http://www.zdnet.com/blog/education/openoffice-is-dead/3909?tag=nl.e550
[1]
 OpenOffice is dead
 As I mentioned over on the Google blog last night, I’m headed to
the  Office 2010 launch tomorrow.  While Office in particular and
Microsoft  in general are hardly my beats, productivity and groupware
software in  the face of Google’s Apps and education’s need to
extract every last bit  of value from our investments certainly are. 
This is why I’ve thrown  myself so completely behind Google Apps. 
For educational institutions,  it’s free and it works very well,
both as a document collaboration  solution and as an email/calendaring
suite. 

        It’s also why I’ve been a big proponent of OpenOffice [2].  
Again, it’s free and provides a perfectly workable alternative to 
Office.  It’s mature, stable, and works cross platform. And it’s
free.   What’s not to like, right? 

        But here’s the thing: If someone needs a desktop office suite (and
I  mean they don’t just think they need one, but actually need to do
things  that can’t be done with Google Apps), then they aren’t
going to be  satisfied with OpenOffice.  I don’t blame them,
actually.  Given my  choice of Office 2007/2010 or OpenOffice, I’d
pick Office.  It’s  polished, it’s easy, and it’s powerful.  To
be honest, I’m not even  satisfied with Office 2008 on the Mac; I
run XP in a virtual machine to  get to Office 2010 when I need it. 

        For users who don’t need Office, it’s a rare occasion that
Google  Docs doesn’t suffice.  And yet for those who need Office,
it’s rare that  they’re happy with OpenOffice.  Where does that
leave OO.org?  Our  district is fairly rural and there are still
plenty of homes with only  dial-up or without Internet access
entirely.  For these families,  OpenOffice is a great choice since
they rarely have access to academic  pricing on Office and can’t get
online to access Apps.  As reasonable  access to the Internet becomes
ubiquitous, though, Google Docs or Office  Web Apps (even via
Facebook) will meet the majority of student and  teacher productivity
needs. 

        Am I wrong? Am I so dazzled by the pretty lights in Office that
I’ve  lost sight of the value of OpenOffice?  I don’t think I am. 
The  majority of the time, the students and staff I support tend to
make use  of Google Docs.  Same for me.  On my Linux machines, it’s
rare that I’ll  fire up OpenOffice, despite it being a solid choice
for desktop  productivity.  That’s what the Internet is for, right?
Because in  addition to Google Apps, there is Zoho and Office Web
Apps, all of which  work quite well. 

        I just don’t see much of a place in mainstream education for 
OpenOffice anymore.  Pre-loaded on laptops and netbooks in developing 
countries where Internet access is unreliable or non-existent? You
bet.  But why use OpenOffice when most of your users can work quite
well with  Apps and licensing costs for Office are low for the small
number of  users who need a full-blown desktop suite?
  

Links:
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[1]
http://www.zdnet.com/blog/education/openoffice-is-dead/3909?tag=nl.e550
[2]
http://www.zdnet.com/blog/education/ok-now-openoffice-is-definitely-good-enough/1895

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