Microsoft is getting rid of WordPad after 28 years – the veteran editor has been present in the OS since Windows 95
gadgettendency.com
Microsoft is getting rid of WordPad after 28 years – the veteran editor has been present in the OS since Windows 95::Microsoft has begun getting rid of another veteran application in its proprietary operating system. The company has released a new test build of Windows 11
You are viewing a single comment
LibreOffice is a good solution for anything one would use Office or WordPad for. Works on Windows, Linux, and MacOS.
Libre Office is a good replacement for Office/Word, but it is much heavier than WordPad.
It even feels heavier than Office on windows (on linux it feels much better).
Likely feels that way because it has to load the Java runtime before launching.
I believe, it only loads a Java runtime for the JDBC database driver in LibreOffice Base. At least, you can tell it in the settings to not use a Java runtime and that seems to not affect the remaining functionality...
Tbh I don't use Windows or libre office so I'm just guessing. Back in the day I just know it took what felt like forever to load initially (and my pc fans took flight each time) but so did MS office 🤷
It even feels heavier than Office on windows (on linux it feels much better).
LibreOffice is also available as a Flatpak:
Outside of that. And keeping in mind WordPad was a standalone rich text editor:
Kate is pretty swell too:
Or slim down to Kwrite:
I myself am also mostly writing in
markdown
on Obsidian:Markdown has definitely replaced most of what I used wordpad for. Obsidian is nice, but I’ll also write markdown in vscode or even just vim. It all works and even when it’s not interpreted, it still looks readable. Plus since it’s all just text, easily converted, and widely supported, I don’t have to worry about format deprecation.
Are these available in Windows?
Seems like only Kate and LibreOffice