posted
I love it, and the whole office program is awesome and I have had little problems converting files or using the program. Does anyone here use a different word processor program or even something like StoryCraft..?
This is not a plug, just an opinion.
[This message has been edited by TMan1969 (edited July 19, 2006).]
posted
Being a true tech geek I've used just about everything. The big four are:
Microsoft Office Apple iWorks Corel Office OpenOffice.org (aka StarOffice)
One of the big treads coming up, or so peoples in the know think, is "online word processors." They are too numerous to list, but the main ones are Writely (which is currently closed as they were bought out by Google and being moved over to the Googlepire), ZohoWriter, ThinkFree and Office Live (the MS version of Office to compete with the likes of Google who already has the word processor and spredsheet apps online).
I personally use the beta version you mentioned, Office 2007 Beta 2 (which can be downloaded from microsoft.com for free right now, just have to register). It is the most robust. But for people that don't use betas and don't want to pay for an office suite, OpenOffice.org is the way to go. It is completely free to download and use. The developers ask that you support the project with a donate if you like it and use it, but that's optional.
posted
I use Wordperfect 9, I'd still be using 6 if the disks didn't suffer the horrors of bit decay. I love it, I know just how to make it do what I want it to. (and it doesn't tell me what to do.)
Posts: 1895 | Registered: Mar 2004
| IP: Logged |
posted
This is a little unusual, but I use Textpad to create a custom XML file, which I then use XSLT stylesheets and a smidgen of Perl to transform into text, HTML, and XSL-FO. Then I take the XSL-FO and run it through FOP (Formatting Objects Processor) from Apache to transform it into PDF.
If you understood that, you're a geek, too.
I like it because I can publish lots of different versions of the same thing without changing my source text: submission formats, contest formats, ordinary formats for general readers, etc. Plus I can automatically have it handle things like em dashes (two hyphens in plain text, two hyphens in Courier PDFs, but true em dashes in HTML and New Century Schoolbook PDFs) and italics (_underscores_ in text, underlining in submissions, true italics in ordinary PDF and HTML formats). Similar to what people would have done with LaTeX a while ago.
It's pretty neat if you're into that sort of thing, but I wouldn't recommend it for the general public. If nothing else, most people would find the tagging distracting. Maybe if I were smart I'd productize it, to hide the tagging but still give people some flexibility; but I do it mostly just to play. Since I moved from doing real technology work to doing marketing, I've had to satisfy my geek bug in different ways. This is one of those ways.
posted
I use Word and it's fine, but I've used Word Perfect and that has worked fine too. When OpenOffice is a little more mature, I'll probably switch to that (maybe next time I build a new computer).
I feel like most word processors are unreasonably overpriced considering what you can get for free.