wait for the tooltip to pop up and then quickly read the text, hoping it doesn't disappear before I've read it. That takes a LOT more time than scanning menus with text+icons.

    Logical grouping is not specific to menus or the ribbon and thus irrelevant.

    Context specific ribbons are horrible because they make the structure change meaning I keep having to search. On top of that, I can not discover what is not there. With a greyed-out item I can at least find the item, and it being greyed-out is a good indication my context is wrong.

  196. Not compatible with collaborations by Pigeon451 · · Score: 2

    I have tried to use open alternatives to Word, but they just don't cut it when trying to collaborate with others. Cross compatibility with Word is poor, particularly for long manuscripts that are edited extensively with track changes. It just isn't worth the headache, and trying to convince academics to convert to something else is nearly impossible.

    And LaTeX is not an option, most people I collaborate use Word for manuscript prep. And I will preemptively state that many journals we submit to openly state they prefer manuscripts written in Word, but will accept LaTeX...

  197. Re:Am I the only one in the world that likes Ribbo by Missing.Matter · · Score: 1

    If the total number of items is the same, then the search time would be the same. But lots of options are not IN the ribbon, and for those the search time is a lot higher.

    In the menu system I have to scan every menu, moving the mouse up and down to open all the flyouts to scan all the options. In the Ribbon I just have to scan every tab, moving my mouse across to click on each tab. Much easier. And by my count, there are 197 selectable items by default in the Word 2010 ribbon, whereas in Writer 3.3.0 there are 148 selectable items in the menu. This of course includes the "table" menu in Writer, which is mostly grayed out until you select a table. When a table is added in Word the Ribbon grows by 58 selectable functions.

    The whole point of the Ribbon is it allows access to *more* items in fewer clicks. You're the first person I've ever seen claim that the ribbon contains less items. Many options like page orientation are right in the ribbon whereas in Writer they are 3 layers deep in a new window.

    Menus also have icons. Thus the menu has both the icon AND the word. In the ribbon I have put my mouse over each icon, wait for the tooltip to pop up and then quickly read the text, hoping it doesn't disappear before I've read it. That takes a LOT more time than scanning menus with text+icons.

    Sparsely... less than half the items have icons, and there's no clear reason for which have icons and which don't. In Office, every function is accompanied by an icon and text except the most common like "bold" or "justify" an the like. The only time icons don't have text are when the ribbon begins to compress on a very small screen. You wouldn't happen to be using it in less than 1000px of horizontal resolution?

    Also, hovering over an item in the ribbon doesn't just give you its name (and it stays as long as your mouse is there. Have you even used Word 2010?); it gives you a little description of what that function does and in some cases a picture preview. Hovering over an item in a menu does nothing because hovering is reserved for opening flyouts.

    And of course you have your toolbar which is icons only, even for uncommon functions. Or you could change it to icons+text, but then it takes up an enormous amount of space due to the 1D layout and gets truncated,so that half of the functions are hiding. The 2D layout of the Ribbon allows for icon+text and doesn't hide anything.

    Further, you didn't address the ability of the ribbon to show style previews. Its size allows this, whereas the menu+toolbar do not have enough room to provide this convenience.

    Logical grouping is not specific to menus or the ribbon and thus irrelevant.

    It's highly relevant when every menu system out there can't do it right. The ribbon has labels for each of the groupings in each tab, which makes the ordering more logical and decreases function search time. In the menu system, there are horizontal rules that separate each group, but there is no indication as to the contents of the group. You have to infer this based on group membership, which is counter productive. Until the menu system changes to add semantic context to the groupings they create, this is indeed specific to ribbons.

    Context specific ribbons are horrible because they make the structure change meaning I keep having to search. On top of that, I can not discover what is not there. With a greyed-out item I can at least find the item, and it being greyed-out is a good indication my context is wrong.

    Menu+toolbar systems have context specific toolbars as well. For example, Writer has a table menu, and when you create a table, a table toolbar appears. Greyed out items are unhelpful because a) they don't need to be there taking up space if you can't use them and b) give you no indication on how to use them anyway. Discoverability of these context specific ribbon tabs is easy, as they appear as soon as you insert their context,

  198. Re:Don't these features interfere w/ compatibility by michael_cain · · Score: 1

    Those features can certainly deal with the "display" part of the problem, but they don't deal with the "floating" part. Both Word and Writer insist that things be attached -- to the page, to a paragraph, to a character, somewhere. They don't (and after this long, I'm inclined to say won't ever) address the underlying issue that in some types of document, strict ordering is relaxed for certain types of objects when the material is laid out on finite pages.

  199. Re:Formatting features are not the killer app anym by swillden · · Score: 1

    Putting latex files under revision control just works. Doesn't work so well with word/openoffice.

    LaTeX files under revision control works okay, but it's a far cry from the sort of collaboration enabled by Word, which is itself a pale, pale shadow of the sort of collaboration enabled by Google Docs.

    --
    Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
  200. Re:They have one huge disadvantage: Landscape mode by snookiex · · Score: 1

    That will change the orientation of ALL pages. If you only need one, you'll have to go to Format -->Paragraph -->Text Flow-->Breaks, check "Insert" and "With Page Style"and then select "Landscape", so yeah, it's not precisely intuitive.

    --
    Open Source Network Inventory for the masses! Kuwaiba
  201. Re:Am I the only one in the world that likes Ribbo by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

    Having everyone have a different ribbon is not a feature when you're trying to explain how to do something, perhaps because you don't have access to some machine from which you can access the user's computer remotely to show them what you're talking about. You used to just be able to tell them go here, go here, click this to get the toolbars they needed, and then click the little book with the A on it or whatever. That's over. The future has become a more confusing place.

    --
    "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
  202. Re:Am I the only one in the world that likes Ribbo by Missing.Matter · · Score: 1

    huh? Everyone has the same ribbon unless they customize it. Obviously someone who customizes the ribbon is more advanced and isn't going to need an explanation on how to do or find something.

  203. Re:Am I the only one in the world that likes Ribbo by UnknowingFool · · Score: 1
    This is what I wrote in the beginning:

    I could customize the ribbon but that requires precognition that what I want is not obvious.

    Time and time again I keep saying the same thing. I am not responsible for your lack of understanding. Customizing the ribbon or menu (as I stated in the very beginning) is not the solution to the fact that things are not obvious. With menus, things are not buried as much as with ribbons which gives a better chance at self discovery. Yes someone can design menus that are completely incomprehensible but that's another topic. Ribbons by their nature tend to bury things under multiple layers.

    --
    Well, there's spam egg sausage and spam, that's not got much spam in it.
  204. Declaration of (conflict of) interest? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hey I'm a Linux and freeware fan and I prefer......mmmmm......LibreOffice - anyone with a more objective comparison. I'm seriously interested to hear....

  205. Re:Am I the only one in the world that likes Ribbo by Sir_Sri · · Score: 1

    We got a lot of those kids into university. And they didn't really know how to use word. Sure they could open it and start typing, but that couldn't format a document to change their lives. They certainly can now though.

    Being able to 'use' any of the office products isn't just open them start typing win, it's being able to actually do something useful with the document. Templates, style guides, being able to produce documents for different purposes, backing up data. Even basic stuff like changing fonts or adding superscripts and subscripts, I don't have to help first year university students with that anymore. I certainly did 4 or 5 years ago though.

    What people learned before was behaviours. Actions that resulted in what they wanted, with no idea what those actions were actually doing, or why, just 'click these buttons in this order and you'll get it to do this thing you wanted'. They didn't actually understand, they just wrote memorized a series of steps. They couldn't come up with steps on their own to save their lives. That applies to far more than just highschool kids, but to most users in general. The new ribbon at least sort of categorizes things by what you're trying to do. If it's not on the home screen (which is a stupid name, but whatever) then it's in sort of sensible easier to understand places. If I want to work with references I'm not trying to find where I insert references, and most of the format menu made sense when there was a lot less screen real estate but can be don't much more gracefully now. The old system was really organized the way the programmers were organized. "edit" "format" "tools" and "window" don't really convey what they actually are from a user perspective, they sound more like how the departments within microsoft were organized, so if you were in the 'tools group' your work ended up in a sub menu layer of 'tools'. You then needed to be able to guess enough about how computer software was written to figure out if the thing you were trying to do was a 'tools' problem or a 'format' problem or a 'edit' problem, and hunt for it there, if you wanted to try and understand.

    Don't get me wrong, the ribbon isn't perfect, but if I want to make document mailings, or put in references or collaboratively edit the ribbon makes those tasks a lot clearer to novice users.

  206. Re:Cue Microsoft shills by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Software is a tool.

    And Economics is a science. A free tool always beats the $200 tool that it is not even compiled for my OS. Why is it not available for my OS? Ah no, Microsoft has an agenda to stomp out their precious OS competitors! Well, they can shove their $200 tool you know where.

    Nobody was trying to "convert you" or "waste your time", but thank you for voluntarily joining the MS Shills Queue. We should always have a separate queue for you, as long as you keep up the good habit of disclosing your motivation like that.

  207. Re:Am I the only one in the world that likes Ribbo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That's my gripe about most things MS. Their terminology is NOT common terminology and their hierarchies for menus are NOT what ordinary mortals (non-MS coders) would expect to find. It's obvious they really don't do continuous focus-group testing during development with ordinary users. So millions around the world have to discover that simple "turn the gridlines on" is buried under "sheet" in the print menu, that line spacing is under "paragraph", that god help you if you try to place a graphic in a document without finding out where to turn off their default re-snap commands when you attempt to move it a millimeter on the page, that you have to backspace over hidden characters/commands in order to get the format somewhat closer to what you intended. Sure, this all means I should have taken a class along the way to understand WTF they buried this simple need. I swear there is a massive class action suit lurking with MS about the lifetimes that have been wasted in the aggregate by the current population in dealing with breach of implied warranty of fitness for the purpose intended. Powerpoint is actually not bad, nor is excel. But god help anyone who hasn't taken an advanced word class that is trying to do a simple multipage document with a table of contents and a few graphics with cutlines and pullouts.

  208. Re:Formatting features are not the killer app anym by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    But you have full control of your data. I'm not sure I trust Google with my data at this point, after seeing the plans that the Vic Gundotra asshole has for all Google properties.

    --
    Fuck Sundar Pichai in the ass!

  209. Re:Am I the only one in the world that likes Ribbo by Missing.Matter · · Score: 1

    With menus, things are not buried as much as with ribbons which gives a better chance at self discovery. Ribbons by their nature tend to bury things under multiple layers.

    I spent the last 5 posts giving you concrete reasons for why your assertions are wrong. You can't just contradict me with no reasons or evidence. I've argued that:

    A) there are more options available in total on the default ribbon (197 options in Word 2010 compared to 148 in Writer 3.3). Since the ribbon organizes items in 2D and take up more space then a menu, by their very nature they allow more items to be displayed at once and better organize those items using pictures, size, and text. Given that there is more space for more items, and there is a higher item count, how can you claim that the ribbon is hiding functionality more than a menu?

    B) Menus by *their* nature tend to bury things in layers. I have evidence for this: click on a menu and you see a bunch of sideways pointing arrows that denote a flyout. Those are layers under which functions are buried! Ribbons are only 1 layers deep. You click on a layer, and you see everything at once. No need to go through a bunch of flyouts. This improves discoverability over the menu.

    C) Self discovery is improved in the ribbon, for all the reasons I listed in my last post that you have yet to comment on. You keep asserting that the ribbon is not obvious, yet provide no evidence or reasons to back this up, in spite of the reasons I enumerated for you.

    Time and time again I keep saying the same thing. I am not responsible for your lack of understanding.

    My advice is don't reply with the same thing as you have been, because I read it and I understand it, but I think you are wrong for all the reasons I posted here and above (which you seem to have not read, since you haven't refuted any specific point). You have yet to present any evidence to support your point of view, and you have yet to refute my point of view. You just keep saying the same thing. That's not my fault, that's yours.

  210. Re:Formatting features are not the killer app anym by DeadDecoy · · Score: 1

    True. When it's 2-3 people, an individual tends to put a lock on it until they've done all their changes (2-3 days max). If the group becomes larger, it gets placed on a website; People edit the document and upload their most recent copy. Ultimately, there is some group coordination that goes on beforehand and Word becomes a poor-man's version control. Dealing with these hassles in an organized fashion is still cheaper (for time) than requiring everyone to learn LaTeX+svn.

  211. Re:4e 6f 21 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    45 66 66 69 63 69 65 6e 74 20 6d 65 6e 20 70 72 6f 67 72 61 6d 20 69 6e 20 48 65 78 2e

  212. Thanks by colinrichardday · · Score: 1

    Yes, that worked, thank you. While I like LaTeX for stuff printed on paper, the fonts (and lack of flow) make LaTeX less than desirable for display on a screen.

  213. Labels by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So many times at work MS Word cannot justify text on a special label size. Secretary is pulling her hair out. I pull out my thumb drive with OO/LO and print the labels 123.

  214. 12 good reasons. by ananthap · · Score: 1

    Also cost and the flexibility to change the OS.

    Just migrated one of my clients to open office (85 PCs) purely for cost considerations. This is a hospital with a basic hospital management system and regular office use. They are still on XP and I will next migrate them to a linux based OS.

    BUT unfortunately, they have a few software packages that use excel as a database so I need to find an alternative for departments that use these PCs (21 PCs in all). Note that getting the software changed isn't a practical option in this case.

    I tried to load MDAC (the microsoft data access compnents) but it still doesn't work.

    Any suggestions? OK

  215. No one buys MS Office for MS Word by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Excel is the actual business tool you're paying for--and it has some juice.

        Word is thrown in.

  216. Long documents by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    From the article:

    The main reason for crashes in LibreOffice appears to be system memory. With sixteen gigabytes of RAM, Writer has yet to crash any document that I have opened -- something that I can't say about Word.

    I had it crash on a system with 8GB of RAM when it tried to open a 30MB .txt file. I think it had a problem with the document consisting of a large number of very short lines (a million lines were within its capabilities).

  217. Re:Am I the only one in the world that likes Ribbo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Am I the only one wondering WTF is going on with the moderation here?
    This post says 'i like the ribbon'; that's it essentially; and it gets +5 interesting?

    How many people are being paid by MS to mod up anything positive about Office and the ribbon? Or write stuff like 'MissingMatter' or whatever they're called - about 20 full page posts explaining how wonderful the ribbon is and how anyone who doesn't like it is just wrong and stupid?

  218. FTFY by robsku · · Score: 1

    Because the standard MS uses is now public.

    Because the standard MS uses is now "public".

    --
    In capitalist USA corporations control the government.
  219. "MS Office is the PHB of productivity software." by zooblethorpe · · Score: 1

    I'd dare say that combine the quirks one must learn and the constant tossing of every feature in every single spot drowning you out, MS Office is the PHP of productivity software.

    When I first read that, I really thought you'd written "MS Office is the PHB of productivity software."

    I guess that still kinda works.

    Kinda like MS Office.

    --
    "What in the name of Fats Waller is that?"
    "A four-foot prune."