I love to help people to understand their software. Screencasts are my tool of choice.
Tuesday, May 30, 2006
Banco do Brasil has now 35,000 OpenOffice.org users
They report that 35,000 PC have been converted from Windows XP to Linux with OpenOffice.org. This is a lot of PC's that now run the open source office suite. Banco do Brazil is federally owned and the Brazilian government has supported open source for quite a while. They are not only using it but actively making sure that translations are available in Portuguese as well as supporting open source development.
Friday, May 19, 2006
BarCamp Boston 2006
Best Open Source Software for the Macintosh
Apple Matters has selected OpenOffice.org as best open source software for the Macintosh in its category. Devanshu Mehta from Apple Matters sees it as an obvious choice, writing "This one is a no-brainer. Compared with the expensive office software from other companies, OpenOffice.org has a quite well-rounded feature set."
However, Devanshu thinks that the reliance on X11 for OpenOffice.org for OS X is a serious drawback and recommends NeoOffice, the port created by Patrick Luby and Edward Peterlin using Cocoa for a native look and better integration.
Saturday, May 13, 2006
New visual books
InPictures has published four new books covering OpenOffice.org
[Its] computer how-to books are based on pictures, not text.The company states
Most computer books contain over 50,000 words. In Pictures books contain one-tenth as many.Best of all, the books are cheap, dirt cheap
For a limited time, In Pictures books can be downloaded for free.
Wednesday, May 10, 2006
Open Document format 1.0 becomes ISO approved
In a joint press release, the International Organization for Standardization (ISO) has approved the international Standard ISO/IEC 26300, Open Document Format for Office Applications (OpenDocument) v1.0.
The Open Document Format (ODF) has been developed as an application-independent format by a vendor-neutral OASIS Technical Committee. ODF has been at the heart of the controversy around the State of Massachusetts adopting open standards to ensure long-term readability of electronic documents.
Monday, May 01, 2006
FSF may take OpenOffice.org off its high priority list
The FSF does maintain this list to draw attention to various projects it considers critical to achieve parity with proprietary platforms. FSF put OpenOffice.org on the list, despite that it is open source itself. However, it is based on Java and depends on features that are not available in the free Gnu implementation of Java.
With the recent release of OpenOffice.org 2.0 the goal has apparently been achieved to eliminate all the quirks, that prevented OpenOffice.org to compile on GCJ. One caveat, this build is not the fasted in the world and rather not usable. But the FSF claims the principle goal to be achieved and hopes that future GCJ implementations will take care of reasonable performance.