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On 5 April 2011 15:56, Mike Hall <mike.hall@onepoyle.net> wrote:

Laszlo,
I worked for perhaps 15 years with various versions of MSO as both a power
user and as a senior manager with responsibility, inter alia, for MSO
support. I met all the senior international people at the time, from MS and
many other suppliers. During that time, whether with short or long
documents, I personally came across only 2 instances of genuine MSO bugs.

Since retirement 16 years or so ago, I have been almost exclusively using
and promoting OOo/LibO. I know what some of the technical advantages are,
and I appreciate them. However, each time I start a major new activity or
project, I run into a major deficiency or bug which has typically taken me a
day or more's work to understand, write bug reports and work out how to get
round. Most of those bugs are still unfixed. This kind of 'wasted' effort
simply does not occur with MSO, or at least it didn't to me, nor did I hear
complaints of that kind from the thousands of end users I was to some degree
responsible for internationally.

In my professional opinion and with the maximum regret, I do not believe
that OOo/LibO has a product offering of adequate quality to be
cost-effective in a high-cost labour economy. The support costs are just far
too high. Thus, it is my considered though painful conclusion that the
majority of IT managers in those economies would correctly judge MSO to be
the better option. As I said, I wish it were different, but it is not. We
can lobby and protest as much as we like, but in my opinion there is
absolutely no chance of extensive corporate or governmental adoption in
Western economies until the product is of comparable quality to MSO, by
which I primarily mean an absence of bugs.


I rather think that depends on what the nature of the use is. Here, we use
FOSS exclusively. We are a small business but heavily ICT dependent. I can't
recall any circumstances where a bug in OOo has wasted a lot of time. In
fact mostly we use Google's spreadsheet for sharing and put WP type stuff
directly into web pages but I just published a book and previously a
professional manual using OOo and Inkscape without any significant problems.
I can see that some specialist power users will have more problems
particularly if they are locked into VB and other MSO dependencies and I
would have though that was a much more serious consideration than bugs.


Mike


On 05/04/2011 12:37, Kürti László wrote:

Mike,
Have you ever tried to work with MS office? Have you ever made a doc
longer than 10 pages? How many times you had to reedit those MS docs? Just
about every time you opened it in a different PC.

Pls don't get me wrong, but MS office works just as OO.o or LibO.
And this is not the case, but please let yourself off the hook of MS FUDs.
:)

Laszlo


----- Original Message -----
From: "Mike Hall"<mike.hall@onepoyle.net>
To: discuss@documentfoundation.org
Sent: Tuesday, April 5, 2011 1:21:03 PM
Subject: Re: [tdf-discuss] European Commitee enter talks with MS licences,
     Please make your action today against it.

On 05/04/2011 12:11, Kürti László wrote:

Even with docx, xlsx format could be read and written by OO.o or LibO (or
at least a workaround can be find).

Laslo,
Don't get me wrong, I entirely agree with all your sentiments.
Unfortunately, in practice the description of the situation I gave will
dominate. The quote from your email above seems to confirm that even
your company has experienced significant end user support issues. I just
wish it were different.



--
Mike Hall
www.onepoyle.net


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