• curbstickle@anarchist.nexus
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    8 hours ago

    My wife is not technical and has no interest in adopting and learning anything.

    The web works the same way regardless of the OS, and LibreOffice has all the same features as Word that she uses.

    The “hard part” is choosing and upgrading hardware, and maybe installation (depending on distribution).

    I mention this because I think we should evaluate these differently. With a preloaded desktop/laptop, I’ve had no issues with anyone that actually relates to Linux (except my BIL who was trying to build an arcade stick for gaming).

    Explaining to my other BIL how to select hardware for his custom build, that took some time, as did guiding him through the installation.

    • they_herd_owl_now@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      7 hours ago

      im sorry but LibreOffice might have all the features of word but it certainly has a really bad user experience. i write often and libreoffice writer is difficult to say the least, not because of lack of features but a lack of most ‘little things’ and ‘tweaks’. i can definitely see someone switching to libreoffice from word, but saying its not ‘hard’ is untrue or a biased take in my opinion and using both suites (more familiar with libre though lmao).

      i do agree that for a mostly web based user as is commonplace nowadays, a preloaded linux thats been decently built is gonna be a significantly easy switch.

      on a slight tangent, but linux for me was a way to rebuild my love for computers after windows systematically fucked things. and i really enjoy the learning process. so personally i still encourage people to spend the time in the learning process atleast a bit

      • curbstickle@anarchist.nexus
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        7 hours ago

        i write often and libreoffice writer is difficult to say the least, not because of lack of features but a lack of most ‘little things’ and ‘tweaks’.

        I think you’re missing the fact that you are doing more ‘expert’ things than most here. The majority of the time, my wife opens a document she made once, saves as a new file (no, she’s not using templates - don’t get me started), and writes her invoice. She then PDFs it and sends it via email.

        She does the same thing with Calc and a previously made blank “monthly calendar”. Opens the blank, saves for the client, enters in the days and renames the month at the top, notes what she’ll be doing for them on each day with an hour estimate, PDF and email.

        That is the kind of thing most people do.

      • Grumpy@sh.itjust.works
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        6 hours ago

        I would say give onlyoffice a try. It’s not FOSS but does have free tier for home use and it’s what I go to for non-main work computer. Beats libre imo.

        • they_herd_owl_now@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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          6 hours ago

          i do use onlyoffice when i have to work with MSOffice docs, its very similar. but the emphasis on AI has irked me too much to make it a regular use

      • Natanox@discuss.tchncs.de
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        7 hours ago

        Yeah, LibreOffice stuck with the old UI/UX for better and worse. Luckily we do have a nice selection of Office Suites in addition to them. OnlyOffice, WPS Office, Collabora, KDE Calligra, Softmaker Office… surely there’s one for everyone on Linux.

        Personally I like OnlyOffice.