Choosing an office suite
If you’re already on Microsoft Office 2007, an upgrade to Office 2010 won’t be as crucial, but for those on previous versions of Office the changes — and the new features — are well worth looking into. OpenOffice.org and LibreOffice have remained competent but developmentally stagnant; they’re useful as quick-and-dirty Microsoft Office substitutes, but tougher to use as full-blown, across-the-board replacements in places where institutional dependence on Office runs deep. IBM’s Lotus Symphony, itself an OpenOffice.org derivative, takes the open source suite in a promising direction, but it too lacks certain features that would make it a true drop-in replacement.
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SoftMaker Office comes remarkably close to being such a replacement and with a price and licensing terms that many people will find more agreeable than Microsoft Office’s. Google Docs does accept a wide variety of common document types for import, but it’s best used to compose original documents for HTML or PDF export — and even then it’s hidebound by the limits of what can be accomplished in a browser. Sadly, WordPerfect Office has become little more than a holding action, with too many legacy functions preserved across revisions and too few modern features to deserve a look.
The level of cross-compatibility between any two suites in this roundup varied wildly. Even Microsoft Office still has issues with OpenDocument formats, and the fidelity shown by the other suites when importing documents depends on what you expect to see preserved. SoftMaker Office did a consistently good job, but even it didn’t catch everything. For native PDF creation, though, OpenOffice.org and its derivatives were at the head of the pack.
On the plus side, every application here — including Office 2010 itself — is available in a trial edition, which runs for enough time to give you a hands-on idea of how well documents convert and are handled. Because everyone’s cache of documents is bound to be different, using a trial may ultimately be the most fruitful way to find out what you can switch to and to what extent.
Office suites pricing, platforms, and applications
Cost Platforms Applications
Microsoft Office 2010 $149, $279, or $499 Windows XP, Windows Vista, Windows 7 Word processing, spreadsheets, presentations, email client, database, desktop publishing
OpenOffice.org 3.3.0 Free open source Windows 2000, Windows XP, Windows Vista, Windows 7, Solaris 10, Linux, Mac OS X Word processing, spreadsheets, presentations, drawing, database
LibreOffice 3.3.1 Free open source Windows 2000, Windows XP, Windows Vista, Windows 7, Solaris 10, Linux, Mac OS X Word processing, spreadsheets, presentations, drawing, database
IBM Lotus Symphony 3.0 Free proprietary license Windows XP, Windows Vista, Windows 7, Linux, Mac OS X Word processing, spreadsheets, presentations
SoftMaker Office 2010 $79 Windows, Linux Word processing, spreadsheets, presentations
Corel WordPerfect Office X5 $99, $229, or $359 Windows XP, Windows Vista, Windows 7 Word processing, spreadsheets, presentations, email client, database
Google Docs Free service Chrome, Firefox, Internet Explorer, Safari Web browsers on Windows, Mac OS X, and Linux Word processing, spreadsheets, presentations, email client, drawing