On Wednesday 20 April 2005 07:49, Lars D. Noodén wrote:
>
> Another topic is attorney-client privilege. Though that is under
> attack in the US, it is still part of practice. MSO XP on
> MS-Windows XP SP2 or MSO 2003 (which has DRM baked in) has the
> capability that every time a document is ope
Try approaching the problem from the topic of records retention and
interchange. MSO file formats change a little each version and the
different versions are not quite compatible with each other. That's
presumably to drive new sales. OOo, in contrast, does a good job in
importing MSO formats
> Benissimo!
>
> (I hope I wrote that correctly. Sorry if I didn't).
*-* Yes, very good ;))
> I am an attorney in San Francisco, California (SF, CA for short). I
> have been trying very hard to get lawyers to use OOo, and have not
> been very lucky. There are lots and lots of programs in CA
On Friday 15 April 2005 14:36, Gerardo Antonio Cavaliere wrote:
> Dear all,
> I am the coordinator of an italian project, which goal is to
> spread OOo among lawyers of the Lawyers Association of Foggia.
Benissimo!
(I hope I wrote that correctly. Sorry if I didn't).
I am an attorney in San Fran
Dear all,
I am the coordinator of an italian project, which goal is to spread OOo among
lawyers of the Lawyers Association of Foggia.
We want to stress the principle of legality in all the law offices that could
use a free programme, instead of paying Word licences.
We aim to constitute an info p