5000 OpenOffice.org Seats for Singapore Government 19
kurtz_tan writes "This story on Linux World says the Singapore Ministry of Defence (Mindef) has installed the OpenOffice productivity suite on 5,000 new desktop computers. This move is aimed at giving employees in the ministry an additional choice in productivity software. It will also help Mindef make 'significant' savings in terms of capital costs.
Singapore is acknowledged as the second best world wide for e-Government. Hope all other world wide government follow suit."
Am I the Only One... (Score:4, Interesting)
However, am I the only one that things--however great the work done on it--OO.o is just a bad imitation of MS Office with all the lack of usability included (but,that, like all imitations, doesn't work quite as well as the original).
Does anyone here use really OO.o a lot and/or prefer it to say LaTeX (or other typesetting systems), Abiword (which at least used to import MSWord better than OO.o) or Scribus. It seems to me that OO.o not only copies all the worst bit of the word-processing model, but all the worst bits of the notorious MSWord sub-model.
Anyway, it is really good to see that governments are getting the message that it is worng for them to use proproetary software (especially to store gov. data), or at least they are getting the message that free software is cheaper and more reliable.
Re:Am I the Only One... (Score:5, Insightful)
It gives people the general idea that open source = inferior.
While I'm not particularly fond of word processors either, MS Office is a great productivity suite that gets things done in minutes.
(I love the smell of karma in the morning) It's NOT "wrong" to use proprietary software, specially if data is released to the general public in more open (CSV/RTF/HTML) formats. I mean, time _is_ money, you know.
Re:Am I the Only One... (Score:3, Insightful)
This is why governments are turning away from MS to open source and Free software. Not just because of the initial cash savings, but because they know they won't be at the mercy of Micr
Re:Am I the Only One... (Score:2)
I was not arguing that it needs more features or that it is not as polished as MS Office or the other free-software alternatives (althought it probably isn't but give them a chance). Instead I was hypothesising that, however good MS Office and OO.o are at what they do, what they do (at least in the word-processing dept, but, also, arguably, elsewhere) is not really very useful or efficient for applications as opposed to alternatives. That is MS-Office style "office suite
Re:Am I the Only One... (Score:4, Interesting)
I prefer OOo to MS Office. OOo runs on all the computers in my office, MS Office does not. OOo file formats are easier to work with than MS Office formats. Finally, I have found the style properties in OOo writer to be more intuitive than those in MS Word.
YMMV
Re:Am I the Only One... (Score:2)
Re:Am I the Only One... (Score:2)
Re:Am I the Only One... (Score:2)
It's
Re:Am I the Only One... (Score:1)
The menus in OOo are flexible (Score:1)
However, perhaps the biggest reason is that the menus in OOo are flexible. This is one big technical advantage could really exploit some usability studies. It would also be possible, at least in theory, to have a training wheels mode for recovering MSO users, just like many other packages used to
Re:Am I the Only One... NO (Score:1)
I am an ex power user of M$ office. My background started doing rather large spreadsheets to do energy management analysis of large complexes back in 91. I originally started with Lotus 123. The time that Lotus 123 saved me was outstanding, but when I was exposed to Excel, I was quickly converted. With built in wysiwyg it was an easy sell. I have used Excel to do many operations in the energy engineering sector for some time. Having coded applications that still live today in VBA I have a pretty good perspe
OpenOffice usability (Score:1)
Is OpenOffice really for everybody?
What can we do to make others realise that non-proprietary products are the way to go in the future?
OO probably better but... (Score:1, Interesting)
The only downside with OpenOffice is this: I cant remember what file types you can and cant save it as, but most computers have some version of MS Word on them and the native OO file format doesn't run Word as far as I'm aware, otherw
Why one company switched back to MS Office (Score:3, Informative)
I imagine this little "bug" was probably intentional on M$'s part...
Who's the best e-gov? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Who's the best e-gov? (Score:3, Informative)
1. Canada
2. Singapore, United States
4. Australia, Denmark, Finland, Sweden
8. France
9. United Kingdom, Netherlands
According to this news article [e-lo-go.de], Singapore is also the best Asian country in e-government services.
Re:Who's the best e-gov? (Score:1)
1. Canada
That explains why Canada is totally incapable of doing anything that doesn't involve the internet. *coughhealthcarecough*