Version: 2008
  • On TechRepublic: 10 cool USB flash drive tricks

May 18, 2004 12:45 PM PDT

Fresh rivals take on Microsoft Office Goliath

  • 1 comment
Two new players have entered the market for productivity software, hoping to grab a sliver of business from Microsoft's dominant Office package.

Beijing-based Evermore Software announced on Tuesday that it has begun selling its EIOffice 2004 package in the United States, Japan and China.

Also targeting the productivity market is Beaverton, Ore.-based Gobe Software, which recently began retail sales of its GoBeProductive software.

Microsoft has long dominated the productivity software market--a category that typically includes a word processor, a spreadsheet and presentation programs--with Office.

But the field has attracted fresh competition lately, with Sun Microsystems and Corel pushing their respective StarOffice and WordPerfect franchises as low-cost alternatives to Microsoft. OpenOffice, an open-source offshoot of StarOffice, is also gaining ground, particularly among government and international buyers.

Evermore is taking a novel approach to the market by basing its product on Sun's Java environment, meaning that the same code runs on both Windows and Linux desktop PCs.

Evermore said in a statement that EIOffice uses a single file format for all types of documents and can read and export documents in Microsoft Office file formats and Adobe Systems' Portable Document Format. The package includes special tools for creating technical and scientific documents, an enhanced file manager and expanded cut-and-paste functions for moving text between documents.

EIOffice is available for download now in English-, Chinese- and Japanese-language editions, priced at $398 per license with five years of free upgrades and unlimited support or $149 for one year of upgrades and support.

Gobe has been in the market for a couple years as a shareware publisher but recently began retail and packaged-good sales of the new version 3 of GoBeProductive.

Unlike productivity "suites" that divide functions between multiple applications, GoBeProductive does everything--spreadsheets, text, graphics--within the same window, the company said. "You don't switch applications, just tool sets," said Bruce Hammond, chief technology officer at Gobe. That makes it easier to produce complex documents that merge multiple data types and to reduce the learning curve in order to pick up new functions, he added.

GoBeProductive also includes several sets of functions not typically found in productivity packages, including graphics design and image editing. Hammond said the goal is to give average PC users the tools they need at a reasonable price.

"We're really targeting small businesses, home offices--that sort of customer," he said. "We're not going after institutional buyers who feel the need for Microsoft."

GoBeProductive sells for $50, with special pricing for academic users. The company only offers a Windows version now but is considering Linux support, Hammond said.

Add a Comment (Log in or register)
The 80's all over again
by May 18, 2004 3:50 PM PDT
Is it just me, or does preasant day sound vaugly familiar to about 20 years ago? Crappy music for the most part on the radio, everybody and there brother is comming out with a word processor (well, now its the entire suite) true, computers are almost fun again, with the way things are going, hopfully it will give the chance for the little guy to start up computer consulting again. maybe Windows will be the current day Macintosh, for those that have no clue about computers, but have the money for the "preaty" stuff, and the Linux/Xfree combo is the old skewl dos/win3.1 .... now, if only bbs's would start poppin up ....
Reply to this comment
advertisement

Latest tech news headlines

advertisement

RSS Feeds

Add headlines from CNET News to your homepage or feedreader.

More feeds available in our RSS feed index.

Markets

Market news, charts, SEC filings, and more

Related quotes

Microsoft (0.00%) 0.00 29.91
Dow Jones Industrials (0.00%) 0.00 10,433.71
S&P 500 (0.00%) 0.00 1,105.65
NASDAQ (0.00%) 0.00 2,169.18
CNET TECH (0.00%) 0.00 1,599.12
  Symbol Lookup
advertisement

Inside CNET News

Scroll Left Scroll Right