ANTenna Blog -- Open Source

Abiword: One Lean, Mean, Word Processing Machine

Posted by Matthew McKenzie Thursday, Jun 26, 2008, 03:54 PM ET

OpenOffice.org gets a lot of attention these days as a practical, no-cost alternative to Microsoft Office. While OpenOffice.org does a fine job, however, there are times when a smaller, faster, feature-packed word processing program would be useful. There is another open-source application that fits the bill perfectly here -- and it deserves far more attention than it gets.

Abiword often gets tagged as a text editor. In fact, it is a full-fledged word processing program: Its feature set compares favorably to a stand-alone version of OpenOffice.org Writer, and most Microsoft Word users will also find everything they need to do business as usual. That includes all of the page- and character-formatting tools one expects to find in a word processor; more advanced formatting tools like table editors and embedded image support; revision tracking and spell checking (with support for a number of languages via plug-in dictionaries); mail-merge support, and much more.

One thing Abiword does not share with its suite-based peers, however, is an appetite for disk space or a Sasquatch-sized memory footprint. Abiword, for example, requires about 19MB of RAM at startup on my Windows XP system, while Writer requires more than 50MB. This doesn't matter much on a dual-core system with 2GB or memory, but it can make a real difference on an older desktop PC or an ultra-portable laptop.

I also find Abiword's user interface to be extremely clean and functional -- the result of thoughtful design decisions as well as the fact that Abiword doesn't need to pack the same functionality into a limited amount of UI space as a suite-based product does.

When you're traveling really light, Abiword runs just fine on a USB drive or other flash memory device. The version available on Portableapps.com (which is compiled especially to run in portable environments) requires only 15MB installed; although the portable version of OpenOffice.org also does a fine job, it requires more than 80MB of storage and is, in my opinion, a bit slower off the mark.

As always, an open-source, small footprint application like Abiword is most useful when you know its limitations. In this case, that list is surprisingly short: Support for annotations is still in the works (and available on development versions of the program), and the Windows version of Abiword lacks Unicode support. Some folks also cite a lack of support for embedded audio/video and an integrated chart-making tool as major shortcomings, although of course that depends entirely upon individual users' needs.

One area where a serious word processing tool cannot afford to fall short is document-format support. Abiword does quite well in this respect: It opened a number of ODF and Microsoft Word (binary DOC format) documents without a hitch, and OpenOffice.org had no problem opening ODF and DOC files created in Abiword.

Currently, Abiword handles its ODF support via a plugin rather than as its native format, and it provides import-only support for OOXML via the same plugin. The use of a plugin is a non-issue for me, since users can still set Abiword to use ODF as the default format once it's installed. In any case, Abiword's involvement in the 2008 Google Summer of Code means that both of these issues, along with support for annotations and full Windows unicode support, are not very far off.

Although Abiword is available for both Windows and Linux, I think it is especially important for Windows users to know about it. There is already a healthy competition among Linux-based business productivity tools, including OpenOffice.org, Abiword, KOffice, and others. On the Windows side, even when people know about OpenOffice.org -- and many business users still do not -- a vast gulf exists between the plus-sized office suites and, at the other extreme, useless toys like Wordpad.

Abiword fills that void for Windows users, and it does so amazingly well. That makes it ideal not as a replacement word processing program, but rather as a useful -- and eventually, indispensable -- addition to any small-business software library.


Business & E-Business | Hardware & Software | Open Source | Windows




This is a public forum. CMP Media and its affiliates are not responsible for and do not control what is posted herein. CMP Media makes no warranties or guarantees concerning any advice dispensed by its staff members or readers.

Community standards in this comment area do not permit hate language, excessive profanity, or other patently offensive language. Please be aware that all information posted to this comment area becomes the property of CMP Media LLC and may be edited and republished in print or electronic format as outlined in CMP Media's Terms of Service.

Important Note: This comment area is NOT intended for commercial messages or solicitations of business.


Spotlight on Solutions
(Sponsored By Cisco)


Explore ANTenna Blog
Most Recent Posts
ANTenna Blog Topics
     
     
ANTenna Bloggers
ANTenna Blog Roll



Browse by Category
Imaging How-To Center

Document imaging basics, plus how to select a solution

go

FREE Technology Services Locator!

Search our database of 200,000 solution- provider locations by business activity, technology, vertical market, and customer size. Find a technology partner NOW.

go

Tech Term of the Day: iPod

TechEncyclopedia gives you the meaning of today's word, plus more than 20,000 additional IT terms and definitions.


InformationWeek Business Technology Network
InformationWeekInformationWeek 500InformationWeek 500 ConferenceInformationWeek AnalyticsInformationWeek CIO
InformationWeek EventsInformationWeek ReportsInformationWeek MagazinebMightyByte and SwitchDark Reading
Digital LibraryIntelligent EnterpriseInternet EvolutionNetwork ComputingNo Jitter
space
Techweb Events Network
InteropVoiceConWeb 2.0 ExpoWeb 2.0 SummitEnterprise 2.0 ConferenceMobile Business ExpoSoftware ConferenceCSI - Computer Security Institute
Black HatGTECEnergy CampMashup CampStartup Camp
space
Light Reading Communications Network
Light ReadingLight Reading EuropeUnstrungLight Reading's Cable Digital NewsConstantinopleInternet Evolution
Heavy ReadingLight Reading Live!Light Reading InsiderEthernet ExpoOptical ExpoTeleco TVTower Technology Summit
space
Financial Technology Network
Advanced TradingBank Systems & TechnologyInsurance & TechnologyWall Street & TechnologyAccelerating Wall StreetBank Systems & Technology Executive SummitBuyside Trading SummitInsurance & Technology Executive Summit
space
Microsoft Technology Network
MSDN MagazineTechNetThe Architecture Journal
space