Today I did my first advanced spreadsheet on LibreOffice after switching to Linux, and it handled itself pretty well. I had to search for some features on the web at first, but after I got it down, I felt comfortable using it. Also, LibreOffice’s default menu layout is not pretty, but I can find all of the functions with just a click, unlike MS Office’s ribbon menu where I had to click around to find what I was looking for. Sorry for bad English.

  • PerfectDark@lemmy.world
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    4 hours ago

    I bring this up often because its so amusing to me.

    Last year I did a lot of interviews with developers of popular Steam Deck and Linux programs. All went really well, and were quite fun to do.

    One ‘dev’ (I use that term so loosely because I found out GPT is heavily used for their work) freaked out though when they saw my document I sent initially was an .odt file.

    Knowing I am a pen-tester, they freaked out and told the public at large I was trying to hack them with a weird file type.

    .odt

    It still makes me laugh. Anyway, I swear by LibreOffice, I use it daily and love it so much!

    • adarza@lemmy.ca
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      3 hours ago

      if a specific format isn’t requested or required, and the formatted text document is not expected to be edited by the recipient–only read, possibly by computer, or printed, i would default to using a pdf.

  • toastmeister@lemmy.ca
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    5 hours ago

    I do wish it had a self hosted docker though. I could see Proton mail and thunder mail adopting it that way, which would be neat.

  • kittenroar@beehaw.org
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    6 hours ago

    Yeah; it’s pretty great. It lacks the excel functions, but if you know some python that is a total non-issue.

  • Termight@lemmy.ml
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    9 hours ago

    Indeed, LibreOffice Calc is a near-daily fixture in my operational workflow. The insistence on proprietary, data-harvesting alternatives like Google Docs is… unnecessary. For Debian-based systems, the installation process is straightforward: sudo add-apt-repository ppa:libreoffice/ppa & sudo apt install libreoffice, referencing the official documentation at https://wiki.documentfoundation.org/Documentation/Install/Linux

    • ILikeBoobies@lemmy.ca
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      6 hours ago

      Collabora used to offer Libre Office online, now it’s their Libre Office fork

      Rollapp lets you use LibreOffice online but I don’t think there is collaboration

    • 4am@lemm.ee
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      14 hours ago

      A lot of what Linux lacks is UI design, and at least 50+% of that is just because of what we got used to using other products.

      • corsicanguppy@lemmy.ca
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        11 hours ago

        Absolute true. We mimicked bad design out there for compatibility, but then it became comfy and now cannot be changed.

        Having said that, the ribbon must die. Let’s not hold MSOffice (post-97) up as the ideal for anything at all, okay?

    • Ferk@lemmy.ml
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      10 hours ago

      Define lack of design. You mean theming? because Linux has way more customizable theming options than the proprietary alternatives, to fit all kinds of subjective tastes.

      You mean usability? it’s the one system that you can rice up to do absolutely whatever you want to do to fit your workflow, you can configure any key to automate literally anything a desktop can do.

      The catch is that you actually do have to get your hands dirty if you want to mold the system to your liking… as opposed to being your own tastes the ones molding to adapt to whichever the designer of the OS decided should be the new tacky fashion or workflow.

      • ReakDuck@lemmy.ml
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        10 hours ago

        I think he mispelled Windows.

        Windows 11 is literally a part copy of KDE. Even the webpage got copied till they removed the evidence. It is KDE from Linux that got copied because the Windows User Interface was shit af.

        But they still lack a lot for my taste. KDE seems to be the winner for me

    • Mwa@lemm.ee
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      13 hours ago

      Depends on the Desktop/Theme your using really.

  • tombruzzo@lemm.ee
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    19 hours ago

    I do a lot of work with CSV files and LibreCalc is so much better for them. You can actually tell it how to delimit the file and to put quotations around each field.

    Some programs actually advise against using excel if you’re going to work on a CSV to upload into the program, which is funny considering it’s meant to be the industry standard.

    P. S. For anyone that would like to use LibreOffice at work, download portableapps and get it from there. It’s so portable it can get around IT administration requirements

    • JoshCodes@programming.dev
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      16 hours ago

      On behalf of cyber and IT, just ask IT to install the thing, please. They can’t really say no to a free app and bypassing restrictions ends badly for everyone. I had a user do that with video editing software… seriously, what could go wrong? Ransomware. Literally ransomware. Lucky for antivirus it stopped it but yeah, please work with IT.

      • Joelk111@lemmy.world
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        15 hours ago

        They can’t really say no to a free app

        What? At my workplace there’s a bunch of stuff we aren’t allowed to install that’s free with the reasoning being security concerns.

        • JoshCodes@programming.dev
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          7 hours ago

          That may be true for Discord but for FOSS products the security concern is the attack surface (more to patch).

          Like I said to the other commenter, if they say no they should have to justify that (in written form, argued, with points), even if the reason you want it is familiarity with the tool, workflow speed ups, or it has a nicer UI. Make them work harder if they say no, and make it really clear you will go away quietly if they say yes.

          I do think that companies asking users to use standard tools so they can build processes and training materials is reasonable. Using other tools means more attack surface, it means more updates, more documentation, less familiar people and it means more risk.

          Also assuming your company is like most and forgets to document everything alongside the crucial processes, if you know how to do something and tie it to a FOSS product instead of say excel, they won’t be able to hire a grad that can work for cheaper and do the thing half as well.

          My point is it does do something for them, but not as much as they think. They didn’t pay for the office suit for you to not use it. However, if you don’t need it, they can also stop paying for it. Justification is important. So is making ITs life difficult by making them justify decisions.

          Bypassing them makes the incident response team’s life difficult, not ITs.

          • Joelk111@lemmy.world
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            6 hours ago

            They should have to justify that

            Have you worked somewhere before? Yeah, they should, but they won’t. It’s easier and cheaper to say no to everything unless there’s a serious tangible business reason that you need to use it, at which point they’ll look into it.

            My company has rejected a bunch of stuff with the only reason being “Security Risk” with no further reasoning provided when asked. It’s super aggravating.

            • JoshCodes@programming.dev
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              5 hours ago

              I’m sorry your team is like that, they should do better. I get along with my company IT team, obviously working close with them has benefits, but we have a lot of oversight and executive support so giving two word answers isn’t a thing where I work, they have to give a written justification etc.

              In the same sense that not everyone works where I do, not everyone has assholes in IT who deny everything. Neither of our experiences are default and I was trying to write for someone in-between. Apologies if it didn’t come across that way.

              There are businesses who don’t allow spotify on the corporate device, for sure. I saw a talk delivered by a guy who did. He worked for a mining company, they wouldn’t let people install things and were inundated with policy violations. He had to change the entire company culture around who IT were, and started by letting people make install requests for apps they wanted to use. They just tracked the requests so they knew who had what, and by helping, they could be selective about where the software came from.

              When people don’t have IT as a support and see them as a regulator, they don’t work with them and bad shit happens. This dudes mining company was hit, also with ransomware (this one worked), because the CFO had local admin since he didn’t want to talk to IT.

              My point is

              • a. they should be helping in this instance. Sorry they don’t, that’s frustrating to hear. Work culture is hard to change and I’m lucky with where I do work and the culture we have.

              • b. don’t bypass security controls regardless. Sorry. It’s still not the answer. If work makes you do things a slower or more annoying way, that’s their time lost. HR will throw you under the bus for the policy violation.

      • cyberwolfie@lemmy.ml
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        10 hours ago

        They can’t really say no to a free app

        A co-worker was told (verbatim) by the head of IT that " we don’t use open source". So yeah…

        • JoshCodes@programming.dev
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          7 hours ago

          Okay maybe I should have said they can’t say no and appear reasonable? Was there a justification or is this guy Joseph Goebbels or something? I bet you didn’t use AI 2 years ago but probably have that running rampant.

          I’d love to live in a world where I trust everyone to install software on computers, but Mr Ransomware, albeit not common, is out there waiting to fuck up the business with a portable application he found. He wanted to do something for a colleague, but we all nearly suffered for it.

          Install things the right way, and if you can’t, make a case for it and get managers involved. Justify the time saved or the comfort it provides: everyone hates AI, blame it on copilot being in excel.

          Bypassing security instead of working with them doesn’t help anyone and it almost always ends badly.

      • corsicanguppy@lemmy.ca
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        11 hours ago

        They can’t really say no to a free app

        “No enterprise support” is actually scary for them. I did security, 'way back, but in Unix, and maybe that’s why we were more cool with OSS back then. Windows people love the black-box binaries and fear a lack of pricy support.

      • Prathas@lemmy.zip
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        10 hours ago

        I had a user do that with video editing software… seriously, what could go wrong? Ransomware. Literally ransomware.

        What app was that? I’m guessing the software was not FOSS.

        • JoshCodes@programming.dev
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          7 hours ago

          There was a trend of malware authors making websites to give away free video editors, I think this one appeared as capcut. They patch the binaries or use other techniques and include malicious DLLs.

          Edit: you and I both are fine with people installing FOSS from github, but what happens when they get the name for the repo wrong? What happens when they go to the fake site a malware author spun up, that even has all the files they wanted?

          Security is there for a reason, sorry, I know we can be annoying and add hurdles to important roles, but people get things wrong. We help with that, and bypassing us means you didn’t give us a chance to save you before you messed up (again I assume everyone on lemmy is a sysadmin Linux user so not ‘you’ but a generic user you).

          • Prathas@lemmy.zip
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            3 hours ago

            Wow, I never heard about this malware trend. I guess this kind of crap will only increase with AI’s help…

    • whysofurious@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      11 hours ago

      I agree with LibreCalc and CSV, in some internationalclasses we always had issues with excel saving CSV in actually different formats depending on the machine locale. LibreCalc never had this problem.

  • flatbield@beehaw.org
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    19 hours ago

    Ribbon bar shit, personally I hate the MS ribbon bar. So for me the LO interface is way better. Just depends on what you like and what you learned and know well.

  • Saleh@feddit.org
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    19 hours ago

    Almost anytime i want to do something a bit more interesting in Excel i have to look for a solution on the web too. And i am considered one of the better Excel users in my working environment.

  • plumbercraic@lemmy.sdf.org
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    16 hours ago

    I am so close to loving libreoffice but trackpad gesture scrolling is broken and it’s kind of not optional on a laptop. With a mouse, I am a big fan.

    • Domi@lemmy.secnd.me
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      11 hours ago

      This works out of the box on KDE (should work on GNOME too), what desktop environment do you use?

      • plumbercraic@lemmy.sdf.org
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        10 hours ago

        Cinnamon, Mint 22. It works, but badly. Two finger scroll does nothing for a second, then jumps to the destination. You don’t see anything in between, which is not how that interaction is meant to go (I start the gesture, realise I overshot the top of page two, then adjust back up, read the top, then keep on scrolling - all without releasing the gesture).

        This thread describes it well: https://www.reddit.com/r/libreoffice/comments/enf3p4/touchpad_scroll_speed/

        edit: i started digging into this again. I think it’s just sensitivity being way too high within LO. If I go one mm at a time it works as expected. But of course I want to browse docs as comfortably as I browse pages on firefox.

        • southsamurai@sh.itjust.works
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          6 hours ago

          That’s my exact distro/de combo. Never had any issues with trackpad use that weren’t also there with the win10 that came on the thinkpad. Which was just that it’s prone to detecting even the lightest accidental taps and over reacting. Maybe it’s device specific?

          Edit: by device specific, I mean that it isn’t every touchpad w/Libreoffice’s issue, rather something that’s wonky with some range of hardware and not others

          • plumbercraic@lemmy.sdf.org
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            6 hours ago

            Aha. This would make more sense - couldn’t imagine this was happening on every laptop. Then I should add my device details to a github issue. Thanks for letting me know.

    • MouldyCat@feddit.uk
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      15 hours ago

      Gesture scrolling? You mean like making clockwise or anticlockwise circles to scroll up or down? I’d have thought that kind of functionality would be handled by the touchpad driver, not individual programs.

      • plumbercraic@lemmy.sdf.org
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        14 hours ago

        i’m on mint cinnamon 22 and have touchegg installed. They have this in built Gestures applet but it doesn’t seem to govern the two finger scroll. Touche (separate app) seems similar - its all about 3 and 4 finger gestures. Seems like the two finger scroll is special somehow.