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m000 | 4 days ago
Also, the "there's no drop in replacement" line is just making up excuses for not acting. Yes, you will not get 100% of the Office 365 features out of the box. There will be some friction.
It's simply ridiculous seeing EU bureaucracy preparing e.g. to ban russian oil [3], making life more expensive for all people, and balking on being forced to switch their stupid word processor.
[1] https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46923736
[2] https://github.com/suitenumerique
[3] https://www.reuters.com/business/energy/eu-propose-permanent...
mgoetzke|4 days ago
bdavbdav|4 days ago
- Group Editing - this ones hard to get right - Reviewing Tools - Automated document generation - Embedding of data-backed images from 3rd party tools
Looking at my wife who works in government, they use it even more heavily, with a lot of complicated formatting, numbering, standards etc going into each document, plus OneDrive collaborative features on top of that.
I suspect office-user people are where most of the features get used. Agreed, most people only use 15% of the features, but which 15% that is likely changes quickly person to person.
MegaDeKay|4 days ago
weirdmantis69|4 days ago
Forgeties79|4 days ago
lukan|4 days ago
If you claim, that this is my position, please read at least one more sentence
"So yes, one can (and should) build them. "
Jolter|4 days ago
That’s beside the sibling comment’s point that this suite is not complete enough (yet).