2/5/2026 at 7:22:26 PM
First of all, I love LibreOffice very much as the last bastion of sanity in classic document suites, and I love what Collabora is trying to do with the online piece. So, first, a million thanks. Truly.Now, to put on the the "feedback is a gift" and "radical transparency" caps.
From the screenshot comparison in TFA: The new one looks all Microsoft-Ribbony. That's a huge step backward. The big strength of LibreOffice or Collabora Desktop Classic is that it has a sane UI/menubar visual paradigm. (Which MS obliterated eons ago.)
But let's talk about what matters: Collabora (the online document suite) is slow as heck.
It needs to be fast-updating for shared multi-user docs, like Google Docs/Sheets or Word/Excel 365.
That should be the top priority. Full stop.
LibreOffice works fine for desktop. But, for Collabora, the web experience needs to be fast. The lag in Collabora is simply unacceptable.
People expect online, and they expect collaborative, and they expect nearly instantaneous updates (at least not painful to type and wait for screen to update).
Talk about misplaced priorities. In my very humble opinion.
by realityfactchex
2/5/2026 at 7:42:09 PM
At least to me, it seems most regular users would struggle and have their productivity reduced attempting to learn a new word processing UI. Everyone and their extended family has been trained on Microsoft products, with Microsoft UI design.I think this matters for the paying customers of things like Collabora and LibreOffice, as they're using it in a work environment. Not at home.
by 0x1ch
2/5/2026 at 8:52:32 PM
> most regular users would...have their productivity reduced...this matters for the paying customers...using it in a work environmentIf the concern is business productivity, then it might be interesting to read that at least some research indicates (perhaps counterintuitively to some) that classic style is better:
"...results indicate that Excel 2003 is significantly superior to Excel 2007 in all the dependent variables...results support the conclusion that the user interface of Excel 2007 did change for the worst in comparison with the user interface of the 2003 version." [0]
[0] Morales (2010), A COMPARATIVE USABILITY STUDY OF MICROSOFT OFFICE 2007 AND MICROSOFT OFFICE 2003, https://scholar7-dev.uprm.edu/server/api/core/bitstreams/a03...
by realityfactchex
2/5/2026 at 10:30:44 PM
A study from 16 years ago is hardly relevant anymore. Back in 2003, people were still familiar with Office 2003's layout; most people have long since forgotten that layout or never learnt it in the first place.The author doesn't discuss users' existing familiarity with Office 2003 and they only mention the word 'training' once, that "software design to interact with technology should require the least amount of training as possible" whilst never acknowledging that training in, and even qualifications in, the use of the Office suite was very much a thing in the 1990s and early 2000s.
Even then, the most problems were had in Excel. Advanced usage of Excel is done by technical people who would have had some training. Word and PowerPoint weren't shown to have significant difference in usability; arguably, Word is the program most people forced to use the Office suite spend their time in.
Never mind the ways by which the Ribbon and computers have changed since Office 2007. Options moved around, the Ribbon height reduced, screens having gotten wider to compress fewer options into submenus…
The author states at the end of their conclusion:
> In order to determine if the result of the study with respect to the Excel 2007 application persists and are not due to the learning curve the experiment can be repeated with users having at least three years using this version.
Do you know if the author or anybody else followed up?
It would be more interesting to see a comparison between Office 365 now that the interface has effectively become the de facto standard (same as Windows, macOS, mobile, tablet, and the web version) and Google Sheets (which retains the menus, toolbar, etc.).
I'm no lover of the Ribbon myself but I feel like there's better evidence for it not being the ideal interface than this which wouldn't have convinced me even at the time.
This isn't the proof that'll bring down the titan.
by zapzupnz
2/5/2026 at 11:25:26 PM
>> the study with respect to the Excel 2007 application persists...can be repeated with users having...years using this version.> Do you know if the author or anybody else followed up
I would love to see more recent and similarly thoughtful work on the exact same subject. If I find more, I'll try to remember to come back here and comment. Definitely, I am interested in the clearest evidence regarding whether either paradigm is "actually" more usable, and not just the result of some confounding variable(s).
With a null hypothesis that the classic toolbar is no better than the ribbon, I just wanted to see some data (instead of assuming that what users have now has to be more efficient for those users just because it's what the market-leading product has been giving users for about two decades).
by realityfactchex
2/5/2026 at 11:35:57 PM
I suspect any such studies these days will be Office vs Google Docs vs iWork vs LibreOffice. Mind boggles how that data will look!by zapzupnz
2/6/2026 at 12:48:14 AM
Well, to get a really balanced UX research sample, you must invoke the full trifecta:- The Zoomer
- The Boomer
- The Clanker
by andai
2/5/2026 at 8:58:47 PM
The question is, if you grant that a different design is better in a vacuum, how to weigh that against the benefits of existing familiarity.by ameliaquining
2/5/2026 at 9:28:30 PM
That's easy. Would you rather have your coworkers working with an artificial handicap, or not?Some people give regular users too little credit. A major reason they are such terrible users is because the software they are given is terrible.
Fix the software, and the users' ability is, to a measurable degree, fixed.
Existing familiarity is nothing compared with the daily additive benefits of better tools.
by realityfactchex
2/5/2026 at 8:59:04 PM
I agree - we're coming up on 20 years of the ribbon, it is too jarring to go back to the fixed toolbars and the vast majority of computer users have no experience with the "old way."by itsrobreally
2/5/2026 at 10:44:26 PM
Except for all the people who use Google Docs, I suppose.by trnglina
2/6/2026 at 1:12:50 PM
Google Docs implements the most popular 10% of features that people use 90% of the time.It was said in the distant past that the last 10% of the time everyone is using different features — the long tail 90% of features. You had to implement them in your software.
When did we switch so we adapt our workflows instead, and only use the common features now? And software doesn't have to implement the long tail?
by direwolf20
2/5/2026 at 11:03:12 PM
This is true I suppose. Google Docs is a bit different. I'm not very familiar with their offerings. Here in the US, most stop using it past grade school and graduate to MS products after, at least in my experience.I don't think it matters since Universities will not be taking Google Doc submissions unless it's core ed classes, any beyond it will be LaTeX anyways.
by 0x1ch
2/6/2026 at 8:30:39 AM
LaTeX is no longer the king of universities, Word has been for quite some time part of the official templates.https://www.acm.org/publications/authors/submissions
And I can tell that while at CERN, those using LaTeX on paper submissions were the minority, on ATLAS TDAQ/HLT group it was a mix of Word, and FrameMaker.
by pjmlp
2/6/2026 at 4:38:29 PM
Maybe this is unique to my comp sci program, but all of our final papers in my program were required in LaTeX before graduating in 2023.by 0x1ch
2/6/2026 at 2:08:58 AM
I have worked in 3 companies in the last 8 years and we all use gsuite just fine. I will even say that I really prefer gsuite over office365 web.by kwanbix
2/6/2026 at 10:11:27 AM
I would like an easy way to switch between the two paradigms. I got used to the ribbonby jimnotgym
2/6/2026 at 2:55:19 PM
What's wrong with the ribbon? It's basically a tabbed toolbar. Unlike a menu bar it doesn't cover up content or require extra actions to hide, and it doesn't require precise mouse movement in order to avoid accidentally hiding.by rendaw
2/5/2026 at 7:46:08 PM
> It needs to be fast-updating for shared multi-user docs, like Google Docs/Sheets or Word/Excel 365.In my experience, Google Docs has this, but realtime collaboration with Word is unusable. Which is interesting, because that means a huge number of existing Office 365 users have yet to experience it.
I wonder if there's an opportunity there.
by rlpb
2/6/2026 at 8:32:59 AM
I think UI looks is a very Subjective opinion. I am rather young so I have realy only experience the Ribbons and for me everything back to the old is a huge step back is always going to look old and dusty to me. But thats personal opinion.Now speed in editing thats a clear showstopper. And we all can agree on that.
by mastermage
2/5/2026 at 9:00:37 PM
The internal guts of Collabora's data models and such are based on the LibreOffice code, right? My understanding is that it's really hard to get Google Docs-like performance with real-time multi-user editing if the whole app wasn't engineered from the ground up to make it possible, which LibreOffice wasn't.by ameliaquining
2/5/2026 at 9:06:15 PM
Unless Microsoft complete re-wrote Office to add Sharepoint collaboration features, they seem to have managed it.by NetMageSCW
2/5/2026 at 9:12:16 PM
I would not be surprised to learn that substantial parts of the core of Office were rewritten to make that possible. Unlike Collabora/LibreOffice, Microsoft is one of the most well-resourced organizations in the world and can afford to do that kind of colossally expensive project. Of course, they'd need an extremely compelling reason to do so, but Google Docs was an existential threat to their market share.Also, other commenters report that the real-time collaborative editing experience in Office is more sluggish than in Google Docs, and this is consistent with my own admittedly very limited anecdotal experience, and if this has persisted for years it may well be for deep architectual reasons.
by ameliaquining
2/5/2026 at 10:59:38 PM
Office for web and desktop office were literally separate teams, in separate locations, when I worked there. Complete separation unified only by a document output.by freeone3000
2/6/2026 at 1:10:32 PM
Microsoft did actual UX research about the ribbon. It's better. Deal with it.by direwolf20
2/5/2026 at 7:57:12 PM
> The new one looks all Microsoft-RibbonyLibreOffice has a Ribbon interface option, too.
by zapzupnz
2/5/2026 at 8:12:48 PM
If both remain available options, that's fine. Sometimes the new thing becomes the default, and then the old thing gets dropped.by realityfactchex
2/5/2026 at 8:57:51 PM
That is not going to happen with LibreOffice.by chris_wot
2/6/2026 at 2:51:45 AM
You can switch away from ribbon styles btw, if it's not your jam. IMO it's grown on me. As for my experience, collabora thus-far has been plenty responsive.by BloodyIron
2/5/2026 at 10:16:49 PM
Ribbon has it's uses for certain people or situations. Of course menu is much faster but again for certain people.by mosquitobiten
2/5/2026 at 9:01:28 PM
I'm currently working on a set of documents with 3 or 4 other people in collabora and we have no more problems than with office 365. It works. You can type simultaneously even in the same line (one types while another corrects the spelling of the previous word, etc), no problem at all.by wazoox