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Neooffice error 508
Neooffice error 508





neooffice error 508
  1. NEOOFFICE ERROR 508 PDF
  2. NEOOFFICE ERROR 508 INSTALL

Office by default will not let you execute macros. "you're not going to need the pre-written macro code which is everywhere for Office," If you need support you can buy it from Sun. If you have enough RAM for access you have enough ram for office. "you've got machines with RAM to spare, " And if you *really* need to send someone an MS-Office format document, you use the "Save as" function to create it.Īnd this model has let us use OO for 4-5 years in a world where almost all of our clients use MS-Office.

NEOOFFICE ERROR 508 PDF

PDF or HTML works fine for presentations. PDFs are the answer to distributing prepared documents. I've literally given non-technical people (office admins, sales and marketing people) a Linux box with OpenOffice and said, "go for it", and they've produced documents and spreadsheets and presentations without asking anything after, "what printer do I use". I've seen many people learn to use OpenOffice and the suggestion that its interface is hard to use is untrue.

neooffice error 508

NEOOFFICE ERROR 508 INSTALL

When people do have to collaborate on writing a document, they can install OOo without much effort, and it is easy to learn, despite not being MS Office. I much prefer sending PDFs to editable documents because it prevents random modifications. However, since OpenOffice has had a "create PDF" feature for ages, and since it produces really elegant PDFs, this is a solved problem. Yes, the problem of "send this document to random people" is a real issue. And I don't get the feeling, when I run it, that I'm running a code base that has hundreds of undocumented backdoors, caused deliberately, or accidentally. There are many alternative office suites and OOo has its flaws, mainly it's a bit slow, but it has a feature set that hits 100% of what we've used - for documents, spreadsheets, simple graphics, and presentations - for years. we get a consistent set of tools on Windows and Linux, and documents that now conform to a global standard and which I know will still be readable in 20 years' time, whatever software or platform I'm using. I've even seen OOo spread like a fashion in some teams that were 100% Microsoft, as they discovered that OOo does actually work very nicely, and as they started using ODF as a standard in place of Microsoft's own formats. For most people it's a lot less painful than it sounds. If the cost-benefit ratio is not strong enough to make the cost and insecurity worthwhile, abandon MS Office and use OOo. The question people need to ask is not, "why should I switch to OpenOffice", but "what is the killer feature in MS Office that I absolutely need?" Do you really need to be able to run Word on a PDA? Do you need a smooth integration between Office and Exchange? Perhaps, but it's worth reevaluating.







Neooffice error 508