Yup, that means the latest version of CodeWeaver‘s commercial Wine
offering also supports the latest version of Microsoft’s hugely
popular Office suite, including both Home and Business editions.
And that’s big news. LibreOffice and Google Docs are near-perfect
replacements for most of us, but many students and business still
require the use of Microsoft Office products or file formats. As great
as interoperability is these days few alternatives are as fuss-free as
opting to install Office on Linux using Wine.
Other Windows software and games that feature improved CrossOver 17 support:
- Microsoft Office 2016
- Microsoft Office 2013
- League of Legends
- Everquest
- Everquest II
- WebSite-Watcher
- Battle.Net
CrossOver 17 also features a large update to the Wine compatibility
layer, a move that brings thousands of big fixes and usability
improvements to users’ desktops and the (ever growing) array of software it supports.
Buy CrossOver 17
CrossOver 17 for Linux and macOS is available to purchase right now from the
CodeWeavers website.
A free trial is also available if you want to test things out before you commit.
Wait: I thought Wine was free?
Wine
is free, open-source software. It’s available to install on Ubuntu (and
other Linux distributions) from the repos, for absolutely nothing.
CrossOver is (in effect) a commercial version of Wine. It’s not free;
you have to pay for it. But many people are happy to do this — and no,
they’re not crazy!