Free software takes on Microsoft Office

Thu May 8, 2008 3:51pm EDT
 

By Jim Finkle

BOSTON (Reuters) - Pierre Avignon is no pirate, but he does not believe in paying for software. His computer is filled with programs like Symphony -- a free suite that he downloaded from an International Business Machines Corp website (http://symphony.lotus.com).

It performs work for which he used to rely on Microsoft Corp's Word word processor, Excel spreadsheet and PowerPoint presentation builder, all components of the Microsoft Office software suite.

"It is free. It is a great deal," says Avignon, a 43-year-old graphics designer from West Newbury, Massachusetts.

Free software was once almost exclusively borne of a grass-roots effort -- with an anti-Microsoft bent -- seeking alternatives to paid software. The movement produced myriad programs, but only a handful of widely used titles such as the Linux operating system.

Microsoft says Office has 500 million users.

Growth in the availability of broadband Internet access has spawned a new type of free software -- programs that its developers host on their own servers and have designed to foster collaboration among users by making documents easy to share.

Google Inc and smaller Internet companies such as privately held Zoho offer free office suites over the Web. (http://docs.google.com and www.zoho.com).

Users don't have to install the programs or even keep documents on their own PCs.  Continued...

 
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