Linked by Thom Holwerda on Fri 29th Jan 2010 22:10 UTC, submitted by twickline
Linux The Bordeaux Technology Group released Bordeaux 2.0.0 for Linux today. "Bordeaux 2.0.0 marks major progress over older releases. With version 2.0.0 and onward we bundle our own Wine build and many tools and libraries that Wine depends upon. With this release we bundle Wine 1.1.36, Cabextract, Mozilla Gecko, Unzip, Wget and other support libraries and tools. We have improved support for Microsoft Office 2007 (Word, Excel and PowerPoint) and preliminary support for Internet Explorer 7 in this release, there has also been many small bug fixes and tweaks on the back-end."
Permalink for comment 406916
To read all comments associated with this story, please click here.
Different target users
by BlueofRainbow on Sat 30th Jan 2010 16:11 UTC
BlueofRainbow
Member since:
2009-01-06

From what I know about the three ways of running Windows applications on Linux:

Wine by it-self targets the hard-core Linux crowd who loves thinkering with the command line and system settings.

Cross-Over Office (Code Weaver) targets the sophisticated user who prefers Linux yet has to deal with Windows for a living. Their various white papers aims at enticing the corporate/enterprise IT. Their Bottle concept (refinement over Wine) is interesting in that one could develop end-user applications and VB scripts for the various versions of (e.g. Office 2003, Office 2007, and soon Office 2010) and test them on a single machine without re-booting and without interferences between the versions.

Bordeaux targets the intermediate user - no thinkering required as it is packaged for specific Linux distributions.

Reply Score: 3