In the past, most software I used was paid and proprietary and would have some sort of limitation that I would try to get around by any means possible. Sometimes that would be resetting the clock on my computer, disabling the internet, and other times downloading a patch.

But in the past few years I’ve stopped using those things and have focused only on free and open source software (FOSS) to fulfill my needs. I hardly have to worry about privacy problems or trying to lock down a program that calls home. I might be missing out on some things that commercial software delivers, but I’m hardly aware of what they are anymore. It seems like the trend is for commercial software providers to migrate toward online or service models that have the company doing all the computing. I’m opposed to that, since they can take away your service at any time.

What do you do?

  • Rentlar
    link
    fedilink
    English
    12 years ago

    Paid Software Experience:

    • “Hi, Thanks for choosing us! Please sign into or sign up for your account! You agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy right?”
    • “Great, and thanks for your purchase! Did you know we have a limited time sale on our Ultra Pro Superprofessional Edition?”
    • “No? Well we also have a monthly subscription plan that can get you very cool features! Wanna check that out?”
    • “No? Alright we’ll get on with installation. But first, we need to make sure you’re not running a VM, VPN and other software we don’t like from our handy DRM software.”
    • “Oh, that DRM software also happens to collect your contact information and read your files so we can sell that for money. Thanks and enjoy!”

    FOSS Experience:

    • Aight you got enough disk space? Here’s the GPL. Where we droppin? Cool, enjoy your program! Support me if you feel like it, bud!
  • @pseud@lemmynsfw.com
    link
    fedilink
    English
    12 years ago

    About 20 years ago, I saw this exact same discussion on mozillazine. Everyone was raving about FOSS being nicer, friendlier, and more convenient, and how piracy is bothersome.

    Then this guy posted a reply, to the tune of “Yeah, and now imagine your entire OS was like that… you should try it.”

    A little later I did, and never looked back. For me, FOSS is convenience.

    I use Arch btw.

  • @dewritoninja@pawb.social
    link
    fedilink
    English
    12 years ago

    It’s a mix of both. On my windows gaming rig I have ms office, photoshop sketchup and fl studio pirated. I haven’t found a good foss alternative for photoshop, sketchup or flstudio (using gimp is worse than being an actuall gimp ). On my Linux laptop I’ve been using more and more foss. I’m getting use to Libre office but it doesn’t do everything I need. Switched chrome for Firefox, vscodium as a code editor, waydroid for Android apps

    • @heeplr@feddit.de
      link
      fedilink
      English
      0
      edit-2
      2 years ago

      Formulars, such as calculating a sum based on the preceding fields.

      • Field formatting, such as appending .00 to a currency amount

      You’re doing it wrong. PDF with embedded javascript is a nightmare and it still doesn’t make PDF equal to excel.

      Better generate your documents with your favourite HTML templating engine from your DB and convert them to simple PDF in the last step.

      LibreOffice notoriously renders Microsoft Office documents incorrectly in my experience.

      Only had that experience with badly designed, macro ridden documents which there’s no excuse for anyway nowadays. I use a lot of print templates (various label printers) and it works flawlessly.

      Also, exporting a non MS file format usually imports fine in LibreOffice, even with complex documents.

      The ability to quickly edit PDF makes it the office suite of my choice.

      • @mikezila@lemmy.dbzer0.com
        link
        fedilink
        English
        12 years ago

        Yeah, but if your boss or client sends you a document that doesn’t work you’re not going to tell them “Uh well this is a badly formed document and you shouldn’t embed scripts and it’s your fault that my FOSS alternative application can’t work with this”. At least I hope you’re not.

        • @heeplr@feddit.de
          link
          fedilink
          English
          0
          edit-2
          2 years ago

          At least I hope you’re not.

          Of course I do and I expect my employees to report such incidents to IT. Such documents are common attack vectors.

          In my experience, customers are not aware of failing interoperability or possible security threats and often grateful for such hints.

          There’s a reason why libreoffice (and I guess other office suits aswell), evince or antivirus show a big, fat warning when opening such documents. Surely there are cases were macros are useful or necessary, but if they have to leave the company, you’re doing it wrong.

          This talk might be interesting for you: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4F2xMw3987I

            • @heeplr@feddit.de
              link
              fedilink
              English
              0
              edit-2
              2 years ago

              We live in the real world. If you don’t submit the government forms how they want you to, they shrug and fine the shit out of you.

              Then you just don’t know the law. There is no legislation that enforces Acrobat in any civilized country without alternative.

              Quite the opposite: Send macroridden documents to any decently secure infrastructure and you get a big fat warning in the subject if it’s not filtered entirely. Officials LOVE to do that extra call ensuring that this document is really from you before opening it and no phishing attempt…not.

              Source: working >25 years in IT, >15 years for government IT

              EDIT: we got some real Adobe Acrobat Fanboy here, eh? ;-)