Comments on: French taxman opts for OpenOffice
Tax agency plans to put the open-source rival to Microsoft Office on thousands of its PCs.
Tax agency plans to put the open-source rival to Microsoft Office on thousands of its PCs.
January 2, 2010 4:56 PM PST
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January 2, 2010 3:30 PM PST
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OpenOffice.org or to Office XP, so that deployment to 80 000
computers is going to have to occur anyway. The difference is
that, though there is likely to be a little bit more user support
required for using OpenOffice.org (though not a lot - it is very
comparable to MS Office 97) which will cost more to offer, the
savings made on not upgrading to XP will allow for this in
spades.
- OpenOffice gaining Live Office announcement dud
- by linuxbeatsMS November 10, 2005 6:29 AM PST
- It is interesting to see the traction that OpenOffice is recieving in the marketplace. It is by-large not the Fortune 500 companies but the SME market with a smattering of 'notable' migrations. Interesting, what is 'notable' for the press may be these larger poster-children deals. What is 'notable' in the market is the broader adoption of OpenOffice through many organizations. The applications are now of relative equivalency and you have companies like http://www.projity.com that has an equivalent for Microsoft Project. They are not open source but it makes the point again that their are alternatives that have equivalent functionality, can open MS file formats and are cross platform. We have a negative inflection point for Microsoft at this time !
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