Interest in LibreOffice, the open-source alternative to Microsoft Office, is on the rise, with weekly downloads of its software package close to 1 million a week. That’s the highest download number since 2023.

“We estimate around 200 million [LibreOffice] users, but it’s important to note that we respect users’ privacy and don’t track them, so we can’t say for sure,” said Mike Saunders, an open-source advocate and a deputy to the board of directors at The Document Foundation.

LibreOffice users typically want a straightforward interface, Saunders said. “They don’t want subscriptions, and they don’t want AI being ‘helpful’ by poking its nose into their work — it reminds them of Clippy from the bad old days,” he said.

There are genuine use cases for generative AI tools, but many users prefer to opt-in to it and choose when and where to enable it. “We have zero plans to put AI into LibreOffice. But we understand the value of some AI tools and are encouraging developers to create … extensions that use AI in a responsible way,” Saunders said.

    • @Lfrith@lemmy.ca
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      5624 days ago

      Syncthing has been so helpful in making me move away from cloud based options. And to think only reason I found out about it and gave it a shot was because I was trying to figure out how to easily sync my non Steam game save files between my Desktop and my Steam Deck. It’s been invaluable since then.

    • Condiment2085
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      1624 days ago

      Woowoo! Cloud has its place and I love it but it’s not for literally everything

        • Condiment2085
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          624 days ago

          I’m hoping to set one up later this year. I have an old laptop that has good enough specs to run it from my research - I just need to get everything off of it and swamp windows for Linux! Never did a Linux install so I’m excited.

          • @gruhuken@slrpnk.net
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            523 days ago

            I switched for the first time a few weeks ago!! I didn’t realise until I booted my Windows partition earlier for work that I hadn’t used it one single time since I did that because it was still open on the download page and forced a hundred updates on me 😅 it’s really fun and freeing, I’ve tried a few and settled on Pop!_OS because I love the simplicity, the pretty desktop environment and the window tiling

            • Condiment2085
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              123 days ago

              So cool! So you basically kept windows in one part of your machine and ran pop os on the rest? Really cool idea!

                • Condiment2085
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                  123 days ago

                  I was reading about this solution. My main laptop is a MacBook Air with M2 so I don’t think I can run any version of Linux on it. I have an old windows laptop I’m thinking about trying it on.

                  Would Linux still run fine on an older laptop?

              • @gruhuken@slrpnk.net
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                21 days ago

                Yeah!! I haven’t had any trouble with it yet, my laptop has only one SSD slot which is why I did it on the same one. I just switch when I boot up. I have the Windows one just in case I can’t get a game to run and to access my work’s shared drive (absolutely cannot figure it out on Linux lol)

          • oppy1984
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            523 days ago

            As a lifetime Windows user who switched to Linux about ten years ago, I recommend Linux Mint. It’s designed to look and feel like Windows 7 so it’s an easier transition when you first move from Windows. Also Mint is a rock solid distribution and has been my daily driver for about 9 years now. And before I forget, Mint has great documentation and community so when you get stuck on something you can easily Google for help.

            • @illpillow@lemmy.ml
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              23 days ago

              you can easily Google for help.

              you can easily search the web for help using your favorite engine. :)

              • oppy1984
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                323 days ago

                True there are other ways to search but I still find that Google surfaces the most relevant answers on the first page. At least when doing technical searches, it’s hit or miss with any other topic.

        • Jeffool
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          223 days ago

          When I get another job lined up that’s my goal. A job and these bills. And that car loan. And maybe a house… Man. Maybe two jobs.

      • @OscarRobin@lemmy.world
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        423 days ago

        Yeah I love LibreOffice’s customisability including sidebar etc, but OnlyOffice just performs a lot better and handles the most common formats better for me

      • @tantalizer@lemmy.world
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        423 days ago

        Yeah! To me LibreOffice just looks dated and, to be honest, shit. OnlyOffice has a much cleaner interface.

        • @ripcord@lemmy.world
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          223 days ago

          It also isn’t still carrying around 30 years of Java baggage from when it was Sun StarOffice, and everything inbetween.

  • @Peffse@lemmy.world
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    11924 days ago

    I’m afraid to find out how many people are still downloading OpenOffice, thinking it’s the same software they heard about back in 2010.

  • @takis@lemm.ee
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    9324 days ago

    I must be one of them. In the last couple of weeks I’m transitioning my apps and services to open source and EU based. I switched from Windows to CachyOS, switched my emails, switched browser, degoogled my phone, deleted FB and X and many more.

    It feels so refreshing and free.

  • Sentient Loom
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    5224 days ago

    Nice. Maybe now Microsoft will respond by offering non-subscription options inventing a new proprietary industry-standard file format so their bloated ransomware remains mandatory.

    • @cactopuses@lemm.ee
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      2624 days ago

      Fortunately platforms like docs are providing sufficient competition that I don’t think they’d be able to lock it down as effectively as they once could.

  • @passenger@lemm.ee
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    23 days ago

    Sure, to avoid costs…

    They really don’t see the connection with the trade war, buy european movement, boycott america movement, trump presidency in general… Really? Or could it be the editor told them not to mention it?

    • @Apocalypteroid@lemmy.world
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      23 days ago

      As someone who has recently cancelled my Microsoft subscription and switched to libre office I can vouch that it was not the subscription cost that made me switch.

    • @LainTrain@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      1123 days ago

      None of those have much real impact outside internet noise compared to people seeing their bank accounts drain.

      I’ve been leaving corpo shit behind for years as a personal boycott, but even I found it much easier to invest time and effort moving off paid services than free ones because of a perceived material benefit beyond smug self-satisfaction.

    • @gamer@lemm.ee
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      323 days ago

      You’re looking for enemies where there are none. I’m not a medical professional, but I assume this amount of paranoia is not good for your mental health and well-being. Just take the article for what it is: a win for free software

      • @passenger@lemm.ee
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        323 days ago

        Sure, it is a win. And thank you for the wise words.

        But to me it seems that many are looking to reduce dependency on US tech.

        Unfortunately, world is such state that a little paranoia is warranted. If Snowden was not a wakeup call, now I finally feel there is a real movement to try to reduce the dependency. Keep in mind that the US currently threatens EU with occupation of Greenland and sides with our enemy.

        But all that said, thank you again, kind stranger.

  • @MunkysUnkEnz0@lemmy.world
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    3624 days ago

    I’m glad to see foss Software taking off. In the past, we had to be a tech enthusiast to Realize it with an option. Now it’s pretty well known.

    The large tech companies didn’t get greedy and try to be so gross with privacy settings. People wouldn’t make the move. They only have themselves to blame.

    If you’re into music, there’s a great open source synthesizer.

    https://surge-synthesizer.github.io/

    • @Lfrith@lemmy.ca
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      3224 days ago

      The US becoming a questionable country and people realizing how almost every digital service and product is US based also ended up becoming a huge incentive to start seeking out alternatives instead putting all their eggs in one country. If it hadn’t been for that I wouldn’t have been making so many product shifts and seeking out foss alternatives or at the very least nonUS alternatives.

      It’s been very cool seeing lot of people making attempts to try out stuff like Linux too even if they don’t stick with it.

    • @orcrist@lemm.ee
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      423 days ago

      My friend, FOSS has been readily available for more than a decade. Whether it’s LibreOffice or the GIMP or VLC or whatever, these are very old pieces of software.

      It’s not taking off now. It already did. But now you personally are noticing. :-)

  • @Legom7@lemmy.world
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    3323 days ago

    I have a job that involves working with spreadsheets. I have Librecalc at home and both Libre and MSOffice at work. I have also had a college course about using Excel specifically. Both really can do mostly the same things but because MS does everything in a specific (backwards) way, people trained on MS who are not otherwise “computer people” can’t cope with needing to unlearn and relearn. So the end result is paraprofessionals are locked in.

    • @LordPassionFruit@lemm.ee
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      1323 days ago

      I really enjoyed spreadsheets before becoming a programmer (I still enjoy them, I just spend less time on them) and basically self taught over the years using Google Sheets.

      There are several really useful functions on sheets that simply do not exist in Excel, and there are others that work almost the same but not quite. Having to use Excel drives me insane sometimes because of how clunky it feels.

      By contrast, using LibreCalc feels kinda how you’d expect an open source Google Sheets to feel? It’s slightly clunkier, but it gets the job done and generally feels better to use than Excel

      • @wise_pancake@lemmy.ca
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        1023 days ago

        I’ve gone full circle

        Loved sheets, then hated them because we should just use a DB

        Now I do stuff in sheets with a tab explaining how I got the data because I can email it to someone and in 4 months it still answers their questions.

        • @LordPassionFruit@lemm.ee
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          423 days ago

          I used sheets because it was portable and flexible, but now I’d almost always just use a db instead.

          My main use for excel now is “I need to send data to someone who isn’t a programmer” and doing json > CSV conversions to see if my 3000 rows of data from a 3rd party have all the necessary bits.

          • @wise_pancake@lemmy.ca
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            423 days ago

            I guess it depends, I can make a pivot table in like 30 seconds, which is faster than setting up and loading data into a notebook.

  • _cryptagion [he/him]
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    3123 days ago

    It’s not just the subscription they want to avoid. Office has been steadily enshitified to the point nobody I know likes using it anymore.

    • @gruhuken@slrpnk.net
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      823 days ago

      Teams has decided it won’t recognise like 50% of word docs anymore. So you can no longer edit them within teams and have to download them. If you simply read and scroll down it, the scroll glitches so bad for no reason. Ugh

  • @snek_boi@lemmy.ml
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    2723 days ago

    If you’re going to download it, try the torrent option! That way, you can give back to the community that gives you LibreOffice.

  • @RememberTheApollo_@lemmy.world
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    2623 days ago

    Dropped the Word suite and used openoffice, then switched to libreoffice. Definitely a slightly clunkier feel to it, but avoiding yet more subscription, cloud based, internet connection needed, account needed software is becoming more and more important.

      • @FreeBooteR69@lemmy.ca
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        1723 days ago

        Open office isn’t getting much in the way of updates these days and is considered dormant and maintained by the Apache foundation. Libre-office is the office suite maintained by the document foundation and is where the bulk of developers moved over to.

        • @rottingleaf@lemmy.world
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          523 days ago

          OpenOffice’s old branding from Sun times was so nice though. Felt like modernity and magic in the sense of Star Wars prequels, Stargate SG-1, that warm kind of thing.

      • @RememberTheApollo_@lemmy.world
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        223 days ago

        Pretty much what everyone said, especially better import/export of microsoft document formats - but one of the things they didn’t mention is that LibreOffice can be easily downloaded and installed from repositories. If I do a fresh linux install it’s just a command line or some other software package installer away. Super easy. I find LibreOffice runs smoother. Only downside is that sometimes it takes a while to load.

      • @joel_feila@lemmy.world
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        223 days ago

        For me it was docx. Oo couldn’t get the formatting right but libre could. This was back when docx was new and i was in school ao the teachers didn’t take off for strange lines or bad formatting.

      • @gamer@lemm.ee
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        223 days ago

        For the past like decade the only “updates” OpenOffice has been getting are questionable code comment changes from one dude. These changes literally do nothing, and people have suggested that the only reason he does it is to make OpenOffice seem like it’s still being developed, even though it was abandoned long ago.

        Why? IDK, but I think it’s just some stubborn asshole with an axe to grind with the LibreOffice project. OpenOffice still has stronger name recognition than LibreOffice, so a lot of people still use it.

  • @RedFrank24@lemmy.world
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    The funny thing is you can still buy Office standalone but you have to actively go looking for it and Microsoft doesn’t advertise it because 365 subscriptions make more money.

    Microsoft doesn’t want you buying standalone versions of software, but they still have to sell it because there’s still a market for it.

    • @Kazumara@discuss.tchncs.de
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      Wow, the way they write “best value” on the offer for 8.50 £/month is just brazen.

      If you use Office Home 2024 for 120£ for just 15 months or more it’s already cheaper.

    • @GamingChairModel@lemmy.world
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      223 days ago

      What’s annoying, too, is that a lot of the methods that have traditionally been used for discounts (education, nonprofit, employer-based discounts) are now only applicable to the subscriptions. So if you do want to get a standalone copy and would ordinarily qualify for a discount, you can’t apply that discount to that license.

  • @turnip@sh.itjust.works
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    1923 days ago

    We should all get Signal as well. If you don’t have it you’ll probably be surprised how many of your contacts do.

  • @sudoer777@lemmy.ml
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    1823 days ago

    If you’re a nerd, also check out Typst and LaTeX. Being able to format your documents with pure code is awesome, and you can also define functions for different things, import libraries to generate graphs, and write comments that don’t show up in the document.

      • @dustyData@lemmy.world
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        723 days ago

        Awesome, it does great at what it was designed to do. And it even does mediocre at things it was not designed to do. It even does incompetently things that aren’t anywhere in its code? Amazing piece of tech.