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Senior Member
Join Date: Apr 2008
Age: 22
Posts: 174
Rep Power: 1 
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Bundled Software
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All the OSs score high (and XP fares decently), but for extremely different reasons. What Apple offers with the iLife bundle "simply blows the doors off anything it's compared with on the PC plat¬form in terms of ease of use, integration, and accessibility," says Sascha. But he also admits that it's limited. iUfe is about your personal lifestyle and improving it-organizing pictures, making videos, and collecting music are the hallmarks. To get work done, you'd need to buy, direct from Apple, the separate iWork or Microsoft Office for Mac 2008 .
Ubuntu addresses productivity more automatically. The Gutsy Gibbon dis¬tro installs the third-party OpenOffice by default, making it the only OS here to offer a full office suite out of the box (so to speak). Some argue that Ubuntu gets too much credit for this distinction, since Ubuntu developers didn't create Open Office (or Firefox or GIMP or any other auto-installed, bundled applica¬tion). But there's nothing stopping Apple and Microsoft from including a freeware office suite such as Open Office, except the desire to sell their own suites.
Windows Vista has no lack of bun dIed software, but it runs the gamut in useful¬ness. Improvements in programs-among them the slick Internet Explorer 7 (espe¬cially slick when compared with Safari on the Mac, a bad browser), Windows Mail, and Vista Calendar-give it an extra leg up. Its Windows DVD Maker and Movie Maker even compete quite well with iLife on the Mac. Vista is the first Microsoft OS to include anti-malware software:
Windows Defender. But is that a plus or a minus?
Most of the bundled software with Vista is available in some way as a down¬load for XP. But by itself, XP has abso¬lutely the weakest software bundle. Not surprising, since it has essentially the same collection today that it shipped with in 2001.
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