Hi,
I need to buy a new laptop after my old one gave up the ghost yesterday. My preference is to buy another Chromebook, however i'm starting a Masters in Social Research in September and it did occur to me whether I would be better off having a Windows machine that could run MS Office.
What do people think- is this necessary? I know that Google has a free alternative to Office but being an extremely proficient user in Word/Excel/Access (due to work) I wonder if it makes sense to learn a new programme?
Any thoughts welcome. I'd rather keep costs down but my main priority is having something sufficient for my course.
I know that Google has a free alternative to Office but being an extremely proficient user in Word/Excel/Access (due to work) I wonder if it makes sense to learn a new programme?
I did PhD in Education (Randomised Controlled Trail). I had both Chromebook and PC. Chromebook was great for data collection and quick writing. On my PC I had Stata, SPSS, R, Scrivener, Zotero and finally Citavi which is a must if you write a dissertation. You are not going to find worthy alternatives for Chromebook. In a sentence, go for PC.
[quote]Quote From bernardpar:
I know that Google has a free alternative to Office but being an extremely proficient user in Word/Excel/Access (due to work) I wonder if it makes sense to learn a new programme?
Yes my uni gives free access to Office 365 2016 packages, online and for download. I've never had anything but a Windows laptop so I've no idea if this package is functional on other platforms..
Personally I wouldn't be without Office as it's easy and familiar and the majority of people I work with use it.
Masters Degrees
Search For Masters DegreesPostgraduateForum Is a trading name of FindAUniversity Ltd
FindAUniversity Ltd, 77 Sidney St, Sheffield, S1 4RG, UK. Tel +44 (0) 114 268 4940 Fax: +44 (0) 114 268 5766