![]() In most categories, OnlyOffice showed it was up to the task. So for the purpose of this review, I used my hands-on familiarity with LibreOffice, MS Word and Google Docs as a baseline for comparisons. I even run LibreOffice on my Windows computer instead of MS Office. I use the Google Doc apps only occasionally, having found over the years that the open source LibreOffice has met or exceeded my personal and professional office suite needs. Whether the mostly-free features will win out over the paid add-on collaboration tools depends solely on your workflow. OnlyOffice also gives users the ability to extend the fully functional office suite with ready-to-use add-ons such as macros, WordPress, Translator and YouTube. The free and the commercial versions of OnlyOffice on Linux offer a common appearance and tools organized into tabs by their purposes: File, Home, Insert, Layout, References, Collaboration and Plugins. ![]() (But more later on how seamless is not always all that it seems.) ![]() Its other benefits include a near-seamless connection to the Web-based OnlyOffice applications for collaboration tools that include two co-editing modes (fast and strict), commenting, built-in chat, tracking changes and version history. The completely reorganized interface of the free version of OnlyOffice now matches that of the OnlyOffice commercial online suite. The OnlyOffice Desktop Editors have a new tabbed and ribbon-style interface with numerous updated features. ![]()
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