J
Joerg
Joel said:No, no, liberals are all very tolerant of dissenting views, remember?
Just ask them!
Yeah, one of the candidate's teams in CA evidenced that yesterday
http://cbs13.com/local/brown.aide.slur.2.1952902.html
Yeah, but for submitting school papers there's no need to edit the
result, right?
If you're working on a lab report or somesuch with multiple people then,
sure, you ought to agree on one word processor for passing files around.
That's what the kids should learn, team work. It's exactly what they
have to do later. This morning I sent a design review chunk on to the
east coast, another engineer will add his stuff, and then it'll be sent
on to the destination. Can't be done in PDF.
I honestly think that the amount of "learning" most kids are required to
do with Word and Excel doesn't amount to more than what you can teach
adults in, say, a pair of one day classes assuming those adults are
generally familiar with the concepts of word processors and spreadsheets
from having used any other competing package. Hence, it's hard for me
not to think that if schools are going to standardize on anything (e.g.,
the software on the computers in the libraries or whatever for the kids
who don't have their own PCs), it ought to be something like OpenOffice:
Anyone who's used OO will have no problem with Office, few people will
ever actually use the more advanced features that Office has that OO
doesn't have, and by demonstrating that OO does solve the vast majority
of an individual's needs, you can save them some money as well.
For word processing I agree, there OpenOffice has almost reached a point
where it is quite compatible. "Almost" because it is a royal resource
hog, it is not very useful on older hardware (MS-Word is). But
spreadsheet? Yeah, I do use it for that but it can't do VBA. So it could
block the more inquiring kids from using it for hobby electronics, with
the HP toolbar and things like that. As for the database, forget it, not
useful at all.
(Microsoft gives free or almost-free copies of pretty much everything to
schools -- which is fine, I have no objections to that -- but even the
"Home/Educational" version of Office is still ~$129 once you're no
longer in school... this point is even stronger in other countries that
aren't as rich as the U.S...)
Many people there use, ahem, copied from the brother in law's nephew's
friend
An engineer from Africa once said that you can't use this newfangled
stuff there anyhow. Has to be DOS software, "Africa-proof" as he called
it, because power can be lost at any time without warning. No flickering
lights, it just goes out. A UPS would cost several weeks of earnings,
not in the cards.
Also, one can buy older versions at remarkably low prices at times, from
liquidation stock. That's how I got my $10 mechanical 3D CAD.
Didn't you use the word processor and spreadsheet in Works for quite
awhile anyway before upgrading to full-blown Office?![]()
Yes, but the migration was fairly painless because I could convert Works
documents into MS-Office format. For bookkeeping I still use Works, and
probably will for a long time. Does everything I and my CPA need. The
newer versions are a bit buggy but 6.0 and prior are ok.