February 01, 2008

Dealing With Microsoft Proprietary Fonts

From Steven J. Vaughan-Nichols' excellent blog.
 
http://www.desktoplinux.com/news/NS7975322673.html

" The really big problem in document formats is what's going to become the next office document format: Microsoft's proprietary Open XML or OpenOffice's ODF (Open Document Format). A far more minor but nonetheless very annoying problem is what do you do about Microsoft's ClearType Collection typefaces: Calibri, Cambria, Candara, Consolas, Constantia and Corbel?

These were introduced in Office 2007 and Vista. Not only are they new and--need I say it?--proprietary, they aren't simply in addition to Microsoft existing proprietary fonts--Arial, Time New Roman, etc.--they replace them. That means not only are Linux and OpenOffice users stuck with semi-indecipherable text, so are users of older versions of Windows and Microsoft Office.

It's enough to make you think that Microsoft wants to force you to upgrade!

Fortunately, there is a way around the funny font problem."

Read more....


And of course, there's always the font substitution window. Tools > Options > OpenOffice.org > Fonts.

Fontsub


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January 11, 2008

The not-entirely-halcyon life of a Microsoft Office 2007 user

If you're thinking you'd like to try OpenOffice but it might be just too much work, or trouble, or something, remember to keep a realistic eye on what life is like in the Microsoft Office world.

A recently reversed service pack disabled the ability to open older file formats, for instance.

Nothing is perfect. Ya got trouble, periodically, in Office Suite City, with a capital T that rhymes with P and that stands for Practically Everyone Has to Deal With Software Issues. That's the nature of software. OpenOffice has problems and Microsoft Office has problems. I think Notepad is pretty problem-free but then, it has maybe 20 features. ;>

I just like to remind folks that life with Microsoft is not, as they say on Buffy, a happy land of beautiful fields and dancing schnauzers and being demi-gods. There are issues. Such as closed document formats and a big honkin' price tag and spontaneous style creation and crashing corrupted Word files that can't be opened with Word but can be opened with OpenOffice. And fun with service packs.


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October 15, 2007

Question: Novell and Excel Macros?

I have heard various statements or rumors about the Novell version of OpenOffice.org being able to convert Excel macros to OpenOffice.org format. Can anyone comment on this, with personal experience? It is of course a fabulous thing to be able to do, if it's possible.

Solveig

September 25, 2007

Math is hard....especially in Microsoft Excel

Here's a story about a major bug in MS Excel 2007

http://community.zdnet.co.uk/blog/0,1000000567,10006016o-2000331777b,00.htm

Try multiplying 850 by 77.1 - the answer should be 65535.

Excel 2007 thinks it's 100000. 

September 19, 2007

IBM's already making a difference: publicity about new office suites

Here's the article, on CNet.

"After years of watching Microsoft rake in billions of dollars from its desktop software franchise, its competitors are pouncing.

IBM on Tuesday announced the release of Lotus Symphony, a suite of free desktop applications based on the OpenOffice.org open-source product...." and so on.

Now, this article is about seven years too late since Sun had StarOffice out there a while ago. But Sun didn't....really....go gangbusters marketing StarOffice. There were the tshirts and bus ads, yes, a year or so ago, but not much else that I saw.

Let's hope the publicity, and recognition of OpenOffice.org and its variants, continues!


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September 17, 2007

OpenOffice.org 2.3 has been released!

23http://www.openoffice.org/

This is the version with the new charting tool. See blogs here and here.




Reportbuilder_150Also, take a look at this. I will be writing about it soon.
It's a fancy new report writer tool extension.


http://extensions.services.openoffice.org/project/reportdesign

 

And it seems like that would be enough, but today is also a day to, well, note (certainly not celebrate, that would be unsportsmanlike ;> ) that the EU has upheld its judgment against Microsoft, and the big ol' fine.


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August 27, 2007

Taking Your Microsoft Office Templates, and Making Them Available in OpenOffice.org or StarOffice

Logo_flower

If you have a bunch of Microsoft Office templates that you love, you can just choose File > Open in OpenOffice.org to use them. However, if you want them to be available when you create a new presentation, or available from File > New > Templates and Documents in OpenOffice.org, you need to do two things: convert them to OOo format, and put them where OOo expects to find them.

Converting Your Microsoft Office Templates to OpenOffice.org/StarOffice Format
You need to convert them to OpenOffice format. Choose File > Wizards > Document Converter. Follow the wizard through to create a converted set of copies of the templates.

Step 1.
Conveter1

Step 2, then just follow the wizard as prompted.
Converter2


Pointing to Templates to Use: Approach 1
(Use Approach 2 if this doesn't work)

Now, choose Tools > Options > OpenOffice.org > Paths. Select the Templates line.
Point1

Click Edit, then click Add, and add the path to the templates you want to point to. (Click this image to see a larger version if you like.)
Point3

Click OK, and OK, and OK  again.

Now you'll see the templates when you choose File > New > Templates and Documents.
Point5


Pointing to Templates to Use: Approach 2 (Usually Need to Do This for Impress)
1. Copy the directory of converted copies.
2. Paste it into this directory:
openoffice\share\template\en-us (or whatever your language is)
3. If they don't show up in the wizard, restart OpenOffice.org and your computer if necessary

If You Only See One of the PowerPoint Templates That You Converted, in the OpenOffice Wizard
See this entry.

For More Information on Templates
For more information on templates, see this post, which includes this information.


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April 27, 2007

Beware! Saving in Word format, and mail merges, don't mix.

Mail merges don't work if you're saving your OpenOffice document in Microsoft Word format.

Whether you're doing this manually, or doing it with the window under Tools > Options > Load/Save > General, saving in Word format will strip out the mail merge fields' connection to the database.

So you can save in .doc by default, but you need to save the mail merge documents, whether they're labels, envelopes, or other documents, in OpenOffice.org native .odt format.



April 19, 2007

You make a grown man burn up in his own office ;>

I think Day 2 is funny. Along the lines of the "I'm thinkin' Arby's" ads.

http://www.microsoft.com/office/newday/default.mspx

April 17, 2007

The Slow Death of Microsoft (or at least some wasting away)

Microsofttttt2_2 Pretty much everything in the business world evolves and changes. The Detroit auto industry, for instance, has gone through some changes. A lot of phonograph companies are no longer in business.

And so even though it seems impossible to think that Microsoft would ever be less than its current massive size and influence, it will happen. Not only because of history but because of the reasons in this blog by Quentin Stafford-Fraser.

I'm sure Microsoft will evolve, diversify, maybe go more into games, etc. But they're not permanent the way they are now. Nothing is.

From the blog. This of course is not an issue specific to Microsoft, but an issue with standard big corporate software development in the current model.

The third, and most telling, nail in Microsoft’s coffin was highlighted for me in a talk given by a former Microsoft employee who had recently moved to Yahoo. I can’t remember his name, for which my apologies. But I remember very clearly what he said.

He had developed a new feature for Outlook/Exchange in 2004. It was a cool feature and was due to be incorporated in the next release, in 2007. But then it was deemed to be a little too aggressive to include it so quickly, so it was postponed until the following release, which will presumably be in 2009/10.  Six years after he finished it! When he moved to Yahoo, he would implement a new feature and it was not unusual for someone to ask, “Could this go live this afternoon?”

 




 

April 16, 2007

Publisher Users: Making Postcards, Brochures, and Other Cool Stuff With OpenOffice Writer and Draw, and Existing Microsoft Templates (Repost)

Reposted April 2007 because this post doesn't show up in Technorati searches.

Update: See The Linux Box for more ready-made OpenOffice Impress templates.

One of the biggest losses people experience when switching to open source is the loss of all those cool templates. They are, as the song says, a hard habit to break.

The good news is, you usually don't have to break the habit. (Unless you've been using Publisher, unfortunately, and you can't open Publisher files in anything—not even Word.) Here's how to keep on using the same templates you know and love; find new ones, or create your own in Draw and Writer.

You Can Still Use Your Own Word Templates and Any Others You Can Find

Here's where you might really start to enjoy the value of OpenOffice.org's compatibility with Microsoft Office.
You can still use all those Microsoft Office templates you got with the software. (Assuming the license doesn't forbid it--just putting that in just in case. ;> ) In OpenOffice.org, just choose File > Open, go to Program Files\Microsoft Office\templates (or wherever) and find the one you want. 

Templates_onharddrive


You can also set up OpenOffice.org to just find those templates. See this blog on templates. Go to the end.

And you can google around for more. I googled for “postcard templates” and came to this nice site from HP. The templates are available not just in Publisher but in Word. Click the image to see it larger if you like.

http://www.hp.com/sbso/productivity/office/direct_marketing.html

Hpsite_postcardtemplates

Follow a few links, and you get here. Click the image to see it larger if you like.

http://www.hp.com/sbso/productivity/office/stocklayout/stocklayout_overview.html

Hp_postcards_2

 

I decided to download the postcard template and the brochure template. I clicked on each; here's what it looked like to choose the brochure template.

Hppostcardsbrochure3

Once the files were downloaded, I just went to OpenOffice.org, chose File > Open,  and opened them in OpenOffice Writer. Here's what the postcard template looks like.

Postcard_microsoftword_1

 

I modified it according to my own information; it was relatively easy. Here's what that looks like. Here's the file itself. Right-click on the link and choose to save link as.

Postcard_modifiedinopenoffice

So that's really all there is to it. Use your own  or find new ones. There are a zillion free templates out there, and you can use the Word format templates (or Powerpoint, or Excel) in OpenOffice.org. Just google for the free ones, or ask friends where they are.

Freewordtemplates


Making Your Own Postcards, Brochures, etc. in Draw and Writer

Now, that's not all the fun. If you want to create a postcard yourself, let's say in Draw, you can go ahead and do that, too. Or a brochure, or anything with specific measurements.

(You can do this in Writer to; I'm just showing it in Draw since the previous section was all about Writer.)

You need to know three  things.
- Choose Format > Page and click the Page tab to set the overall page size and orientation.
Thing1

- Use the drawing tools like the text box and shapes to create the borders of the items in the document. Choose View > Toolbars > Drawing to bring up that toolbar.
Thing2

- Select any item, right-click, and choose Position and Size. In the window that appears, click the Position and Size tab. will let you specify that the border of the postcard box, for instance, is 4x6. Remember to mark or unmark the Keep Ratio checkbox depending on whether you want to change one measurement of the object or both.
Thing3

 

So let's do an example.

 

I'm going to create another postcard template. So I choose File > New > Drawing to create a new Draw document. I choose Format > Page, click the Page tab, and set the page size and margins.  I'll need a document that's like the first one or the second one, depending on what I'm printing on.

Option 1: A document with no margins, 6 across by 8 high (for two 4x6 postcards), and portrait orientation

Demo1
Option 2: A document with half-inch margins, 7 across by 9 high (for two 4x6 postcards with two half-inch margins around the outside),  and portrait orientation

Demo1a

Next, I create a box to show me where the content should go. I just click on the rectangle tool in the Drawing toolbar and draw the box. I don't want a fill in it so I make the fill Invisible.

Demo2

I right-click on the border of the rectangle, choose Position and Size, and click on the Position and Size tab. I choose 6 wide by 4 high, and unmark the Keep Ratio checkbox.
Demo3

I put the edge of the box against the edge of where the postcard paper will end.

Demo4withborders

At this point, I make a template of it, so I can get at it again. See this blog on templates. If you want my document to download and make into a template,  here it is. Right-click on the link and choose to save link as.

 

Now I just make one version of the postcard, the way I want it. I put the content in the box, keeping in mind I need a bit of space between the text and the edge of the paper.

Demo5

 

I copy the postcard and paste it, and drag the pasted version down to the bottom end of the document.

 

And now I just delete the boxes.
Demo6pasted

 

That's all there is to it. A little bit of work to set up, but the template takes care of that; you only need to do it once.

 



February 23, 2007

Google enters the office suite/email space officially

Read the articles here.

http://business.timesonline.co.uk/tol/business/industry_sectors/technology/article1421520.ece

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/tech_and_web/article1423608.ece

Here's the Google Apps site. http://www.google.com/a

Google will launch an assault on one of Microsoft’s biggest earners today when it unveils its first suite of paid-for office tools.

For $50 (£26) a year per user, Google Apps Premier Edition will offer corporate customers a bundle of web-based applications including e-mail, a word processor and a spreadsheet. It will compete with Microsoft’s Office, which includes the software stalwarts Word and Excel...

... Google added that its own 10,000 employees have been using its system for several months, although as recently as October most of them were using Microsoft’s Outlook e-mail service. Robert Whiteside, head of enterprise services at Google UK, said: “We have been eating our own dogfood.”

What makes this work, of course, is that Google has a kajillion units of storage space for rent,  and most people have high-speed. (My parents in Montana with their seeminly 1k dialup could no more use Google spreadsheets than they could pull bricks out of walls with their bare hands.)

There is also a wide-open space for just a freakin' simple application with fewer features but the right features. If I were a programmer, I would create a cut-down simpler version of OpenOffice.org. (I know I can modify the toolbars and menus, but you can't delete menus that are already there.)

I haven't checked out the new site yet, though I do use Google Spreadsheets to tracks lists of things I need to access from multiple locations.



February 14, 2007

Top 10 Reasons to Fall in Love With OpenOffice.org

Arrowtiops

In honor of the day, here's a slightly tongue-in-check, but very true, list of reasons to consider OpenOffice.org.

You might be looking for a new relationship this year. An office suite that doesn't cost you more than you get from it. An office suite that supports you in accomplishing your goals rather than spending all your time supporting it. OpenOffice.org is here for you. Here are some great reasons to fall in love with it.

10. OpenOffice.org will change to please you. It will, if you so desire, meet you at the door each evening with a menu of your favorite choices. (Which is to say, you can configure the menus and toolbars to say and portray whatever you want.)

Dowhatyouwantittodo

9.  Does Microsoft Office give you $450 of love for everyone who uses it? It's a user, not a giver. Spend your money on something important. Education. Cancer research. A truly great pepperoni pizza. OpenOffice.org doesn't take you  away from what you want to do.

8.    OpenOffice.org makes great PDFs, with a zillion graphics, display, and security settings you usually only see in Adobe products.

7.  Want cool templates? All your  Microsoft Office templates work in OpenOffice.org.

6. OpenOffice.org won't leave the relationship and take  all your stuff with it. Microsoft Office makes files in its own proprietary format. OpenOffice.org uses OpenDocument format that anyone can make a program to open. It's your data -- don't pay someone to let you access it.

5.  As Lyle Lovett says in his song, "I married her just because she looks like you." OpenOffice.org looks more like your current version of Microsoft Office than Microsoft Office 2007 does.

4.  OpenOffice.org gets along with all your friends. It runs on Vista. On Linux. On Mac.

3.   Want support? Sun Microsystems provides it.

2.  Microsoft Office is high maintenance -- if you don't keep track of all your licenses, Bill's jack-booted thugs come around and throw a hissy fit. OpenOffice.org is low maintanance. Upgrade or don't, and either way, pay nothing.

1. Cost of buying OpenOffice.org licenses for everyone in your organization: $0.  Never having to pay Bill another cent: Priceless.

http://www.openoffice.org   Download it today. Start loving it tonight.

(Start migrating tomorrow morning.)




ODT Plugin for Microsoft Word

Here's an ODT plugin for Microsoft Office so that you can use Word and create OpenDocument format files. I haven't tried it yet but it's on my list.

The story on Groklaw.

Download the file from Sourceforge.

TechTarget Article: Compatibility Tips for Word and OpenOffice Writer

I've written an article for TechTarget.com about how to create documents to convert as well as possible between Microsoft Word and OpenOffice.org Writer.

http://searchopensource.techtarget.com/tip/1,289483,sid39_gci1186330,00.html

It's essentially about how, when Word documents don't open all that well in OpenOffice Writer, it's often because...well, the original document wasn't in great shape. The article talks about how to use tools appropriately to make documents that are well constructed no matter what application you're using, and how well constructed documents convert better between office suites, operating systems, and other environments.




 

I've got Microsoft Vista

Vista_1

For various reasons, I suddenly bought a new HP Pavilion laptop last week ($800 down to $650!). One key reason was that I couldn't keep my old laptop going on AC, even with valiant attempts to duct-tape the cord to the computer hard enough or at the right angle to keep the juice going.

So I'm the proud yet somewhat abashed owner of a slick new Vista-running laptop, with wireless internet (yay!) and various other features that weren't on my laptop that I bought in 2002.

Vista -- well, it certainly seems attractive. Kind of a Macintosh look to the graphics. And lots of helpful things pop up so I'm sure that the OS is easier for some people. Frankly, I was expecting more of a dramatic difference given all the emotional pants-wetting that was going on.

Anyway, the main point is that the first thing I did once everything was set up for the OS was to download OOo 2.1. It installed slick and runs fine.

Now have SUSE, UBUNTU, XP, and Vista in the house. (What does it mean if I have more operating systems than cats? Not by much, granted. I guess I'd rather have that ratio remain on the side of the operating systems.)

Of course, the big issue is, what's MS Office 2007 like? I haven't activated my free trial yet but I will be SURE  to let you know what I think of it when I do. ;>

February 12, 2007

Expanded List of Tips for Tweaking Word Documents or WP Documents That Don't Look Perfect in OpenOffice Writer

I realized that I don't really have all the tips for compatibility between OpenOffice.org Writer and Microsoft Word in one spot. Here we go. These aren't all of the things you could ever try but they're my classics.

  • Before converting the document, see what you can do about creating it well in a way that will convert well. If you create documents well, they'll convert well.
  • If people are having problems with your document, find out if they really need to edit the document at all. If they just need to print it or have it on hand, then use File > Send > Document as PDF and all formatting problems are moot. Ditto if the problem is on your end -- if you don't need to edit the document you've received, then ask for a PDF version.
  • Don't overlook the idea, with legacy documents, of A) keeping a couple licenses of Word around so you don't have to bother converting 0r B) contracting out the conversion work.
  • Check the page formatting. Choose Format > Page and adjust the page size, margins, and page orientation.  Make the page margins smaller  if you're having trouble fitting everything onto the right number of pages.
  • If text formatting is decidedly odd, select and choose Format > Default to remove formatting and start over.
  • Change the font and/or font size. Select the text and choose a different font and font size from the dropdown lists at the top left of the toolbar.
  • If graphics are behaving oddly, right-click on each and choose Anchor > To Page. Then reposition the graphic. You might also want to slightly shrink the graphic so it will fit better, or increase the size.
  • For lists, select the list and click the numbering or list icon to turn off all numbering or bullets. Then reapply the list or bullets by clicking the same icon again.

Bulletsonoff

  • Adjust the default tabs. Choose Tools > Options > OpenOffice.org Writer > General. Set the tabs slightly smaller or slightly larger and check the effect.
  • Adjust the default fonts. Choose Tools > Options > OpenOffice.org Writer > Basic Fonts (Western). Specify the fonts and font sizes that fit best in your documents.

Defaultfonts

  • Check the fonts that are used with your printer and operating system. You might want to set up font substitution. Choose Tools > Options > General > Fonts, and use the online help to apply the replacement table. Replace fonts you can’t use with fonts you can.
  • Choose Tools > Options > OpenOffice.org Writer > Compatibility. If the printer metrics option at the top isn’t on, select it. Try changing the other settings in the window and see if those items help.

If you find that you have a set of formatting changes that works well going to Word and back again, make that your default template. Then every time you create a new Writer document, it will have those attributes.

  • Create a document with the correct formatting attributes.
  • Choose File > Templates > Save.
  • Save the template in My Templates and call it Conversion.
  • Click OK.
  • Choose File > Templates > Organizer.
  • In the left-hand pane, expand My Templates and select the Conversion template.
  • Right-click on that template and choose  Default Template.

Defaulttemplate

  • If you want to go back to the normal default template later, open the Organizer again, right click, and choose Reset Default Template > Text Document.

February 07, 2007

Microsoft's own antivirus fails to secure Vista

I get the feeling Vista is underwhelming some folks. Not everyone but it's not going over huge.

Read more.




February 02, 2007

Something Slightly Annoying in Powerpoint Presentations That Affects Using Them in OpenOffice.org Impress

Boblogo

Note March 2007: Tip from a reader, John:

------------------------------------

I had problems with templates until I read your tip - however, once I understood the problem, I did find a slightly easier
way to title them correctly.  It's not the OO Converter that inserts PowerPoint Presentation as the title.  The converter picks up the title from the original PowerPoint file.  Therefore, BEFORE you run the conversion, locate the template files in the MS Office folder and do the following for each one:

Right click on the file/ select Properties/ select Summary - in the title field, Powerpoint Presentation will be highlighted.  Just type in the title that you want for this template and click on OK.

When you have done them all, then run the OO Document Converter and they will be converted with the correct titles.

--------------------------------

It was interesting to figure it out, but the end result is more work for us all.

Here's the deal. In theory you can run the Document Converter (File > Wizards > Document Converter) to convert all those lovely Microsoft Office templates you want to use in OpenOffice. The wizard creates converted copies. You then copy those copies to openoffice\share\templates\en-us\ and they show up in all your template windows. (If necessary, restart the program and/or the computer to make them show up.)

All of that works just great with Writer and Calc, and the converter works just fine for everything, including Powerpoint/Impress.

But here's the deal.

The Powerpoint templates each have a different filename, of course. blue, red, bluefancy, etc.

But they all have the same TITLE, the name that appears in the upper left corner when you're looking at the document. The TITLE is different than the FILENAME. The TITLE of every Powerpoint template, at least in the versions I've looked at, is empty and the converter assigns the value PowerPoint Presentation during the conversio. So the converted templates end up all having the SAME TITLE.

Why does this matter? Doesn't the template organizer in OpenOffice.org use the file name?

NO. IT DOES NOT.

DAMMIT.

The template organizer in OpenOffice.org uses a document's TITLE.  (In OpenOffice.org, you set it under File > Properties > Description, Title field.)

Propertieswindow

So that means that when you copy a bunch of templates to the template directory, all with the same TITLE, the organizer gets horribly confused and won't let you get to more than one.

So here's what the converted templates look like when I just copy them to my  openoffice\share\templates\en-us\ directory. It's all fine right here.

Templatesindreictroy

But when I take a look at the templates organizer, File > Templates > Organize, then this is what it looks like.  Only ONE template, and with the default TITLE that the converter put in.

Templatesinorganizerbad

And likewise here's what it looks like in the wizard.
Templatesbadonesinwizard

So what do you do when you want to take a bunch of Powerpoint templates and use them in OpenOffice.org?

You get an intern, or you get a couple beers and an extra hour or so, and you do it one step by painful step. The same way you'd do it with a normal OpenOffice.org that you want to make into a template.

In OpenOffice.org, open the Powerpoint template. Choose File > Templates > Save. Select a category, specify the TITLE in the Name field, and click OK. All the titles must be unique.

Rinse and repeat.

If you have a quicker version of this, or if you didn't encounter this problem, let me know!




January 31, 2007

Educators: Do schools really care about Vista? (Or Microsoft Office 2007?)

Wesley Fryer has a nice take on Vista and schools.

http://www.speedofcreativity.org/2007/01/30/vista-is-out-but-do-educators-care/

He says, among other things:

Well, Windows Vista is now on the market, but my question is: Do any educators care? I don’t know of any midwest U.S. school districts planning to make the transition to Vista anytime soon.

I'm skeptical too.  (But you knew that. ;> )  Really, though. What's the attraction? I'm not sure what genuine benefit, matching the amount of money that would have to be spent and the effort to upgrade, that schools get.

What happens when your current licenses run out, though, or when MS comes aknockin' and says, upgrade or else? (I'm not exactly sure how all the licensing systems work but I believe in general, you have to upgrade sooner or later.)

Open source, perhaps?

I'm not saying OpenOffice.org and Linux are for everyone, but I think they deserve serious evaluation by any educators with limited budgets.  (I assume that's pretty much all school districts.) When the software doesn't cost anything, that frees up an awful lot of money. Which means students and teachers can get a better education, better facilities and supplies, and better salaries.

But it's a pain to switch. Yes. Any change is a pain. Switching from WordPerfect to Word was a big pain for most people, who left WP kicking and screaming. It's part of using computers.

Just take a real look at each side. For staying with Microsoft and for going with open source, evaluate all the money and  training and lost time and converting the documents and installing the software and networking and everything else. Then when you have all the facts, do a comparison of what it really would be like on Vista and MS Office 2007, versus what it really would be like on Linux and OpenOffice.org (and Firefox and Moodle and the other cool education-related pieces of open source software out there).

One public organization with 3000 employees is saving 2.8 million dollars over the next six years, just by switching to OpenOffice.org. That's a lot of money.





January 30, 2007

Top 10 Reasons to Use OpenOffice.org Instead of Microsoft Office 2007

Hi all,

I'm working on a tshirt for those who are already fully assimilated, to wear to help convince the Microsoft Office users. I'm looking for ideas that are better than what I came up with. 

Any thoughts on other Top 10 Reasons? I'm looking for factual or silly or just funny. ;>

Thanks,
Solveig

Click the image to see a bigger version.

Top10

January 22, 2007

More Brilliant People Saying that Office 2007 Is A Whole Different Program, So Why Not Just Use OpenOffice.org?

Microsoftofficedevilstower

Baslow expresses what I've been talking about for a while.

The current Microsoft Office and OpenOffice.org work in a roughly similar way. But the new Microsoft Office 2007 is essentially a whole new program, according to many reviewers including David Pogue. So when you're thinking about switching to Microsoft Office 2007, don't just think about the price -- think about the retraining effort.

So why upgrade to MS Office 2007? Pay nothing, and switch to OpenOffice.org, instead. You retrain for both, but the cost of OpenOffice.org is hundreds, thousands, hundreds of thousands, or perhaps millions of dollars less than Microsoft Office, depending on how big your organization is. Saving a lot of money is, well, really good. It lets you spend that money on something that's actually important: education, cure for cancer, better pizza, or whatever your business or organization is about.

Here's my extended-dance-version blog post on this.





January 17, 2007

Vista Launch Will Boost Desktop Linux

I'm glad lots of other people are spreading the word that, you know, Vista....is not necessarily worth the money.

"The launch of Windows Vista has created a huge opportunity for Linux vendors to take a larger share of the corporate desktop market, according to the president of Linux Australia."

http://scott2096.blogspot.com/2007/01/vista-launch-will-boost-desktop-linux.html

http://www.zdnet.com.au/news/software/soa/Vista_launch_will_boost_desktop_Linux/0,130061733,339273059,00.htm




December 05, 2006

Novell Version of OpenOffice.org

Matt Asay has a blog referencing an article on Novell's supposed "forking" of OpenOffice.org. He recommends trying the Novell version of OpenOffice.org. Read more here.

Read more about the Novell version of OpenOffice.org.  and here from Miguel de Icaza.

Download from here; registration is free and not too painful.
http://download.novell.com/protected/Summary.jsp?buildid=90Jv0byQWIU~

 


November 29, 2006

Word Filter for Writer

A new filter is being worked on for opening Word files in Writer. I don't necessarily follow the technical description here, from Henning Brinkmann but it's good to know that things might get even better.

 


November 15, 2006

Are Vista and Office 2007 for You?

ComputerWorld has an article about the pros and cons of continue the upgrade trail with Vista and Office 2007.

I've been talking about this for a while. Upgrading to Vista or Microsoft Office 2007 or both is not to be undertaken lightly.

Here's the deal in a nutshell.

  • Vista isn't going to just run easily on the same hardware you've got.
  • Office 2007 means lots of money and  retraining.
  • Skipping the Microsoft upgrades, and going to Linux and OpenOffice means little or no money for the software and hardware, and retraining.

So....what works for you and your organization?

Note: If you're a school or otherwise on a limited budget, are you sure that's the best way to spend the money, especially on the hardware you have now? Here's a blog from a Vista beta tester, The Tech-Savvy Teacher.

 


August 07, 2006

Making OpenOffice.org Work the Way You Want It (Repost)

  Logotop_notbad_1

(Originally posted in October 2005.)

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.

Click the thumbnail below to see a bigger image of the window.

Autosave

Now OOo is more like a well-behaved pet and less likely to jump up at you, licking and biting inappropriately.

Those are not all the configuration steps you can do, by a long shot. But I like them, and students seem to like them. And they're an important set of steps in the general process of showing that OpenOffice.org does what you tell it to do.


July 21, 2006

The Microsoft Office 2007 Upgrade Is Going to Have a Big Learning Curve--and a Big Price. Now's the Time to Consider OpenOffice.org Instead.


Logo_ooobetter_1

(Originally published February 2006)

Office 2007 Is Just Another Upgrade...Right?
In a word. No.

This is going to be huge. Painful. Expensive. And that's before you get to the retraining costs.

Here's why.

Microsoft Office 2007 Is a Radical Redesign of the User Interface, and Will Require Plenty of Retraining

Here's the current Microsoft Word toolbar.

Toolbar1_1

Courtesy of LInux Watch  and linked articles, here's a screen shot of MS Word 2003. Click to see a larger version.

Office2003

MS Office 12 looks entirely different, and changes constantly as you move in the document. Click this image to see a larger version.

Office12_toolbar_1

And again courtesy of Linux Watch, here's a screen shot of MS Office 2007. Click to see a larger version.
Office12word

You can't just install this on all 500 computers at your organization and tell people there's a new version.

The Buzz on Microsoft Office 2007 Is the Retraining

Experts around the planet are leary of the radically changed new interface.

Here's an excerpt from an article on eWeek.

Heading the list of challenges facing Microsoft is the fact that Office 2007 has a new user interface, which could require extensive staff retraining at a significant cost, as well as a new file format, which has the potential to create compatibility issues, analysts such as Joe Wilcox of Jupiter Research, told eWEEK.

"When you introduce something new, it disrupts, and this increases things like help desk costs and employee downtime," Wilcox said. "So, to get to the benefits that come with this, they have to get past whatever retraining will be needed around the new user interface and any hardships around the new file format, which are always disruptive. These are two big hurdles Microsoft has to get around."

Enterprise customers such as Robert Rosen, CIO for the National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases and an eWEEK Corporate Partner, agree. The new user interface and file formats pose "major concerns and will slow up adoption significantly," Rosen said. "Since we don't know enough about the benefits of Office 2007, we have not yet developed any plans to move forward."

And another quote:

Jupiter Research's Wilcox told eWEEK that if there were ever an opportunity for StarOffice and OpenOffice.org, "this might be it, going head-to-head against Office 2007, because we have a new file