MS Works
As you know i now have a new PC, what i need to know if there s a free version of MS word available as i have several word processing documents that i need to keep.
Is there a free version i can download? I found one earlier that turned out to be a virus:sad:
Any ideas or will i have to fork out for a full copy?
Is there a free version i can download? I found one earlier that turned out to be a virus:sad:
Any ideas or will i have to fork out for a full copy?
Post edited by zx1 on
The trouble with tribbles is.......
Comments
An' you know what they said?
Well, some of it was true!
There are no free versions of MS Word (well, not legal ones anyway...), but Microsoft has done the "Microsoft Works" office suite which was supposed to be a low cost alternative. It is blimmin' awful though. LibreOffice is what you want! :)
Sadly, it isn't though.
http://www.filehippo.com/software/office/
You can use Edlin and jolly well like it.
There is also Office Webapps, which are free webbrowser based versions of Word, Excel, etc, for use with Skydrive.
http://office.microsoft.com/en-us/web-apps/
:-o
my folks are visiting your island this week.. alas they wouldn't bring a load of scrabbles with em for ya haha
OpenOffice born as a evolution or replacement of Sun's StarOffice, and it remained as a cost-free version of StarOffice (StarOffice had some features not available to OpenOffice users). Also it was one of Sun's free projects, so anybody could contribute.
When Oracle bought Sun, they bought also some software products (MySQL, OpenOffice, Virtualbox, Java) and promptly they started to secure their rights and direct the development as they intended. That has caused that most developers from OpenOffice and MySQL abandoned the projects.
Those developers started new forks of that project (LibreOffice and MariaDB). At this moment, it is unclear to me if MariaDB is a better option than MySQL (but the usage is growing in Linux distributions); but it turned out that OpenOffice developing was almost stopped... Oracle donated the code and rights to the Apache Foundation.
LibreOffice have most of OpenOffice developers, and they have "cleaned" unused code of 3.x versions; OpenOffice has the support of the Apache Foundation and they have received also the code from IBM Symphony. For now I guess LibreOffice is a better option, but that could change (although I think that it won't).
Some other "derived" projects from OpenOffice, like StarOffice, IBM Symphony and Go-oo are discontinued, also.
An' you know what they said?
Well, some of it was true!
If you don't really need much more than basic editing capabilities then the web versions of Office are free as is Google Docs. Beyond that LibreOffice is really the only choice you get.