

LibreOffice, like OpenOffice, offers a free, open source alternative. In this blog entry, we’ll explore a new development that makes LibreOffice smartphone or tablet friendly. While it retains amazing functionality as an office suite, LibreOffice has been missing something: the ability to work on the go via your mobile device. Because of that, LibreOffice is a great tool for educators or even families looking to keep up with digital learning. The big difference? LibreOffice is a free, open-source set of applications created by The Document Foundation. It includes tools like a word-processor, spreadsheets, drawings, and even databases. Version 22.04.2 is the second bugfix to the bigger version 22.04 earlier this year.The suite of productivity products called LibreOffice is a lot like other office suites. The KDE Project also recently announced a new release of KDE Gear. For instance, we can confirm that the Android app was able to open password-protected files directly from Dropbox, which neither the Dropbox app nor Google Docs can do. They are still a little clunky, but they're useful, especially as viewers.

The mobile apps have matured noticeably from when we looked at LibreOffice 7.1. The company also offers mobile versions for both iOS and Android. Fancy a remix? Ubuntu Unity and Ubuntu Cinnamon have also hit 22.04.Minimal, systemd-free Alpine Linux releases version 3.16.Linux Lite 6.0: It's quite pretty, but 'lite' it is not.openSUSE Leap 15.4: The best desktop on the RPM side of the Linux world.Alongside conventional desktop-oriented versions, Collabora offers a web-based version, Collabora Online, which works alongside various cloud storage providers, including both NextCloud and OwnCloud along with many others. One of the significant partners behind LibreOffice is Collabora, which has just released Collabora Office version 22.05.Ĭollabora is one of the leading developers of LibreOffice, making about one-third of the commits to the codebase. The Enterprise version has a slower release cycle, but it's available with commercial support. Android app was able to open password-protected files directly from Dropbox, which neither the Dropbox app nor Google Docs can do It's comparable to a free Linux distro, or a short-term Ubuntu release: there's no commercial support, but you may be able to get assistance from other users – in other words, the Community. The difference is that the Community version is the faster-moving development branch.
