If a business were all linux would they use Office 365
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@wirestyle22 said in If a business were all linux would they use Office 365:
@coliver said in If a business were all linux would they use Office 365:
@wirestyle22 said in If a business were all linux would they use Office 365:
Another part of it is companies outside of yours are going to send you documentation. Where does the expectation of best practice end?
Why would it end? Why would you expect someone to do less?
I've literally never worked for a good company so my expectations are very low of companies and now government
That would be true.
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@dashrender said in If a business were all linux would they use Office 365:
and there is no need for collaboration
It's government so we are constantly collaborating with the state. The higher the government body the less they care about your specific trials and tribulations. Just make yourself compliant, period--which would be great if they were telling us to do the right things. They aren't.
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@wirestyle22 said in If a business were all linux would they use Office 365:
@dashrender said in If a business were all linux would they use Office 365:
and there is no need for collaboration
It's government so we are constantly collaborating with the state. The higher the government body the less they care about your specific trials and tribulations. Just make yourself compliant, period--which would be great if they were telling us to do the right things. They aren't.
Right - but that's a separate discussion - more or less in a silo. The results of which are nearly useless to anyone else, because of the specifically non-best practice requirements.
The same goes for Healthcare - we must use faxing, even though a most non-healthcare/non-government businesses gave up faxing ages ago.
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@dustinb3403 said in If a business were all linux would they use Office 365:
So the topic specifically was using Office365 via web, not with the install-able option. Of course a business would be able to take that route, but is there a good reason to do so when Office365 does as good of a job as it does?
Would a business opt to use a different solution entirely?
Zoho has all of that also. So most likely they would use O365/Zoho/G-Suite
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@coliver said in If a business were all linux would they use Office 365:
@wirestyle22 said in If a business were all linux would they use Office 365:
@coliver said in If a business were all linux would they use Office 365:
@dashrender said in If a business were all linux would they use Office 365:
@coliver said in If a business were all linux would they use Office 365:
@wirestyle22 said in If a business were all linux would they use Office 365:
@coliver said in If a business were all linux would they use Office 365:
What prevents them from using O365? It's generally one of the least expensive enterprise email solutions available.
I think he means with full features
What features would be missing? Email, calendaring, contacts, OneDrive, Sharepoint, Skype for Business, are all available on Linux in one form or another.
Well specifically you left off all of the MS Office apps that can be installed locally. But I'm pretty sure it was Scott who said that WINE was originally created because someone wanted to run MS Office on Linux OSes
What benefit does Microsoft Office provide to a Linux shop that LibreOffice doesn't provide?
Libreoffice often requires conversion of the more complex office documents. If you can't seamlessly open them and have everything displayed correctly it's not very useful IMO. It's a little different if you're just starting your company and it starts as linux right in the beginning though.
The topic was about a Linux shop. If we're talking about a mixed shop you have a point, although it's not as big of an issue lately as it has been in the past.
And when are we going to stop sending office documents outside of the company? They should be PDFs. The hosted solutions (or sharepoint) allow for real time collaboration on documents. Then it should be converted to a PDF. If you want to do a one off document, create it and convert to PDF. Sending documents in doc types is just incorrect.
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@coliver said in If a business were all linux would they use Office 365:
@wirestyle22 said in If a business were all linux would they use Office 365:
@coliver said in If a business were all linux would they use Office 365:
@wirestyle22 said in If a business were all linux would they use Office 365:
@coliver said in If a business were all linux would they use Office 365:
@dashrender said in If a business were all linux would they use Office 365:
@coliver said in If a business were all linux would they use Office 365:
@wirestyle22 said in If a business were all linux would they use Office 365:
@coliver said in If a business were all linux would they use Office 365:
What prevents them from using O365? It's generally one of the least expensive enterprise email solutions available.
I think he means with full features
What features would be missing? Email, calendaring, contacts, OneDrive, Sharepoint, Skype for Business, are all available on Linux in one form or another.
Well specifically you left off all of the MS Office apps that can be installed locally. But I'm pretty sure it was Scott who said that WINE was originally created because someone wanted to run MS Office on Linux OSes
What benefit does Microsoft Office provide to a Linux shop that LibreOffice doesn't provide?
Libreoffice often requires conversion of the more complex office documents. If you can't seamlessly open them and have everything displayed correctly it's not very useful IMO. It's a little different if you're just starting your company and it starts as linux right in the beginning though.
The topic was about a Linux shop. If we're talking about a mixed shop you have a point, although it's not as big of an issue lately as it has been in the past.
They are likely to receive some type of office documentation via e-mail here so I'm considering that too
Any received or sent document shouldn't be in a doc format. They should be sending, and expecting, documents in pdf.
Bah I responded before I read the whole thread.
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@stacksofplates said in If a business were all linux would they use Office 365:
@coliver said in If a business were all linux would they use Office 365:
@wirestyle22 said in If a business were all linux would they use Office 365:
@coliver said in If a business were all linux would they use Office 365:
@wirestyle22 said in If a business were all linux would they use Office 365:
@coliver said in If a business were all linux would they use Office 365:
@dashrender said in If a business were all linux would they use Office 365:
@coliver said in If a business were all linux would they use Office 365:
@wirestyle22 said in If a business were all linux would they use Office 365:
@coliver said in If a business were all linux would they use Office 365:
What prevents them from using O365? It's generally one of the least expensive enterprise email solutions available.
I think he means with full features
What features would be missing? Email, calendaring, contacts, OneDrive, Sharepoint, Skype for Business, are all available on Linux in one form or another.
Well specifically you left off all of the MS Office apps that can be installed locally. But I'm pretty sure it was Scott who said that WINE was originally created because someone wanted to run MS Office on Linux OSes
What benefit does Microsoft Office provide to a Linux shop that LibreOffice doesn't provide?
Libreoffice often requires conversion of the more complex office documents. If you can't seamlessly open them and have everything displayed correctly it's not very useful IMO. It's a little different if you're just starting your company and it starts as linux right in the beginning though.
The topic was about a Linux shop. If we're talking about a mixed shop you have a point, although it's not as big of an issue lately as it has been in the past.
They are likely to receive some type of office documentation via e-mail here so I'm considering that too
Any received or sent document shouldn't be in a doc format. They should be sending, and expecting, documents in pdf.
Bah I responded before I read the whole thread.
Nah you're good. Glad I'm not the only one who thinks this way.
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If we could install and run MS Office on Linux about half of our company would switch immediately.
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@stacksofplates said in If a business were all linux would they use Office 365:
@coliver said in If a business were all linux would they use Office 365:
@wirestyle22 said in If a business were all linux would they use Office 365:
@coliver said in If a business were all linux would they use Office 365:
@wirestyle22 said in If a business were all linux would they use Office 365:
@coliver said in If a business were all linux would they use Office 365:
@dashrender said in If a business were all linux would they use Office 365:
@coliver said in If a business were all linux would they use Office 365:
@wirestyle22 said in If a business were all linux would they use Office 365:
@coliver said in If a business were all linux would they use Office 365:
What prevents them from using O365? It's generally one of the least expensive enterprise email solutions available.
I think he means with full features
What features would be missing? Email, calendaring, contacts, OneDrive, Sharepoint, Skype for Business, are all available on Linux in one form or another.
Well specifically you left off all of the MS Office apps that can be installed locally. But I'm pretty sure it was Scott who said that WINE was originally created because someone wanted to run MS Office on Linux OSes
What benefit does Microsoft Office provide to a Linux shop that LibreOffice doesn't provide?
Libreoffice often requires conversion of the more complex office documents. If you can't seamlessly open them and have everything displayed correctly it's not very useful IMO. It's a little different if you're just starting your company and it starts as linux right in the beginning though.
The topic was about a Linux shop. If we're talking about a mixed shop you have a point, although it's not as big of an issue lately as it has been in the past.
They are likely to receive some type of office documentation via e-mail here so I'm considering that too
Any received or sent document shouldn't be in a doc format. They should be sending, and expecting, documents in pdf.
Bah I responded before I read the whole thread.
Unbelievably, we get quotes that are in all the time in both xls and doc.
I tried blocking doc/docx, etc at the spam filter and the world went into a tail spin!
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@dashrender said in If a business were all linux would they use Office 365:
@stacksofplates said in If a business were all linux would they use Office 365:
@coliver said in If a business were all linux would they use Office 365:
@wirestyle22 said in If a business were all linux would they use Office 365:
@coliver said in If a business were all linux would they use Office 365:
@wirestyle22 said in If a business were all linux would they use Office 365:
@coliver said in If a business were all linux would they use Office 365:
@dashrender said in If a business were all linux would they use Office 365:
@coliver said in If a business were all linux would they use Office 365:
@wirestyle22 said in If a business were all linux would they use Office 365:
@coliver said in If a business were all linux would they use Office 365:
What prevents them from using O365? It's generally one of the least expensive enterprise email solutions available.
I think he means with full features
What features would be missing? Email, calendaring, contacts, OneDrive, Sharepoint, Skype for Business, are all available on Linux in one form or another.
Well specifically you left off all of the MS Office apps that can be installed locally. But I'm pretty sure it was Scott who said that WINE was originally created because someone wanted to run MS Office on Linux OSes
What benefit does Microsoft Office provide to a Linux shop that LibreOffice doesn't provide?
Libreoffice often requires conversion of the more complex office documents. If you can't seamlessly open them and have everything displayed correctly it's not very useful IMO. It's a little different if you're just starting your company and it starts as linux right in the beginning though.
The topic was about a Linux shop. If we're talking about a mixed shop you have a point, although it's not as big of an issue lately as it has been in the past.
They are likely to receive some type of office documentation via e-mail here so I'm considering that too
Any received or sent document shouldn't be in a doc format. They should be sending, and expecting, documents in pdf.
Bah I responded before I read the whole thread.
Unbelievably, we get quotes that are in all the time in both xls and doc.
I tried blocking doc/docx, etc at the spam filter and the world went into a tail spin!
I once did similar thing and nearly got fired, I blocked email with macros attachment and the financial department went nuts.
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Skimmed entire thread because, WTF.
Seriously, what does the OS have to do with the choice of O365?
Obviously if you cannot run the desktop apps, then there is no reason to pay for a subscription that includes them, but that has nothing to do with the rest of the features of O365 or any other solution such as GStuite.
You buy the solution that fits your needs. O365 has many packages that give you features without the desktop applications.
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@jaredbusch said in If a business were all linux would they use Office 365:
such as GSuite
I think you can run Google Docs apps offline if you install Chrome on Linux. Never tried it, but I know you can run all of the other Chrome apps that way.
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@stacksofplates said in If a business were all linux would they use Office 365:
@jaredbusch said in If a business were all linux would they use Office 365:
such as GSuite
I think you can run Google Docs apps offline if you install Chrome on Linux. Never tried it, but I know you can run all of the other Chrome apps that way.
you can but generally they suck. We have gsuite at work (mostly for gmail) and offline mode is terrible IMHO.
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@dustinb3403 said in If a business were all linux would they use Office 365:
Just a thought that popped into my head, was if a business from servers to laptops was running RHEL or CentOS for everything, would they opt to use Office365 for email collaboration and Office capabilities?
They might. The decision to use O365 tooling is really quite separate from the choice of desktops today. Sure, you can't install the fat clients of MS Office, but that's only one piece of O365 and one that you might not use anyway.
All the other stuff works fine and even MS Office works in the online mode with Linux. You can use OWA for Exchange or you can use an email client on Linux for it, like Nylas 1 or Evolution.
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@wirestyle22 said in If a business were all linux would they use Office 365:
Good question. I don't know what your options would be in a business environment. I know a lot of people run it on wine but I think there have been issues doing that as well.
MS Office 2016 doesn't run on Wine. Older versions do.
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@scottalanmiller said in If a business were all linux would they use Office 365:
@wirestyle22 said in If a business were all linux would they use Office 365:
Good question. I don't know what your options would be in a business environment. I know a lot of people run it on wine but I think there have been issues doing that as well.
MS Office 2016 doesn't run on Wine. Older versions do.
Yet. . .
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@coliver said in If a business were all linux would they use Office 365:
What prevents them from using O365? It's generally one of the least expensive enterprise email solutions available.
Only inexpensive compared to GSuite which is only a few cents more and only if you are only looking at email with O365. It's pretty pricey, probably the most pricey, enterprise platform of this nature. It only seems cheap in comparison to ridiculously inappropriate solutions like Intermedia or Rackspace Exchange.
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@dashrender said in If a business were all linux would they use Office 365:
@coliver said in If a business were all linux would they use Office 365:
@wirestyle22 said in If a business were all linux would they use Office 365:
@coliver said in If a business were all linux would they use Office 365:
What prevents them from using O365? It's generally one of the least expensive enterprise email solutions available.
I think he means with full features
What features would be missing? Email, calendaring, contacts, OneDrive, Sharepoint, Skype for Business, are all available on Linux in one form or another.
Well specifically you left off all of the MS Office apps that can be installed locally. But I'm pretty sure it was Scott who said that WINE was originally created because someone wanted to run MS Office on Linux OSes
It was and up to 2013 works fine. 2016 probably will, but doesn't yet.
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@dashrender said in If a business were all linux would they use Office 365:
@stacksofplates said in If a business were all linux would they use Office 365:
@coliver said in If a business were all linux would they use Office 365:
@wirestyle22 said in If a business were all linux would they use Office 365:
@coliver said in If a business were all linux would they use Office 365:
@wirestyle22 said in If a business were all linux would they use Office 365:
@coliver said in If a business were all linux would they use Office 365:
@dashrender said in If a business were all linux would they use Office 365:
@coliver said in If a business were all linux would they use Office 365:
@wirestyle22 said in If a business were all linux would they use Office 365:
@coliver said in If a business were all linux would they use Office 365:
What prevents them from using O365? It's generally one of the least expensive enterprise email solutions available.
I think he means with full features
What features would be missing? Email, calendaring, contacts, OneDrive, Sharepoint, Skype for Business, are all available on Linux in one form or another.
Well specifically you left off all of the MS Office apps that can be installed locally. But I'm pretty sure it was Scott who said that WINE was originally created because someone wanted to run MS Office on Linux OSes
What benefit does Microsoft Office provide to a Linux shop that LibreOffice doesn't provide?
Libreoffice often requires conversion of the more complex office documents. If you can't seamlessly open them and have everything displayed correctly it's not very useful IMO. It's a little different if you're just starting your company and it starts as linux right in the beginning though.
The topic was about a Linux shop. If we're talking about a mixed shop you have a point, although it's not as big of an issue lately as it has been in the past.
They are likely to receive some type of office documentation via e-mail here so I'm considering that too
Any received or sent document shouldn't be in a doc format. They should be sending, and expecting, documents in pdf.
Bah I responded before I read the whole thread.
Unbelievably, we get quotes that are in all the time in both xls and doc.
I tried blocking doc/docx, etc at the spam filter and the world went into a tail spin!
I usually receive quotes from vendors in html or pdf.
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@gjacobse said in If a business were all linux would they use Office 365:
Why does it have to be limited to Office / Office 365?
I assume because that's the topic?