I am considering moving to Yellow Dog Linux on my primary work machine. The machine should more than handle YDL, but I have many files that are currently in many formats that I don't particularly have converted and am not sure that I want to convert them. I am looking for suggestions from any on the list here that have run Illustrator, Photoshop, Quark, and MS Office. I know that from what I've seen, OpenOffice.org translates MS Office files nicely for the most part. I ran into a small issue yesterday taking a PowerPoint presentation into OOO's presentation program where the Excel graphs I had created had messed up color schemes on the data value labels, but otherwise, translated quite nicely (v. 1.03 on win98). I guess I'm a little concerned, because ideally I want to work in Linux for most of the work I do, but I need to know that I can do it effectively. I know that from what I've read and experienced myself with GIMP (which I really like - not as slick as PS to me, but it's a NICE app) and KIllustrator, which would take in the two primary programs that I use for DTP here at the office. The BIGGEST consideration is can I take YDL and use the apps that install with KDE and Gnome and make it work with a MS Office setup - in other words, since all the rest of the users are using MS Office for the most part, as are most of the people I deal with in sending stuff to, can I take that work and save it in a translation that they can handle. Obviously anything outside PDF or any other means that creates outlines of text will be subject to font matching, which tends to be an issue at times. We work around it by PDF. And from what I've heard, PDF seems to be pretty available on the Linux platform, but I need confirmation that I can get it and that it's not going to cost us. I can't entertain any more expenses here this year on IT, so this is a freebie kind of need. :-) Hope that was clearer than mud. Thanks for any help, all. Take care. Chris