Mon Oct 15, 2007 11:53AM EDT
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It isn't that tough to convince someone to give up Microsoft Word in exchange for a free alternative that does 98 percent of the same stuff... but getting people to drop Microsoft Outlook is a whole other animal. People are just really, really attached to their email, and I can understand that.
Thunderbird is the open source alternative to Outlook, and while it's been around for years, I've never found it as useful as Microsoft's original. Bugs abound, and it's just not as polished an application. But nonetheless, Thunderbird may soon be heading into the OpenOffice.org family, where it's set to become part of the suite with the upcoming 3.0 revision.
With bug fixes and improved calendaring support, Thunderbird might be improving its odds as a potential Outlook killer. However, last week the project lost two of its full-time developers, so everything's a little up in the air. While things still seem on track for Thunderbird to join the OOo family, let's take a look at some of OpenOffice 3's upcoming new features outside of the information manager realm:
Not familiar with OpenOffice? Check it out by downloading and installing it here. (Remember, it's free; you've got nothing to lose.) You might also try Lotus Symphony, which I wrote about earlier.
Finally, if you want to try Thunderbird now to see what you might be missing, you can download it here. I'd especially love to hear from Outlook users who give it a go; let us know what you see as the pros and cons.
Join in the discussion. Here you'll see the comments in the order they were posted.
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6 Posted by ljosephpratt on Thu Sep 3, 2009 6:55PM EDT Report Abuse
I made the switch from Outlook to Thunderbird a few years ago and have never looked back. I've never found any bugs to speak of, the Mozilla help site for Thunderbird has solved my few problems, and installing the Lightning add-on fulfills all my Calendar/To-Do needs. I've been using OpenOffice 3.0 Beta and have been extra pleased. I agree it does 99% of what you need, and that extra 1% isn't worth paying a single cent IMO. You won't be able to open Publisher files, but you can convert them to PDFs on a few different websites. If you have a problem installing/using either program, just google your problem and the first page of results will be filled with websites giving easy instructions to help.