OpenOffice Office Software Suite

January 24th, 2007 at 11:52 am (Free Softwares)

WORD or WordPerfect document. Excel spreadsheet. PowerPoint presentation. These are familiar terms for anyone who has worked in an office in the past 15 years.

The software to produce these kinds of files can cost hundreds of dollars. OpenOffice.org is a completely free Open Source office software suite that not only can read and write to the various commercial office software file formats, but also writes to the now-standard OpenDocument format.

OpenOffice.org consists of six programs: Writer, for word processing; Calc, for spreadsheets; Impress, for presentations; Draw, for editing or creating graphics; Base, for using data-bases; and Math, for complex calculations and formulas.

International support is strong, with 93 different languages supported to some degree. OpenOffice.org will run on Windows, Mac OS X, Linux, Solaris and FreeBSD operating systems.

OpenOffice.org was originally a German commercial software package called StarOffice, developed in the mid-1990s. Purchased by Sun Microsystems in 1999 to reduce their own in-house office software costs, the source code was made public a year later.

StarOffice still exists as a low-price commercial product from Sun, but it’s now based on the OpenOffice.org source code rather than the other way round, much like the way the Netscape web browser is now based on offshoot Mozilla’s Firefox web browser source code.

Using OpenOffice.org is similar to using any other office software package. The controls and options will be familiar to anyone with experience using other office software suites and there are online support forums and documentation.

Files created by other office software programs can be opened in OpenOffice.org and will look almost identical to the way they looked in the original program. Since the original commercial file formats are proprietary, meaning the details of the format are not public, there can be some minor differences in appearance and some files may need to be modified slightly to look the way they did in the original program.

It can take up to a minute for OpenOffice.org Calc to open complex spreadsheets created by other software. Ma-cros, or scripts designed to automate repetitive tasks, are currently not well supported though work on improving this situation is ongoing.

OpenOffice.org prefers to save files using the OpenDocument format or ODF, an open international standard that is designed to make it easier to access structured information such as document files and spreadsheets.

Governments and corporations around the world are switching over to the ODF standard since it means that information is not locked away in proprietary data formats only some programs can understand.

In particular, the archiving of information so that future software might easily access it is a driving force behind the growing movement toward ODF.

Even Microsoft is joining the bandwagon by paying for the development of an ODF plug-in for Microsoft Word. OpenOffice.org is a free download about 100 MB in size.

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CommFort 2

November 11th, 2005 at 5:52 pm (Free Softwares)

CommFort 2 is a client-server chat for local area network. The software combines all attributes of the best network communication utility such as channels-based chat, voice chat support, user profiles, file and folder transfers, sound…

All features are delivered in a well-rounded user interface, which is very easy to learn for both chat first-timers and experienced users. CommFort supports the communication of up to 1000 people simultaneously.

Compared to the previous version, CommFort 2 is more reliable and functionally rich. Thanks to the implementation of the new protocol, the load on the network is a fraction of what it was. Sensitivity to network errors has been minimized as well, which results in more stable chat performance.

Version 2 features a full-fledged channel architecture, which allows you to create general channels and invite guests. Each of the channels has a separate list of users. If users want to talk to each other privately, they can do this in the private channel, or by sending private messages.

The release also features a voice chat, which allows users to communicate with each other using microphones. Voice chat works in the full duplex mode. Whats more, CommFort has been optimized to allow users to paste bigger pictures to the chat window and send files much faster than in the previous version.

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Skype

October 18th, 2005 at 5:52 pm (Free Softwares)

Skype has been my quiet life saver for many months, offering free phone calls via my computer for the lengthy, and previously costly international and interstate communication necessary as a Website Marketing Consultant.

Skype is a little piece of software that lets you make free calls over the Internet. Skype is revolutionizing the telecommunications world by allowing users to make superior quality voice calls to other Skype users (who also have the software installed on their computer) for free. And the clarity of the connection even beats the humble telephone.

Skype is hugely popular and has already had over 100 million downloads of its software - and - daily 150,000 new users join up. Currently, Skype has 33 million active users worldwide.

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