Summary | Difficulty Rating | Time to complete |
Install LibreOffice as a fully functional office suite that is Microsoft Office compatible. | ![]() |
5 – 20 minutes. |

LibreOffice is a complete Office suite that is fully compatible with all versions of Microsoft Office. And since it is open source it is also 100% free.
It’s available for Windows, Mac and Linux PCs, updated often, and is the only office suite that works almost identically regardless of machine.
To be fair LibreOffice can’t do everything that MS Office 2010 does. But it does a lot more than offerings such as Google Docs, and has more power than most users need. It is an obvious choice for any user, company, or organization that wants to stop paying for Office.
It comes with a:
- Word processor (Writer)
- Spreadsheet (Calc)
- Presentation system (Impress)
- Drawing package (Draw)
- Database (Base)
- Math equation editor (Math).
One very cool feature is the ability to create PDF files right out of the box. No need to mess around with additional software or creating fake printers.
Installation couldn’t be simpler – just download, run and…that’s it! Depending on your Internet speed you could literally be up and running with it in a few minutes. And if MS Office is your mainstay then I’d suggest taking a few moments to set the default file save format to Word/PowerPoint/Excel before you start.
The one thing it doesn’t come with is an alternative to Microsoft Outlook. However, if you really need an email client, then Mozilla’s Thunderbird comes highly recommended.
But if you are looking for an office suite that is Microsoft Office compatible then you have nothing to lose – so give it a shot! Unless you actually enjoy spending money on software you don’t need.
It?s laborious to search out knowledgeable folks on this matter, however you sound like you already know what you?re talking about! Thanks
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You can also set LibreOffice options to load and save documents in proprietary Microsoft format (eg doc/xls/ppt or docx etc) by default, so you don’t need to know about the standard Open Document Format.
That’s how I have it set up – it seems to avoid a lot of problems that way 🙂
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