Re: This is not my month.
Posted: Sat Jun 21, 2014 6:03 am
Yeah OpenOffice and libreoffice are the only legal free options if you want full MSOffice compatibility. Just be sure to save as .doc or .docx instead of the default odf format.
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lol, this worked. I didn't think my XP office would install on a 64 bit system.ettoren wrote:MS Office XP should still work. I use Office XP Pro because I HATE HATE HATE HATE that "Ribbon" crap they put in the newer versions. I've had it installed on Win Vista, 7 and 8 without a hitch. I also use OpenOffice for some of it's features. Specifically I use it to convert your word doc releases into PDF
You can always run a 32 bit version of a software on a 64 bit OS but not viceversa. (although, technically speaking, you will be compromising on the 'optimal performance' of the softwareFel wrote:I didn't think my XP office would install on a 64 bit system.
I believe that the "corporation" you are thinking of turned over the code to the Apache foundation.MartinK wrote:Weren't there some issues with openoffice due to still being owned by a corporation that wanted to make money with it? I believe its currently owned by oracle, which hasn't all that good a track record with its Java either.
For office software, there's not really any noticable difference - the reasons for slow performance in these things is rarely to do with CPU (at least, with the way they currently use CPUs anyhow).The Thing wrote:You can always run a 32 bit version of a software on a 64 bit OS but not viceversa. (although, technically speaking, you will be compromising on the 'optimal performance' of the softwareFel wrote:I didn't think my XP office would install on a 64 bit system.)
I know. I was trying to be sarcasticSpec8472 wrote:For office software, there's not really any noticable difference - the reasons for slow performance in these things is rarely to do with CPU (at least, with the way they currently use CPUs anyhow).
I guess even here its nigh impossible to see the difference unless you are playing a game with good graphics or running/loading a high end heavy usage consumption software.Spec8472 wrote:You'll see better performance if you stick everything on a current-generation SSD - that'll at least eliminate IO wait times.
Oh, you missed the sarcasm tags.The Thing wrote:I know. I was trying to be sarcastic
Actually, you'll see a quite significant improvement in performance by switching to SSDs, pretty much regardless of what your use-case is.The Thing wrote:I guess even here its nigh impossible to see the difference
Hmmm... I knew about how they worked and why they were different but did not know that you can notice difference in simple programs !! Honestly speaking, I have a pretty new system with a HDD and will not be switching to a SSD any time soon just to check it out.Spec8472 wrote:Actually, you'll see a quite significant improvement in performance by switching to SSDs, pretty much regardless of what your use-case is.
Actually, with MS Office, 32-bit is preferred. Never install 64-bit MS Office unless you need to work with incredibly large documents (multi-gigabyte Excel docs, for example). Many applications that interact with Outlook will not work properly with 64-bit versions due to the way registry keys are stored for 64-bit apps vs. 32-bit apps. I ended up removing 64-bit Office from my work machine and installing the 32-bit version in order to get various applications to properly interop with Office.The Thing wrote:You can always run a 32 bit version of a software on a 64 bit OS but not viceversa. (although, technically speaking, you will be compromising on the 'optimal performance' of the softwareFel wrote:I didn't think my XP office would install on a 64 bit system.)
Ditto the above... When I create new Images at work, I always have 32-bit MS office on our 64-bit windows machines because of this issue. A number of specialized (expensive) programs from smaller design houses do not work with office 64-bit. I suggest 64-bit OS because things just run better (most of the time) and you can use more RAM in your PC. Office 32-bit is more than good enough for 95% of all users would be my guess. If your company has 32-bit and 64-bit office... they had to pay for 2 difference licenses. Another issues is optional programs like visio and project must be the same type (32 or 64-bit) as your base office install. Save yourself some trouble and go with 32-bit.alkiera wrote:Actually, with MS Office, 32-bit is preferred. Never install 64-bit MS Office unless you need to work with incredibly large documents (multi-gigabyte Excel docs, for example). Many applications that interact with Outlook will not work properly with 64-bit versions due to the way registry keys are stored for 64-bit apps vs. 32-bit apps. I ended up removing 64-bit Office from my work machine and installing the 32-bit version in order to get various applications to properly interop with Office.The Thing wrote:You can always run a 32 bit version of a software on a 64 bit OS but not viceversa. (although, technically speaking, you will be compromising on the 'optimal performance' of the softwareFel wrote:I didn't think my XP office would install on a 64 bit system.)
From a technical standpoint, there are very few applications that actually benefit from being natively 64-bit. I recently read a breakdown of why(http://blogs.msdn.com/b/ricom/archive/2 ... rsion.aspx), but the main of it is that unless the application actually uses more than 3GB of RAM actively, you're actually losing by converting the app to 64-bit; as all memory pointers in a 64-bit app are twice as big as they were in a 32-bit app, thus take up more space in memory.
Having a 64-bit OS is always a benefit(More RAM is better); 64-bit apps, not so much.