> Microsoft (and I am no fan) has the best tool for data manipulation that exists for most of humanity.
Sigh... "Microsoft has". Time was, spreadsheets was a generic category of software, made by lots of different software makers. Nowadays, it feels like people not only don't know this, but can hardly even conceive of the possibility that "spreadsheet" could mean something other than "Excel". At least I think that more people are still able to think of, say, word processors or presentation software as not necessarily Microsoft products; the spreadsheets battle seems to have been their most crushing victory in the "Office" or "productivity software" wars.
It's sad not only for the IT world in general or from a free-market perspective, but for spreadsheets in specific, too: Who knows what stuff like Quattro Pro or Lotus Improv would be capable of now, if they were still around?
Sigh... "Microsoft has". Time was, spreadsheets was a generic category of software, made by lots of different software makers. Nowadays, it feels like people not only don't know this, but can hardly even conceive of the possibility that "spreadsheet" could mean something other than "Excel". At least I think that more people are still able to think of, say, word processors or presentation software as not necessarily Microsoft products; the spreadsheets battle seems to have been their most crushing victory in the "Office" or "productivity software" wars.
It's sad not only for the IT world in general or from a free-market perspective, but for spreadsheets in specific, too: Who knows what stuff like Quattro Pro or Lotus Improv would be capable of now, if they were still around?