
TABLE OF CONTENTS

Introduction, Part 1: Major word
processors

If ever a maxim fit, one
size does not fit all applies accurately to word processors. First
rule: Choose
your word processor according
to your environment and needs,
and inherent in that choice is
choosing your format.
Second rule: be happy with your choice, because statistics show
you're not likely to change.
How a word processor is judged depends on what role one assumes. For example, a
graduate student has more exacting demands from a word processor than a
supervisor, who uses her database program to issue memos and take notes that can
be directly shared on task rather than a rerouting communication through a word
processor. The same goes for a self-employed person compared with one who merely
uses a word processor to primarily write letters. Many novelists never used word
processors, and they still do not, as a word processor's emphasis on formatting
and layout is often a
distraction to writing. Thus
what role one assumes will
define need, and need will
determine what one demands
from their word processor.
Perhaps the biggest arguments
occur between the failure to
look beyond the word processor
itself and consider instead
the format. Documents are
written to be shared, and on
top of old world printing,
it's been Adobe's PDF
(Portable Document Format)
that has enabled it most. The
commoditization of Microsoft's
Office Open XML format (MS-OOXML) with OpenOffice's
OASIS OpenDocument Format
(ODF)
through the
interoperability work of
Novell will only mean that
where before PDF was the
primary format vehicle for
sharing documents (along with
HTML, XML, and .doc), documents will
merely be shared directly
through XML. Already, with the help of online word
processors, one can upload a
document to say, Google Docs,
and a manager, teacher, or
entire group can have
read/write access to any
number of documents among many
formats. The reality is that
it doesn't matter which word
processor you use as long as
it makes your work easier and
more efficient. The
commoditization signifies that
as formats become more
interchangeable, what specific
word processor is used becomes
irrelevant to the life of the
document.
However,
it's important to go a step
further now that ODF is
ISO-certified as the
international standard for
creating office documents.
Before there was an ISO
standard universal document
format, all applications
sought to support as many
formats as possible to
increase their
interoperability. While some
formats would have allowed
better interoperability, e.g.,
RTF (Rich-Text Format), they
were not used by the
market-leading vendor
(Microsoft). Thus, all
programs should write
import/export filters for the
OASIS OpenDocument Format
(ODF) shared by OpenOffice.
The first thing OpenOffice did
was not lock itself into its
original format (SXW), but
wrote filters for Microsoft's
file formats as a way ticket
to the game. Doing so directly
contributed to the creation
and adoption of ODF for
OpenOffice and has helped the
entire office field arrive at
a truly Open Standard Open
Document Format (ODF). This is
critical because not only is
ODF increasingly supported by
more applications (almost all
the online word processors do
so), for the purpose of
document life and control, it
should be the only format used
by
governments and companies,
as Georg Greve notes.
Let us be clear: the choice is
not between being able to
interoperate with Microsoft
thanks to Novell and Corel
doing interoperability work
for them or being stuck in
some ODF ghetto, unable to
read Microsoft documents.
Everyone wants to
interoperate. The question is
how. The problem is Microsoft.
The solution lies with
Microsoft. It's 2007, and it's
time that Microsoft followed
the same standards everyone
else, instead of insisting the
world bend to their ways.
Microsoft's MS-OOXML doesn't
disrupt
this propensity. It's not
only unacceptable, but quite
strange that even now
we can't all freely share
documents with one another, no
matter what operating system
we like to use. (For example, Microsoft Office 2007 documents cannot be read or
opened in the Mac version of Office!) But we can send
each other email, read each
others blogs and websites,
even if you are on Windows,
I'm on Linux, and Uncle Fester
is using OS X. Why isn't that
the norm for everything? It
ought to be. The bottleneck is
Microsoft. FOSS software is
happy to interoperate with any
other software. Why won't
Microsoft? That is the $64,000
question in 2007. All this
only matters if you intend to
use Microsoft Word. The good
news is that there are many
good alternatives.
Which word processor is the
best? Depends on whom you ask. The good news is that there are several great choices
among word processors now, including online word processors that bring needed
collaboration and publishing features, centered around the ODF format, which is
not tied to any specific word processor vendor.
Thus this review won't champion
a "winner," because most of
the word processors reviewed
were either good or very good.
With so many good choices in
the word processor category,
it's impossible to say someone
shouldn't use something like
TextMaker or Atlantis if they
like it, are productive
with it, and it suits their
needs. And debates between
Word and OpenOffice often come
down to cost and control in
the end for businesses;
personal preference for
individuals. So you don't feel cheated, if you skip to the very end, I
do offer my own personal choices within each
category and the briefest reasons why.
What to
consider in a major word processor

Suitability. Does it meet your needs in
your business, at home, at
school, or in whatever role
you use it? Can you work with
one at home and another at the
office?
Ease-of-use. A short learning curve. This
is where the user interface
(UI) makes the difference.
Does it have a solid Help file
to get you started?
Power. Does it handle complex or
large documents well? You'll
notice a word processor's
performance quickly, but
sooner or later, you're going
to need power.
Default file format. The two de facto formats
around the globe are
OASIS OpenDocument
(ODF) format and Word's
binary .doc format (2007 has
the XML-based .docx
format, but only WordPerfect
and OpenOffice will have
conversion filters for it). Which will you choose,
and which will you need to use
in your work? Can it export
to: (1) ODF, (2) Word, (3)
PDF? You may not need
additional format choices,
but if you share your files
with others, you will. Online
word processors, however,
offers a lovely workaround
solution to this age-old
compatibility problem.
User Interface. Is it familiar
or distracting? Can you find
features easily? Can you setup
and build your documents
without frustration? In other
words, does it aid or hinder
your work?
________________________________________________
OpenOffice.org


___________________
WHAT TO LIKE
- Open
file format.
OpenOffice.org is the first
office suite (and word
processor) to use the new
OASIS OpenDocument Format,
the future-proof
ISO certified international standard for
office documents (ISO/IEC
26300:2006).
OpenDocument is designed
for the future, not the
past. ODF is
overseen by the
Organization for the
Advancement of Structured
Information Standards (OASIS)
and is supported by
Microsoft rivals IBM,
Google, and Sun
Microsystems, among other
companies.
Here's a detailed
comparison of
OpenOffice.org
and Word 2007 formats
according to the
OpenDocument Fellowship.
To top it off, the
OpenDocument Foundation
has finished an
ODF
Converter for Microsoft
Office. With the ODF
converter (only for Word
at this time), Microsoft Office
users can save their
documents in the ODF
format from the File menu
just like any other doc
type. The ODF converter can
be installed into all
versions of Office ranging
back to Microsoft Office
97. Below is a screenshot
of how it sits within the
normal context of the
File, Save, and Open (or
"Office") menu, but is not
integrated within the Save
As subdialog.

Note that it is Microsoft
who is funding the
third-party writing of the
ODF plugin for Office 2007 via
"MCAN" (Microsoft-Clever
Age-Novell), not
the other way around. And as
Rob Wier notes, Microsoft seems to have designed it to intentionally
annoy users: "Since Microsoft is the one providing the, "Funding,
Architectural & Technical Guidance and Project co-coordination" one would
think that they would contribute more in the area where they are uniquely
qualified to assist, the full and native integration of the ODF support into
Office."
OpenOffice.org has .doc
support and while Novell
has promised to share the
results of its MS-OOXML-to-ODF
converter efforts with the
OpenOffice.org project,
but I agree with
Walt Hucks, who
suggests "waiting for the
[OpenDocument
Foundation's] DaVinci
plugin to be completed and
released later this year.
It will allow users to
natively use OpenDocument
Formats, even as the
default file format, while
preserving
Microsoft-specific
features in ODF files (and
hopefully, specific
features of other
applications as well,
including those which
Microsoft Office does not
understand or support)." The
list of features not
supported by the MCAN
ODF converter is long, as
in really long. This means
that if you're an
OpenOffice.org user who
must use Word 2007, save
all your files in .doc
format only using
Compatibility Mode. This
is your best chance for
conversion between the two
programs.
As of 2006, ODF is
the ISO certified
international standard for
office documents,
not MS-OOXML, nor .doc.
For any other vendor, it's
easier to write a
conversion filter for ODF
than will ever be for
MS-OOXML, among other reasons
for the sheer sake of
supporting Microsoft's
backward compatibility
with its previous
proprietary formats over
the past 18 years. Corel
has announced it will
support both ODF and MS-OOXML
in the next WordPerfect
version. That was more than seven months ago as of this writing and no word
yet on their progress, or lack thereof.
-
Broad
language support.
Use OpenOffice.org in your
own language, how much
easier is that! Its Native
Language Project is one of
its most popular for
contributors.
-
Largest document capacity
of any word processor
tested: 65,535 pages saves
to an XML file only 3.59M
in size. Typically
documents saved in ODF
format are 20-25% smaller
than Microsoft's new MS-OOXML
format for Word 2007.
- Great
multi-platform
support
(including 32- and 64-bit
OSes), Windows, Linux, Solaris
(x86 and SPARC), OS X, and
Google Docs and
Spreadsheets.
- A
strong academic word
processor, given the
ability of anyone
notably university
departments can specify
a citation standard on
their own, and its ability
to handle large documents
with ease.
OpenOffice.org's new
ODF Toolkit Project
will only expand its use
in the future and among
many other applications.
- Enhanced PDF management
and direct export to
LaTex. These two features
alone make it invaluable
for academic use, and
OpenOffice.org's PDF export
has been refined to be
highly accurate among
colors, links, tables, and
images. Paper use in
business and academia is
fast declining, and with
built-in PDF document
creation ability, it's one
less app you'll need to
buy.
- Bibliography (or citation)
database. Accurate,
customizable, and
extensible bibliography
database, and while
OpenOffice.org's Base isn't
very powerful,
StarOffice's Adabas D is if you want to go even further. It looks like you'd
expect, but works well and never loses a record.
- Book
view is handy, and the
flexible print preview is
very fast.

-
Customizability.
Unlike Word 2007, you have
far more control over
OpenOffice.org's workspace
and UI. Although Microsoft
claims that less than 5%
of all users ever change
any of the default
settings in a program, I
suspect it's a far higher
percentage. Depending on
your role vis-a-vis the
software student,
writer, manager, support,
legal, etc. eventually
you're going to want to
customize a part of the
tool you use every day, if
for no other reason than
greater efficiency and
workflow.
-
Document Wizards let
you save your creations as
a new style, which speeds
up template creation.
- Document recovery is
excellent, since I had two
electrical failures and
managed to get back where
I was working each time.
- Attractive, clean,
familiar interface,
provided you're not
enamored by Microsoft's
Ribbon in Word 2007
(pardon me, I meant to say
"Fluent UI" see below).
Interfaces eventually
change, but for now, if
you're comfortable with
the traditional Windows
office application
interface, then
OpenOffice.org
will suit you.
- All
the advantages of Open
Source; that is, no
vendor lock-in of either
licensing, file format, or
technology. Your documents
are in no danger of being
made obsolete by the next
version's file format
changes. Also, as ODF is
also an
Open Standard, it lets
you choose which software
you want to use. If
implemented in other
software programs, you're
not limited to
programs that use ODF
as their default file
format, viz.,
OpenOffice.org, or subject
to the
poor converters of ODF
files from other sources.
You're free to choose the
word processor you
like most.
- Easy
to learn and use. If
you've used any word
processor especially
Microsoft Word in the
last dozen years, then you
already know a lot about
OpenOffice.org.
OpenOffice.org's
learning curve is
slight and the suite is
highly customizable.
___________________
WHAT NOT TO LIKE
- Suite-dependence.
OpenOffice.org/StarOffice
cannot be installed as a
standalone app, as it is
integrated into a full
suite of programs. Then
again, this can be
considered a strength.
Once it's open, everything
is fast thereafter. But
OpenOffice.org's slow
startup speed is due
to the fact that the JAVA Runtime Environment is loading
rather than a solitary DLL file.
- Narrow dialog windows.
Many scrolled lists in
dialogs such as Customize
> Add Commands are too narrow,
unfortunately require both
horizontal and vertical
scrolling within list
panes, cutting off text.
Unforgivable in the 21st
century.
- Word
Count dialog could
provide more stats. No
keyboard shortcut for Word
Count dialog either. Just
add this as an option to
the status bar.
-
Outlining is solid and very
similar to Word 2003, only its more customizable with acute positioning,
character, and graphics options. Still, this is one of OpenOffice.org weaker
points and is no longer enough to get by. Fortunately it shares all the same
keyboard shortcuts as outlining in Word 2003 which reduces your "switch
time" when moving to OpenOffice.org.
- No
Horizontal Page Setup
format. Time to
provide a Horizontal
template for
OpenOffice.org. I
understand that Writer is
primarily a word
processing application,
but with all the advanced
tools for drawing and
tables you can pretty much
use it to build any type
of document as long as
it scrolls vertically. How
about a horizontal
template that allows users
to build documents that
scroll left-to-right. This
would be great for
creating workflows, family
trees, organizational
charts, and storyboarding.
- That
big fat download.
Someday maybe just
OpenOffice.org can be updated
without having to download
the entire program.
Someday. At least
OpenOffice.org added
automatic updates.
___________________
CONCLUSION
OpenOffice.org
seems to taken the best
features of Microsoft Word
2003 such Format Painter,
document recovery, hosted
templates, nested tables, Edit
> Paste special, etc. but
left out the bloat; for every
feature is not mimicked. So if
you're a fan of Word 97-2003,
then you already know your way
around OpenOffice.org.
OpenOffice.org
3.0 is due late 2007/early 2008,
as many word processors are
due to be upgraded over the next year.
Don't look for OpenOffice.org
to share the Ribbon feature of
Microsoft Office. Microsoft
has forbidden products that
directly compete with it to
implement the Ribbon, not that
anyone would want to. While
a move to
OpenOffice.org or StarOffice need not
accompany a migration away
from Windows, these suites can
pave the way to such a move in
the future a measure of
flexibility that one cannot
expect elsewhere, and still
retain your documents'
integrity. Novell will aid in
this by offering
interoperability between
OpenOffice.org OASIS OpenDocument
Format (ODF) and Microsoft
MS-OOXML format later in 2007. Beyond the
anti-Microsoft emotional element, OpenOffice.org's code development
is open to all and its recent
ODF Toolkit Project allows
developers expand ODF's range
of use in other applications,
and to improve the ability to
use OpenOffice.org as a
programming framework for
creating and processing
OpenDocument (ODF) documents
rather than to use it as a
desktop application. It is
based on the OpenOffice.org
source code, and can be
tailored to process ODF
documents outside traditional
office desktop applications.
Thus OpenOffice.org stands
and falls on its own
reputation. It has a bright,
secure future, and its user
community brings a lot of
excitement to it, making it
fun.
StarOffice should be included with
OpenOffice.org because it's often
a choice of businesses for its
support options. The
differences between StarOffice
and OpenOffice.org are subtle but
distinct. The source code
available at OpenOffice.org
does not consist of all of the
StarOffice code. Usually, the
reason for this is that Sun
pays to license third party
code included in StarOffice, but which OpenOffice.org does not have
permission to include. StarOffice
costs $70 (or $35 for an
Enterprise license), whereas
OpenOffice.org is free (but the
OpenOffice.org project does take
donations!). So if you're feeling generous and you're a long-time OpenOffice.org
user, consider buying a license to StarOffice. Those
things which are present in StarOffice but are
not available on
OpenOffice.org
are not extraordinarily
different but include:
-
Certain fonts
(including,
especially,
Asian-language fonts)
- The
database component
Adabas D
-
Additional templates
-
Extensive Clip Art
Gallery
-
Some sorting
functionality (Asian
versions)
-
Additional file
filters
-
Commercial spell
checker and thesaurus
-
Migration assessment
tool (Enterprise
Edition)
-
Macro migration tool
(Enterprise Edition)
-
Configuration
management tools
LINKS
OpenOffice.org 2.x Features -
http://www.openoffice.org/dev_docs/features/2.0/index.html
OpenOffice.org FAQs -
http://www.openoffice.org/FAQs/mostfaqs.html
Wikipedia - OpenDocument (ODF) -
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OpenDocument
OpenOffice.org Wiki -
http://wiki.services.openoffice.org/wiki/Main_Page
Sun ODF Plugin for Microsoft Office 2003 (screenshots)
-
http://www.sun.com/software/star/openoffice/
ODF Alliance -
http://www.odfalliance.org/news.php
REVIEWS
Various OpenOffice 2.x Reviews -
http://www.openoffice.org/product/reviews.html
CNET -
http://reviews.cnet.com/OpenOffice_2/4505-3524_7-31624261.html
eWeek -
http://www.eweek.com/print_article2/0,1217,a=163156,00.asp
Financial Times -
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/1c5e53b8-b205-11d9-8c61-00000e2511c8.html
PCPro -
http://www.pcpro.co.uk/reviews/80012/openoffice-2.html
ComputerWorld -
http://computerworld.com.sg/ShowPage.aspx?pagetype=2&articleid=2742&pubid=3&issueid=66
PCMag -
http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,1895,1851003,00.asp
vnunet.com -
http://www.vnunet.com/personal-computer-world/software/2140229/openoffice-org
Good Gear Guide -
http://www.goodgearguide.com.au/index.php/taxid;1730094674;pid;1587;pt;1#cb
Sun Microsystems -
http://www.sun.com/software/star/staroffice/reviews.jsp
________________________________________________
Microsoft Word 2007


___________________
WHAT TO LIKE
- The
new user interface. If
you like it, then you're
going to love Word 2007.
Although I found the
Ribbon more useful in
Excel than in Word, the
stated goal for it was to
make more of Word's
features accessible, as
they had become buried
deeper and deeper, thus
resulting in the dreaded
bloat word over the past
several versions. CTRL+F1
toggles the Ribbon on and
off. You can also use the
ALT, Tab, Arrow, and Enter
keys to navigate the
ribbon, and can still use
any KeyTip with the ribbon
collapsed. Note:
Microsoft has renamed the
Ribbon the "Microsoft
Office Fluent User
Interface." No thank
you, I'll stick with
Ribbon.
- Live
Preview which
includes the ability to
preview changes such as
examining font changes or
table formats without
changing the setting and
then reversing it via undo
is helpful, though
WordPerfect has had this
feature for several years.
- Word
2007's desktop publishing
features. Word 2007
embeds a broad array of
desktop publishing
features to the word
processor. From Themes to
tables to graphics, it
really lets you be
creative and professional
with your documents. In my opinion, this may be the best reason to buy
Office 2007 for its desktop publishing features and power. In fact, you
may even save money by doing so.
- Building Blocks. Word
2007 can be used to
assemble documents from
frequently-used or
predefined content such as
disclaimer text, pull
quotes, sidebars, cover
pages, and other types of
content. This will help
ensure you don't spend
needless time recreating
content or copying and
pasting between documents;
it also helps ensure
consistency across all of
the documents created
within your organization.
With this feature, Word
finally catches up to
WordPerfect's Quick
Styles.
- Recent Documents are now
fully displayed and
expanded. When you
click the Office button in
Office 2007, the Office
menu appears, containing a
two-pane view somewhat
similar to the Windows
start menu. When the menu
appears, the right pane is
fully consumed by the
Recent Documents list. The
list was designed to be
friendly, clear, and
self-explanatory; and it
is.
- Contextual spelling
is
really useful; absolutely
helpful.

- One-click access to
references. Hold down
the ALT key and click any
word, and depending on
which reference you have
selected under the Review
tab, Word 2007 will either
translate it, define it,
find a synonym, or look it
up using the Encarta
Encyclopedia.
- Word 2007's outlining
abilities remain the strongest in the field, in large part because they're
easy to master. If you routinely create complex or long documents, you
either need an outlining program, such as Microsoft OneNote, or one that
will let you think on the fly. Word 2007 lets you do that with both speed
and ease. Planning a document is a little bit like putting a puzzle
together. You try a piece here and then over there. A topic you thought was
minor suddenly looms larger in importance. When you're brainstorming and
plotting, it's important to keep an open mind. Word's Outline view is an
incredible outlining tool. It lets you move large blocks of headings and
text from one part of your document to another, and rank headings and their
accompanied text higher or lower in relative importance. In Outline view,
you can even show or hide different parts of your document, to focus your
attention on what's important at the moment. Best of all, Outline view is
just another document view, so you don't have to outline in a separate
document.
- Live
Word count and Zoom
slider are integrated into
the status bar. I've
championed more
informative and accurate
word count dialog in text
editors and word
processors for years, and
still few get it right. But
Live Word Count on the
status bar is a boon to
writers everywhere.
- Expanded document capacity
from previous versions, now each document can
32,755 pages long.
- Contextual Tabs show
features related to the
selected object. Whenever
you select or insert a
picture, table, chart, or
any other object, the
specialized tools for
working with that object
appear as additional tabs
in the Ribbon. When you
click away from the
object, the tools put
themselves away. To
quickly bring forward the
Contextual Tabs for an
object, simply
double-click the object.
(This could also be a
feature to dislike, as it
creates havoc in
PowerPoint, for example.)
Several additional tabs
will pop-up depending on
what youre doing. For
example, select a table in
Word or a chart in Excel
and new tabs appear to
help you edit the design
(layout, color, and so
on). This is similar to
the context-sensitive
menus that pop-up when you
right-click on an object,
except in this case they
use the graphically rich
Ribbon. In fact,
applications will add tabs
from other applications --
if you paste an Excel
chart in a Word document,
then click on the chart
from within Word, Word
adds three tabs you would
ordinarily see in Excel to
manipulate the chart --
all without leaving Word.
-
Built-in Equation Editor.
Finally, and it's snazzy.

- Themes. How fast can
you create a great looking
document? The structured
editing of Themes comes to
your rescue with galleries
or stunning choices. Think
of Themes as custom styles
in the hands of a graphic
designer. Notable is color
themes which take shades
of any chosen color and
make it consistent
throughout a document,
tables, borders, lines,
boxes, backgrounds, and so
on. For those who compose
regular newsletters and
brochures, this is one of
the best reasons to
acquire Word 2007.
- Graphics.
Tables and Charting
now take seconds rather
than a minute, even
complex ones. Really
striking is the new Smart Art feature.
From flowcharts to
relationship charts, Smart
Art lets you produce some
stunning diagrams. With
the Smart Art Gallery you
can pick a design, then
fill in a panel with the
text you want to appear in
the diagram (the
description of the steps
in your flowchart, for
example). Need to add an
item to a diagram? No
problem; use the small
outline attached to the
diagram to enter a new
step in the flowchart and
Office redraws the
diagram, any connectors,
and adjusts font size
appropriately.
- A
better programming model.
Visual Studio Tools for
Office gives developers a
greater level of
confidence that
applications will do what
they're supposed to. VBA
was then; Visual Studio
and .NET programming tools
are now.
- Little things. Using
ALT+Drag to box-select
text is useful for
grabbing specific parts of
text. However, selecting
text within a table using
ALT+Drag will open the
Research Pane.
___________________
WHAT NOT TO LIKE
- New
document format
compatibility.
The new file format,
.docx, is needlessly
complex XML for a document
specification, weighing in
at almost 7,000 pages
compared to ODF's 600 (ODF
uses existing standards
such as W3C; Microsoft has
chosen to stick with
tradition and create their
own standards for MS-OOXML). For the
meantime as in the next
two years if you don't
upgrade to Word 2007, you will need
the
Office 2007 Compatibility
Pack. If you want to
hold out for Office 2009
while using Word 2003,
then this Pack allows for
previous versions going
back to Office 2000 to
save files in the new
.docx format. As mentioned
above in the
OpenOffice.org section,
the Microsoft-funded
"MCAN" group
(Microsoft-Clever
Age-Novell) has released
an ODF plugin for Word
2007, but the
list of unsupported
features by the MCAN
ODF converter is very
long, and the problems
they face
are insurmountable. If
you're an Word 2007 user
who must also use
OpenOffice.org, save all
your files in .doc format
only using Compatibility
Mode. This is your best
chance for conversion
between the two programs.
The poor performance of
the ODF plugin
was expected, given
the poor technical
approach sought by Clever
Age in light of the
non-standard XML
implementation of the MS-OOXML
formats. Ironically, this favors the
ISO-certified ODF format,
making it a better choice around the world.
In the end, despite its
"open" moniker, the
Microsoft MS-OOXML format
remains strictly
proprietary, as Microsoft
refuses to disclose the
difference between its
published file
specification and its
actual one to other
vendors and developers.
What this means is
business as usual: if you
use Microsoft Office 2007
to create your
intellectual property,
you're going to need
Microsoft software to read
those files properly and
accurately. Below is what a 6039-page spec looks like, and ask yourself if
anyone other than Microsoft will ever be able to fully and correctly
implement the specification. Frankly, that's because it's a product
specification, not a specification for office document data.

The MS-OOXML specification, all 6,000+ pages.
Why does this matter?
Let's say you want to use
Word 2007 but save your
documents to an open
format, e.g., ODF. The new
ODF converter in its first
release is like many 1.0
releases: awful except for
the simplest documents.
Expect it to improve, but
as of now,
it's unusable through
several sample attempts.
Also, the ODF converter is
not part of the Save As
subdialog under the File
(Office) menu, nor can ODF
be defined as the default
file format. Fair enough,
that's typical and
predictable of Microsoft,
but there is also no
keyboard shortcut to save
as ODF. Redefining a
keyboard shortcut to "Save
File As Other Formats"
only brings up Microsoft's
formats along with RTF and
TXT. Point is, Microsoft
wants to make it easy for
you to use their
proprietary format, and a
tad more difficult to use
any other.
- OGA,
Office Genuine Advantage.
Microsoft increases piracy
detection by forcing users
to submit to their
"genuine advantage"
program. Microsoft Office
is well-connected to the
internet through many of
its features such as
templates, updates, and
references. Access or
download any one and if
your copy of Office isn't
validated, then your
software goes into Reduced
Functionality Mode,
preventing you from
creating or saving any
documents. Typical of any
anti-piracy measure, it
punishes and harasses
honest users most. Worse,
if you use Microsoft
Office 2007 to create your
intellectual property, if
Microsoft one day decides
your copy is not genuine,
you could effectively be
locked out of your own
copyrighted material.
- It's
Microsoft,
whatever that's worth;
often a positive:
Large
amounts of capital and
available resources that
dwarfs competitors (except
for Google);
Microsoft is the
established leader for
office software, with
significant mainstream
brand equity;
Large and
very significant influence
over partners and
complementary suppliers;
Interoperability amongst
office products and
ancillary lines of
business;
Microsoft appeals to corporations
and large institutions;
It's
Microsoft,
whatever that's worth;
sometimes a negative:
Not free
and in fact can be very
expensive for a small
business, non-profit, or
an emerging market;
No
easy-to-use collaboration
tools that rival the
leaders in the online
office space (more on this
in Part 3);
Web-based
delivery is not a core
competency. Microsoft would
potentially need to
reorganize operation,
although their
FlexGo initiative
seeks to allow users to
pay for Microsoft Office on a
per use, subscription
basis each month;
Microsoft's proprietary
file format locks your
files to a corporation.
- New
user interface. You'll
love it or hate it, until
you are accustomed to it.
But if you're an old Word
horse, it takes time to
find everything. In the UI
redesign, the alternative
to allow the Ribbon to
dock as a sidebar would
have allowed more of the
document to be visible
given new letterbox 16x9
monitors. This was
considered and rejected
for some reason. Other UI
complaints:
(1) An
extra step has been added
to almost every keyboard
shortcut;
(2) The
Options dialog is
resizable, but its
subdialogs are not. Why?
(3) Unlike
previous versions of Word,
you
cannot customize the
Ribbon, only the Quick
Access toolbar (what we
know as the Title bar);
(4) The
Ribbon is
too fat, being 47
pixels thicker than that
of Office 2003; its icons
are too large; and its
rows are too spread out;
(5) A nice
UI touch would be an
onscreen toggle of what
the F-keys do, even if you
rekey them.
- Dependencies are
everywhere. Certain
apps and features work
only when used with the
Office System servers.
Office SharePoint Server
(formerly SharePoint
Portal Server) is the
keystone. Excel
spreadsheets can be
managed centrally, but
only via SharePoint's
Excel Services. Word
document collaborations
and PowerPoint's Slide
Library require
SharePoint, too.
- Full
citation dialog
scrolls instead of
expands, which is an
incredible blunder,
although I've never known
a single researcher or
writer to trust their
references to a form.
Researchers might keep
them in databases, but
it's one of their own
making, because they know
their fields. Secondly,
pulling a reference from
Word's Master List is far
too labyrinthine. Simply
copying the functionality
of the Endnotes program
would have been smarter.
Worse, while sources are
saved as XML, Word 2007's
documentation styles are
XSLTs, making it
incredibly difficult for
anyone to create their
own, e.g., a university
department or in-house
publishing division.
Compare with
OpenOffice.org
which uses the ZOOM
standard, which can work
with z39.50, and the newer
SRW (SOAP) and SRU
(RESTful) protocols. Why
Microsoft is reinventing
the wheel (again) with
citations makes Word 2007
unattractive for future
academic use, most notably
for graduate students,
writers, and scholars.
- The
Help Menu is gone (as
are all menus), and
the About box is moved to
the "Resources" page
within Options. It
contains all of the
information about updating
and getting support for
Office, which tech support
will hate. I can see users
yelling in the phone:
"Where is it?" not to
mention this box is now
buried six clicks deep.
Why not put this at the
bottom of the File menu or
somewhere in the View tab?
Also, the Help file (or
"system" as Microsoft
calls it) is virtually
useless. Using the index
often returns inaccurate
results. Most of the
topics are thin on content
and it's as if Microsoft
would flesh out the Help
file contents as time went
on, rather than when the
product was released.
-
Microsoft Word is still a
de facto standard. As
Bob Sutor notes: "The
basic problem with a de
facto standard is that
it is controlled by a
single vendor who can, and
often does, change it
whenever the vendor
decides to do so. This
frequently happens when a
product goes from one
major version to another.
At that point, everyone
else who is trying to
interoperate with the
information created in the
owning vendors product
must scramble and try to
make their own software
work again."
- Price by itself, the
most expensive word
processor here.
- Licensing the
most restrictive of
the word processors listed
here. Anti-piracy checks
are now mandatory.
Microsoft's Office Genuine
Advantage (OGA) program
will require mandatory
validation of Office
software. Also, any Office
Online templates
downloaded from within the
Office 2007 Microsoft
Office System applications
will require validation of
legitimacy. OGA is a
sister program to Windows
Genuine Advantage (WGA),
launched in July 2005 as a
program that automatically
checks a user's version of
Windows to ensure it is
not counterfeit or
pirated. Microsoft has
integrated this check
directly into the next
version of Windows,
Windows Vista, as part of
what it is calling a
"Software Protection
Platform." Like
Vista, Microsoft wants to
enforce the "one license
per device" restriction
rather than one license to
each user, which
discourages hobbyists.
___________________
CONCLUSION
With the 2007 version, Microsoft Word has become what I always dreamed it
would someday be: a killer desktop publishing app built-in to my word processor!
In my view, that's its biggest draw. The whole point of
Microsoft's redesign of Word's
user interface is to enable
users to spend more time
writing and less time
formatting. In a way it
succeeds and can save you
time, but at the price of
spending more time overall
inside the word processor
itself constantly tinkering. As Oliver Rist of
InfoWorld
states: "Microsoft's other
goal for Office 2007 is to
differentiate itself as much
as possible from its new
competitors." This new version
is particularly aimed at
office workers who spend years
with various versions of the
program and make their living
with Word as their primary
office tool, but won't bother
to study the program and learn
it. But expect your learning
curve of Word 2007 to increase
if you're a long-term current
user. New users should have
little problem adapting the
new user interface. Word 2007
embeds a broad array of
desktop publishing features to
the word processor, and if
your work employs composing
brochures, stylish reports,
this is your word processor. But in order to master it, set
aside time to learn it.
However, it falls short in the
academic arena and students
and researchers should be
advised not to use Word 2007's
bibliographic feature. If your
work demands consistent
graphic documents, such as
brochures, catalogs, extensive
reports, or broad
collaboration on projects,
then Microsoft Word 2007 is
well worth your time and
money. If you're a student, scholar,
or writer, I cannot
recommend Word 2007. With regard to its new file format, it's safer to save your
documents in the binary .doc format for reasons of both backward and forward
compatibility, as the MS-OOXML specification will never be implemented by anyone
other than Microsoft. Simply put, that means if you use and save documents in
Office 2007's new file format, your data will be locked-in by Microsoft and the
only way you'll have reliable, readable access to it is by, through, and of
Microsoft alone.
LINKS
FlexGo: Microsoft's
Pay-as-you-go Computing -
http://www.microsoft.com/whdc/flexgo/default.mspx
Microsoft Office Fluent User
Interface (doc file) -
http://www.microsoft.com/presspass/presskits/2007office/docs/2007OfficeUIFS.doc
Open XML Formats FAQs -
http://office.microsoft.com/en-us/products/HA101723691033.aspx
Microsoft Office Compatibility
Pack for the 2007 formats -
http://www.microsoft.com/office/preview/beta/converter.mspx
Word Team blog -
http://blogs.msdn.com/microsoft_office_word/
Word 2003-2007 command
reference guide -
http://officebeta.iponet.net/en-us/help/HA100744321033.aspx
System Requirements for Word -
http://office.microsoft.com/en-us/help/HA101668651033.aspx
ODF Add-in for Microsoft Word
2007 -
http://sourceforge.net/projects/odf-converter
PDF add-in -
http://office.microsoft.com/en-us/help/HA101675271033.aspx
REVIEWS
Jeff Kirvin -
http://kirvinonwriting.blogspot.com/2006/05/microsoft-word-2007-review.html
ZDNet -
http://review.zdnet.com/word-processors/microsoft-word-2007/4505-3529_16-32143055.html
PC Pro -
http://www.pcpro.co.uk/reviews/100139/word-2007.html
PC World -
http://www.pcworld.com/article/id,128266/article.html
Oliver Rist -
http://weblog.infoworld.com/smbit/archives/2006/10/living_with_off.html
The Register -
http://www.theregister.co.uk/2007/01/23/microsoft_office_2007_uptake/
________________________________________________
WordPerfect
X3


___________________
WHAT TO LIKE
- Power throughout the
program. WordPerfect
accommodates both the
dilettante and expert. If
you only dabble as a
letter writer, then
WordPerfect will make you
feel good about
writing. Two things that
still separate WordPerfect
from the pack are its
streaming code
architecture and its
Reveal Codes feature. Both
of these contribute
directly to the speed of
the program and its strong
user retention, i.e., once
your learn WordPerfect,
you never want to let it
go.
- Word
count button on the status
bar. I love this. You
may never use it, and if
not, you can remove it.
Unlike Word 2007's live
word count, you must click
the button to update it;
still, it's a nice touch.
- Paste without formatting
allows HTML content to be
included in a WordPerfect
document intact. This is
highly convenient for
dropping content into a
file and retaining its
accuracy.
- Save
without MetaData feature
is something everyone
should copy. When sharing
files between companies or
divisions, this eliminates
any confidential or
sensitive file info from
the document.

- Enhanced PDF lets you
not merely export, but
import and edit PDF files,
and although it
re-exported incorrect
colors on my test, the
text was fine. You can
also save to SWF format
(Flash).
- Graphics handling has
long been and is still a
pleasure in WordPerfect.
Much like TextMaker,
WordPerfect lets you do
anything with a graphic,
and you don't have to dig
around in a dialog to do
it.
- Table of authorities.
WordPerfect has useful
features for creating
tables of authorities in
legal documents, along
with other features
lawyers love, such as the
ability to convert old DOS
documents and bring them
up to the current day.
- Keyboard shortcuts.
After decades, WordPerfect
still shares most of the
same keyboard shortcuts
from the original DOS
program. Once you learned
them, they were burned
into your brain for good.
- Color schemes for the UI
seem to be the rage, and
Corel has three that all
are attractive. They did a
great job here, I just
wish they had copied their
own unique gray and silver
UI used in the CorelDRAW
suite.
- Workspace manager
feature allows you choose
between WordPerfect or
Word keyboard shortcuts,
menu structure, and
toolbars. If you switch to
the Word equivalents, your
documents are also saved
in .doc format.
- Announced ODF and MS-OOXML
support for next version.
Corel, who has
committed to broad
interoperability
between OpenOffice.org and
Microsoft Office, is an
original member of the
OASIS Technical Committee
on the OpenDocument
Format, and Paul Langille, a senior Corel developer, is one of the original
four authors of the OpenDocument specification, so support for this format
is only natural. It will be interesting to see how successful they are and
whether they will be able to convert MS-OOXML documents with accuracy.
Efforts within the first year have been embarrassingly bad.
- Full
setup took only 10 minutes,
and while that seems long,
it loaded over 540M onto
the HD, because
WordPerfect is not sold
separately. In a second
test, setup took only 3
minutes and just over 178M
when loading WordPerfect
and the minimal components
in the suite.
- Corel is not perfect but
it has brought fresh air
and new life to
WordPerfect, which had
grown stale and had taken
advantage of the loyalty
of long time WordPerfect
users through versions 8
through 11. Corel has one
thing going for it and
that is, it doesn't feel
the pressure to compete
head-on with Microsoft,
instead choosing to work
alongside, but
persistently seek to build
a better word processor
and this, from a
traditional graphics
company! Now if only
everyone else would just
steal the best wordcount
dialog ever created, then
I'd be ecstatic.
- Little things like
zoom, word count, and
numerous other display
options for the status
bar, along with the
ability to adjust margins
with the mouse onscreen
make WordPerfect a fun,
powerful word processor
that can handle every need.
___________________
WHAT NOT TO LIKE
- Exporting to XML and HTML
left troubling changes, as
graphics didn't wrap or
text flows were disrupted,
and in one instance, a new
section was translated as
insert page. Clean XML
text, however, was clean
easily readable with a
browser or RSS reader.
- WordPerfect is not sold
separately from its
suite. But wait, you say,
almost every other word
processor here shares a
suite, too. While the
WordPerfect suite is
cheaper than Microsoft
Office across the board,
some might only want
WordPerfect itself, as
good as it is. (Corel does
the same thing with its
CorelDRAW suite you
get/pay for Photo-Paint
and several other apps
whether you use them or
not.)
- Still no Unicode support.
Although you have the
option of saving a file in
"Unicode text," I could
not get the file to render
properly under alternate
language apps. This limits
WordPerfect's appeal in
markets outside of North
America and Western
Europe.
- Corel is not perfect but
this version should not
have been sent to
manufacturing with the PDF
editing problems it has.
You can't realistically
publish or edit an
imported PDF document
because of the extensive
conversion errors made by
WordPerfect. Corel is not
afraid to build service
packs for their products
early and often, but they
should not have to with
WordPerfect because
there's no rush to compete
with another company's
release schedule; i.e.,
it's only competing with
itself, not Microsoft.
___________________
CONCLUSION
On almost every front,
WordPerfect meets every
challenge. From compatibility
to PDF export to file format
to graphics to power to broad
choice within the UI,
WordPerfect's flexibility
makes an ideal word processor.
This year Corel has promised
to provide support for both
OpenOffice.org OASIS OpenDocument
Format (ODF) and Microsoft's
MS-OOXML within the program, although by Summer 2007, Corel was still bogged in
this effort, and has refused to comment publicly on any further timeline on when
a converter would be ready.
Given the complexity of the
MS-OOXML spec, I'm eager to see
how accurate Corel's
conversion filters will be,
and who (or what) will be
blamed if they're not.
Which format
will be dominant in ten years
around the globe we'll see,
but Corel is offering cover by
splitting their bet if you
use one format, you'll still
have WordPerfect to convert it
to the other for you.
Ultimately, WordPerfect
suffers because it's no longer
the sole major competitor to
Microsoft Word, and its WPD
document format is essentially
obscure, forcing it to support
every other format it can.
Years of "We're number 2!"
cheerleading has not brought
the software a larger slice of
the market.
Perhaps WordPerfect isn't
different enough to make you
want to switch from Microsoft
Word, but who cares, it's a
significant upgrade for
current users and it makes a
great word processor for
students at any higher level.
And if you want a familiar,
customizable interface rather
than Word's Ribbon,
WordPerfect has you covered.
And if you're a current
WordPerfect user, you should
be using this version, so
upgrade now!
LINKS
[BetaNews] Corel: ODF One
Choice Among Many -
http://www.betanews.com/article/Corel_ODF_is_One_Choice_Among_Many/1165015068
WordPerfect FAQs -
http://www.corel.com/servlet/Satellite/us/en/Product/1152105039094
Wikipedia - WordPerfect -
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WordPerfect
WordPerfect Universe -
http://www.wpuniverse.com/
REVIEWS
eWeek.com -
http://www.eweek.com/article2/0,1895,1917723,00.asp
Software in Review -
http://www.softwareinreview.com/cms/content/view/36/1/
WordPerfect vs. Word (ongoing) -
http://www.wpvsword.com/
IT Reviews -
http://www.itreviews.co.uk/software/s355a.htm
PC Pro -
http://www.pcpro.co.uk/reviews/57568/corel-wordperfect-office-12.html
TG Daily -
http://www.tgdaily.com/2006/01/17/corel_wordperfect_officex3_release/
PC Magazine -
http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,1895,1565988,00.asp
ZDNet -
http://review.zdnet.com/Corel_WordPerfect_Office_X3_Standard_Edition/4505-3524_16-31660600-2.html
________________________________________________
Introduction,
Part 2:
Second-tier word processors

Remember: one size does not fit all.
Choose your word processor according to your environment and needs. Don't let
the world "alternate" lull you into thinking these word processors are mediocre.
They are anything but so. Some have been around since the 1980s, the rest in
some form since the early to mid-1990s. So like many office suites, these word
processors have had time to mature, although their ambition and target user do
not always match each other. Unlike the big three word processors above, they
won't take long to master, and they don't waste time on superfluous features
that don't work, such as Word 2003's crippling Master Document feature. Instead,
you get a word processor built to create professional-looking documents with
ease and efficiency.
Who are these word processors built for? Anyone, really; anyone who neither
needs nor wants a full office suite. Look around at your family your mom,
retired uncle, nephew, gamer buddy, sports-crazed neighbor, or drunken sot of a
best friend may never need the high-end features of Microsoft Word. In comes
"alternate" word processor to save them time, money, and allow them to sidestep
years of frustration. However, just because you don't see high-end features on
some of these alternate word processors doesn't mean they don't have them.
SoftMaker Office, 602 PC Suite, and EI Office are highly refined programs that
have gained critical attention and loyal users around the world. Another quality
that many of these powerful alternates share is their stability no Zero-day
attacks, no VB macros to exploit, and other ordinary Microsoft vulnerabilities
and dangers.
While the following word processors are not
dominant, they demand a specific purpose for
using one of them. Often that reason
is no other than to master a smaller feature set while accomplishing the same
tasks one would otherwise do in the larger word processors covered in Part 1.
Another reason might be simply compatibility (with Microsoft Word) without
having to use Word itself. Whatever the reason, you won't find dissatisfied
users of these word processors.
As for format, many come with their own proprietary format,
which are almost useless if you want to share documents. All save in Microsoft's
dominant .doc format. None will save in Microsoft Office 2007's MS-OOXML format.
And of the seven word processors reviewed in this section, only TextMaker has an
ODF import feature (but no ODF export). These word processors are not
necessarily built for everyday business use, however, several could handle the
task in small businesses if needed.
There are two shared traits of all these second-tier word
processors: (1) each tries to match the look and feel of Word 97-2003, and often
they want to bring that look and feel to a variety of platforms, and (2)
they release major updates only rarely. The reason is simple:
with a delimited feature set and a file format based on the market leader,
there's no need to upgrade; these programs do what they need to do and no more.
Bugs are ironed out with minor updates.
Which word processor in this second tier is the
best? Depends on what criterion used. The most refined is TextMaker, while
the most innovative is 602 PC Suite, and the most attractive UI lies with
EIOffice. The others work, but don't fare so well with regard to speed and
power. In other words, they quickly crash with larger documents, and frankly,
that makes them useless. Still, keeping with Part 1, this review won't champion
a "winner." Download, evaluate for a week composing a variety of
documents; check for conversion accuracy, and consider their upgrade history
do they fix bugs? does the program tend to crash? Is its customizability
suitable? and so on. If not, uninstall and try another.
What to
consider in second-tier word processors

Suitability. Does it meet your needs in
your business, at home, at
school, or in whatever role
you use it? Can you work with
one at home and another at the
office?
Ease-of-use. A short learning curve. This
is where the user interface
(UI) makes the difference.
Does it have a solid Help file
to get you started?
Power. Does it handle complex or
large documents well, especially if you share and import with other word
processors? You'll
notice a word processor's
performance quickly, but
sooner or later, you're going
to need power.
Upgrade history. How often is the program updated? How often is a
major upgrade released? Are bugs fixed in a timely manner?
User Interface. Is it familiar
or distracting? Can you find
features easily? Can you setup
and build your documents
without frustration? In other
words, does it aid or hinder
your work?
ODF as native file format. Although it could not be considered as
part of this review given the age of many of these programs' last upgrade, users
should look to see if any word processor they choose in the future will support
the OASIS OpenDocument (ODF)
format as a native file format, not just as a plugin. It's an ISO certified open
standard XML document format that is being used by more and more office suite
applications.
________________________________________________
TextMaker


___________________
WHAT TO LIKE
- Well-designed throughout.
TextMaker is the most polished and refined of all the alternate word
processors. Imagine taking the best and most-used features of Word 2003,
vastly expanding its document creation power, and throwing in a healthy dose
of perfectionism throughout the user interface. Forget your imagination and
just check out TextMaker. I'm betting you'll love it because it will never
slow you down.
-
Large document capacity
at 4,096 pages. Moreover, TextMaker handled the document with
ease, the .tmd file's size only reaching 32M.
- Broad control via Properties dialog.
I love this. You can control a lot of your document's properties from one
dialog, from protection to meta data to word count statistics and more. Take
note: this is good design when you can conflate numerous, similar tasks in
one large, easy to use dialog.

- Fast.
As in damn fast. From opening itself to opening documents to handling linked
spreadsheets to navigation and printing, TextMaker seems to do everything in
an augenblick (blink of an eye). It will never hog your memory,
never have a memory leak, and it will outwork you every time.
-
Multi-platform support. It's a good day when I
have a choice of OS when using TextMaker. It looks great on Linux.
- Affordable.
At only /$69.95 (that's a real bargain in USDollars) for SoftMaker Office,
this is a bargain for this kind of stability.
- Graphics handling
is one of TextMaker's strengths, splitting work between an object and text
mode, letting you add and edit a graphics file with ease and speed. Most
programs make this a real pain. TextMaker gets it.
- References.
TextMaker handles indices, bibliographies, tables of content well, even
letting you set up a bibliography database using its database component,
DataMaker. Yet another feature that allows you to be productive as a
student, researcher, writer, or transcriptionist.
- Customizable keyboard shortcuts.
Every program should have this. It's not just for power users, it's for
everyone. Enough said.
- Full, working trial
version.
If you're going to try a new program especially another word processor
it should be able to do everything it claims it can do without
having to purchase it first. TextMaker loads everything for its 30-day
trial.
- Internal file manager
dialog lets you easily search, print (without opening if you like), delete,
and/or rename without going outside the program. Very handy when working
with multiple files.

- Little things,
such as control over the UI, default file format,
keyboard shortcuts, toolbars, dictionaries, and so on give you control not
only of your documents, but of the program itself. That's rare.
___________________
WHAT NOT TO LIKE
- Too dependent on Microsoft.
Maybe this isn't a criticism, but in 2007 it is. TextMaker has only ODF
import abilities right now, and no ODF export. Traditionally, TextMaker's
.doc file conversion has been extremely accurate. It's own .tmd format is
fine, but like any other proprietary format, hardly supported outside of
TextMaker itself. However, if you regularly interact with .doc files at the
office or school, TextMaker mirrors every element and you'll be able to use
it transparently with Word 97-2003. Let's hope SoftMaker adds full ODF
support soon, and that (1) ODF can be defined as the default format, and (2)
we don't have to wait for the next full version to do so. Moving to ODF
would put TextMaker among the big three word processors, given its broad
abilities.
- TextMaker is no longer sold
separately from its
suite, which includes the spreadsheet, PlanMaker. SoftMaker would say this
is a 2-for-1 benefit, as both are so easily integrated with one another.
- No PDF export.
Perhaps this is too expensive, but this would be a welcome addition to this
word processor.
- Too long between upgrades.
Although there were regular updates, it took SoftMaker four years to issue
its next major upgrade to TextMaker. Perhaps they were trying to conquer too
many platforms. And since these alternate word processors don't go for
feature bloat, there are fewer new features to merit a full upgrade over time.
___________________
CONCLUSION
Make no mistake, TextMaker is among the strongest contenders in this
DonationCoder.com word processor review. It will never frustrate you, never
disappoint you, and never empty your wallet. It will, however, tackle virtually
any task you can throw at it. By every measure, I would highly recommend
TextMaker to anyone.
LINKS
Tips and Tricks for TextMaker 2006 -
http://www.softmaker.com/english/tipstm_en.htm
REVIEWS
SoftMaker Press page -
http://www.softmaker.com/english/ofwpress_en.htm
________________________________________________
Atlantis


___________________
WHAT TO LIKE
-
Document power from small to large, to mega-sized.
I work with large plain text and basic data files that can be opened with
almost any program, but how surprising it is to find a word processor like
Atlantis that can open a 10,000-page document with the same ease as a
50-page one. Save time was virtually instantaneous.
- Elegant and polished user interface.
The love is in the details, and Atlantis is never ugly in any of its toolbar
or graphical customizations.
-
Document bar.
I've always liked document bars or tabs in text programs wherever I find
them. Atlantis's document bar resides just above the status bar and like the
status bar, can be toggled off.
- Control what's seen on the status
bar.
I love this. You can control a lot of your document's properties from one
dialog, from protection to meta data to word count statistics and more. Take
note: this is good design when you can conflate numerous, similar tasks in
one large, easy to use dialog.

- Good support.
Atlantis has one of the best and most well-managed forums of any word
processor, thanks to a responsive administrator and a lively, creative user
community.
-
30-day Trial version is fully functional, as it
should be. If you're going to disable your trial version, then how would a
user ever be able to evaluate your program honestly? Atlantis lets you see
what you're paying for, and you get to decide if it's worth it. I say it is.
- Affordable.
At $35,
this is a bargain for this word processor.
-
Almost every menu item has its own keyboard shortcut.
And they are well thought out.
- Word count dialog
is loaded with information, a boon to writers and editors.

- Broad user interface
customization
from the status bar, document bar, keyboard shortcuts, toolbars, menus,
sounds, Atlantis lets you set the program up based on how you work,
not how it thinks you should.
- Customizable keyboard shortcuts.
As noted above, every program should have this. It's not just for power users, it's for
everyone. Enough said.
- Full, working trial
version.
If you're going to try a new program especially another word processor
it should be able to do everything it claims it can do without
having to purchase it first. TextMaker loads everything for its 30-day
trial.
- Little things,
such as the overall attractiveness of the UI,
extensive sources for help, internal update check, the open pictures dialog
(below), and the attention taken to footnotes and endnotes make Atlantis a
popular word processor for good reason.

___________________
WHAT NOT TO LIKE
- Nonexistent graphics handling.
It's not a good sign when even the Help file doesn't include a sample photo
inserted into a page with word wrap and picture anchor options. Too bad, as this really spoils
what should be a necessary feature.
- Spellchecker and thesaurus languages
could be increased. Atlantis attracts loyal
users from around the world, and while it has thirteen European languages,
many new users elsewhere would enjoy these features in their native
language.
- No PDF export.
Perhaps this is too expensive, but this would be a welcome addition to this
word processor.
- Limited file formats.
Atlantis preserves efficiency by using the de facto standard Microsoft .doc
format, along with RTF and text, but that's about it. A nice option for
version 2.0 would be to upgrade to ODF format and eventually including a
.doc-to-ODF converter.
___________________
CONCLUSION
Atlantis is a fine word
processor in so many ways, until you stumble across one of its deficiencies,
and then it
frustrates you, forcing a workaround, as in the lack of comments converted from
a .doc file to its graphics shortcomings. But its power lies in its
customizability. If you're wanting a word processor to dance with you rather
than dictate to you, and one that packs power and speed into its document
length, Atlantis should be at
the top of the list.
LINKS
Atlantis news and changelogs -
http://www.atlantiswordprocessor.com/en/news/
REVIEWS
Atlantis CNET page -
http://www.download.com/Atlantis-Word-Processor/3640-2079_4-10510652.html?sb=1&v=1
________________________________________________
________________________________________________
Papyrus WORD


___________________
WHAT TO LIKE
-
The clipboard.
The gray area outside the document boundaries on the Papyrus (WORD, the word
processor component) workspace can serve as a clipboard. Just drag-n-drop
text and photos there to include later.
- Text macros.
Imagine this as a mini-AutoHotkey feature for text built inside your word
processor. Very handy (but get AutoHotkey too).
-
Precise font sizes.
Papyrus can also display and print font sizes in decimals 11, 11.5, 11.25,
11.75pt and so on.
- Papyrus can be installed using a USB
flash drive.
We all love being able to take a program with us. By being a stand-alone
word processor, it's not dependent on resident, system files, allowing you
to take your work and your favorite word processor with you.

- Non-modal dialogs.
You don't have to close a dialog to keep working on your document. If you're
working with styles or fine tuning a photo, you can leave the relevant
dialog open and continue working. Just drag it to the side of the workspace.
Very handy and saves time.
-
Intelligent cut and paste prevents two spaces or
no spaces from occurring when inserting or copying text to another location.
-
A good student word processor. Papyrus makes it
really easy to include and edit research papers with a table of contents,
index, bibliography, footnotes or endnotes. One less thing to worry about:
just get writing.
- Mark multiple,
discontinuous text or sections and make changes simultaneously.
Wow! Let's say you misspelled a term in two or more ways throughout a long
paragraph or document. Instead of finding and replacing each separate term,
just highlight them all using either the CTRL key or using the Mark button,
and then input one correction for all. That's clever and innovative. Tip:
You can do the same for graphics, setting or editing their properties at the
same time.
- Resizable dialogs,
especially the Options dialog.
Every program that does not have this option, please steal it.
- Affordable.
At $35, this is a bargain for this word processor.
- Word count dialog
is loaded with information, a boon to writers and editors.
- Customizable
keyboard shortcuts.
As noted above, every program should have this. It's not just for power
users, it's for everyone. Enough said.

- Broad user interface
customization
from the status bar, document bar, keyboard shortcuts, toolbars, menus,
sounds, Atlantis lets you set the program up based on how you work,
not how it thinks you should.
- Excellent PDF
export.
Loaded with options all the way through PDF 1.7, Papyrus lets you share and
store your files securely and accurately.
- Merciful pricing.
Like TextMaker, Papyrus sells as an Office
product which also includes a database, spreadsheet, and desktop publishing
components, but allows everyone to buy the program for /$99, another gift
to those of us who have to suffer from a weak USDollar. Version upgrades,
however, are half the price of the program.
- Little things,
such as being able to assign additional hotkeys
to your function keys, an array of templates and tutorials included, both
Windows (Vista ready) and OS X versions, and that they English version is
the exact same as the German version of the program.
___________________
WHAT NOT TO LIKE
- Dialogs do not close after applying
changes.
There's no Okay button, just Apply buttons within the dialogs and when you
press them, the dialog remains open. Esc does the trick.
- Although it shares the .doc format,
Papyrus has its own .pap format. Fortunately, the several .pap documents I
created included ones with a table of contents, headers/footers, and
footnotes, converting with great accuracy to .doc format.
- Poor kerning.
Although kerning was set to 0, every document in Papyrus looked unfinished
and stretched Overall, this resulted in an unattractive document.
- Limited file formats.
While Papyrus will save to the de facto standard Microsoft .doc format, it
brings its own .pap format to the program as the default.
- Nonstandard Help file.
Although Papyrus's Help file is layered, it first introduction is merely an
HTML file with links.
___________________
CONCLUSION
What others lack, Papyrus
more than makes up for, as its power, depth and breadth of features, along with
its graphics abilities are fused into a highly stable, tightly-coded program.
That Papyrus is a mature program shows. The only two things that threw me were
its HTML Help file and its poor kerning. Otherwise, Papyrus brings a lot of
advanced features to its word processor strengthened by its other office
components. While Papyrus doesn't have a online user forum, it offers a
surprising variety of phone and email support options. It's easy to see why
anyone would want to register Papyrus: it's truly a robust document solution.
LINKS
Papyrus
12 features -
http://www.rom-logicware.com/new_v12.htm
REVIEWS
AppleLinks -
http://www.applelinks.com/index.php/more/charles_moore_reviews_papyrus_office_12_office_suite/
Low End Mac -
http://lowendmac.com/misc/05/1121.html
________________________________________________
AbiWord


___________________
WHAT TO LIKE
- Built for writing.
AbiWord has the tools needed for students to compose papers within any
discipline. What it lacks in an Equation Editor it makes up for by offering
accurate import of them from LaTex or any file. Taking many of its cues from
Microsoft Word over the years, you'll find common paper elements, such as
headers, footers, footnotes, endnotes, table of contents, bookmarks, etc.
Yet there is no index feature for writing longer documents. But that's
okay: this is a small word processor, and we don't expect a kitchen sink of
features within.
-
Variety of export options. RTF, .doc, HTML, .mht,
all readable across OS platforms. For PDF, you'll need to rely on a
third-party app.
- Keyboard shortcuts for almost every
option.
This should be encouraged and AbiWord's authors took time to layout a broad
set of keyboard shortcuts. However, there is no option to customize them.
- Plug-ins extend
AbiWord in many creative ways.
AbiWord's website provides a clever
Plug-in Matrix listed according to their function. Most of them
work very well.

-
Multi-platform support. Linux, OS X, Windows,
your choice. Excellent!
- Open Source.
It's free, but if you use it and like it, consider promoting it and/or
helping in some way with the AbiSource project.
- Graphics handling
is basic, but allows every text-wrapping option around an image or object.
This only matters when you need it, and trust me, you'll need it.
- Plugins.
AbiWord handles plugins with ease. Set your cursor on a word and within a
click it can be defined, searched using Google, looked up using Wikipedia,
or translated by Babelfish. Other plugins can be downloaded and easily
installed.

- References.
AbiWord shines with footnotes, endnotes, indices, and table of contents.
It's clear the authors went a long way toward securing these features, and
their quality makes a difference.
- Open source.
It's supported and used by many, and it will never cut into your wallet.
Better, you can take it with you on other platforms.
- Little things,
such as document history, revision control,
directional text (Right-To-Left or Left-To-Right), and complete control over
table creation make you smile.
___________________
WHAT NOT TO LIKE
- AbiWord cannot handle large files,
and never has been able to. Even saving a five-page .doc file blanked the
program screen for six seconds on a fast machine, and this has been true for
years now. Even a light-duty word processor needs more power than for mere
letter-writing tasks.
- Even though AbiWord is open source,
its development has been slower than expected. This is
reflected in the lack or features common to other small word processors,
such as PDF export, ODF support, and better graphics handling. It will be
interesting to see how soon (or if?) AbiWord will support ODF as a native
file format.
- .DOC conversion is poor.
I was surprised at the various files I created either in Word 2003, or saved
as a .doc file in other programs were so poorly converted. AbiWord added
spaces before and after periods, changed the font every time Times New Roman
(I should not have to modify the Normal style to open a document in its
originally formatted font on my own machine). In one file, it deleted the
title paragraph altogether and right-formatted the first paragraph.
- User Interface (UI) inconsistencies.
Pressing a letter to jump to the desired font in the font list dropdown box
does not work; inserting a photo made the first paragraph disappear for a
few seconds (see below). I uninstalled and reinstal