I used to have that and Libre Office. Now I’m retired just use the stuff that Apple provides.
There were two versions of NeoOffice; one was NeoOffice/J (Java) and the other one was a proposed Cocoa version which never worked well enough to continue.I used to use NeoOffice eons ago when OpenOffice only supported an X11 gui on Macs. I believe that NeoOffice supported Aqua from day one.
What do you need it for? If you're looking for a basic office suite but you don't need collaborative features then LibreOffice would fit the bill. It's still very Linuxy with its UI design but it's come lightyears from the days when its predecessor OpenOffice only ran on Mac using x11 or Java. That's what necessitated the NeoOffice fork to begin with.Whats a decent and supported office package these days for the Mac if you don't wanna go down the MS, Apple or Google route?
I barely even remembered that name. I still use LibreOffice and Google Docs.I hadn't heard of NeoOffice in ages. What you all using these days?
I use the stable branch of LibreOffice, version 7.6.4 at the moment https://www.libreoffice.org/download/download-libreoffice/Whats a decent and supported office package these days for the Mac if you don't wanna go down the MS, Apple or Google route?
If you don't need a gazillion features try OnlyOffice (the desktop version). It's pretty nice https://www.onlyoffice.com/Whats a decent and supported office package these days for the Mac if you don't wanna go down the MS, Apple or Google route?
It really is. I use it with Nextcloud so I can create and edit documents using OnlyOffice in a web browser. I installed it using docker on my Synology NAS so it's effectively a server application in this scenario. It's pretty well compatible with MS Office documents too. IMO better than LibreOffice which often exhibits formatting errors with MS Office documents.If you don't need a gazillion features try OnlyOffice (the desktop version). It's pretty nice https://www.onlyoffice.com/
[LibreOffice is] still very Linuxy with its UI design but it's come lightyears from the days when its predecessor OpenOffice only ran on Mac using x11 or Java. That's what necessitated the NeoOffice fork to begin with.