February 29, 2008

This weekend: California Open Source Installfest with recycled computers for needy schools

As the song goes, that's what it's all about.

http://www.tuxmachines.org/node/24609

"One person's trash is another's treasure, and this weekend open source vendors and community members plan to join forces with a Northern Californian recycling organization to transform hundreds of desktop and laptops into PCs loaded with Ubuntu, Firefox, OpenOffice and more to be donated to needy area schools. Untangle, an open source application software maker, joined forces with the Alameda County Computer Resource Center, or ACCRC, to first take in and then turn around hundreds of computers loaded with software for local schools."

Read more...


Traininglogo




February 27, 2008

It's all about spending your money on something more important: open source money management tools

Check this out.

http://www.smartcreditshopper.com/articles/the-open-source-online-finance-guide-50-freeware-online-tools-to-manage-your-money/

Some are online tools like salary.com, some are tax tools for making estimated payments, some help you figure out whether it makes sense for one spouse to stay at home, etc. Check it out; it's a very nice list of specific, common things you need to figure out.


Traininglogo




November 29, 2007

Free Camtasia and Snagit!

I don't know how or why, but they're fabulous applications and they're free. If you do anything with video or screen capture and you don't have them already, get'em now.

http://www.edsupport.cc/mguhlin/archives/2007/11/entry_3928.htm

Thanks to Miguel and his original source Leonard for the references.

   

      TechSmith, the makers of Camtasia Studio (one of the best screen       recording and video editing tools around) are offering the full version       of Version 3.1.3 for free download. This is a terrific tool for all       educators to create resources as well as for learners to create their       own digital stories and videos - so get it while it's hot. :)    

                  


   

      Free Screen Capture program    

   

      SnagIt Pro is now giving away retail editions of SnagIt screen capture       software for free. Follow these steps to download SnagIt for Free:    

   
  1.         Get the demo version of SnagIt 7.2.5 via FTP at ftp://ftp.techsmith.com/pub/products/snagit/725/SnagIt.exe       
  2.         Request a SnagIt 7         Software key       

Traininglogo




September 14, 2007

Educators, this is for you! The first K-12 Open Minds (open source software) conference is October 9-11, 2007 in Indianapolis, Indiana.

Open_minds_headerThe first K-12 Open Minds conference is going to be held October 9 - 11, 2007, in Indianapolis, Indiana. The kick-off reception is Tuesday, the 9th, with the regular conference sessions on Wednesday and Thursday, the 10th & 11th.

The Open Minds Conference is the first national K-12 gathering for teachers, technicians and educational leaders to share and explore the benefits of open source in education. Virtual Learning Environments that provide 24X7 access to teaching and learning resources, cutting-edge and easy-to-use desktop applications, coupled with powerful management tools and low-cost computer strategies make the classroom of tomorrow available today!

Schools around the United States and the world are discovering the the benefits of open source software. In Indiana alone, over 100,000 students use open source software every day. Not only does open source save money, it allows schools to extend the benefits of technology more broadly, affording a better education to students.

I think this is the must-attend event of the year relating to Free and Open Source Software in K-12 education.  There are currently over 55 planned conference sessions, covering a the use of Linux and Open Source use in classroom, teaching, technical, and leadership aspects.

The individual registration fee is $100, or $89 each for groups of three or more. Register on the website or call Anthony Yanez, Registration Coordinator, at 800.940.6039, extension 1348.  Compared to other conferences I've been to, this is a huge bargain.

This is a great opportunity to really find out how much you can benefit, and how much money you can save, by using open source software. And of course to learn enormous amounts about using the software.


Traininglogo




November 30, 2006

Good Introductory Overview of Linux and Open Source

The "Of Zen and Computing" blog has a nice article on Linux and open source and just what the deal is.

 


August 01, 2006

Free Software Magazine: Issue 13

Get the latest issue of Free Software Magazine here!

I have an article on templates in the next issue.


July 10, 2006

Who Knew "Desperate Housewives" and "Alias" Were Linux Fans?

Karim sent me links to these dandy screen shots. Yes, the glamorous soap opera "Desperate Housewives" uses Linux and OpenOffice.org when they shoot computer screens.

Alias episode 212 with OpenOffice Writer
Click to see it bigger.
Alias212ooo7ao

Desperate Housewives episode 220 with OpenOffice Calc
Click each to see it bigger.

Dh220ooo1jm

Dh220ooo27os

See also the post on "House", Linux, and OpenOffice.org


Go Ben! Energetic coverage of the goal to advertise OpenOffice.org

184393742_8d9ba1084a_o


Ben Horst continues to hit the virtual bricks and get coverage of his effort to make sure everyone knows about OpenOffice.org. Every time I look around, someone's asking me "did you know about this?" Including people not in the OpenOffice world.

Here's the gist.

A group of grassroots activists in the OpenOffice.org community have just announced they are going to undertake a similar media campaign to Spread Firefox, starting with a free (as in beer) New York City daily newspaper called "The Metro," published by Metro International. Most penguinistas know what a huge success the grassroots Spread Firefox ad campaign was. Through ads in the New York Times and the Frankfurt General Newspaper, and the hilarious Firefox videos on the FunnyFox website (video link here), Firefox has probably gained greater popular name brand recognition in the general public than any other free open source software (FOSS) project. 

Read more.  Or click here to contribute.

It's not just sending out emails to everyone he knows, though--other efforts have failed. As the Factory City blog notes, "It’s interesting to see this effort emerge organically — especially after the initial thrust to create a SpreadOpenOffice project fashioned after Spread Firefox died on the vine owing to internal struggles over branding control. A similar project SpreadKDE made it out of the gate, but it’s unclear whether it ever took off."

Ben's currently about 75% of the way to his goal.

I'm amazed at how well Ben's spreading the news. We met at Comdex 2003  and I was impressed then with his technical knowledge, his ability to learn the Las Vegas bus system. I was impressed at how such a clean-cut, nice guy could look so  scary in an Army Surplus outfit, which was extremely effective in keeping people from bugging us on our way through some of the more alarming Las Vegas neighborhoods. ;>  But I didn't know he could get people's attention like this.

Ben, I'm tellin' ya, when you get done with this ad, do the same thing in Chicago. That's all it'll take to get Oprah to do that show I'm always fantasizing about where she gives away a free  Linux laptop to everyone in the audience.


July 01, 2006

My Ubuntu Installs Were Incredibly Easy! (Repost)

(Originally posted March 2006)

If you've been thinking of putting Linux on one of your old machines, but you've heard that Linux installs are horrifyingly painful, PLEASE read this. That's what I used to think, too.

Not any more.

You will be shocked, delighted, and go "whoohoohoo!" all the way home.

Here's Ubuntu, running on my ooooold laptop, just as slick and easy as can be.

Ubuntumanshot

Ubuntu is incredibly simple to install and and use. You can install Ubuntu on an old machine (or whatever machine). Aside from the fact that nothing works 100% of the time, and wireless can be very wacky on any machine or operating system, I tell ya, installing Ubuntu will Just Work.

I repeat.

A Linux distro, Ubuntu, is incredibly slick to INSTALL and to use. You can be up and running on Linux today with no more effort than you'd expend making tea.

Now, I'm sure that many other distros are great and easy too. I understand from my techy friend and author of the first Java Certification Exams Simon Roberts who supervised but didn't actually do the install or tell me anything I didn't know, SuSE rocks and is gorgeous to boot. I understand that many of my fears about Linux installation actually are based on unusual situations like setting up wireless and really old or really new hardware. And are also just based on what I heard a long time ago that is not true anymore.

So anyway, it's probably not just Ubuntu that's easy and slick as a whistle. But I'm still very excited about this install.

I am doing everything for this post on my newly Linuxed laptop, too, btw.

Here's the story.

Me and My Linux Background: I'm So Not a Linux Head

I knew I would have to admit this sooner or later: I'm not really that knowledgeable about Linux. Not in a deep down kind of way. I have never and will never build my own distro and don't keep track of what GUI is my fave.

I'm not afraid of it or of using other operating systems--I used Solaris at Sun for three years, Mac at Great Plains Software, mostly Windows since then.

But you know, you hear these stories about installing Linux and it sounds like a quick hike up K2 would be easier. Packages. Drivers. Distros. Editing your BIOS. AAAAAAAAAAAAAAGH.

I installed, with the considerable help of my friend Simon, a Linux distro a few years ago. Red Hat 8 or something like that. Not horrible but not easy.

Time to try it again, though. I considered the Linspire distro but there seems to be some cost associated with it (forget that! ;>  ) and there seemed to be a lot of buzz around Ubuntu. Plus you've GOT to love a distro with this name.
Breezy

What I Installed On and the Internet Setup
I bought this laptop, a Dell Latitude CPX, used for $400 from Half.com at least three years ago. I tried to check what its specs are and couldn't see it offhand, but you can figure it out generally. A roughly seven-year-old laptop. Defiitely not less.

I also installed Ubuntu on my four or five year old HP Pavilion 6835, 800 mhz machine with 300 MB memory or so.

I connected using a standard Ethernet card to my in-house standard Ethernet network. No wireless. (Wireless is a pain in the patookus on any system--at least in my experience.) The Ethernet card just went in the little slot on the left side of my laptop, and the dangly thing connected to the normal plug of the Ethernet connection. My desktop already had an Ethernet card installed.

How I Got the Install CDs

Like a breeze. very easy. I downloaded the CD from Ubuntulinux.org. But you can just order CDs too, off the web site. Totally for free, no shipping costs or anything. (Just one note--I ordered mine at least a couple weeks ago and haven't received them yet. Probably more like three weeks ago.)

Freecds


How the Install Went

Like a breeze. I didn't partition the drives or do anything fancy.  I just said yes, take over the computer, leave no data behind, etc.

I had the computers hooked up to the Internet. The install went out to the Ubuntu site and got extra files it needed, with no fuss or muss dealing with the connections.

I did nothing complicated. I entered what my name and password should be. That's about as complicated as it got.

Performance

Doesn't zip really fast on my laptop, and I haven't used the desktop a lot yet since I'm dithering about my monitor options. But it's definitely good enough. It's a 7+ year old machine.

What It's Like to Use
Very similar to Windows and Solaris. I just played around with the various selections and it looked pretty easy. OpenOffice.org is there, under Applications > Office, just like you'd expect. I got on the Internet by choosing Applications > Internet. I found my files by choosing Places > Home Folder. It's all pretty logical. Most windowing applications aren't that complicated, and I find Solaris, Linux, and Windows all far more similar to each other than Macintosh.

Ublog_navigationcrop_1

What Else Works Besides Internet
The laptop doesn't have a CD burner, just a CD R drive, so I hooked up my USB Iomega CDRW external drive to it. I inserted a blank CD. And it just worked--a message popped up asking what I wanted to do. It was just like burning a CD on XP. I might have squealed with delight.

Cd

Printing worked fine, too. I hooked up the printer directly the USB port of my laptop. I chose System > Administration > Printing, double-clicked the new printer, answered the simple questions, and selected the printer I use. Didn't have to go hunt down drivers or anything.

Printer

And yes, the printing actually works. Just got a nice printout of this page on the printer. ;>

Printing_1

I haven't  set up Thunderbird or anything for email since I'm not using this machine for that. I'm pretty pumped about the printing and the other hardware and networking stuff.

Installing Linux Just Worked.
The install was a breeze. Internet and hardware just worked. The layout is logical. The software is free.

Come on in, the Linux is fine!


June 26, 2006

Everybody Loves OpenOffice.org (Especially When They Think It's Microsoft Office)

Logo_frog_1 

This is another story about change, and tangentially a story about Stevie Nicks.

I’ve already mentioned Louis, who when switching to OpenOffice.org from Microsoft Office, simply told his users that there would be a big upgrade. No mention of a different office suite program. ;> I love that story.

Here’s another story from the other side of the country. The school district’s latest levy had failed, so they had to cut a couple hundred thousand dollars from the budget. Naturally, there was a big meeting to talk about how to do this.

The school district IT director, Randy, was taking notes during the meeting, and his notes were being projected for everyone to see.

Randy said, “So, one way we could save a huge amount of money would be to cut Microsoft Office and switch to OpenOffice.org.”

Murmurmurmur…general objections…too hard…too different….it would never work.

"Well,” Randy says, “Here’s a question. What program am I using to take notes?”

There was a rousing chorus of “Microsoft Word, of course.”

"Nope,” replied Randy, with what I can only assume was just a hint of a satisfied smirk. (I would have smirked. Randy might be a better person than me.) “It’s OpenOffice.org Writer.”

Wow! No way! But it’s so much like Word!

Randy continued. “And you know what? For the last two years, you’ve been receiving Word, Excel, and Powerpoint documents from me that I created in OpenOffice.org and saved in Microsoft Office format."

More murmuring, surprise, delight, etc.

And so they voted overwhelmingly to switch to OpenOffice.org and save a pantsload of money.

This is, by the way, took place recently in the  Seattle area, in Microsoft’s back yard.

It's yet another story showing that Change itself, uppercase, is often what we primarily fear; not the actual new thing that’s going to happen.  As the song goes, I've been afraid of changin' cuz I built my life (and my complex mail merges and spreadsheets) around you.

For those of you out there fighting the good fight and evangelizing OpenOffice.org, I think this story has some great lessons. Don’t try to convince people ahead of time. Just start using it within your IT department, or personally, and expose people to it without telling them what it is. Install it on people’s computers and let them play with it. Let the potential users enjoy sitting in the nice open source hot tub. Let them learn to like it without knowing much about it.  Let them come to the conclusion that....hey...you know, this isn't all that different, and we sure could save a lot of money switching to it...hmmm....

Try leading with the product, not with the idea of the product, or with Change.

Click here for additional tips on migrating users to OpenOffice.org, and click here for thoughts on how to make it easier for people to want to switch.

For those who are encountering resistance transitioning--I know that OpenOffice.org isn’t the same as Microsoft Office. It’s different. The Venn overlap is maybe 70%. But when you have to cut a couple hundred thousand from your budget, do you do it by cutting Microsoft Office, or by cutting salaries and books and benefits and other things that really matter? )


June 22, 2006

Spending Your Money on Something Important (Repost)

Logo_education_1

Office suite software isn't really all that important.

What's important is pretty much anything else. What your organization is doing: research, services, saving lives, preserving order, education. Preserving the rain forest. Rebuilding New Orleans. Job retraining. Heck, you could argue that a good pumpkin pie is essentially more important than software.

OK, the office suite software helps you do all those things I listed and a million more. But I want to point out that our goal in our eight hours a day is not to use software. It's everything else.

All right. So now think about this.

OpenOffice.org is free.

Other office suites are not.

You switch to OpenOffice.org, and you or your organization is suddenly not spending $500, or $50,000, or $5 million on your office suite licenses.

Add up all the other people or organizations who are no longer spending that money on an office suite, and suddenly we're into some serious cash.

Think about how much your city police force spends on office suite software, and about how that money could probably do some good if it were spent on, say, salaries for additional police.

Think about what that research facility down the road spends on software. Compared to the money they spend for their equipment, maybe not much, but it's money probably better spent on upping the salaries for a few poor post-docs than on office suite software.

Think about how much money the federal government spends on office suite software. Now fantasize about how you would redirect that money if you were in charge.

(Almost makes $4,000 toilet seats pale in comparison, doesn't it? OK, toilet seats are already white, but you know what I mean.)

Amazon saved $17 million when they switched to Linux. Same principle--pay less for something that's not part of your core business.

Think about how much your state spends on office suite software for schools, and how many more teachers and books that money could buy.

A lot.

Education is one of the most important places to think about OpenOffice.org. Education is, to put it mildly, important. Plus, third graders aren't likely to complain that they're used to how Word does styles and they don't want to switch. They're open to anything new. And education isn't exactly overfunded. I live in Colorado which is either 49th or 47th in the nation in funding for education.

For educators, here's an interesting article on trends this year, including OpenOffice.org. 

For anyone thinking about upgrading to Vista, here's an important blog. Dave Rosenberg states that Vista gives you an opportunity to really compare the actual cost and the actual benefits, and he quotes Jon Oltsik from Enterprise Strategy Group."

So just think about the value. Think about how much money you're spending on your office suite, and what you could do with that money that would be more important.


June 20, 2006

Open Source Web Site Templates

Check'em out! Very pretty stuff.

One

Two

"Open Source Templates was mainly created to support non-profit organizations.

If you run a non profit org, and are needing to cut down on the costs associated with website development than you have come to the right place. We offer a wide range of free for personal use or non profit use website templates that are easy to modify and add content to.

We will be offering a wide range of tutorials dedicated to helping your organization easily download and create your own great looking site in a matter of hours."

See also this web site, http://www.oswd.org/

Three

Four

About this site:

"To put it simply, Open Source Web Design is a collection of web designs submitted by the community that anyone can download free of charge!

The Open Source Web Design project was founded in September, 2000 by Francis J. Skettino. The goal was to provide the Open Source community with quality web designs to help get people's projects on the web in a way that is both organized and good looking. From personal blogs to content managements systems to full fledged businesses, OSWD has been providing free web designs to those who need them for years. With your help, we will continue to do this for years to come. "


TechTarget Article: Google Spreadsheets Review

I've written an article for TechTarget on the new Google spreadsheets. Here's part of it.

Firstpage

"My first reaction was, "Oh, cute," and "Looks like a good design." It seems like the GUI designers stood up inside the box and looked at what was outside. The design is not revolutionary, but it avoids, at the least, a retread of the client-based spreadsheet GUI. The designers used different types of widgets to provide the navigation and options. There are three tabs for different types of functions: drop down buttons for key features like Saving, buttons for standard toolbar features (Cut, Copy and Paste) and a few plain old links for common features like New and Open."

Essentially, I think it's great for some, and others will never take a second look. Click here to read the whole review.


June 19, 2006

The World's Biggest and Best School, Resume-Maker, and Source of Available Internships: Open Source Projects

Intership_logo

I came across this post by Jon Udell via Ted Leung. Essentially, the gist is that open source projects offer a tremendous opportunity.

"Open source software development, to a degree unmatched by any other modern profession, offers apprentices the opportunity to watch journeymen and masters at work, to interact with them, and to learn how they think, work, succeed, and fail. Transparency and accountability govern not only the production of source code but also the companion processes of design, specification, testing, maintenance, and evaluation."

I'm so glad Jon wrote this, since it raises a great point about open source that's entirely unrelated to the topic of how and when and why to use the programs. It's a point I've carried around in my mental model for years. Open source projects are a wonderful place for anyone to get experience about what they like to do; get experience so that potential employers will give them a second glance; and get experience so that they will actually learn to do those tasks well.

Experience is really important.

I listen to the This I Believe series on NPR, and if I were ever asked to do an essay on something that I believe very strongly, it would be this point about experience. Theory is squat until you try it out. Like the people on What Not to Wear say, try it on! Or like your mom says, eat one bite of your Brussels sprouts. Your roommate says, just go to the party for an hour. Just, as the Nike folks, do it, and see what happens. Doing is an entirely different thing than thinking about stuff.

So that's the first point. How do you know what you want to do with your life? You really don't know how good you are at something, or what a career is really all about, or whether you like something, or anything else important, until you do it. Not study it, not watch it, but do it.  Internships are how I learned in college that I really disliked anything and everything to do with my business major, though the theory was cool enough.  (What I enjoyed was the act of learning about interesting theories about how society works--which often has very little to do with what you do with a business degree.)

Another angle on experience is its role in getting hired. Let's say you know you love project management. That is an absolute certainty. How do you get a job doing project management, on the strength of your business and communications double major and your role as a counselor at Camp Kickamonga?

And then there's the third item, actually learning to do something well. The reason that people look for experience when they hire. How do you find your Obi-Wan who will teach you how to herd cats, or have your horrible but incredibly valuable disastrous learning experience? How do you learn to do basic stuff like write courteous, direct, concise emails?

The answer is experience.

OK...how the heck do you get experience?

  • I dug up unpaid internships during college.
  • If your parents are in the same profession, that doesn't hurt.
  • Volunteering is good. If you want to have experience with project management, figure out something in that genre to do for free for Habitat for Humanity or the animal shelter. Help to organize a blood drive. If you want to become a techwriter, I'm sure there are a zillion places that will be happy for you to document their processes.

Or there's open source projects, which are always ready for more hands and have a huge variety of tasks. It's not just for programmers. Writers, project managers, fundraising, advertising and marketing, web design, maybe even accounting--that's just off the top of my head.

So for anyone out there who's read What Should I Do With My Life and wants to try out a few things, any parent who's got a 23-year-old college graduate slacker in the basement, or anyone of any age who wants to get experience and the advantages it brings, find an open source project.

I won't even try to list them all, but OpenOffice.org is a wonderful product with a great bunch of volunteers.


May 25, 2006

Pledge to Buy Your Very Own $100 Laptop From MIT! Pictures Too!

100laptoppicture

It's so cute! And it's closer to being available!

http://hardware.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=06/05/24/1210225

Here's the photo album.

You can pledge to buy one for $300. That means you get one, and two needy children each get one, too.  I've just pledged. Here's the text.

"I will purchase the $100 laptop at $300 but only if 100,000 other will too."

— Mike Liveright, digital charity supporter

Deadline to sign up by: 31st October 2006
552 people have signed up, 99448 more needed

April 15, 2006

Interesting Blog/Essay on Long-Term Market Effect of Web Office

Here's an interesting article on what's going to happen with Google, Writely, OpenOffice, Vista, MS Office, and the rest of the gang.  The hook is the latest announcement from Google, the Google Calendar.

http://opengardensblog.futuretext.com/archives/2006/04/google_calendar.html

April 13, 2006

Online Office Suite Apps Besides Writely and AjaxWrite

The options for online office suite applications, rather than those you need to install on your computer, are opening up.

I've blogged about AjaxWrite, and of course most people have heard of Writely.

However--wait, there's more! ;>

Shawn posts  about NumSum, for online spreadsheets, and a commenter on his blog  mentions EditGrid.   There's also  Thumbstacks, an online presentation tool.

Morbidly Thoughtful  mentions ZohoWriter. Arvind wrote to me to mention that they also have ZohoSheet, an online spreadsheet. They have many other products; see them listed at http://blogs.zoho.com/. Go to this post to learn more about the spreadsheet product.
 

This is all great. As Shawn says, now individuals and cities can spend money on good internet, and skip the hundreds for Microsoft Office. It's all about having the option to spend your money on what's actually important.

April 10, 2006

StumbleUpon.com Is Pretty Cool

I'm not actually all that into the social bookmarking thing--the tiny little Luddite/pencil person in me resists techy overhead.

[By "pencil person," I mean I like to choose the least complicated way of doing something, even if it might not be as slick or cool. During the space race, as the story goes, the US spent millions developing a pen that would write in space. It's very cool; I got one as a gift when I was working at Great Plains Software. However, it cost millions and it took a long time. What did the Soviet Union do? Yep--they just used pencils.]

However, I've been getting a ton of views lately directly from the Stumbleupon.com site so I decided it bore some more investigating.  (Thanks y'all, by the way. ;>  ) I had gone before but didn't see an easy way to go to content and just skipped it.

Here's the Stumbleupon main page  statement.

"StumbleUpon uses / ratings to form collaborative opinions on website quality. When you stumble, you will only see pages which friends and like–minded stumblers have liked."

So I bumbled around, figured out how to do it (not quickly). It's a little different, you have to actually install a browser plugin (anything from Mozilla, aka Netscape and Firefox). You also have to create an ID but you just have to (I believe) click the link to create an ID and it creates one for you, bang.

To install the toolbar, don't download the file and try to install it; just click on the link at this URL.
https://addons.mozilla.org/mozilla/138/

The toolbar looks like this in your browser once it's installed. Click the picture to see a larger version.
Stumbletoolbar

You can search in the search field, or you can just click the far-left  "Stumble!" button to be sent to any site you like. Click the button and you'll get a window where you can choose categories. After that clicking Stumble will just take you from one very interesting and/or useful site to another.

I chose Science/Tech as the category and was taken to the OpenOffice.org site, a few others, and then to GnuCash. It says "Designed to be easy to use, yet powerful and flexible, GnuCash allows you to track bank accounts, stocks, income and expenses."

Gnucash

I hadn't seen, or remembered seeing, such a practical open source product like this, so I thought it was worth noting here.

Anyway, back to Stumbleupon. However you get to a site, you can click the Reviews of This Page icon and see what other Stumblers thought of it.

Reviewsofthispage

And of course you can click the Thumbs Up or Thumbs Down site to vote on it.

I haven't used all the icons on the toolbar, but I was impressed with what StumbleUpon showed me. If you're into this kind of thing, give it a try; if you're not, then try it anyway the next time you're on hold, or between hands playing online poker.  It's not the easiest interface to find your way around in (their web site), but the results are useful.



March 24, 2006

OpenOffice Pan-Galactic Post: Posts on Charts, PDF, Spreadsheets, Templates, Drawings, OpenOffice Training, Toolbars, and Much More

I've been having a problem that some of you might sympathize with--getting posts to show up in Technorati. So as a cheater, I've created this post that links to a bunch of posts that I don't think have been showing up. Not all of them like links to current discussions or issues, just the ones I think are  important that have been missed.

So I'm sorry this isn't new content, but perhaps somewhere in the last six months there's something useful that Technorati didn't let you see the first time around.

Templates, Writer, general setup and toolbars

Calc spreadsheets and charts

Draw, Diagrams, Impress presentations

Web publishing and PDF

  • What I did with the web tools, creating colors, image maps, etc. to redo my getopenoffice.org StarOffice and OpenOffice Training page
  • PDF, with linked articles on PDF presentations, and using hyperlinked PDFs. That post is particularly interesting since you can generate PDFs from linked OpenOffice.org documents, and the links carry over to the PDF.
  • Using the wonderful Web Wizard (that's the techtarget article, here's the blog link) for creating web sites from existing OpenOffice, Microsoft, and graphics documents. You can also use it for  PDF batch convert.

Mail merge, labels, envelopes, and databases

Openoffice training, change management, and general discussions



March 08, 2006

OpenOffice.org 2.0.2 is Available

Here's the info.
http://www.filehippo.com/download_openoffice/

At some point it will be available here too I imagine. ;>
http://www.openoffice.org/


IBM Is Going Microsoft-Free Internally

It's like a John Lennon song. "Imagine all the people....living without any Microsoft products...." And not just a few people.  About 330,000 people. Additional people.

IBM has canceled their contract with Microsoft. They will be using RedHat for the operating system and their own riff on OpenOffice.org for their office suite.

Here's an article on it, and related sites on the Windows Vista Weblog and Groklaw.

IBM--while we're chatting, I just want to mention, I could probably free up some time to train your internal employees. ;>   training@getopenoffice.org   


February 22, 2006

"Freedom Toasters": Walk-Up Kiosks Dispensing Open Source Software. BYO Blank CD: Updated April 15th 2006

Update April 15th: Read an interview with the project founder Jason Hudson by Marshall Kirkpatrick. Jason Hudson is the Technical Product Manager for the Shuttleworth Foundation and founder of the Freedom Toaster project.

Also note a reference in the interview to the Go-Open Source Portal.  It has many resources, plus an actual phone line for support and comments.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

This is sooooooo cool!  Move over, $100 laptop!  And how did I miss this? Blogs started last year. According to the founder, "The Freedom Toaster is a free vending machine/kiosk that dispenses open source software burned to CD or DVD in locations throughout South Africa."

Toaster_proto_1

Information is posted at these locations among others:

http://www.gokis.net/self-service/archives/001203.html
http://opencontent.org/blog/archives/180
http://www.start.com.my/blog/freedom-toaster/

The main site is:
http://www.freedomtoaster.org/

Here's what it says:

"The Freedom Toaster project was started in 2004 by the Shuttleworth Foundation as a way to overcome these problems.

Freedom Toasters are conveniently located, self-contained, computer-based, 'Bring 'n Burn' facilities. Like vending machines, preloaded to dispense confectionery, Freedom Toasters are preloaded to dispense free digital products (e.g. Linux Operating Systems and the OpenOffice.org office suite Toaster Software)."

Here's where they are currently located.

For instance, the East London one is at:

Walter Sisulu University
Walter Sisulu University (Chiselhusrt Campus)
19 Manchester Road
Chiselhurst
East London
5214

Want one near you? Click here.

Now THIS is crossing the digital divide.

Read more.

 


Tags

133 Free or Open Source Programs for Windows

Here is an enormous list of free and open source programs for Windows.

Posted by among others, http://journals.aol.com/johnmscalzi/bytheway/entries/5543

The list is here:

http://www.listible.com/list/windows-opensource-and2For-freeware

Posted by justhamade at www.listible.com, it's got stuff I've never heard of. Notable in my opinion:

  • IrfanView 3.98 -- great for viewing and batch converting your digital photos and much more.

  • Juice 2.2 for podcasts (reminds me, I so need to do one)
  • GMail Drive 1.0.9   GMail Drive creates a virtual filesystem on top of your Google Gmail account and enables you to save and retrieve files stored on your Gmail account directly from inside Windows Explorer, and thus use your Gmail account as a file storage medium.
  • WinPooch 0.5.9  For trojans or spyware
  • CDex  CD ripping and audio encoding software.
Oh, heck, it's all notable. ;>  Just wanted to give a quick overview of some items since it's a long list.

If you have something to add, you can add it to the list.

(Equal time for Linux--Ubuntu ships out FREE CDs of their Easy Breezy Badger Linux operating system. Free, as in no shipping charges. Order some today. )
 


Tags

October 30, 2005

Making OpenOffice.org Work the Way You Want It

  Logotop_notbad_1



Note: Here's a related article I wrote for TechTarget.com.

What's better, software that does what it thinks you want, or software that does what you tell it to?

If it's rocket-launching software, and I don't know much about rocket-launching, I guess I would let the software do what it wants. However, I know what I darn well want my office suite software to do. I know how I want it to behave. I know what features I want and I know, for instance, that I do not want it suggesting to me what word I am typing and offering to help me finish the arduous task of typing it.

OpenOffice.org has its default behavior and default settings just like any other software but is very cooperative in letting you customize those behavior and settings the way you want them. Which is refreshing. You just have to tell it how to behave.

Goldenrules_5So I've put together a list of the top  customizations I think are the most helpful and/or powerful. I make sure that everyone in my classes learns these by lunchtime, and review them afterwards. When the software behaves the way you want, that makes everything better.

(By the way, this is a little bit off topic, but I wanted to mention that the scroll graphic at the top of this blog is a drawing shape in OOo 2.0.  I'm a bit of a giggly schoolgirl when it comes to the OOo drawing tools, especially the new 2.0 features.)

1. Turn off the word completion.

I hate word completion, and it’s really easy to turn off. Choose Tools > AutoCorrect and click on the Word Completion tab. Make sure the Enable Word Completion option is unmarked, and click OK.

Wordcompletion_1

2. Turn off any automatic formatting that you don’t want.

Would you let people live in your house who you didn’t know? Then you don’t want automatic formatting going on that you don’t understand. Choose Tools > AutoCorrect and click on the Options tab. Unmark everything except the top option, Use Replacement Table. Then go back through and see if you really want anything.

(You can unmark the Use Replacement Table option too....but that table is handy, as you'll see in the next item.)

3. Use the automatic formatting to create handy shortcuts.

The same tab where you turned off word completion has a really great feature for creating shortcuts. Let’s say you type the word supercalfragilisticexpealidocious a zillion times a day, or your name and title, or anything kinda long. You can set up a shortcut for it. It's a much more reliable approach than word completion.

To do this: Choose Tools > AutoCorrect and click on the Replace tab.

A. In the left-hand field type your shortcut like sig and in the right-hand field, type the word you’re tired of typing all the time.

B. Click New, then click OK.

Replace

C. Click the Options tab and be sure that both checkboxes for the top item, Use Replacement Table, are marked. That just means "use the stuff in the Replace tab."

D.  In your document, type the shortcut, followed by a space, and your word will appear.

Note: You can also delete anything in the Replace tab that you don't want.

4. Display the icons that you want.

There are a zillion icons in OOo as with any software and you probably don’t use all of them. There’s also that dandy little result of having to click on the black arrow to get to the icons you want, while the ones you do want sit there taking up space and, quite frankly, smiling a bit smugly. So take off the ones you don’t want, leave room for the ones you do want, and add some other ones.

First step is to take off the ones you don’t want. Click on the dropdown arrow and choose Visible Buttons. Find the icons you don’t want, like double spacing, and select them. That’ll remove the checkbox by them, and that removes them from the toolbar.

Dropdown_1 Now add the icons you want. The first thing to try is to click the dropdown arrow again and choose Visible Buttons. If the icon you want is there, select it and it’ll appear.

If the icon you want isn’t there, click on the dropdown arrow again and instead of Visible Buttons, select Customize Toolbar. Find the toolbar you want to add icons to. Click Add, and in the window that appears just keep looking through the categories on the left til you find the feature you want in the list on the right. Select it and click Add.

Addicons_2 

Back in the customization window, you can leave the icon as is and just click OK, or change the icon by clicking and holding down on the Modify button and choosing Icon.

Addicons2

5. Get to know the choices under Tools > Options.

Choose Tools > Options, and you’ll see the big fat configuration window. Just as the items under Tools > Autocorrect were about default behavior, Tools > Options is about default settings, default values. Anything about the program, from icon size to language settings to where the program looks when you choose File > Open, is set here.

I suggest that you open the OpenOffice.org (or StarOffice as in this illutration) item at the top, then select Paths, and change the values for any paths you use a lot. Change the My Documents item, for instance, to change the default for where OOo tries to save documents. You’ll save a lot of time scrolling around in your Save windows.

Toolsoptions_1

To change the path, select it in the window, click Edit, and just point to the new location.

You might also want to expand the StarOffice Write item, select Default Fonts, and choose the ones you prefer.

When you’re done, just click OK.

You can turn off the Save for Autorecovery feature if you want--or increase the save interval
I find this feature entirely un-annoying, but you can turn it off easily if you want. Autorecovery means if OpenOffice.org crashes or you have to coldboot your machine, at least you'll have something recent to return to. If you're hypervigilant, increase the interval to every minute or 5; if you don't care about it, set it to every hour or just turn it off.

Choose Tools > Options > OpenOffice.org > Load/Save > General. You're looking for the Save AutoRecovery Information Every  option. Unmark it, or change the interval.