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posted by cmn32480 on Thursday February 02 2017, @08:06PM   Printer-friendly
from the that-only-took-10-years dept.

Martin Brinkmann at gHacks reports

LibreOffice 5.3 is the newest version of the popular open source Office suite, and one of the "most feature-rich releases in the history of the application".

The Office suite, available for Windows, Mac, and Linux operating systems, is now also available as a private cloud version, called LibreOffice Online.

LibreOffice, at is[sic] core, is an open source alternative to Microsoft Office. It features Writer, a text editing program similar to Word, Calc, the Excel equivalent, Impress which is similar to PowerPoint, and Draw, which enables you to create graphic documents.

LibreOffice 5.3 ships with a truckload of new features. One of the new features is a new experimental user interface called Notebookbar. This new interface resembles Office's ribbon UI, but is completely optional [submitters emphasis] right now.

In fact, the new user interface is not enabled by default, and if you don't look for it or know where to look, you will probably notice no difference at all to previous versions.

To enable the new Ribbon UI, select View > Toolbar Layout > Notebookbar. The UI you see on the screenshot above is enabled by default, but you may switch it using View > Notebookbar to either Contextual Groups or Contextual Single.

[...] One interesting option that the developers built-in to LibreOffice 5.3 is the ability to sign PDF documents, and to verify PDF document signatures.

[...] The Writer application got some exciting new features. It supports Table styles now for instance, and there is a new Page deck in the sidebar to customize the page settings quickly and directly.

There is also an option to use the new "go to page" box, and arrows in the drawing tools which were not available previously in Writer.

Calc got a new set of default cell styles offering "greater variety and better names", a new median function for pivot tables, and a new filter option when you are inserting functions to narrow down the selection.

The article also has 4 demo videos embedded.

In the comments there, Donutz notes that the Ribbon UI requires the Java Runtime Environment.
Oggy notes that the suite is available from PortableApps. (Martin's site is largely Windows-centric).


Original Submission

 
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  • (Score: 3, Insightful) by jmorris on Thursday February 02 2017, @10:32PM

    by jmorris (4844) on Thursday February 02 2017, @10:32PM (#462152)

    MS ribbon sucks... why would we want this?

    Because we seem to have an inferiority complex that forces us to chase Microsoft and Apple's taillights.

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  • (Score: 3, Insightful) by Nerdfest on Thursday February 02 2017, @11:20PM

    by Nerdfest (80) on Thursday February 02 2017, @11:20PM (#462172)

    ... even when they're heading in completely the wrong direction (including bad UI choices. lack of options, removing features, and bad architecture .... I'm looking at your systemd).

    • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Friday February 03 2017, @07:11AM

      by Anonymous Coward on Friday February 03 2017, @07:11AM (#462259)

      You might also look at Chrome (Chromium’s existence notwithstanding).

    • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Friday February 03 2017, @09:19AM

      by Anonymous Coward on Friday February 03 2017, @09:19AM (#462289)

      What is amusing about this discussion is how there is this implication in all this that somehow OS software has the GUI sorted and these guys have diverted from awesome to a bad path.

      I am not going to explain why this is so amusing since if you lack the basic awareness of the state of software to know why there is no hope for you....