Netherlands Looks to Move to OpenDocument Format for Goverment
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I'd hate to lose Office. On the rare occasions I've used other packages I've always found them to be rubbish in comparison. I find the cost of an Office licence to be pretty trivial compared with the benefits.
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@Carnival-Boy said:
I'd hate to lose Office. On the rare occasions I've used other packages I've always found them to be rubbish in comparison. I find the cost of an Office licence to be pretty trivial compared with the benefits.
At this scale I also find the cost of Office to be nearly trivial compared to the other costs associated with employees/workers.
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@Dashrender said:
At this scale I also find the cost of Office to be nearly trivial compared to the other costs associated with employees/workers.
MS Office never gets to be all that cheap. It's more expensive, for example, than an iPad (see other discussions around user efficiency.) Yes, it's cheap compared to the cost of an employee in both cases, but it is never cheap. It's, in my experience, on par with a whole PC in cost. But the big costs of MS Office come from managing licenses, updates, deployments and other things that it does not do well. And in locking people in to Windows and Mac platforms. The costs are mostly hidden and I've never seen anything that suggests that MS Office makes people more efficient than the alternatives.
Don't get me wrong, MS Office is an amazingly good product. But it carries a lot of costs and caveats too, mostly hidden in things like license management and audits.
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@Carnival-Boy said:
I'd hate to lose Office. On the rare occasions I've used other packages I've always found them to be rubbish in comparison. I find the cost of an Office licence to be pretty trivial compared with the benefits.
The "other packages" all being LibreOffice, I assume? What other serious competitor is there? I've never found it to be rubbish, though, using both I routinely prefer LibreOffice. It's lighter, easier to manage and maintain, no licensing issues, etc.
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@Carnival-Boy said:
I find the cost of an Office licence to be pretty trivial compared with the benefits.
What benefits do you find are compelling with it? The big ones that I see most often are users already familiar with it (this seems to be becoming less common rather than more common as people stop using PCs at home) and integration with other products (also becoming less and less common from what I see.)
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The one amazing benefit that I see with MS Office, and what makes us use it, isn't the MS Office platform itself but its full top to bottom integration with SharePoint and Office 365 platforms. That one thing is what makes it super valuable to us.
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@scottalanmiller said:
The one amazing benefit that I see with MS Office, and what makes us use it, isn't the MS Office platform itself but its full top to bottom integration with SharePoint and Office 365 platforms. That one thing is what makes it super valuable to us.
How much of that can't be handled in the online apps these days? I really don't know since I don't really use the online apps.
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@Dashrender said:
@scottalanmiller said:
The one amazing benefit that I see with MS Office, and what makes us use it, isn't the MS Office platform itself but its full top to bottom integration with SharePoint and Office 365 platforms. That one thing is what makes it super valuable to us.
How much of that can't be handled in the online apps these days? I really don't know since I don't really use the online apps.
That portion, all. But few people like the online app as much as the installed on. LibreOffice actually had the hosted app option ahead of MS Office.
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I personally have never found my self without the installed application, and find the Hosted App solution rather useless.
Maybe some time in the future (if I didn't have a working and setup device) would I have to use this feature. But it hasn't happened yet.
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@DustinB3403 said:
I personally have never found my self without the installed application, and find the Hosted App solution rather useless.
Maybe some time in the future (if I didn't have a working and setup device) would I have to use this feature. But it hasn't happened yet.
I used Google Apps all through college. I prefer the apps hosted. Especially when all the documents get stored in one easily accessible place.
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@coliver said:
I used Google Apps all through college. I prefer the apps hosted. Especially when all the documents get stored in one easily accessible place.
I get that with MS Office locally installed.
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@coliver said:
@DustinB3403 said:
I personally have never found my self without the installed application, and find the Hosted App solution rather useless.
Maybe some time in the future (if I didn't have a working and setup device) would I have to use this feature. But it hasn't happened yet.
I used Google Apps all through college. I prefer the apps hosted. Especially when all the documents get stored in one easily accessible place.
Google Apps aren't included in the conversation, those are solely cloud based solutions. (Unless and correct me if I'm wrong) Google hasn't sold their Cloud App as a direct install-able that is usable without internet.
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@DustinB3403 said:
@coliver said:
@DustinB3403 said:
I personally have never found my self without the installed application, and find the Hosted App solution rather useless.
Maybe some time in the future (if I didn't have a working and setup device) would I have to use this feature. But it hasn't happened yet.
I used Google Apps all through college. I prefer the apps hosted. Especially when all the documents get stored in one easily accessible place.
Google Apps aren't included in the conversation, those are solely cloud based solutions. (Unless and correct me if I'm wrong) Google hasn't sold their Cloud App as a direct install-able that is usable without internet.
That used to be the case with Chromebooks, is it no longer?
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@DustinB3403 said:
@coliver said:
@DustinB3403 said:
I personally have never found my self without the installed application, and find the Hosted App solution rather useless.
Maybe some time in the future (if I didn't have a working and setup device) would I have to use this feature. But it hasn't happened yet.
I used Google Apps all through college. I prefer the apps hosted. Especially when all the documents get stored in one easily accessible place.
Google Apps aren't included in the conversation, those are solely cloud based solutions. (Unless and correct me if I'm wrong) Google hasn't sold their Cloud App as a direct install-able that is usable without internet.
I assumed we were talking about Office suites in general. Even so when I can I prefer to use the hosted variant of apps as they are identical no matter which machine I use them on and will always be available. I am unable to do that currently due to some politics with my new job.
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That is what makes things like OneDrive or OwnCloud so great.... Y ou can use them to sync files across your devices... but that's another topic.
I have LibreOffice installed on my home Windows machine right now. It works great for everything I need it for.
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The hosted App and the installed one, should be identical to each other, respectively.
The Web App should always match the web app, and the installed should always match the installed.
The functional difference you'd expect are Performance, and only performance. Everything else should work the same exact, for each platform of the same product.
If you were working on a Web App Excel document, and you downloaded the file to your computer, and your scripts / vbs / functions stopped working it's clearly not the same application.
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@DustinB3403 said:
The hosted App and the installed one, should be identical to each other, respectively.
The Web App should always match the web app, and the installed should always match the installed.
The functional difference you'd expect are Performance, and only performance. Everything else should work the same exact, for each platform of the same product.
If you were working on a Web App Excel document, and you downloaded the file to your computer, and your scripts / vbs / functions stopped working it's clearly not the same application.
This is clearly not the case in hosted MS Office apps vs locally installed one.
But I'm guessin' ye knew that. -
@DustinB3403 said:
The hosted App and the installed one, should be identical to each other, respectively.
The Web App should always match the web app, and the installed should always match the installed.
The functional difference you'd expect are Performance, and only performance. Everything else should work the same exact, for each platform of the same product.
If you were working on a Web App Excel document, and you downloaded the file to your computer, and your scripts / vbs / functions stopped working it's clearly not the same application.
You've not seen Office 365 then, I take it?
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I think we're in the last generation of "We NEED MS Office because of its features" and are moving into the age of "We CAN'T use Office because it sucks to work with online and/or it costs way too much" unless Microsoft catches up in a big way soon. Google's successful Chromebook push in the education sector means that there's going to be a significant portion of adults in the next 10-15 years who grew up with effortless online collaboration being standard. Heck, my alma mater switched over to Google Apps for Education about 3 years ago... I joined the IT help desk shortly afterwards, and everyone that mentioned the switch to me was incredibly happy about it.
In comparison, I've tried to get people to use Office Online but all of the apps are just different enough to provide a sort of Uncanny Valley of features and UI that seems to make people anxious to use it. I have to provide training for anyone who needs to use the online version, showing them where things are because it's all almost - but not quite - in the same place as the desktop application. And then there are the small Microsoftisms throughout that bog people down, like the fact that you have to click "edit document" to actually do anything to the document besides look at it. That tiny User Experience glitch in particular has been a pain point for every single person I've trained... and I feel a bit evil telling people to use Office Online instead of Google Docs, which they already know how to use.
I am hoping the bulk of Office 2016's new features focus on improving online collaboration. Based on Windows 10 it appears MS is taking big steps on integrating internet services into the desktop experience, and based on this article that's what they plan to do with Office 2016 as well... but given their current implementation, I'm going to have to see it myself before recommending it to anyone.
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I'll agree that simply sharing a name often allows people to have completely invalid assumption, and through those assumptions have expectations and ultimately frustrations. If for example, MS didn't call Word online Word - people would just look for things like they had to when they learned to use Google Apps.
Of course this probably wouldn't work for MS, the whole point is that people are migrating to something familiar.