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Alternative Office

As software models emerge, the scenery of software changes. Only forces this strong could dethrone a dominant software suite like Microsoft Office. Both web-based services and Open Source software have produced the following free office suites.

Last week we looked at a couple free AJAX services, Writely and NumSum that respectively replace Word and Excel. But these are feature-limited and experimental. This week’s picks come with office-sized feature sets.

ThinkFree Office Online

ThinkFree has years of experience in office applications. In its newest version, ThinkFree has taken its Java-based alternative to the web. This new online office suite opens, edits and saves Word, Excel and PowerPoint files. In addition to supporting all kinds of Office features, like columns, advanced formatting, graphics and more. ThinkFree Office Online also supports web-based presentation via document embedding in your blog.

thinkfreeonline Alternative Office

Whats more, your files and the software reside online and are accessible from any computer with a browser and Java. The web-based aspect of the suite makes it convenient, but also requires patience as the software loads into your browser. The initial load is longer than subsequent ones. But unlike many Java applications, its performance on the Mac is more than adequate for regular use. While ThinkFree’s beta professes limited support for Mac, Linux, Firefox and Safari I found it to work well on both Mac browsers, Safari working better.

OpenOffice.org 2

This Open Source project is in its fifth year of adapting Sun’s Star Office into a Microsoft Office replacement. While there have been some early criticisms of the new version’s speed, I have found it the best Office replacement yet. In testing the suite I found OpenOffice to handle complex features like conditional formatting, tables, columns and embedded graphics.

OpenOffice 2 for Mac is available now as an Advanced Build, a prelease version that is described as stable. In my testing I did not experience any troubles. This new build includes the complete suite and interface – making it the first OpenOffice version for Mac with full feature parity. This includes Base, the Access-like database tool and Math (used for scientific formulas) and Draw in addition to the standard Writer, Calc and Impress.

openoffice2 Alternative Office

All that functionality comes at a price – more than 300 megabytes. The suite also requires and uses the X11 windowing system: a free install from Apple. But, this new version comes with valuable functionality and performance improvements. OpenOffice provides Mac users with a very compelling option. Mac Office has been incomplete in comparison to its Windows companion. With a full-featured replacement, there’s no reason to upgrade Office for Mac.

So, whatever your style of word processing and spreadsheeting – there is a compelling, complete and modern alternative to Microsoft Office. Isn’t freeware great?

Brian

Crystal Ball 2006

It has been a great year for freeware, as we’ll see when my annual Freeloader Friday Best of 2005 comes out later this month. But this week, I thought I’d peak over the fence at some early-development freeware that is likely to make it big in 2006.

Now, the disclaimer. This week’s picks are not beta – not even alpha software. So be prepared for some unpredictability. That said, they work fine for me.

Flock Developer Release

Firefox has reignited the browser wars, and given new life to the browser. An enterprising bunch of developers are building off the stable and fast core of Firefox, creating a browser for the future. They call it a “social browser”. Others are calling it the perfect browsing companion to the latest web services.

flock Crystal Ball 2006

Flock is a Firefox base, with integrated services. With Flock, you can manage your Flickr account and post directly to your blog without loading a page. In place of bookmarks, your Flock Favorites are synced to your del.icio.us favorites. And this is just the Developer’s Preview. Because it is based on Firefox (1.5 to be specific) it supports – with a little tweaking – Firefox extensions.

There are lists (here and here) of Flock-compatible extensions, and a free utility that can convert many Firefox extensions here. I think we’ll be hearing a lot about this project in the coming months.

bbPress

bbPress is a classic example of Open Source itch-scratching. When the folks at WorkPress needed a new forum system, they didn’t like the existing options so they came up with their own system. You can see it in use in the WordPress support forums. Now the project has gained a life of its own, and has been released as Open Source.

bbpress Crystal Ball 2006

Available only as nightly builds (not even a 0.1 version yet) the project is functional and as customizable and cutting edge as WordPress itself. It is light and fast, supporting user management (including banning), search and multiple forums. Even better it features a unique tag-cloud for quick navigation to topics by tag (for an example, see the WordPress support forums). bbPress is the only modern forum alternative I’ve seen. And yes, it even uses AJAX to update content.

Note: bbPress, like its cousin WordPress requires PHP and MySQL. My host: 1and1 has PHP/MySQL hosting starting at $2.99/month.

That’s it for our look into the future. I hope you liked what you saw. While release dates and features are still blurry, one thing is clear: things are changing on the web, and so is free software.

Brian