Using open office is not recommended . It has been discontinued and didn't see a massive update for about 10 years. Only office is good alternative to ms office with a similar interface .
True, some projects are lagging behind or seeing less development. However, there are PC's out there with very low specs and Open Office, as old as it is, can work better on it than Libre Office. One of my main goals is this: educate people to keep hardware they have for as long as possible by adjusting what they install and use on their system as long as expectations are decent. Look at Microsoft and/or Apple and Google: you end up upgrading your hardware once every few years so they can fill your device with even more bloatware. They even have planned obsolesce to make sure you upgrade and buy new gear. One Linux is installed on the old gear it feels like it is anew in most of the cases : D
@@TheLinuxWayToday i understand what you are trying to say but open office has not seen any security improvement in years and not in active development. It is a security risk. Please do your research and don't recommend it in RUclips video
You can install Windows apps on Linux with Lutris and Wine, no problem there. As it stands right now, the Linux apps for professional are at the same level as Windows ones (DaVinci, Lunacy, Krita, Blender, just to name a few). But far more important my friend, we value our privacy far more than a few UI trinkets in an OS ;)
🐧 - Thanks for watching! Let me know in the comments what you think and if you'd like to see other tutorials and how to videos!
Using open office is not recommended . It has been discontinued and didn't see a massive update for about 10 years. Only office is good alternative to ms office with a similar interface .
True, some projects are lagging behind or seeing less development. However, there are PC's out there with very low specs and Open Office, as old as it is, can work better on it than Libre Office. One of my main goals is this: educate people to keep hardware they have for as long as possible by adjusting what they install and use on their system as long as expectations are decent. Look at Microsoft and/or Apple and Google: you end up upgrading your hardware once every few years so they can fill your device with even more bloatware. They even have planned obsolesce to make sure you upgrade and buy new gear. One Linux is installed on the old gear it feels like it is anew in most of the cases : D
@@TheLinuxWayToday i understand what you are trying to say but open office has not seen any security improvement in years and not in active development. It is a security risk. Please do your research and don't recommend it in RUclips video
@@TheLinuxWayToday ruclips.net/video/xdpMxmFvGBA/видео.html
@@mashrafidipto5520 That is true as well. I will be more cautious to recommendations for future! Thank you so much! : D
Linux apps are subpar compared to Windows ones. I use both os, I restrict myself to the terminal on linux. Anything gui is better on windows
You can install Windows apps on Linux with Lutris and Wine, no problem there. As it stands right now, the Linux apps for professional are at the same level as Windows ones (DaVinci, Lunacy, Krita, Blender, just to name a few). But far more important my friend, we value our privacy far more than a few UI trinkets in an OS ;)