Introducing
The Slant team built an AI & it’s awesome
Find the best product instantly
Add to Chrome
Add to Edge
Add to Firefox
Add to Opera
Add to Brave
Add to Safari
Try it now
4.7 star rating
0
What is the best alternative to Apache OpenOffice?
Ad
Ad
Supernotes
All
5
Experiences
Pros
3
Cons
1
Specs
Top
Pro
Short-form note-cards
The note-card format is incredibly versatile, and great when you have lots of information.
See More
Top
Con
Only web apps for now
The developers haven't released native apps yet.
See More
Top
Pro
Responsive platform
Works on all devices, from mobiles to laptops.
See More
Top
Pro
Full Markdown (with LaTeX equation) support
Great to be able to use all the features of Markdown, rather than a select few.
See More
Specs
Platforms:
Web, Mac, Windows, Linux, iOS, Android
API:
Yes
Collaborative:
Yes
Search:
Yes
See All Specs
Hide
Get it
here
28
0
ONLYOFFICE
All
11
Experiences
Pros
9
Cons
1
Specs
Top
Con
Web app
It is a text editor that is running in a browser window, how can you trust this? Not to mention that it needs a lot more system resources than native apps.
See More
Top
Pro
Available for Windows, Linux, MacOS, iOS, and Android
ONLYOFFICE offers desktop applications for Linux, Windows, and MacOS that can be connected to the web-based solution for document sharing and collaboration.
See More
Top
Pro
High MS Office compatibility
Highly compatible with .docx, .xlsx, .pptx as well as with .odf.
See More
Top
Pro
Collaboration capabilities
See More
Top
Pro
Can be used as a web app
ONLYOFFICE offers a web-based office suite that can be deployed on your own server using various deployment options, including Docker script and virtual machines with the software pre-installed.
See More
Top
Pro
Has a portable version
ONLYOFFICE portable works on almost every Linux distribution.
See More
Top
Pro
Advanced work with math equations
See More
Top
Pro
Integration with Nextcloud
Easy integration with Nextcloud for collaborative work.
See More
Top
Pro
Free and open source
ONLYOFFICE is distributed under AGPL v.3 license with the source code available on GitHub.
See More
Top
Pro
Support for add-ons (plugins)
See More
Specs
Platforms:
Web-based (Windows, Linux, Mac OS, Android-clients)
Versioning:
Yes
Project management:
Yes
Word processing:
Yes
See All Specs
Hide
See All
Experiences
FLOSS
258
160
hackmd.io
All
26
Experiences
Pros
20
Cons
6
Top
Pro
Collaborative
Allows multiple people to edit the same note in realtime.
See More
Top
Con
Custom grammar and spell checker
It does not work well in French (and probably other languages).
See More
Top
Pro
Automatic "table of content"
Automatically generates a "table of content" of your headlines.
See More
Top
Con
Not as beautiful as StackEdit
See More
Top
Pro
Supports revisions
Allows you to go back in time to a previous version of your document.
See More
Top
Con
Cannot organize notes
Doesn't have the ability to organize notes or create notebooks.
See More
Top
Pro
Edit and view-only permission settings
Note: Enterprise Edition has even more refined permissions, but the permissions in the non-enterprise edition are pretty powerful.
See More
Top
Con
Slow servers / problem with online / offline switching
Servers can be slow / down for a few seconds preventing from working on the documents currently being edited.
See More
Top
Pro
Shortcuts from Sublime Text, Emacs, and Vim
See More
Top
Con
No PDF export support
See More
Top
Pro
Tag support
This is truly helpful for organizing your documents.
See More
Top
Con
Tries to be smart
It guesses what you want to do and tries to help, often in a wrong and annoying way, for example it when working with list items. Ironically Markdown was built to solve those problems (you format yourself with simple codes and it just works).
See More
Top
Pro
Can create slide-shows
Supports creating slide-shows in markdown.
See More
Top
Pro
Online
It's multi-platform (works well on smartphones) and there is no need to install anything.
See More
Top
Pro
Math support
Use LaTeX seamlessly within the editor.
See More
Top
Pro
Dark and white theme
Perfect for working at night.
See More
Top
Pro
Lightweight
See More
Top
Pro
Book mode view
This is really helpful for longer documents. Or even "books." This is also super helpful for journaling activities and the like.
See More
Top
Pro
Available as a web service
HackMD service can be downloaded and installed in custom servers.
See More
Top
Pro
Cross platform
Is available as desktop app.
See More
Top
Pro
Dropbox import and export
See More
Top
Pro
Extended markdown syntax
Adds supports for embeddings from Youtube, Vimeo, Speakerdeck, GitHub gist etc; and even creating UML diagrams, Graphviz graphs, Timing charts, and even Music notes! and alerts and comments boxes and emojis.
See More
Top
Pro
Open source
HackMD Core's source is available on GitHub.
See More
Top
Pro
Free
You can subscribe to it for more features.
See More
Top
Pro
Github Gist import and export
People who subscribe can push and pull unlimited.
See More
Top
Pro
Google Drive import and export
See More
Hide
See All
Experiences
0
62
4
Emacs Org-mode
All
16
Experiences
Pros
11
Cons
4
Specs
Top
Pro
Ultimate flexibility
This app's flexibility is based on its minimalist approach, giving the user near-infinite freedom.
See More
Top
Con
Unintuitive user interface
The key combinations are unintuitive and difficult to remember. This is probably because there are a lot of hidden "modes" depending on where the cursor is. Actions aren't paired with reversing actions like in other todo apps. For example, hitting shift-tab does NOT reverse the effect of hitting tab.
See More
Top
Pro
Absolutely free
Emacs with Org-mode is free as in beer and free as in speech – that is, it costs nothing and it’s totally open source.
See More
Top
Con
Android app isn't very good
There are several user-created apps for Android, but none seem to offer the same level of functionality as other to-do apps.
See More
Top
Pro
Files are usable anywhere at anytime
Users are not tied to one service provider, program, platform, or database engine.
See More
Top
Con
Not really cross platform
Although it is possible to get a lot of it working, no all in one, sync included, out of the box solution is available for mobile devices.
See More
Top
Pro
Incredibly extensible
There are many plug-ins for Org-mode, including Org-habits and Org-notify. If Org-mode lacks some piece of functionality, it is very easy to add it.
See More
Top
Con
By default, a hard-to-read display
The default way of writing an outline or checklist creates a very messy wall of text that's difficult to read with no vertical spacing. You can manually add vertical spacing, but the Org operations don't preserve it. There are pretty-display modes, but you need to remember how to enable them, etc. etc.
See More
Top
Pro
Agenda views
See More
Top
Pro
Excellent unofficial Android app (orgzly)
See More
Top
Pro
Offline support
See More
Top
Pro
Efficient features for deadline organization
See More
Top
Pro
Supports plaintext spreadsheets
See More
Top
Pro
There are a lot of extensions, for exporting to html, bootstrap, js-reveal and much more
See More
Top
Pro
Quickly add rich text
See More
Specs
Platforms:
Linux / OSX / Windows
API:
Yes
Collaborative:
no
Hide
See All
Experiences
Get it
here
81
15
StackEdit
All
14
Experiences
Pros
9
Cons
4
Specs
Top
Pro
Works online and offline
StackEdit works within your browser. You need internet access to connect to the website, but once it's loaded, the site does not require an internet connection - you will be able to edit and save files locally. Additionally, you can use Fluid to turn it into a native desktop application.
See More
Top
Con
Saves files in browser's local storage
Local storage is limited and if the browser crashes the text can be lost.
See More
Top
Pro
Supports various Markdown flavors
Supports standard Markdown and Markdown Extra.
See More
Top
Con
Cannot be accessed while being offline
Even though the editor itself works offline, you need internet access to open the website and the editor.
See More
Top
Pro
Simple workflow
It is very easy to toggle between the preview and the editing windows. The black makes it a very focused writing environment. Of course it's possible to change that if needed.
See More
Top
Con
Lacks a good integrated spell checker
Uses the built-in browser spell checker which may not be as good as spell checkers other editors have. Depending on the browser, of course.
See More
Top
Pro
Great when in full-screen
See More
Top
Con
Publishing to GitHub requires giving write access to repos
In order to publish documents to GitHub, StackEdit requires writing access to your repos, something which many people may not be comfortable with.
See More
Top
Pro
No need to install additional software
StackEdit works directly from the browser, there's no need to install additional software as long as you have a web browser installed on your computer.
See More
Top
Pro
Real-time preview
The preview shows in a collapsible pane on the right hand side.
See More
Top
Pro
Instant publishing
StackEdit allows pushing a document directly to a list of publishing or file storage platforms or any SSH server.
See More
Top
Pro
Multiple export options
Can export to .txt, .html and .pdf.
See More
Top
Pro
Syncs via Dropbox and Drive
Files can be synchronized through Dropbox and Drive.
See More
Specs
Platforms:
MacOS, Linux, Windows
Export:
Text, HTML, PDF
Preview:
Live Preview
Sync:
Dropbox, Drive
See All Specs
Hide
See All
Experiences
Free
120
24
JotterPad
All
4
Experiences
Pros
3
Cons
1
Top
Pro
Supports Markdown
Supports the CommonMark Markdown format.
See More
Top
Con
Free version includes a PDF watermark
If you're using the free version of the application PDF exports will have a watermark.
See More
Top
Pro
Allows customizing style
You can change the font to suite your needs.
See More
Top
Pro
RTL support
Supports right-to-left languages.
See More
Hide
Get it
here
12
4
Notion
All
21
Experiences
Pros
15
Cons
5
Specs
Top
Pro
Full-featured on desktop, mobile and web
Even the right-click menus on the web are the same as the app.
See More
Top
Con
Not very fast using native apps
Can take time if you're switching between lots of pages often as it needs to load the data each time
See More
Top
Pro
Unlike anything else
One of the most complete applications one can use to build a personal dashboard (or professional) and migrate all other services to it. No more calendar, task, notes, financials, lists, writing and wiki apps, just Notion.
See More
Top
Con
Not always very intuitive
Column filters are not that intuitive to apply.
See More
Top
Pro
Pages within pages within pages, to infinity
You can have a ridiculous amount of information within a single note. Look at how it works, you'll be surprised!
See More
Top
Con
No true backup
True backup can only exist if it's automated and easily recoverable. Else, it's just an outdated copy or useless scrambled data.
See More
Top
Pro
Flexible contents storage and organization
You can upload files and embed online stuff in any hierarchical structure using pages, toggle lists, etc.
See More
Top
Con
Designed with teams in mind, and less formatting than Evernote
Evernote may be more individual-oriented and has more formatting and such options available, but whether that affects you is down to personal preference. Try both and see which you prefer.
See More
Top
Pro
Highly visual, with icons next to every new page and so on
This feature makes it very easy to find certain notes and such. And great for visual people as well. You could also add images as icons instead, if you like.
See More
Top
Con
Not yet a new protocol, as it could be! (or could it?)
Think of scuttlebutt or email. the best Evernote alternative would be a "web 3.0" of sorts. Something that would be just a simple file added to a computer and automatically replicated to other computers along with a website and any company could easily pick up the concept and make their own hosting, including some awesome google drive/host of sorts.
See More
Top
Pro
Blocks offer incredible flexibility
The basic unit of organization in Notion is the block, which can be a chunk of text, an image, a bullet point, or even a link to another page. Each page consists of these blocks, which can be easily reorganized, moved to other pages, converted into other content types, or generally manipulated in many useful ways. Because of blocks, restructuring information in Notion is way easier than in any other wiki or notebook app.
See More
Top
Pro
Does a great job with both notes and to-dos
To-dos in Notion aren't just dot point lists. You can drag and drop them into columns just like Trello (Kanban style), you can have sub-tasks, and you can easily mark things off as completed so they are no longer in your way. Notes are also powerful, with proper formatting and ways to manage and search for them, which makes it a great Evernote alternative.
See More
Top
Pro
Cross platform
Works with Android, iOS, Windows, & Mac OSX.
See More
Top
Pro
Awesome for wikis
You can easily start writing a bunch of web pages, share it with co-workers and choose whether to publicize or keep your contents private. It's also easy to hyperlink pages.
See More
Top
Pro
Amazing view flexibility
You can create different views for a page's content and easily toggle between kanban, table, etc. (As long as the content is able to allow different views.)
See More
Top
Pro
Quick and effective search
Just type in a word and you'll have results in no time at all.
See More
Top
Pro
Attach files in tables
You can attach files in table cells, which is a feature missing in most spreadsheet-like applications.
See More
Top
Pro
Great spreadsheet functionality
You can use calculation/formula, links, attachment, inter-referencing of data from other pages or tables, embed documents and images in the table cells.
See More
Top
Pro
Renders Markdown Syntax
Add code blocks, Headers, bullet point, numbered lists, or To-Do boxes by typing using Markdown Syntax (instead of klunkily moving the mouse to formatting boxes)
See More
Top
Pro
Less headaches when editing pages
Lets you restore your page to a past edit. Also works with sub-pages and databases. Though it is worth mentioning that it's a paid feature.
See More
Specs
Platforms:
Windows, macOS, iOS, Android, Web
Collaborative:
Yes
Offline access:
No
Markdown support:
Export
See All Specs
Hide
See All
Experiences
Get it
here
450
88
Vim
All
46
Experiences
Pros
30
Cons
15
Specs
Top
Pro
Lightweight and fast
When compared to modern graphical editors like Atom and Brackets (which have underlying HTML5 engines, browsers, Node, etc.), Vim uses a sliver of the system's memory and it loads instantly, all the while delivering the same features. Vim is also faster than Emacs.
See More
Top
Con
High effort to customize
A lot of time and effort is put in to make it specific to your needs.
See More
Top
Pro
Free and open-source software
Vim is open-source, GPL-compatible charityware.
See More
Top
Con
Difficult learning curve
You'll spend a lot of time learning all the commands and modes supported in Vim. You'll then spend more time tuning settings to your needs. Although once it's tuned to your needs, you can take your .vimrc to any machine you need and have the same experience across all your computers.
See More
Top
Pro
Works in terminal over SSH
Unlike other editors such as Sublime Text, Vim is a command line editor and hence can be used in remote development environments like Chromebooks via SSH.
See More
Top
Con
Difficult to copy, paste, and delete
See More
Top
Pro
Extremely portable
Vi/vim exists on almost all Unix-like platforms. It's the de-facto Unix editor and is easily installed on Windows. All you need to make it work is a text-based connection, so it works well for remote machines with slow connections, or when you're too lazy to set up a VNC/Remote Desktop connection.
See More
Top
Con
Poor support for external tooling
Many plugins depend on optional Python and Lua features, which may or may not be included in whatever binaries are available for your system. And without platform-specific hacks, it is difficult for plugins to operate in the background or use external tooling.
See More
Top
Pro
Keyboard-based, mouse-free interface, and trackpad support
There's no need to reach for the mouse or the Ctrl/Alt buttons again. Everything is a mere key press or two away with almost 200 functions specifically for text editing. Vim does support the mouse, but it's designed so you don't have to use it for greater efficiency. Versions of Vim, like gVim or MacVim, still allow you to use the mouse and familiar platform shortcuts. That can help ease the learning curve and you'll probably find you won't want to (or need to) use the mouse after a while.
See More
Top
Con
Poor feature discoverability
Though basic features like syntax checking, autocompletion, and file management are all available out of the box or with minimal configuration, this is not obvious to new users, who might get intimidated or assume they need to install complex plugins just so they can have this functionality. Other features new users might expect to find embedded in Vim, such as debugging, instead follow a UNIX-style model where they are called as external programs, the output of which might then be parsed by Vim so it can display results. Users not familiar with this paradigm will likely fault Vim for lacking those features as well.
See More
Top
Pro
Great productivity
Vim's keyset is mainly restricted to the alphanumeric keys and the escape key. This is an enduring relic of its teletype heritage, but has the effect of making my ost of Vim's functionality accessible without frequent awkward finger reaches.
See More
Top
Con
No smooth scrolling
Even with the GUI version, the lines jiggle line-by-line. If you are used to smooth scrolling, this is very annoying, especially when working with larger files.
See More
Top
Pro
Macros increase productivity
Many text editors have programmable macros, but since Vim is keyboard-based, your programmed macros are usually far more predictable and easier to understand.
See More
Top
Con
Doesn't play nice with the system cut/paste mechanisms
This can be worked around somewhat if you disable mouse for insert mode. You can then right-click your terminal and use paste like you would anywhere else in a terminal. But it still doesn't feel right when the rest of your system uses Ctrl-C/Ctrl-V, and you have a system clipboard manager, and so forth.
See More
Top
Pro
Excellent performance
As it loads the whole file into RAM, replacing all string occurrences in 100 MB+ files is quick and easy. Every other editor has sort of died during that. It is extremely fast even for cold start. Vim is light-weight and very compact. In terminal, it only uses a small amount of memory and anytime you invoke Vim, it's extremely fast. It's immediate, so much so you can't even notice any time lag.
See More
Top
Con
Outdated UI
See More
Top
Pro
Tons of plugins/add-ons
This makes Vim the definitive resource for every environment (Ruby/Rails, Python, C, etc.), or simply just provides more information in your view.
See More
Top
Con
Requires Brain Mode Switching
When editing in vim, you have you use the vim keys; when editing in every other window on your PC, or in Word or Excel or other application, you need to use the standard system key combinations. Learning the vim combinations can actually make you SLOWER at everything else.
See More
Top
Pro
Everything is mnemonic
No need to memorize different key combinations for things like deleting the text inside of a block or deleting the text inside of a pair of quotes. It's just a series of actions, or nouns and verbs, or however you prefer to think about it. If you want to delete, you select "d"; if you want it to happen inside something, you select "i"; and if you want the surrounding double-quotes, just select ". But if you were changing the text, or copying it, or anything else, you'd still use the same "i" and ". This makes it very easy to remember a large number of different extremely useful commands, without the effort it takes to remember all of the Emacs "magic incantations", for example.
See More
Top
Con
Slow when opening files with very long lines
A lot of very long lines can make Vim take up to a minute to open files, where a few other editors take only seconds to load the same file.
See More
Top
Pro
Vimtutor
Vimtutor is an excellent interactive tutorial for people with no prior experience of Vim. It takes about 30 minutes to complete.
See More
Top
Con
Consume brain energy for editing that should be used for logic
Text editing in vim is awesome, but it requires thinking about combination of commands. In other editors, you don't have to think about how to delete this part of code. You just think about how to implement a feature, what is a good design for this code. Even after you get used to using vim, it still requires your brain for editing.
See More
Top
Pro
Amazing extensibility
Vimscript provides a rich scripting functionality to build upon the core of Vim. When combined with things like Tim Pope's Pathogen plugin management system, it becomes easy to add support for syntax, debugging, build systems, git, and more.
See More
Top
Con
Foreign keyboards have a hard time on Vim out of the box
A lot of frequently-used keybinds are way harder to access on foreign keyboards because they use different layouts. For example, Germans use the QWERTZ layout, while French use the AZERTY.
See More
Top
Pro
Usable from a Terminal or with a GUI (GVim, MacVim)
If you happen to be logged into SSH, you can use Vim in a terminal. It can also run with a GUI too.
See More
Top
Con
Unintuitive mode switching
See More
Top
Pro
Has been supported for a long time
And will be supported for many years to come.
See More
Top
Con
Extensibility isn't that great
While it has gotten better and some projects are slowly starting to build proper extension support, it still can't and by design never will achieve the extensibility of another editor like emacs.
See More
Top
Pro
Once learned, it's very hard to forget
Vim's somewhat steep learning curve is more than made up for once you've mastered a few basic concepts and learned the tricks that allow you to program faster with fewer cut/paste mistakes.
See More
Top
Con
Works poorly out of the box with right-to-left
See More
Top
Pro
Can never outgrow it
The fact that very few, if any, people claim to be a "Vim Master" is a testament to the breadth and depth of Vim. There is always something new to learn - a new, perhaps more efficient, way to use it. This prevents Vim from ever feeling stale. It's always fresh.
See More
Top
Pro
Flexible feature-set
Vim allows users to include many features found in IDEs and competing editors, but does not force them all on the user. This not only helps keep it lighter in weight than a lot of other options, but it also helps ensure that some unused features will not get in the way.
See More
Top
Pro
Has multiple distinct editing modes
Interaction with Vim is centered around several "modes", where purpose and keybindings differ in each. Insert mode is for entering text. This mode most resembles traditional text entry in most editors. Normal mode (the default) is entered by hitting ESC and converts all keybindings to center around movement within the file, search, pane selection, etc. Command mode is entered by hitting ":" in Normal mode and allows you to execute Vim commands and scripts similar in fashion to a shell. Visual mode is for selecting lines, blocks, and characters of code. Those are the major modes, and several more exist depending on what one defines as a "mode" in Vim.
See More
Top
Pro
By default in Linux
All Linux distributions out there will have Vim built into them, which is highly convenient!
See More
Top
Pro
Vim encourages discipline
If you use Vim long enough, it will rewire your brain to be more efficient.
See More
Top
Pro
Useful undo features
Vim does not only offer unlimited undo levels, later releases support an undo tree. It eventually gives the editor VCS-like features. You can undo the current file to any point in the past, even if a change was already undone again. Another neat feature is persistent undo, which enables to undo changes after the file was closed and reopened again.
See More
Top
Pro
Donations and support to Vim.org helps children in Uganda through ICCF Holland
See More
Top
Pro
Built-in package management
Starting with Vim 8, a package manager has been built into Vim. The package manager helps keep track of installed plugins, their versions and also only loads the needed plugins on startup depending on the file type.
See More
Top
Pro
If you can use Vim you can also use vi
See More
Top
Pro
Works on Android
See More
Top
Pro
Productivity enhancing modal paradigm
As with all vi-like editors, Vim provides a modal paradigm for text editing and processing that provides a rich syntax and semantic model for composing succinct, powerful commands. While this requires some initial investment in learning how it works in order to take full advantage of its capabilities, it rewards the user well in the long run. This modal interface paradigm also lends itself surprisingly well to many other types of applications that can be controlled by vi-like keybindings, such as browsers, image viewers, media players, network clients (for email and other communication media), and window managers. Even shells (including zsh, tcsh, mksh, and bash, among others) come with vi-like keybinding features that can greatly enhance user comfort and efficiency when the user is familiar with the vi modal editing paradigm.
See More
Top
Pro
Asynchronous I/O support
Since Vim 8, Vim can exchange characters with background processes asynchronously. This avoids the problem of the text editor getting stuck when a plugin that had to communicate with a server was running. Now plugins can send and receive data from external scripts without forcing Vim to freeze.
See More
Top
Pro
Can set up keymapping
See More
Top
Pro
Multiple clipboards
It is called "registers".
See More
Top
Pro
Status Booster
Using vim not just increase your productivity, but helps you flex.
See More
Specs
Platforms:
Linux, macOS, Windows, Cygwin
License:
Vim License
Price:
0
Extension language:
Vim
Hide
See All
Experiences
free
2402
445
OfficeSuite
All
9
Experiences
Pros
7
Cons
2
Top
Con
Ads
If you don't pay for the full version, you will be forced to deal with ads.
See More
Top
Pro
Rich editing features
OfficeSuite offers more editing features than similar apps for Android.
See More
Top
Con
Can not save in ODF
Sure the program can open the ODF format, which is very useful to users of LibreOffice or similar, but it does not seem to be able to save in that format as it tries to save as a docx, doc, rtf, or txt. Maybe in the future.
See More
Top
Pro
Full compatibility with Microsoft Office and Open Office formats
See More
Top
Pro
Excellent PDF editing capabilities
See More
Top
Pro
Drag and move text
See More
Top
Pro
Keyboard shortcuts
If you have a keyboard connected to your Android device, you can optimize your workflow by using keyboard shortcuts.
See More
Top
Pro
Supports 56 languages
See More
Top
Pro
Supports Bluetooth and WiFi sharing
Other apps typically only support cloud sharing, OfficeSuite Pro allows Android users to share over their network or straight through Bluetooth.
See More
Hide
See All
Experiences
Get it
here
24
9
Calligra
All
9
Experiences
Pros
5
Cons
3
Specs
Top
Con
Bloated
Very bloated as it requires way too many dependencies to install. This is especially prominent in non-KDE desktops which may require over 100 dependencies to install.
See More
Top
Pro
Huge list of efficient and capable office components
Calligra consists of 9 tools. In addition to word-processing, spreadsheet and presentation software, it includes tools for project management, sketching/painting, database management, vector graphics, diagramming and brainstorming.
See More
Top
Con
Subpar compatibility
Microsoft office proprietary formats are not always accurately rendered
See More
Top
Pro
Free and open source
See More
Top
Con
Slow development
Development is slower and less active than competition.
See More
Top
Pro
Unified design language
See More
Top
Pro
Calligra offers cutting edge applications for artists to work on 2D drawings and illustrations
Calligra includes Krita, a sketching and painting application, and Karbon, a vector drawing application. Both offer end-to-end solutions. Krita is also available as a standalone program.
See More
Top
Pro
Made for KDE
Designed in Qt for KDE plasma (but will also work in other DEs), hence the appearance is consistent with it.
See More
Specs
Platforms:
Windows; OSX; Linux
Database management:
No
Project management:
No
Word processing:
yes
See All Specs
Hide
See All
Experiences
Get it
here
59
20
Office 365
All
12
Experiences
Pros
5
Cons
6
Specs
Top
Pro
Easy to transition from MS Office
Office 365 is laid out the same way with a similar ribbon interface that will be instantly comfortable to long-time Microsoft Office users.
See More
Top
Con
Proprietary
Uses proprietary software.
See More
Top
Pro
Excellent integration and compatibility with MS Office desktop applications
See More
Top
Con
Dependant on having an Internet connection
See More
Top
Pro
Allows for real-time collaboration
Multiple people can work on the same document at the same time.
See More
Top
Con
Cloud dependent
Does not edit local files, they have to be synced first.
See More
Top
Pro
Speech to text dictation
Linux never got it together
See More
Top
Con
Unusable for business in the EU
Cloud applications are mostly incompatible with the EU general data protection regulation.
See More
Top
Pro
No installation required
See More
Top
Con
Has only a fraction of Microsoft Office functionality
Office 365 is not a complete replacement for Microsoft Office. The most advanced functionality still can only be found on the desktop.
See More
Top
Con
Expensive
$35/user/mo.
See More
Specs
Platforms:
Webapp; iOS; Android
Database management:
No
Word processing:
Yes
Notetaking:
Available separately
See All Specs
Hide
See All
Experiences
Get it
here
78
28
LibreOffice
All
37
Experiences
Pros
17
Cons
19
Specs
Top
Pro
Comprehensive suite of applications
LibreOffice includes applications for word-processing, spreadsheets, presentations, and database management.
See More
Top
Con
Not fully compatible to MSOffice
It's not fully compatible with MSOffice and often breaks documents.
See More
Top
Pro
Free and open source
LibreOffice is available for free with code available here. It's licensed under LGPL v3 with new contributions dual-licensed under MPL.
See More
Top
Con
LibreOffice Base requires Java
If you need to use Base, it requires Java.
See More
Top
Pro
Cross-platform
All major operating systems are supported, including Microsoft Windows, Mac OS X and GNU/Linux (Arch, Fedora, Mandriva, Debian, Ubuntu, Suse).
See More
Top
Con
Needs a lot of system resources
It's a large office package that needs a lot of drive space and system memory.
See More
Top
Pro
Multilingual
It is available in more than 110 languages.
See More
Top
Con
Documentation is out of date
Good luck turning off autocorrect, because the place where the documentation says that option is doesn't exist.
See More
Top
Pro
High compatibility with MS Office
Possible to use in corporations.
See More
Top
Con
No good video editing for presentations
See More
Top
Pro
Font embedding support
Font embedding ensures that the document will display correctly whether or not the target machine has that specific font installed.
See More
Top
Con
Track Changes needs to be improved
Collaborating on a single document is difficult. Track Changes makes the document hard to read as both edited and deleted text is displayed, it's not possible to print comments, tracked differences between document versions are sub-optimal and there's no system for accepting/rejecting changes.
See More
Top
Pro
Portable version
LibreOffice offers a version of the suite that does not require installation. It can be kept on a thumb stick to ensure that you have an office suite on whichever machine you choose to use.
See More
Top
Con
Poor stability
Consistently crashes while editing. Absolutely unreliable.
See More
Top
Pro
The de-facto standard
Being able to tell new people that the FOSS community has an actual default office suite matters. It shows that, despite the bewildering number of options, there can be a clear winner.
See More
Top
Con
Poor desktop integration
Since it is written in Java it does not integrate nicely with the operation systems theme, icons or dialogs.
See More
Top
Pro
LibreOffice can take from OpenOffice, but not the other way around
Due to licensing each office suite uses, only a one-way transfer of code is possible, offering more long-term potential for LibreOffice over OpenOffice.
See More
Top
Con
Ugly interface
Ungly interface compared to others office solutions, like WPS office.
See More
Top
Pro
The most user-friendly option
To attract new people to FOSS, having an office suite that is as user-friendly as LibreOffice is a must.
See More
Top
Con
Won't work with themes
It does not work with custom themes due to all the different wrappers involved.
See More
Top
Pro
Encryption support
LibreOffice allows encrypting and password-locking files.
See More
Top
Con
Ribbon is experimental
See More
Top
Pro
Presentations can have 3D models embeded within them
Impress supports 3D models in gITF format.
See More
Top
Con
No Quickstart
Quickstart was removed from the Linux application. Now every time you open a file it will take at least 2,5 seconds to open.
See More
Top
Pro
Lots of extensions and dictionaries
Has many extensions that can add additional features to LibreOffice.
See More
Top
Con
Does not run as stable as OnlyOffice
It runs fine until it crashes. Users have experienced multiple crashes when using the cursor to select text in the writer, running in Kubuntu 18.04.
See More
Top
Pro
Ribbon design
Since 5.3, LibreOffice offers a Ribbon design view (similar to Microsoft Office) (check here).
See More
Top
Con
Restricted license
LibreOffice uses a more restrictive license than OpenOffice, which makes it almost impossible to backport features to OpenOffice.
See More
Top
Pro
Multiple themes
Many icon themes available to customise the look and get consistent look with the OS.
See More
Top
Con
Not a very well non-English languages spell check support
See More
Top
Pro
Continued development and maintenance
See More
Top
Con
No ability to access online brokerage accounts for trading
No ability to access trading and brokerage accounts via Calc to conduct automatic buying/selling like you can in MS Excel.
See More
Top
Pro
Good Zotero integration
LibreOffice works very well with Zotero. The integration of the Zotero plugin in LibreOffice is a breeze, citing while writing and generating the bibliography is just a click. Also good since you need to coop in an (MS) world: Libreoffice and Zotero cooperate very well to make sure your refs survive a "Save as" from one file format to another (e.g. docx to odt or the other way around). Basic (open and free!) tools is your in the market for this...
See More
Top
Con
Many user annoyances and malfunctions which lead to loss of work and time, often not intuitive
See More
Top
Con
Master slide management in Impress not up to mark
As of version 6, the master slide management is not as good as PowerPoint in Windows.
See More
Top
Con
Steady update
See More
Specs
Platforms:
Windows, macOS, Linux, FreeBSD, NetBSD
License:
MPL-2.0, GPL-3.0, or LGPL-3.0
Technology:
C++, Java
Database management:
Yes
See All Specs
Hide
See All
Experiences
Free
946
306
Google Drive
All
20
Experiences
Pros
10
Cons
9
Specs
Top
Con
No official client for Linux
Google as of yet has a client for Linux, leaving many who use the service forced to use third party apps or the webpage.
See More
Top
Pro
File sharing & collaborative editing
Google account holders and non-holders can be set to access and/or collaborate on files/folders in real-time. Additionally, you can find files you've shared not only by filename but by person you've shared the files with.
See More
Top
Con
Data privacy not guaranteed
Data privacy is widely known as one of Google's weaknesses. Data shared through Google is most likely matched up with the user's profile inside other Alphabet inc. subsidiaries, and, due to the business model, used commercially.
See More
Top
Pro
15GB free
This space is shared across Drive, Gmail & Google Photos.
See More
Top
Con
Terms and Conditions allow Google to own anything on Google Drive
They can create derivative works, they can perform it, they can modify it, and they can publish it at will. There are many other specific rights they take over your product. Read the Terms carefully and compare with ANY others.
See More
Top
Pro
Built-in office suite
Includes tools for writing, presentations and spreadsheets.
See More
Top
Con
Very unreliable
Desktop client constantly crashes.
See More
Top
Pro
Integrates with other Google services
For example, you can use search to search through both Drive and Gmail.
See More
Top
Con
No WebDAV, FTP or SFTP
It supports none of these common protocols used for access to network storage, which severely limits OS integration. You are forced to use the browser or a standalone client, which isn't possible on all systems.
See More
Top
Pro
Extended functionality via apps
Third party Drive applications running in Chrome or Android can add functionality such as image/video editing, project management, flowchart creation, etc.
See More
Top
Con
Low bandwidth
Can't even upload all my files to this
See More
Top
Pro
Mobile integration
You can work from any device, especially mobile.
See More
Top
Con
Low sync speed
See More
Top
Pro
Save files to drive directly from Gmail
Drive lets you save any file from your email.
See More
Top
Con
No universal Windows app
See More
Top
Pro
Cheap for extra storage
$1.99 per 100GB, for up to 16TB.
See More
Top
Con
Doesn't integrate well with OS
See More
Top
Pro
Revision control
By clicking Ctrl + Alt + G in Windows or Command + Alt + Shift + G is OS X you can access previous version of the file.
See More
Top
Pro
Indexes images
You can search images by object, place, or face when they've been added to your google photos collection. Google Assistant also helps you find screenshots that could be archived, images that aren't in the correct orientation and pictures that would work well as animations or albums.
See More
Specs
Platforms:
Windows; OSX; Linux; Android; iOS
Versioning:
Yes
Cloud Storage:
Yes
Free storage size:
15 GB
See All Specs
Hide
See All
Experiences
Free / paid
355
156
LibreOffice Writer
All
12
Experiences
Pros
6
Cons
5
Specs
Top
Con
Not as powerful as command line editors
This is true of any GUI WYSIWYG editor as it simply isn't possible to match the efficiency and utility of a CLI editor with an interface intended for mouse control.
See More
Top
Pro
Mouse-friendly interface
Unlike command line editors, Writer doesn't require learning special keybindings or memorizing specific commands. Every option and setting is available at the click of a button!
See More
Top
Con
Terrible image handling
Arranging images is nigh impossible.
See More
Top
Pro
WYSIWYG
What you see is what you get when you hit print!
See More
Top
Con
Obtuse UI / UX / menus
See More
Top
Pro
Familiar interface
The GUI is reminiscent of Microsoft Word and just as easy, if not easier, to use.
See More
Top
Con
Limited extensibility
Not many cool or interesting plugins are available.
See More
Top
Pro
Really fast
See More
Top
Con
Not as Good as the Windows Version
Glitchy, adds more spaces when indenting but you can't fix it as it just keeps doing it. Can't wrap text around tables but Windows version can. Both versions won't place page count outside margins where it belongs.
See More
Top
Pro
Easy to use
See More
Top
Pro
Open source
See More
Specs
Platforms:
Windows, Linux, Mac, Android
Hide
See All
Experiences
Get it
here
100
54
Cryptpad
All
5
Experiences
Pros
3
Cons
1
Specs
Top
Con
Limited storage
The free version offers only 50 Mb storage.
See More
Top
Pro
NGI award
Europe’s Next Generation Internet initiative (NGI.eu) award for privacy and trust-enhanced technologies. The NGI Startup Awards recognize Europe’s most promising entrepreneurs who develop revolutionary products, solutions and services.
See More
Top
Pro
Kanban
Kanban board.
See More
Top
Pro
Markdown
Markdown support, also for presentations.
See More
Specs
Platforms:
Web
Collaborative:
Yes
End-to-end encryption:
Yes
Markdown support:
Yes
See All Specs
Hide
Free / paid
11
7
WPS Office
All
30
Experiences
Pros
15
Cons
14
Specs
Top
Con
Chinese software
Might be a security problem for some end-users.
See More
Top
Pro
Excellent Microsoft Office compatibility
WPS has the best compatibility with MS Office files of all major office suites that support Linux.
See More
Top
Con
Proprietary software
Although some versions/programs are free to download, they're all proprietary licenses utilizing a freeware model.
See More
Top
Pro
Ribbon-like UI
WPS is the only Linux office suit to offer a Ribbon-like UI for better ease of use. Although, if you wish to keep using a classic drop-down menu style UI, you can.
See More
Top
Con
No HiDPI support
Problematic with 4K screens.
See More
Top
Pro
Free version
WPS comes in three flavors: Free, Standard ($49.95) and Professional ($69.95).
See More
Top
Con
No equation editor in Linux
Equation editor for Linux has been "under development" for several years with no real additional info from the developers. Safe to say it's just not going to happen. No equation editor is a deal breaker for some, which is a shame. Otherwise this office suite performs very well.
See More
Top
Pro
Cross-platform desktop and mobile
Available on Windows, Linux, iOS and Android.
See More
Top
Con
Lacks ODF support
WPS Office does not support importing or exporting OpenDocument Format, the default file format of LibreOffice and OpenOffice.
See More
Top
Pro
Pdf viewer
Has support to view pdf files.
See More
Top
Con
Installing can be a hassle
A .deb file is offered, but missing fonts can be a problem.
See More
Top
Pro
Multilingual
WPS Office is available in more than 40 languages.
See More
Top
Con
No hyphenaton, no help or real forum
Lack of hyphenation in Writer is a terrible mistake. Reading the few forums about it will let you know that it breaks the words without rules and without hyphens in any language. The question was stated in 2013 and still doesn't have an answer. Their help system practically doesn't exist, everything leads you to a 404 page. Maybe this issue could be easily resolved by developers with a plugin or something like that, but the Linux community doesn't show interest for the product.
See More
Top
Pro
Tabbed interface
Instead of open up a new instance of the program for each document, WPS opens each document as a separate tab, allowing for easy switching between them.
See More
Top
Con
Ads
There are in-app ads.
See More
Top
Pro
Smooth integration with many different cloud services at the same time
WPS integrates with multiple cloud service's at once such as Dropbox, One Drive, Google Drive and more.
See More
Top
Con
Default font styles are not pretty
See More
Top
Pro
Integrated backups
WPS will automatically save your document over time to prevent data loss.
See More
Top
Con
Only the basic office tools
WPS has software for word-processing, spreadsheets and presentations. No tools for database management, note-taking, graphics, etc.
See More
Top
Pro
Encryption support
WPS allows you to encrypt and password-lock files.
See More
Top
Con
Very slow to load
I looks like there is a splash screen, but it doesn't appear until just before the full interface loads, which can be about 20 seconds. It is often slow enough to cause the user to click again and again, resulting in the app loading multiple times in succession.
See More
Top
Pro
It is not owned by Microsoft
Supporting linux & open source and leaving Microsoft because of their greed and instability with updates etc.. (personal preference)
See More
Top
Con
Some Ms Fonts are not available (ie Ariel)
See More
Top
Pro
View documents side by side
You can split the window allowing to view different parts of the same document, or open two documents for comparison, also imitating Microsoft Word.
See More
Top
Con
Dumps configuration files onto the desktop that are visible to the user
Each of the apps in the suite has a .desktop configuration file that is created at first launch and remains thereafter. Removal results in re-creation.
See More
Top
Pro
Clean edition when sharing your document
Text modifications can be verified at the margins, not mixed with the text, imitating Microsoft Word. On the other side, LibreOffice/OpenOffice don't have this very useful feature.
See More
Top
Con
There are better Office alternatives for Linux
In my testing of office suites for Linux, WPS Office was not as comprehensive as LibreOffice, and the resemblance to Microsoft 365 applications was better in OnlyOffice Desktop Editors. Moreover, Linux users can also access the online applications of Microsoft 365 via Google Chrome or other web browsers.
See More
Top
Pro
Change pdf documents to word
See More
Top
Pro
Available on snapcraft and flathub too
See More
Specs
Platforms:
Windows; Linux; IOS; Android
Database management:
No
Project management:
No
Word processing:
Yes
See All Specs
Hide
See All
Experiences
Free
298
237
Built By the Slant team
Find the best product instantly.
4.7 star rating
Add to Chrome
Add to Edge
Add to Firefox
Add to Opera
Add to Brave
Add to Safari
Try it now - it's free
{}
undefined
url next
price drop