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LibreOffice 6.0 Released: Features Superior Microsoft Office Interoperability, OpenPGP Support (softpedia.com)

prisoninmate writes: LibreOffice 6.0 comes two and a half years after the LibreOffice 5.x series, and it's the biggest release of the open-source and cross-platform office suite so far. It introduces a revamped design with new table styles, improved Notebookbars, new gradients, new Elementary icons, menu and toolbar improvements, and updated motif/splash screen.

LibreOffice 6.0 offers superior interoperability with Microsoft Office documents and compatibility with the EPUB3 format by allowing users to export ODT files to EPUB3. It also lets you import your AbiWord, Microsoft Publisher, PageMaker, and QuarkXPress documents and templates thanks to the implementation of a set of new open-source libraries contributed by the Document Liberation project. Many great improvements were made to the OOXML and ODF filters, as well as in the EMF+, Adobe Freehand, Microsoft Visio, Adobe Pagemaker, FictionBook, Apple Keynote, Pages, and Numbers, as well as Quattro Pro import functionality, and to the XHTML export. LibreOffice Online received numerous improvements as well in this major release of LibreOffice.

8 of 251 comments (clear)

  1. Re:So what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    OpenPGP is a protocol, while GPG is a software implementation of the OpenPGP standard.

  2. Re:It reminds me of Firefox: slow and bloated. by Immerman · · Score: 5, Informative

    > opens in about half a second on my computer

    Be aware that, unless you intentionally disabled it, Microsoft Office preloads when Windows starts, and never exits. So those fast "load times" are basically just the time it takes to open a new window - Office has actually been running in the background the entire time. Very nice if you use Office a lot, but it means your boot time is slowed accordingly, and those resources are being consumed constantly, limiting the resources available to other applications.

    As I recall Open Office actually has a similar preloader available, but it's more obvious (leaves an icon in the tray) and I'm not sure if it's enabled by default - use office suites rarely enough that I always disable such things as being excessively expensive.

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  3. It asks by sjbe · · Score: 3, Informative

    As I recall Open Office actually has a similar preloader available, but it's more obvious (leaves an icon in the tray) and I'm not sure if it's enabled by default - use office suites rarely enough that I always disable such things as being excessively expensive.

    Libreoffice asks you if you want it enabled during installation. You can also turn it on/off from the settings as well.

  4. Good option regardless of price by sjbe · · Score: 5, Informative

    It is a solid option when you do not get office through your work or want to pay the small monthly fee for the home edition.

    It's a a better than solid option even if you do get MS Office. I have no idea why anyone would actually pay to use MS Office at home for non-work purposes. I use LibreOffice every day as I have standardized our company on it. Works great with no more problems than MS Office.

  5. Re:So what? by Joey+Vegetables · · Score: 4, Informative

    My understanding is that OOXML started out being exactly that, and was tweaked just enough to be approved, just barely, by ECMA/ISO. With the result that Microsoft could claim it as an "international standard," and compliant applications could potentially create Microsoft-readable files but would still have extreme difficulty reading Microsoft-created ones, because of all the items in the spec that read like "This specifies that the code should call RenderFoobarFactory()" but with no indication of what a FoobarFactory was. It may still be that bad. I stopped bothering with it years ago. LibreOffice and its cousins work well enough, and interoperate well enough, for my purposes. But anything whose longevity I care about is saved in a truly open format such as ODF.

  6. Re:Printing by j-beda · · Score: 3, Informative

    Does anybody know if LibreOffice 6 fixes the bug where portrait documents will only print in landscape mode?

    If this is the bug you were talking about, it seems to have been fixed in at least 5.4.4

    https://bugs.documentfoundatio...

  7. Re:So what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

    There is no need for Java in any even approximately normal use of LibreOffice.
    Also which Office are you talking about? The latest version REQUIRES SSE2, which a P3 doesn't have, so Offfice will not run AT ALL on that laptop of yours.
    You're seriously misrepresenting things in that post...

  8. Re:Good "cheap" option by Anne+Thwacks · · Score: 4, Informative
    It's great, but nobody can open the files I send them

    You seem to have this backwards. Recent versions of MS Office can open odt files (although you might have to twist its arm behind its back). Various MS Office versions fail to open docx documents on a regular basis, and the most reliable fix is to open said docx with LibreOffice and then save it again as doc or odt.

    The reality is, odt is an iso standard, well defined and guaranteed readable for ever. docx is completely undefined, and even MS dont know what the spec is. Don't use it for documents needed in the long term or off site - ever.

    Also MS formats tend to hide your secrets from you but divulge them to unsuitable people at inappropriate moments. Do not use them if you have a bank account or friends you value.

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