I need Outlook and Publisher!
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If you're on Mac, Mail is an excellent email client, better than Outlook imo, but it comes free with Mac OSX.
If you're on Windows, I highly recommend Thunderbird as an email client, which is better than Outlook.
Publisher is for making brochures and stuff, but Gimp can do a great job at that, as well as dedicated publishing apps such as Scribus.
All the programs I've mentioned above are completely free, and mostly open source.
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Thunderbird is Open Source, which is a major win. For publisher, (eww) you could givethis a try. Or go to Microsoft if you want the official versions, but be prepared to pay for that.
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Thunderbird is good for mail on both platforms.
Scribus is a good replacement for Publisher, but it's pretty difficult. Be prepared to learn, because you'll need to. Be open minded, as many things seem counter-intuitive as they're intended for print.
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You two just summed up my post
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Outlook and Publisher are not free... They are still better than Thunderbird, OSX Mail or anything else, in my opinion.
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LeDerpy123 wrote:
Outlook and Publisher are not free... They are still better than Thunderbird, OSX Mail or anything else, in my opinion.
Personally I've never seen the need for a desktop email client (although I see the use on mobile devices for instant notifications and such) but I don't see the cost of outlook coming even remotely close to justifiable when there is Thunderbird. I don't think that Open-Source software projects are currently ready to eliminate these paid options, but think, is it really important for you to use Outlook at a cost when the same things can be done in Thunderbird (or in a browser) for free? As for publisher, I've never really liked it, but if you were going to pay for either program, I'd say publisher is more important to have the actual version than mail, which can be handled well by open-source.
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jji7skyline wrote:
You two just summed up my post
Except we shied away from Mail and didn't recommend GIMP for publishing (because that's really not what it's for). Plus, I gave a warning.
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Gmail is awesome for mail, is online and needs no download.
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NeilWest wrote:
Gmail is awesome for mail, is online and needs no download.
However, some people may not want to use Gmail, perhaps because of a business email or a website email.
But Gmail is great.
Last edited by kayybee (2013-02-28 03:15:19)
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mythbusteranimator wrote:
Office is about...say....$500
Actually, it's it's only a little over $200. Older versions might be even cheaper, especially if it can be bought under a student discount.
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16Skittles wrote:
LeDerpy123 wrote:
Outlook and Publisher are not free... They are still better than Thunderbird, OSX Mail or anything else, in my opinion.
Personally I've never seen the need for a desktop email client (although I see the use on mobile devices for instant notifications and such) but I don't see the cost of outlook coming even remotely close to justifiable when there is Thunderbird. I don't think that Open-Source software projects are currently ready to eliminate these paid options, but think, is it really important for you to use Outlook at a cost when the same things can be done in Thunderbird (or in a browser) for free? As for publisher, I've never really liked it, but if you were going to pay for either program, I'd say publisher is more important to have the actual version than mail, which can be handled well by open-source.
AbiWord is supposed to be a lighter version of Libreoffice/Openoffice as well if that interests you, floats your boat, tickles your fancy, etc.
Also I've never found desktop email clients useful either, until recently when I've acquired numerous different email accounts for one purpose or another, and it's probably the only way to stay on top of all of that.
@veggie: I think you'd be surprised how much Mail and Thunderbird have in common, they have an almost identical UI and both have very good ease of use. Of course on a PC the choice is made for you.
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jji7skyline wrote:
@veggie: I think you'd be surprised how much Mail and Thunderbird have in common, they have an almost identical UI and both have very good ease of use. Of course on a PC the choice is made for you.
If they have an identical UI and one's open source while one isn't, why wouldn't you choose the open source one?
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veggieman001 wrote:
jji7skyline wrote:
@veggie: I think you'd be surprised how much Mail and Thunderbird have in common, they have an almost identical UI and both have very good ease of use. Of course on a PC the choice is made for you.
If they have an identical UI and one's open source while one isn't, why wouldn't you choose the open source one?
Also, one is platform dependent. Thunderbird works on OS X, Windows, and Linux.
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16Skittles wrote:
veggieman001 wrote:
jji7skyline wrote:
@veggie: I think you'd be surprised how much Mail and Thunderbird have in common, they have an almost identical UI and both have very good ease of use. Of course on a PC the choice is made for you.
If they have an identical UI and one's open source while one isn't, why wouldn't you choose the open source one?
Also, one is platform dependent. Thunderbird works on OS X, Windows, and Linux.
Indeed. If you ever had to switch, then you wouldn't have to get used to a different interface, too.
And OP didn't specify OS, so it's more safe to assume Windows.
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veggieman001 wrote:
16Skittles wrote:
veggieman001 wrote:
If they have an identical UI and one's open source while one isn't, why wouldn't you choose the open source one?Also, one is platform dependent. Thunderbird works on OS X, Windows, and Linux.
Indeed. If you ever had to switch, then you wouldn't have to get used to a different interface, too.
And OP didn't specify OS, so it's more safe to assume Windows.
Especially with a signature that states "Everybody loves Windows, right?" with a .gif of a windows logo nyan?
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16Skittles wrote:
veggieman001 wrote:
16Skittles wrote:
Also, one is platform dependent. Thunderbird works on OS X, Windows, and Linux.Indeed. If you ever had to switch, then you wouldn't have to get used to a different interface, too.
And OP didn't specify OS, so it's more safe to assume Windows.Especially with a signature that states "Everybody loves Windows, right?" with a .gif of a windows logo nyan?
Indeed
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veggieman001 wrote:
16Skittles wrote:
veggieman001 wrote:
Indeed. If you ever had to switch, then you wouldn't have to get used to a different interface, too.
And OP didn't specify OS, so it's more safe to assume Windows.Especially with a signature that states "Everybody loves Windows, right?" with a .gif of a windows logo nyan?
Indeed
Indeed what?
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macbookacer wrote:
veggieman001 wrote:
16Skittles wrote:
Especially with a signature that states "Everybody loves Windows, right?" with a .gif of a windows logo nyan?Indeed
Indeed what?
You have a windowslove sig, apparently...
I've tried thunderbird, it's slower than mail and doesn't do as well a job with my mail, but that's just personal preference.
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veggieman001 wrote:
16Skittles wrote:
veggieman001 wrote:
Indeed. If you ever had to switch, then you wouldn't have to get used to a different interface, too.
And OP didn't specify OS, so it's more safe to assume Windows.Especially with a signature that states "Everybody loves Windows, right?" with a .gif of a windows logo nyan?
Indeed
Hm...
look at the username
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kayybee wrote:
veggieman001 wrote:
16Skittles wrote:
Especially with a signature that states "Everybody loves Windows, right?" with a .gif of a windows logo nyan?Indeed
Hm...
look at the username
He must be a hackint0sher
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jji7skyline wrote:
kayybee wrote:
veggieman001 wrote:
IndeedHm...
look at the usernameHe must be a hackint0sher
Can you stop fooling around?
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macbookacer wrote:
jji7skyline wrote:
kayybee wrote:
Hm...
look at the usernameHe must be a hackint0sher
Can you stop fooling around?
Sorry my friend.
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