OpenOffice 3.0 Revealed: All the Features You Don't Want to Miss!
A new version of OpenOffice is upon us and it’s worth your while to check it out. We’ve long recommended this suite of programs as one of the must-have open-source applications on your PC. Simply put, it’s as close to Microsoft’s Office suite as you’re going to get without plunking down a small fortune. It doesn’t contain any unpleasantries in design and functionality that the idea of a “free office suite” might conjure up. And its newest 3.0 incarnation—all of .6 somethings greater than the last full OpenOffice release—adds even more versatility to the suite.
We figured now’s as good a time as any to introduce you to some of our favorite new features of OpenOffice. This isn’t a Microsoft Office 2007-style reinvention of the application. You can expect to see the same general user interface and layout as before—no scary launch button, we promise. A number of the tweaks and additions occur under the suite’s surface. But they’re every bit as important, adding bits of functionality that we sorely missed in OpenOffice 2.4.1. Come with us as we take a walk through the newest bits of OpenOffice 3.0!
Office 2007
Try to open up a .docx file in OpenOffice 2.4.1 and you get this: an ugly conversion screen, with none of the options ever able to open your poor document.
One of the biggest changes to OpenOffice isn’t so much a change as it is an addition. OpenOffice now supports the import of documents created in Microsoft Office 2007 for both the PC and Mac. Previously, you had no recourse: you had to convert .docx files back to .doc before you could pull them up in OpenOffice. But those days are no more. The software suite can handle documents, charts, and presentations that contain that finicky “x” in the extension, no worries.
Launch Window
It's a little gimmicky, but at least OpenOffice's launch window serves as a constant reminder to check for new template and OpenOffice extensions. We still wish the application would better integrate these options into the respective programs, a la Firefox's extension support.
The change is more aesthetic than practical, but you can now start up a base OpenOffice window and be treated to a prompt that asks you where you want to go next. It’s a helpful little launching screen for all six of OpenOffice’s native applications. More than that, the screen also lets you open files directly, load templates, and search for new OpenOffice extensions and templates. You can also click up to the File menu and launch any of the suite’s helpful batch of wizards, including simple Web page design and currency conversions.
Multi-page view
Microsoft Office 2007 still squeaks out the win for having more viewing options for documents than OpenOffice. It sure took the latter long enough to incorporate the common multi-page viewing standard.
Borrowing a page from Microsoft Office 2007—literally—OpenOffice 3.0 now supports the viewing of multiple pages at once. Previously, you were stuck to a one-page-only design regardless of how large your viewing area was. But those days are now gone. You can now view pages side-by-side either sequentially or organized in an even-odd fashion. OpenOffice 3.0 also comes with a sliding zoom bar that makes it easy to adjust the screens’ overall sizes. That noise you hear in the distance is the sound of 30-inch display owners cheering with delight.
Since we’re talking aesthetics, we should also mention that the OpenOffice icons have been tweaked ever-so slightly. These new designs freshen up the look of the entire program but keep the original icon themes pretty intact. We are pleased by this, as the last thing users want to do is mouse-hover their way across the functions of a new-looking toolbar.