Sofware sustitute

M

Mauricio

I have some files created with Office 2003, but in this moment, I don't have
that sofware where I'm. I want to know if exist a free version of some
software that permit to me open and modify files of Office 2003.
 
J

JoAnn Paules [MVP]

Some of the others have talked about Open Office. I don't know much about it
but you could try.

If I was you, I'd say that I couldn't do the work because I didn't have the
software. ;-)
 
D

David R. Norton MVP

I have some files created with Office 2003, but in this moment, I
don't have that sofware where I'm. I want to know if exist a free
version of some software that permit to me open and modify files
of Office 2003.

http://www.openoffice.org is compatible with most Office files.
 
C

Carey Frisch [MVP]

Microsoft Office System Trial Software
http://www.microsoft.com/office/trial/default.mspx

--
Carey Frisch
Microsoft MVP
Windows - Shell/User
Microsoft Community Newsgroups
news://msnews.microsoft.com/

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:

| I have some files created with Office 2003, but in this moment, I don't have
| that sofware where I'm. I want to know if exist a free version of some
| software that permit to me open and modify files of Office 2003.
 
H

Harlan Grove

Mauricio said:
I have some files created with Office 2003, but in this moment, I don't
have
that sofware where I'm. I want to know if exist a free version of some
software that permit to me open and modify files of Office 2003.

In addition to OpenOffice, there are many other open source programs that
can work with .DOC and .XLS files. For Word files (.DOC), you could use
AbiWord

http://www.abisource.com/

For Excel files (.XLS), you could use Gnumeric

http://www.gnome.org/projects/gnumeric/

For both, you could use 602Pro,

http://www.software602.com/products/pcs/index.html

or many of the other packages found on

http://www.google.com/Top/Computers/Software/Office_Suites/

though most of them are shareware rather than freeware. OpenOffice is the
closest to Microsoft Office in terms of features, though Gnumeric is the
most numerically accurate spreadsheet currently in existence (although I
haven't checked NeXS for Unix/Linux systems lately).
 

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