• @pulido@lemmings.world
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    332 months ago

    It’s disgusting how many businesses have been herded into wasting money on products they can be using for free, then convincing customers they “need more money.”

    • @recall519@lemm.ee
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      222 months ago

      LibreOffice is pretty far from Microsoft Office. Even Google’s suite is more polished. Like it or not, funding behind a project helps build a stronger product.

    • @somedev@aussie.zone
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      172 months ago

      Probably better to think of spending their money on an open ecosystem, instead of just using something for “free”. If software products have sufficient funding they can better improve the products and can continue to exist - without some form of monetisation most wouldn’t still be around.

      • @pulido@lemmings.world
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        132 months ago

        I believe it’s a chicken and an egg problem.

        If free software projects had more users, those users would improve the software further with donations, patches, and bug reports.

        • @somedev@aussie.zone
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          42 months ago

          I think both can be true. I just mean if we’re talking about a company paying for Microsoft Office vs LibreOffice.

        • @PushButton@lemmy.world
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          32 months ago

          No.

          There is enough LibreOffice users to realize that the curve of the donations over users isn’t proportional.

          When was the last time you donated?

          Exactly.

    • @Broken@lemmy.ml
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      52 months ago

      I’m fully in support of LibreOffice and the fact that it can do a lot for free. However it is far from an enterprise product.

      I’m still waiting for anybody to make a true competitor to Excel. There’s some decrnt spreadsheet software but there’s really no comparison to the functionality of Excel. Even Google sheets is a distant second.

      My point is, when there are power users involved LibreOffice just won’t cut it.