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July 4, 2008 7:00 AM PDT

Power Downloader accelerates OpenOffice

by Seth Rosenblatt
  • 2 comments

As you might imagine, Power Downloader is a big fan of open-source software, and of OpenOffice in particular. The free productivity suite gives users all the tools of Microsoft Office for free, with only minor features lacking support. Notably, OOo, as it's affectionately known, supports the OpenDocument movement's attempt to standardize file formats.

Go-OO features a cleaner layout and better import filters than its parent code, the standard OpenOffice.org.

(Credit: Go-OO)

However, Power D knows that OpenOffice can be a slothful bear of a program. Running the Quickstarter can make firing up the app you need faster, but for busy software superheroes like Power D, that means having it load on start-up, which extends his computer's boot time. Speed, however, is only one of the reasons that Power Downloader is recommending Go-OO. It's a fork of the OpenOffice code, much the same way that Flock is derived from Firefox.

The interface has been enhanced and is much easier to use, with larger icons and less clutter. It still sports drop-down menus for fast customization, but there's no doubt that Go-OO comes with a cleaner layout. It also comes with an importer to handle DOCX, XLSX, and PPTX formats, and natively supports SVG files. Graphics rendering is greatly improved, too, including VBA support, Mono integration, better display of Chinese characters, support for WordPerfect graphics, and EMF rendering.

OpenOffice must be uninstalled before Go-OO is loaded, but that's a minor annoyance. Whereas Flock is a Firefox fork geared for a particular kind of user, Power Downloader happily recommends Go-OO to anybody who's looking for a faster, lighter, and slightly better version of OpenOffice.

March 31, 2008 6:09 PM PDT

Freeware office apps earn an update

by Seth Rosenblatt
  • 4 comments

For freeware productivity fans, March has ended like a lamb, not a lion. Microsoft Office replacement OpenOffice.org--download for Windows, Intel-based Macs and PowerPC-based Macs--and MS Word analogue and significantly smaller AbiWord have released updates that strengthen their functionality, expand their features, and ensure that they won't be rolling over to Web-based competitors anytime soon.

OpenOffice.org Chart now can handle equations for regression curves.

(Credit: CNET Networks)

Redmond's MS Office is a behemoth of a program, but Silicon Valley-based Sun Microsystems' OpenOffice.org is hardly a lightweight. Currently, the update is only available for the Windows version of the suite, although updates for the Mac editions are expected soon.

The new features are various and numerous, but not innumerable. One of the more useful ones is that users can now create relative links in PDFs, so that users exporting lengthy PDFs can create useful jump points. They can also store a master password in the program, making it easier to access secure Web sites, and print text modified as ''hidden'' without additional formating changes.

Calc, OpenOffice's version of Excel, gets improved cut/copy/paste/insert functionality, while Writer, the Word analogue, sees the introduction of user-interfaces for custom document properties, among its other changes. The OpenOffice Web site has also seen a few tweaks, making it easier to download plugins that treat this open source suite more like Mozilla's Firefox and less like a precious bauble that needs to be locked down and admired from afar.

All in all, the update doesn't change the overall functionality of the program, but it expands on what's already there and continues to push OpenOffice as more than a mere Office copy.

AbiWord has expanded support and stability for importing document formats.

(Credit: CNET Networks)

AbiWord's update was comparable, but what struck me as most interesting was the note for a planned update in version 2.6.1 for Windows that hasn't been released yet. This plugin will allow users to work on the same document in real-time. There's some support for Unix-based versions coming from the Sugar on the One Laptop Per Child platform, but this sounds like a major add-on that will probably take time to develop and achieve stability. Still, it's good to see AbiWord trying to take on Web-based collaborative sites as well as the standard word-processing audience.

Other improvements include more support for document import and export, support for native Windows Vista menus, drag-and-drop and clipboard enhancements, and improved mechanisms for stripping the program of components that individual users deem unnecessary, such as the spell checker or printer support. This could be useful for those trying to conserve resources, although we don't have any information on how much you could expect to free up.

Until the OpenDoument format becomes the standard and replaces the bloated DOC format, the most useful improvement for average users will probably the format conversion enhancements. If you have a favorite office or productivity program, tell us about it in the comments below.

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