Mousepad is the equivalent of Notepad in Windows. People can probably get on with WordPad (if that still exists), but I haven't seen many non-tech-savvy people use Notepad. Many of them don't even know what it is used for (even if it's obvious when you think about it).

FYI, WordPad is still around. But I've never seen anybody use it over notepad, especially non-tech-savvy people, as Notepad is generally the default app that opens text files in Windows. Wordpad only opens .doc/.docx files by default, to my knowledge.

You have to remember that the "installed" size is different than the download size, and that the download includes libraries too. Getting the installed size for just the main package doesn't count those.

I understand that. I was targeting the download size as the smallest available size I could find. The install size is a much greater size to evaluate, as the install size of Writer by itself is over 300MB, greater than both packages download sizes combined. I used the download size as a best case size, since it's just the installer.

Anybody who studies or works in an office will most likely need a word processor. Anybody doing any kind of (including personal) accounting will need a spreadsheet editor.

These are specifically the people I was stating that would either know how to find the correct packages or have the correct package already installed for them. Anybody who is provided a Linux computer in an office will have had the tools they need installed when the computer was provided to them. Students will either have installed Linux themselves and, while they may be new to centralized package management, have enough know how to learn about it, or Linux was installed for them by a person they can consult on what to get. The same goes for people needing a spreadsheet for accounting, though to continue with the Windows comparison that we seem to be following, neither Windows nor OSX ship with spreadsheet apps, to my knowledge.

I'm not saying we don't need it, I was just asking how crucial it was since they are applications with specific use cases that most users won't need.

If there is a strong opinion that they are necessary inclusions, then, due to space requirements, Abiword and Gnumeric are going to be much smaller in size to be included in the ISO, and are both capable of basic enough functions. So that would be my vote.


On 1/28/2015 3:42 PM, Pasi Lallinaho wrote:
On 2015-01-28 23:32, Peter Rauhut wrote:
Is it crucial to have a default office application at all? I would imagine anybody who is new to Linux would be happy just having access to Mousepad as a GUI text editor in the menu

Mousepad is the equivalent of Notepad in Windows. People can probably get on with WordPad (if that still exists), but I haven't seen many non-tech-savvy people use Notepad. Many of them don't even know what it is used for (even if it's obvious when you think about it).

and having the option during install to download LO or other similar packages. An office suite seems like a pretty big space use for installation media to have. For LO's download files , just Writer (77.6 MB to download) and Calc (83.6 MB to download) is a pretty big jump in size compared to Abiword (4.4MB on disk) and Gnumeric (6.6MB) on disk.

You have to remember that the "installed" size is different than the download size, and that the download includes libraries too. Getting the installed size for just the main package doesn't count those.

Furthermore, if you are evaluating LO Writer and Calc separately, you will count their common libraries twice.

If having them is crucial, I'd like to see Abiword and Gnumeric stick around.

Honestly, though, I can't imagine why they are needed. I can't see any use cases where a person who needs them won't either know how to install them or already have it installed by the people who set up the computer for them. Almost nobody needs to start editing spreadsheets as soon as their computer starts up for the first time.

Anybody who studies or works in an office will most likely need a word processor. Anybody doing any kind of (including personal) accounting will need a spreadsheet editor.

Many people coming from Windows have a hard time grasping the concept of centralized repositories. Making them install an essential (see above) application would open the possibility that they will install a non-supported version from somewhere around the Internet.

That being said, there is clear argumentation on why these are being shipped, and I wouldn't want to go deeper into the argumentation whether we should ship such applications or not. Instead, let's focus on picking the right one for Xubuntu.


On 1/28/2015 3:01 PM, Eero Tamminen wrote:
Hi,

On keskiviikko 28 tammikuu 2015, Elizabeth K. Joseph wrote:
We've had this discussion a few times in past cycles, but as we
continue to bump into bugs in Abiword[0], the topic has come up again.

How are we feeling about our default choice of Abiword and Gnumeric as
the office applications for Xubuntu? Is it time to consider switching
to LibreOffice?
I think both are fine as standalone applications. Main problem comes from
file exchange with Windows users, which is fairly frequent use-case.

* Gnumeric has worked fine for me with Excel documents.

* Abiword cannot be used even to properly view more complicated Word
documents.

* When it comes to presentations, while LO-impress can be used to view them,
modifying the, with LO normally breaks them (fonts/kerning etc).


So, I think the questions are:

* How well LO fits onto installation media, it and its dependencies are much
larger than the games that are being talked about...

* How important file exchange with Windows users is?

Solution for latter can also be e.g. "Install full (Windows compatible)
office suite" link on desktop...


    - Eero

I'll note that in the past the pro-LibreOffice users tended to
dominate these discussions. Feel free to speak up, but we're actively
encouraging the folks who use and prefer Abiword and Gnumeric to speak
up too. How would changing the default impact you? Do you feel
strongly about not switching to LibreOffice?

Thanks everyone.

[0] One of the latest that came up during testing:
https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/abiword/+bug/1395323






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