Are there good Microsoft word alternatives that support Linux (I don’t mind closed source)? Libreoffice is meh and only office is quite good, but are there any better ones? Also, is there a way to install word on Linux using wine? When I do that my laptop just overheats and loses internet connection.
What is it with Microsoft Word that makes you prefer it to others?
Not op, but what drives me back to word (and other ms office like pp and publisher and win is:
90%: Far Superior spell and grammar and style check
10%:
Easy integration of a good tts to read my own texts to me as well as lecture for university.
Easy citavi integration
Auto complete sentences (at least in English)
superior layout presets (on click and OK and modern enough style to submit without even thinking about it) (Far superior for publisher)
As someone with dyslexia, the superior spell and grammar check is what I miss most in libreOffice. I usually have to use an external tool for spell check like grammarly.
Have you tried languagetool? There is an integration for Libre Office, Obsidian, MS Word and others. It offers spell checking, rephrasing and is superior to the build in checker in my experience. You could compare it to DeepL versus Azure Translate.
For libreoffice, does it support change tracking and digitally signed documents with digital signature + photo of physical signature?
@JustEnoughDucks @NateNate60 I’m sure about the first two features: Yes. I don’t know about a picture of your manual signature, unless you talk about simply embedding it in a document: That’s for sure possible.
Where doed WPS office source it’s ads? I mean, if you run it in a (more or less) sandbox (well, you might want to have access to the files you’re editing), and without access to internet, how does the ad interface behave?
I actually don’t remember seeing adverts on the Linux version when I tried it out a few years ago. Maybe that’s changed, or maybe they just don’t run adverts on the Linux version.
Disabling WPS’s Internet access will remove the advertisements. Strangely enough, the WPS blog gives instructions on how to do this in Windows.
For me, I use the office suite at work, and one of the simplest things that makes me wish i could use it at home is that damn search bar in the top.
After that, I appreciate that libreoffice introduced the ribbon UI. I grew up with word 2003, so i know what it was like, but after they introduced the ribbon ui, it immediately felt more easy to use. Especially the style picker.