Showing posts with label free software. Show all posts
Showing posts with label free software. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 13, 2009

OpenOffice 3.0


OpenOffice 3.0


This free office suite packages an impressive

set of editing tools inside a foolproof interface


Despite the adage “You get what you pay for,” free doesn’t necessarily equal bad, and OpenOffice 3.0 makes the latest case. This open-source productivity suite lets you create and edit documents, presentations, spreadsheets, databases, and drawings, and even reads Microsoft Office 2007 files. If you can deal with its limited (nay, nonexistent) sharing functionality, this suite offers everything a student or road warrior could want.

Installation and Speed

Although OpenOffice is free, you’ll be prompted to make a donation when you download the install file. Downloading the 142MB file to our desktop using an Ethernet connection took 19 minutes and 1 second, and installation took 5 minutes and 54 seconds to install, a rather long wait.

With the previous version of OpenOffice, we were displeased by how slow the Java-based program was in daily use. In our hands-on experience with the current iteration, however, the different components (e.g., Writer, Draw, Impress) took a second to launch on an Intel Centrino 2–powered HP Pavilion dv5t. The program took about a second to open blank documents.

Simple Interface, Made to Customize

OpenOffice has most of the features you’d expect in a desktop office suite, and in contrast to Office 2007’s icon-packed Ribbon interface, which new users often find intimidating, they’re presented here in a foolproof UI. The task-oriented opening screen has icons for creating text documents, presentations, spreadsheets, drawing, formulas, and databases. There are also icons for choosing templates or opening documents that have already been created. In the lower right corner are smaller icons which let us add features and templates from Openoffice.org.

As with Office 2007, you can customize menus. You can choose which icons to display, as well as their order, and even decide which items appear under hierarchical menus, such as File, and rearrange their sequence. This is a level of customization not available in Microsoft Office.

More important, OpenOffice allows you to switch among the document, spreadsheet, and presentation programs within a single interface. Clicking File > New brings up a fly-away menu showing the different documents you can create. So, if you’re in the word processor, you can click New > Spreadsheet, whereas if you were working in Microsoft Word you’d have to launch Excel to begin working on a spreadsheet. Across most of the applications—documents, spreadsheets, presentations, and drawings—users can export their work as PDFs.

Word Processing

For anyone who has ever used Microsoft Office 2003, OpenOffice’s document creation interface is a cinch to master. Blank documents (or spreadsheets or presentations) sit atop a dark gray background. The hierarchical menus—including File, Edit, View, Insert, Format, Table, Tools, Window, and Help—will look familiar, as will the two rows of icons underneath it, representing common functions, such as spell check. When you roll over an icon with your cursor you’ll see a label explaining what it does.

When it comes to formatting text, OpenOffice has more options than its free online counterparts (Google Docs and Acrobat.com), including more text and background colors, and the ability to program macros and insert movies, sound, and objects, such as charts, into the copy. Best of all: it reads Office 2007 files, so if your colleagues send you DOCX files, you can open and edit them in OpenOffice.

Spreadsheets

OpenOffice’s simple two-row kitchen sink of icons is particularly handy with spreadsheets: it highlights the features and shortcuts you’re likely to use most, including sorting in ascending or descending order and adjusting the number of decimal places. Like Excel 2007, the formula bar autocompletes (so, if you type “=a”, Average will appear as a choice).

The one instance in which you might miss Excel is in OpenOffice’s lack of formatting options. For instance, there aren’t as many color or customization options when creating charts, whereas the Microsoft Office Suite, including Excel, offers Quick Style, from which users can apply a plethora of different color themes to charts or a whole document.

Presentations

When you first launch Impress, OpenOffice’s version of PowerPoint, you can either open a template (of which there are few), open an existing document, or walk through an on-screen wizard. This optional wizard, which prompts you to choose backgrounds and slide transitions, can be intimidating to users who don’t know precisely how they want their presentation to look.

A right-hand panel lets you choose master pages, layouts, table designs, custom animations, and slide transitions. At a glance you can select, say, a vertical bar graph with a title on top. As with PowerPoint, users can also insert pictures, movies, and sounds.

Although these features are helpful, OpenOffice doesn’t have any prepackaged templates; just these à la carte one-click edits, as well as a slew of backgrounds. To add templates, you’ll have to go to OpenOffice’s main screen and click the icon to add more templates; you’ll be brought to a Web site, which has more than nine pages worth of apps but only three pages of templates.

Sharing—or Lack Thereof

In an age where Acrobat.com, Google Docs, and Zoho Docs all allow users to collaborate on documents online, OpenOffice’s biggest weakness is that it has too few sharing options. Even Microsoft Office lets users publish their documents directly to blogs and shared workspaces and store presentations and slides in a Slide library.

Just as OpenOffice allows users to download additional templates and features, it requires them to add collaborative functionality through third-party apps (such as 03spaces.com, which is free for individual users). That’s not so bad, but given the trend toward collaboration in productivity software—and given that OpenOffice itself is an open-source project—we wish these tools were baked in.

Verdict

With the exception of online collaboration, a feature OpenOffice doesn’t natively offer, this free productivity suite gets the job done. There’s no doubt that its robust feature package not only matches its pricey competitors, but it also trounces other free options, particularly Web-based services such as Google Apps and Acrobat.com. While business users might want to keep Office as their primary tool for its integration with Exchange Server, OpenOffice will do just fine for students—not to mention road warriors who don’t have a Microsoft Office license to spare.

Download :
http://ftp.nluug.nl/ftp/pub/office/openoffice/stable/3.0.0/OOo_3.0.0_Win32Intel_install_wJRE_en-US.exe

Saturday, October 11, 2008

OpenOffice.org 3.0.0 Final



OpenOffice.org the product is a multi-platform office productivity suite. It includes the key desktop applications, such as a word processor, spreadsheet, presentation manager, and drawing program, with a user interface and feature set similar to other office suites. Sophisticated and flexible, OpenOffice.org also works transparently with a variety of file formats, including those of Microsoft Office.
Available in over 45 supported languages with more being constantly added by the community, OpenOffice.org runs stably and natively on Solaris, Linux (including PPC Linux), Windows, Mac OS X (X11), and numerous other platforms. Our porting page lists the platforms (ports) that OpenOffice.org can run on.
Written in C++ and with documented APIs licensed under the LGPL and SISSL Open Source licenses, OpenOffice.org allows any knowledgeable developer to benefit from the source. And, because the file format for OpenOffice.org is XML, interoperability is easy, making future development and adoption more certain.

Wednesday, October 8, 2008

Opera 9.60 Build 10447 Final



Discover the new standard in Web browsing! Opera lets you surf the Internet in a safer, faster, and easier way. One of the most full-featured internet power tools on the market, it includes pop-up blocking, tabbed browsing, integrated searches, and advanced functions like Opera's groundbreaking E-mail program, RSS Newsfeeds and IRC chat. You can customize the look and content of your browser with a few clicks of the mouse.

Opera started out as a research project in Norway's largest telecom company, Telenor, in 1994, and branched out into an independent development company named Opera Software ASA in 1995. Opera Software develops the Opera Web browser, a high-quality, multi-platform product for a wide range of platforms, operating systems and embedded Internet products.

Opera is known as the fastest and smallest full-featured browser, a first choice for people using older PCs and Windows 95 and a brilliant alternative to the default IE from Microsoft. Opera, first of all, is client World Wide Web, that is the program for extraction of the information from WWW as the documents created with help HyperText Markup Language (language of a marking of hypertext HTML).
Low requirements to resources of system. Opera will work even on 386 computer about 6 MB of operative memory. MDI the interface. You can open without special expenses of memory any quantity of windows inside one working window, having chosen thus a tabulared or cascade mode.

Download : Opera 9.60 Build 10447 Final
Download : English

Monday, September 22, 2008

COMODO Internet Security 3.5.51259.400 Beta


Integrates COMODO Antivirus, COMODO Firewall and COMODO Defense+ in a seamless manner.
The COMODO Internet Security was designed to be the that integrates COMODO Antivirus, COMODO Firewall and COMODO Defense+ in a seamless manner. We have also fixed many bugs in COMODO Firewall with this release. COMODO Firewall or COMODO Antivirus canbe installed as standalone products by using the same setup.


Developed by one of the world's leading IT security providers, Comodo AntiVirus leverages multiple technologies (including on demand & on access scanning, email scanning, process monitoring and worm blocking) to immediately start cleaning or quarantining suspicious files from your hard drives, shared disks, emails, downloads and system memory.

Download : Windows 32bit
Download : Windows 64bit


Friday, September 12, 2008

Google Chrome v0.2.149.27 Beta


Google Chrome is a browser that combines a minimal design with sophisticated technology to make the web faster, safer, and easier. It has one box for everything: Type in the address bar and get suggestions for both search and web pages. Will give you thumbnails of your top sites; Access your favorite pages instantly with lightning speed from any new tab.
Google Chrome is an open source web browser developed by Google. Its software architecture was engineered from scratch (using components from other open source software including WebKit and Mozilla Firefox) to cater for the changing needs of users and acknowledging that today most web sites aren't web pages but web applications. Design goals include stability, speed, security and a clean, simple and efficient user interface.

Download :
http://www.google.com/chrome/

Tuesday, September 2, 2008

HandyCafe Internet Cafe


HandyCafe Internet Cafe Software was written by using the latest technology and concept. Many newly added features contribute the software more elasticity and skill. HandyCafe is an Internet Cafe Software which brings prestige to the business with an easy to use structure and its reliability in the network media.

Some new features and other conventional ones of HandCafe are summarized below. Most of them are not given by other programs and thanks to these unparalleled features, managing an internet cafe and network didn't be ever so enjoyable and easy...

It's Free

Download :

http://rapidshare.com/files/142016606/HANDYCAFE_.zip

Registration

http://www.handycafe.com/en/sebasvuru.php