John Carter to the rescue. A question on NeoOffice brought this speedy reply. "Documents written with Pages will not come up in NeoOffice, OpenOffice, LibreOffice, or MS Office.
What to Know About NeoOffice
John Carter recommends NeoOffice. He explains, "Here’s something good to know about NeoOffice: NeoOffice includes the following open source software:
- OpenOffice.org and Apache OpenOffice
- LibreOffice
- Akua icons
- NeoOffice icons and images
- Minizip
- Mac remote control
- The main difference between NeoOffice and OpenOffice or LibreOffice is that NeoOffice is built specifically for the Mac.
- Another main difference is that NeoOffice launches MUCH faster than LibreOffice.
NeoOffice :: Open at Launch menu to open Calc or Impress instead of Writer at launch
- File :: Browse All Versions menu to restore previous versions of your documents
- Native file locking to safely edit files in iCloud Drive, Dropbox, or network drives
- Native Mac OS X grammar checking
- Native Mac OS X text highlighting
- Support for Mac OS X Services
- Native floating tool windows
- Menus open when no documents are open
- Command-clicking on window titlebar
NeoOffice Now Available at App Store
John Carter has some good news. "In the past, NeoOffice (which contains a full featured word processor nearly identical to Word in MS Office) was available for a nominal fee of $10, which presumably had to be renewed every year. NeoOffice is now available in the App Store for $29.99, and presumably all future updates will be FREE. I would expect this to apply to minor updates, but major updates might come with a fee (and discounted if you own a previous version).
Seeing Stars & Planets
This month's Prescott Astronomy Club meeting on October 5 will feature John Carter and his presentation, "Planets in Motion." The meetings are always held at the Prescott Public Library in the Founders Suite from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. every first Wednesday of the month. John will be using his MacBook Pro; his slides were created using NeoOffice. Take a look at NeoOffice here. "All are welcome," John announces.
Office, Free?
Some of you may have decided to download NeoOffice for all of your Documentation, Presentation, and Spreadsheet needs (because it's free). Now what? John Carter shares some details here.
"Would you like to get to know this application a little better? What better way than with a tutorial that guides you through several practice items for each type of document? You can get this tutorial online as an eBook in PDF format here.
"That site contains links to several documents in the section labelled 'Download Documentation.' The one I recommend is OpenOffice.org 3x Conceptual Guides to get a thorough treatment of all aspects of NeoOffice. Please download any and all documents that pique your interest. And don't forget to grab the OpenOffice Lesson Files (a zip file that you have to unzip) that go with the OpenOffice.org 3x Conceptual Guides. Download all these files to the same folder in your hard drive where you can easily access them.
"Even though these documents are written for OpenOffice, they will work for NeoOffice. The differences will be slight, if any, and the compatibility is 100%.
"There are significant advantages to using NeoOffice over OpenOffice, mainly speed and in additional features added specifically for the Mac.
"The NeoOffice documentation shows how to create a PDF file using 'File->Export as PDF...', but sometimes that method doesn't result in a 100% accurate rendition of the file. The method I prefer to create a PDF file is to use File->Print, then select 'Save as PDF...' from the PDF button in the first print window:
"This gives you a 100% compatible output with the way it looks on the screen."
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