cross-posted from: https://lemmy.ml/post/4802776
As you know, this will be the final version of LO to have Semantic Versioning; all future releases will have Calendar Versioning.
How much of that is just new users doing their 23rd Arch install?
Probably zero, since LibreOffice is a part of the repo.
And so far we’ve had 1,587,383 downloads from our site! (So that doesn’t include Linux distributions that package it themselves.)
I would’ve almost considered those downloads as reported in some way. Debain does queries into package use. Figured it might trickle down.
It trickles down like that time I peed while doing a handstand.
There is really only one rule when doing the handstand, and you broke it.
So true 😂
The internet is slowly healing itself
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Something of that size is nice to have calendar versioning.
I think it’s nice for end users regardless. Very easy to tell the age of your install.
Especially when a project is fairly mature and not making breaking api changes regularly.
sadly, LibreWrite still has random crashes, and omg their auto bullet system is totally hopeless.
If you could recreate the crashes and get those steps into a bug report that would be great for the developers.
I second this!
I just wish they would get enough funding (governmental?) to make it more like the g suite, which is based on it. UX is still a nightmare.
I like it just fine with the tabbed interface
My s/o has regular crashes in Windows when I don’t remember when I last had one in Linux. Her version is less often updated than mine (I have to lay my hands on her machine to do it manually) but the problem tends to persist, although maybe a bit less lately.
I suspect that not all platforms perform the same.
Check out the Chocolatey package manager for Windows. It makes updates for all our common packages available through git/yum/brew easily installed/updated on Windows. PowerShell will never be anywhere near as nice as sitting at a proper linux terminal, but Chocolatey makes the Windows experience slightly more bearable when you need to use it.
Thanks for the pointer, I’ll look into that.
I haven’t really used Windows seriously since before they switched to NT, so I just have no idea what tools are available for it.
I just use winget to update Libreoffice since it’s already there in windows 10/11.
“Winget update LibreOffice” in a power shell terminal.
Updating it manually sucks.
it does not crash for me in windows.
Hm. According to you and others it seems to be even more random than I thought.
I use it on windows daily for work reports. No crashes. Maybe depends on what features you’re using.
On Linux I’ve found that the flatpak is more reliable than other delivery formats for whatever reason.
I have never had librewrite crash but I also don’t do use it extensively. Like maybe a doc a month.
Hey I contributed 2 of those just this month reinstalling Windows after an update broke my raid array by modifying the partitions on one of the drives rather than the array. And then decided the drive was corrupt. And then finally accepting this as the last straw and giving up and installing Linux as my primary OS. Only keeping Windows for the few games that require it, or I’d just run a VM for the few other times I might need it.
It would be great is LibreOffice Calc had more data analysis features.
Is this the best open source doc editor? I’m slowly degoogling and using drive/docs is a hard one to move away from. Can LO open Google docs?
It’s more of an alternative to Microsoft Office, but it is mostly considered THE open source office suite for GNU/Linux.
For something cloud-based, you may want to consider OnlyOffice. I’ve never used it, so I can’t say how good it is.
future releases are bound to be confusing!
CalVer isn’t confusing.
Would be lovely to have a download per release diagram along w/ the release date (b/c Summer matters in the FOSS world 😆)
It still sucks though. It doesn’t play nice with dark mode on Windows at all. I’ve been trying to get away from Google docs and I was hoping Libre would be a decent alternative, but it just feels bloated and clunky in comparison. I really wish it didn’t.
If anyone has alternatives I’m all ears.
It doesn’t suck, it’s just different from what you are used to. Especially the compatibility to Excel-Formulars impresses me.
But of course there are open source alternatives. OnlyOffice is often recommendet if you prefer the Microsoft Office look. I think you could also self host it to make it a real alternative to google docs, but I haven’t looked into it.
Avoid Openoffice, it sounds similar to Onlyoffice. It is the predecessor of libreoffice and deprecated.
Dark mode issues hahahahaha
Should probably put it on the MS Store, because somebody else already has and is charging money for it…
I have mixed feeling about the calendar versioning…
share it with us
Everything started with her…
I’m also wondering why you would stop using SemVer