![]() ![]() The latest contract breech I've had with them is regarding their SLA agreement. (Chromium's bug tracker I've had some success with but it's not 100% a Google product) In fact, over the past decade I've had to reach out to various support levels on different products and can say they stand at a remarkable 0% solve rate. Google is literally the worst company I've ever done business with. ![]() ![]() GSuite is ok when it works most times, when it doesn't it's a nightmare. I'm fairly certain they were scanning emails for ad targeting up until the past year or so. What legal agreement? It's not like they won't weasel out of it anyway. Of course, none of this is particularly surprising considering it was posted by OnlyOffice themselves. I also tested Collabora very briefly (using NextCloud's demo), and the toolbar is client side, which means it could very well be that modes are not shared. You must take them at their word for this!įor collaborative editing, modes (bold/italic/font sizes etc), Collabora uses the same state for all clients. This must be taken into account when considering resource limits when scaling, and latency and bandwidth to the client(s).Ĭollabora's handling of OOXML (.docx/.xlsx/.pptx) is much worse than OnlyOffice's. The "comparison" really only points out three issues:Ĭollabora runs an instance of Libreoffice on the server. If it had been a good comparison, it would have listed pros and cons of both solutions, rather than only pros for one, and only cons for the other. It's just an advertising piece bashing Collabora.
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