Re: [libreoffice-users] Linux alternative

2015-07-18 Thread yahoo-pier_andreit

On 07/18/2015 09:32 AM, Thomas wrote:

On 2015/07/18 6:50, Jack Wallen wrote:

Thank you for sharing that, Charles (I'm the author). Glad to know it
resonated.

Jack

Thank YOU, Mr. Wallen, for your article.
Although I know, this does not belong here, just a word.
I have been trying (STRUGGLING) to move away from MS and get friendly
with Linux for 7-8 years now!
So far with little success. Yet, I still keep trying.



many thanks jack, :-)
I'm not an expert, I start to use linux, basically opensuse, in 2000, 
and I agree with thomas, my son, my sister, my nephews uses linux, but, 
if I didn't install it and configure it and solved the problems that 
rised up and sometimes continues to pop up, they never started to use 
linux. too complicate... :-)



To quote from your article:
Each of these distributions ... are ideal for users seeking an
alternative to Windows. ... They are user-friendly and will get the job
done.
That is definitely NOT my experience.
Maybe the statement (and Linux) is meant for computer specialists. I am
not one of those.

Whenever I ask my (what must sound to the computer experts) stupid
questions, I get in every of the many friendly communities the advice:
If you don't know s**t about computers, you should not dare go near the
damn thing (=Linux).

My experience is, that Linux is making the transition VERY difficult for
non-experts, ordinary mortal men, that just
want to work with the computer - without knowing about computer science,
software design, programming techniques etc.

But I am probably boring you.
Sorry for that.
Thomas





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Re: [libreoffice-users] Linux alternative

2015-07-18 Thread Thomas

On 2015/07/18 6:50, Jack Wallen wrote:
Thank you for sharing that, Charles (I'm the author). Glad to know it 
resonated.


Jack

Thank YOU, Mr. Wallen, for your article.
Although I know, this does not belong here, just a word.
I have been trying (STRUGGLING) to move away from MS and get friendly 
with Linux for 7-8 years now!

So far with little success. Yet, I still keep trying.

To quote from your article:
Each of these distributions ... are ideal for users seeking an 
alternative to Windows. ... They are user-friendly and will get the job 
done.

That is definitely NOT my experience.
Maybe the statement (and Linux) is meant for computer specialists. I am 
not one of those.


Whenever I ask my (what must sound to the computer experts) stupid 
questions, I get in every of the many friendly communities the advice:
If you don't know s**t about computers, you should not dare go near the 
damn thing (=Linux).


My experience is, that Linux is making the transition VERY difficult for 
non-experts, ordinary mortal men, that just
want to work with the computer - without knowing about computer science, 
software design, programming techniques etc.


But I am probably boring you.
Sorry for that.
Thomas


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Re: [libreoffice-users] Linux alternative

2015-07-18 Thread Luuk

On 17-7-2015 23:47, Gary Dale wrote:

On 17/07/15 05:25 PM, charles meyer wrote:

For those on the list using or contemplating Linux, this was interesting.





Frankly though, I'm confused as to why more software vendors don't
compile to libwine .



libwine is about 'bondage'..


It seems some people are just into bondage.  :)





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Re: [libreoffice-users] Linux alternative

2015-07-18 Thread Paolo Debortoli
hi. personal experience.  I started using linux about 12 years ago installation 
and configuration are just a bit longer than in windows systems  (but you can 
find a lot of documentation). Linux systems are, by the way, more transparent 
(if you want to know what happens behind the interface), customizable and 
versatile than windows systems. You can run linux on micro computers  (e.g. 
raspberry), very old computers (I have ubuntu on a notebook with 256 mb ram); 
you can use a wider set of data formats (texts, images...)  and so on.  then it 
depends on your needs: if you have particular softwares or hardwares that 
require windows...  However, open source software (LibreOffice, Gimp, 
Blender...) has made impressive progresses in the last years, so that just a 
small number of users can note the difference (provided they don't just trust 
the name or think that higher costs mean higher quality).

Paolo  Debortoli




On Saturday, July 18, 2015 10:31 AM, yahoo-pier_andreit pier_andr...@yahoo.it 
wrote:
On 07/18/2015 09:32 AM, Thomas wrote:
 On 2015/07/18 6:50, Jack Wallen wrote:
 Thank you for sharing that, Charles (I'm the author). Glad to know it
 resonated.

 Jack
 Thank YOU, Mr. Wallen, for your article.
 Although I know, this does not belong here, just a word.
 I have been trying (STRUGGLING) to move away from MS and get friendly
 with Linux for 7-8 years now!
 So far with little success. Yet, I still keep trying.


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Re: [libreoffice-users] Linux alternative

2015-07-18 Thread Gary Dale

On 18/07/15 04:31 AM, yahoo-pier_andreit wrote:

On 07/18/2015 09:32 AM, Thomas wrote:

On 2015/07/18 6:50, Jack Wallen wrote:

Thank you for sharing that, Charles (I'm the author). Glad to know it
resonated.

Jack

Thank YOU, Mr. Wallen, for your article.
Although I know, this does not belong here, just a word.
I have been trying (STRUGGLING) to move away from MS and get friendly
with Linux for 7-8 years now!
So far with little success. Yet, I still keep trying.



many thanks jack, :-)
I'm not an expert, I start to use linux, basically opensuse, in 2000, 
and I agree with thomas, my son, my sister, my nephews uses linux, 
but, if I didn't install it and configure it and solved the problems 
that rised up and sometimes continues to pop up, they never started to 
use linux. too complicate... :-)


The same issue afflicts Windows. It's just that Windows usually comes 
pre-installed. Having performed a lot of installs of both types, I've 
found the Linux installs to be simpler and a lot faster. Windows may get 
to the login screen a bit faster but then you've got interminable 
updates to install with reboots needed between most of them.


As for needing assistance, I find a lot more problems cropping up with 
Windows than with Linux. And yes, most end-users aren't equipped to deal 
with them but that isn't dependent on the operating system. However 
fixing Windows problems is more difficult and sometimes even fruitless 
(e.g. Windows Updates that mysteriously fail).


I've used Linux pretty much exclusively (except for an income tax 
program that I haven't got to work in wine) for 18 years. I find Windows 
to be awkward and limiting. And after looking at Windows 8, it seems to 
be getting worse, not better.


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[OT] Re: [libreoffice-users] Linux alternative

2015-07-18 Thread Felmon Davis

On Sat, 18 Jul 2015, Thomas wrote:


Although I know, this does not belong here, just a word.
I have been trying (STRUGGLING) to move away from MS and get friendly 
with Linux for 7-8 years now!

So far with little success. Yet, I still keep trying.


this makes me wonder what the top two or three things are that people 
find hard in adopting Linux.


I don't want to count the yrs I've used Linux. I was never a 
full-time user of Windows, I used OS/2 before Linux and Desqview on 
some version of DOS before that.


for the most part I'm barely aware of the operating system: launch a 
program and work or play is my mode. never gave up command-line habits 
either, the pictures confuse me like holding a conversation via 
charades.


f.

--
Felmon Davis

In most instances, all an argument proves is that two people are 
present.


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Re: [OT] Re: [libreoffice-users] Linux alternative

2015-07-18 Thread Tom Davies
Hi :)
I'm sure people on this mailing list might be happy to help with 1 or 2
questions about how to do a certain thing or 2 in linux.  Such questions
often turn out to be quite popular threads even though they are a little
off-topic.

I think a lot of people take a similar route to me.  Even now i still use
Windows occasionally (admittedly usually only because i'm forced to or
because someone doesn't know how to use it and/or has broken it).

I suspect that most linux users have a dual-boot somewhere with an option
to boot into Windows.  I think it's something that almost everyone does
somewhere near the start of their journey into linux land.  I guess what
i'm saying is that i suspect that linux usage is always growing so fast
that most linux users are fairly new - that certainly seemed true in the
Vista era and maybe early in Win8's era too.


Err wrt In most instances, all an argument proves is that two people are
present. i don't think that is true at all.  I have often seen people
disagreeing with a position they were recently adamant about.  For example
my boss orders me to do something.  I do it.  Then he tells me off for
doing it and claims he'd never had said that.  I've also found myself
arguing with myself too.  I'm not sure if an argument is possible even if
no-one is present but it wouldn't surprise me.  ;)

Regards from
Tom :)





On 18 July 2015 at 18:44, Felmon Davis dav...@union.edu wrote:

 On Sat, 18 Jul 2015, Thomas wrote:

  Although I know, this does not belong here, just a word.
 I have been trying (STRUGGLING) to move away from MS and get friendly
 with Linux for 7-8 years now!
 So far with little success. Yet, I still keep trying.


 this makes me wonder what the top two or three things are that people find
 hard in adopting Linux.

 I don't want to count the yrs I've used Linux. I was never a full-time
 user of Windows, I used OS/2 before Linux and Desqview on some version of
 DOS before that.

 for the most part I'm barely aware of the operating system: launch a
 program and work or play is my mode. never gave up command-line habits
 either, the pictures confuse me like holding a conversation via charades.

 f.

 --
 Felmon Davis

 In most instances, all an argument proves is that two people are present.

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Re: [libreoffice-users] Linux alternative

2015-07-18 Thread Gary Dale

On 18/07/15 01:29 PM, Tom Davies wrote:

Hi :)
+1

But Wine is about bondage in the sense that it keeps you using stuff 
that is made for Windows.



Making stuff that needs Wine in order to work kinda keeps you 
locked-in to the Windows world.


By contrast we see many native GnuLinux programs are then ported over 
to Mac and Windows apparently without a huge amount of effort.  
Firefox and LibreOffice/OpenOffice are great examples of that as they 
have then become serious competitors to alternatives that were only 
written for Windows and then have been unable to be ported to anything 
else.


If programs plan to become cross-platform then initially writing for 
Linux seems to be the optimum route. Writing for Mac seems to be the 
next best option.


Starting with Windows means programs or almost anything else faces a 
nightmare up-hill struggle.  Even Microsoft themselves take an extra 
whole year to port their office suite to Mac and even then it's a 
stripped-down version.



Writing for Wine is a neat trick that i have not heard of before.  It 
sounds like it neatly avoids any need for porting at all.  Wine runs 
on Mac too so that is all 3 major platform covered in one hit.  It 
feels like there must be an inherent flaw aside from the ethical issue 
of not quite breaking free of the Windows world.  If not why on earth 
wouldn't everyone be doing this? ;)


Regards from
Tom :)

Not at all. Wine gives people the opportunity to leave Windows while 
still running the same software. So long as that software is under a 
Free license, what makes it any different from stuff that runs on JVM 
(for example)?


I don't need to port my programs when I use Wine/Libwine. They run 
perfectly on both platforms, And I don't need to have anything to do 
with Windows whereas if I port my programs, I need a Windows platform 
to test them on.


I feel like I'm perfectly free from the Windows world except that I need 
a VM to run an income tax program and to run Windows versions of 
browsers (did you know that the Windows version of Firefox doesn't 
always render pages the same as the Linux version?).


There is actually a fair amount of software developed to Windows APIs. 
Samba and Mono (and programs that use Mono) are two that come to mind 
immediately. Some people oppose this (especially when the Windows APIs 
aren't public) but others accept it as a small price to pay to spread 
Free Software.



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Re: [libreoffice-users] Linux alternative

2015-07-18 Thread toki
On 07/18/2015 05:29 PM, Tom Davies wrote:

 If programs plan to become cross-platform then initially writing for Linux 
 seems to be the optimum route. 

If a programming team delivers a usable Linux product in one year, then
for a second platform, it will take the same team six months to deliver it.

If a programming team delivers a usable Windows product in one year,
then it will take a second team that is twice the size of the first
team, two years, to deliver the program on a different platform.

FWIW, writing to WINE/LibWINE is equivalent to writing a program for
Windows, in terms of overall productivity, and cross-platform support.

Furthermore, with WINE/LibWINE, your program won't have the same look
and feel as other software on the same platform.

jonathon

  * English - detected
  * English

  * English

 javascript:void(0); #
 Writing for Wine is a neat trick that i have not heard of before.  It
sounds like it neatly avoids any need for porting at all.

It also means that bug fixing is an order of magnitude more
difficult,because bug isolation requires looking at:
* your source code;
* The WINE/LibWIN library;
* The OS that the bug was reported on;


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Re: [libreoffice-users] Calc:- Moving a fixed page break.

2015-07-18 Thread James E Lang
If it is indeed a manually inserted page break you can delete it by selecting a 
cell immediately beyond the break and then using these key strokes:

Alt+E B and either R or C depending on the orientation of the break

That's Menu Edit, Item Delete Page Break, and either sub item Row Break or 
Column Break if you prefer to use a mouse.

If, instead, the page break occurs due to a lack of room for the next row or 
column and you want it in an earlier location substitute Alt+I (Menu Insert) 
for the Alt+E (Menu Edit). I find this usage of two different menus to not be 
intuitive but it's the way things aee.

I'm using LO 4.3.7.2 

-- 
Jim

-Original Message-
From: Budgie aje...@errichel.co.uk
To: users@global.libreoffice.org users@global.libreoffice.org
Sent: Fri, 17 Jul 2015 12:29
Subject: [libreoffice-users] Calc:- Moving a fixed page break.

Hi, I have a problem with a page break which was not inserted 
(knowingly) by me.  I have tried to move it in the View - Page Break 
Preview but it will not shift.  Is this a bug or am I doing something wrong.


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Re: [OT] Re: [libreoffice-users] Linux alternative

2015-07-18 Thread James Knott
On 07/18/2015 05:56 PM, Tom Williams wrote:
 Comments about how
 Linux is good for basic things and not good for productivity.

Tell that to all the scientists who use supercomputers.  The vast
majority of them, including my cousin, run Linux.  Also, a while ago,
all the computers on the International Space Station were switched from
Windows to Linux.

http://www.computerweekly.com/blogs/open-source-insider/2013/05/international-space-station-adopts-debian-linux-drop-windows-red-hat-into-airlock.html

http://www.extremetech.com/extreme/155392-international-space-station-switches-from-windows-to-linux-for-improved-reliability

Apparently viruses can even survive in space!

http://www.theguardian.com/technology/2013/nov/12/international-space-station-virus-epidemics-malware

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Re: [OT] Re: [libreoffice-users] Linux alternative

2015-07-18 Thread Gary Dale

On 18/07/15 06:10 PM, Malgosia Askanas wrote:

On 2015-07-18 04:02 PM, Gary Dale wrote:

The top reason people find hard is almost certainly that you have to
install it.


That's not entirely accurate.  There are a few (not many) companies 
that specialize in selling Linux-preinstalled machines. The two that 
immediately come to mind are System76.com and ThinkPenguin.com .


-malgosia

True but largely irrelevant. You can't go to the local Best Buy or 
Staples and pick up one.


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Re: [OT] Re: [libreoffice-users] Linux alternative

2015-07-18 Thread Malgosia Askanas
Heh heh.  But then the _real_ top reason would be that you can't acquire 
a Linux machine in a hurry.  True enough.


On 2015-07-18 06:16 PM, Gary Dale wrote:

On 18/07/15 06:10 PM, Malgosia Askanas wrote:

On 2015-07-18 04:02 PM, Gary Dale wrote:

The top reason people find hard is almost certainly that you have to
install it.


That's not entirely accurate.  There are a few (not many) companies
that specialize in selling Linux-preinstalled machines. The two that
immediately come to mind are System76.com and ThinkPenguin.com .

-malgosia


True but largely irrelevant. You can't go to the local Best Buy or
Staples and pick up one.



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Re: [libreoffice-users] Linux alternative

2015-07-18 Thread Gary Dale

On 18/07/15 02:25 PM, Harvey Nimmo wrote:

On Sat, 2015-07-18 at 08:21 -0400, Tim---Kracked_P_P---webmaster wrote:

On 07/18/2015 03:42 AM, Eric wrote:

On 07/17/2015 05:25 PM, charles meyer wrote:

For those on the list using or contemplating Linux, this was
interesting.

http://www.techrepublic.com/article/alternative-is-the-question-linux-is-the-answer/


No one really addressed software only written for Windows - e.g.
Dragon Naturally Speaking.

There doesn't seem to be a good open source or Linux-based voice
recognition software.

That can be a deal breaker.

yes it can be. As someone dependent on NaturallySpeaking,  I can tell
you that most of the native limits speech recognition solutions do not
measure up and would probably take a multimillion dollar effort to
make a functional equivalent.

  Then there is the issue of supporting it, fixing bugs, adding
features, working with the community current open-source funding
techniques just don't measure up to the financial needs of critical
projects like this would be.

  So how is it, I am using NaturallySpeaking to dictate on the next?
Well the wine solution is pretty fragile and doesn't work with the
latest NaturallySpeaking. It still has problems with using community
supported extensions such as natlink and vocola.

  Instead, I'm using a different solution which is running
NaturallySpeaking in a Windows virtual machine and using a tool I
developed called speech bridge (See github)  to link speech
recognition functionality in Windows to whatever the hell Linux is doing.

  It's moving slow, I am changing things as I need them. I'm getting to
the point where I could use some assistance but I'm going to hold off
asking until I have a good specification/Definition.

--- eric


There are only two or three Win-only software I need to use, that I have
not found an easy to use alternative for a .deb based Linux OS.  Also, I
have not found any way to use my external USB-based wifi antenna, for
better/faster useful access 10 floors below my router's antennas.  IF
so, then Linux would be use for that work environment,

Also, for the speech issue, I have never been able to got that to work
properly for Ubuntu and Linux Mint, as least text to speech.  I have not
worked with speech to text or speech system control before, so I have
not really looked into that, much.

I couldn't find a good OCR solution for linux either. Project for
someone?

Cheers
Harvey


You're kidding right? Check out https://help.ubuntu.com/community/OCR 
for a quick overview of the current state of affairs.



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Re: [libreoffice-users] Linux alternative

2015-07-18 Thread yahoo-pier_andreit

On 07/18/2015 02:39 PM, Paolo Debortoli wrote:

hi. personal experience.  I started using linux about 12 years ago installation 
and configuration are just a bit longer than in windows systems  (but you can 
find a lot of documentation). Linux systems are, by the way, more transparent 
(if you want to know what happens behind the interface), customizable and 
versatile than windows systems. You can run linux on micro computers  (e.g. 
raspberry), very old computers (I have ubuntu on a notebook with 256 mb ram); 
you can use a wider set of data formats (texts, images...)  and so on.  then it 
depends on your needs: if you have particular softwares or hardwares that 
require windows...  However, open source software (LibreOffice, Gimp, 
Blender...) has made impressive progresses in the last years, so that just a 
small number of users can note the difference (provided they don't just trust 
the name or think that higher costs mean higher quality).

Paolo  Debortoli



yes, but as I say, you are quite expert, my sister had a pc with 
windows, and to allow her to use linux the only way is to install linux 
by me :-)  :-)






On Saturday, July 18, 2015 10:31 AM, yahoo-pier_andreit pier_andr...@yahoo.it 
wrote:
On 07/18/2015 09:32 AM, Thomas wrote:

On 2015/07/18 6:50, Jack Wallen wrote:

Thank you for sharing that, Charles (I'm the author). Glad to know it
resonated.

Jack

Thank YOU, Mr. Wallen, for your article.
Although I know, this does not belong here, just a word.
I have been trying (STRUGGLING) to move away from MS and get friendly
with Linux for 7-8 years now!
So far with little success. Yet, I still keep trying.






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Re: [libreoffice-users] Linux alternative

2015-07-18 Thread Harvey Nimmo
On Sat, 2015-07-18 at 16:05 -0400, Gary Dale wrote:
 On 18/07/15 02:25 PM, Harvey Nimmo wrote:
  On Sat, 2015-07-18 at 08:21 -0400, Tim---Kracked_P_P---webmaster wrote:
  On 07/18/2015 03:42 AM, Eric wrote:
  On 07/17/2015 05:25 PM, charles meyer wrote:
  For those on the list using or contemplating Linux, this was
  interesting.
 
  http://www.techrepublic.com/article/alternative-is-the-question-linux-is-the-answer/
 
 
  No one really addressed software only written for Windows - e.g.
  Dragon Naturally Speaking.
 
  There doesn't seem to be a good open source or Linux-based voice
  recognition software.
 
  That can be a deal breaker.
  yes it can be. As someone dependent on NaturallySpeaking,  I can tell
  you that most of the native limits speech recognition solutions do not
  measure up and would probably take a multimillion dollar effort to
  make a functional equivalent.
 
Then there is the issue of supporting it, fixing bugs, adding
  features, working with the community current open-source funding
  techniques just don't measure up to the financial needs of critical
  projects like this would be.
 
So how is it, I am using NaturallySpeaking to dictate on the next?
  Well the wine solution is pretty fragile and doesn't work with the
  latest NaturallySpeaking. It still has problems with using community
  supported extensions such as natlink and vocola.
 
Instead, I'm using a different solution which is running
  NaturallySpeaking in a Windows virtual machine and using a tool I
  developed called speech bridge (See github)  to link speech
  recognition functionality in Windows to whatever the hell Linux is doing.
 
It's moving slow, I am changing things as I need them. I'm getting to
  the point where I could use some assistance but I'm going to hold off
  asking until I have a good specification/Definition.
 
  --- eric
 
  There are only two or three Win-only software I need to use, that I have
  not found an easy to use alternative for a .deb based Linux OS.  Also, I
  have not found any way to use my external USB-based wifi antenna, for
  better/faster useful access 10 floors below my router's antennas.  IF
  so, then Linux would be use for that work environment,
 
  Also, for the speech issue, I have never been able to got that to work
  properly for Ubuntu and Linux Mint, as least text to speech.  I have not
  worked with speech to text or speech system control before, so I have
  not really looked into that, much.
  I couldn't find a good OCR solution for linux either. Project for
  someone?
 
  Cheers
  Harvey
 
 You're kidding right? Check out https://help.ubuntu.com/community/OCR 
 for a quick overview of the current state of affairs.
 
No, I'm not really kidding. Command line programs are only the start of the 
journey.
It is quite a bit more to have something that is well integrated with
the corresponding display and text tools.
  



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Re: [libreoffice-users] Linux alternative

2015-07-18 Thread Ian Whitfield



I couldn't find a good OCR solution for linux either. Project for
someone?

Cheers
Harvey


I also battled to find a good OCR program for a couple of years on my 
Linux System (PClinuxOS)!!


Then about two years or eighteen months back I came across the 
combination of YAGF with Tesseract.
This combination works fantastically with basically just clean-up to 
do on almost any scanned document.


I can recommend this to anyone who needs, or uses, OCR as a regular job, 
(as I do).


IanW
Pretoria RSA.

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Re: [OT] Re: [libreoffice-users] Linux alternative

2015-07-18 Thread Tom Williams
On 07/18/2015 10:44 AM, Felmon Davis wrote:
 On Sat, 18 Jul 2015, Thomas wrote:

 Although I know, this does not belong here, just a word.
 I have been trying (STRUGGLING) to move away from MS and get friendly
 with Linux for 7-8 years now!
 So far with little success. Yet, I still keep trying.

 this makes me wonder what the top two or three things are that people
 find hard in adopting Linux.


I've found a number of people simply expect _any_ computer to look, act,
and feel like Windows.   I installed LibreOffice on the computer of a
client of mine because MS Office Starter Edition kept acting funny when
he would try to open MS Office documents attached to email messages. 
One day, we were talking about his using Excel vs Calc to update a
spreadsheet.  He insisted he couldn't use Calc because it didn't do what
Excel did.  I asked him to show me the things he could do in Excel but
couldn't do in Calc and we both discovered he actually _could_ do all of
the things he needed to do in Calc but the way he needed to do those
things were a little different.  In another case, I showed an IT guy I
used to work with an Ubuntu system.  He wanted to run an application and
went straight to the lower left corner of the screen, looking for the
Start menu.

The more people learn Windows, especially as their first computing
interface, the more they tend to think all computers behave that way. 
Of course, this isn't an absolute statement.  :)

Something else I've found is non-Linux users tend to expect a higher
standard of performance from Linux for it to even be considered a
viable option.  For example, if Linux can't support {fill in the
blank} perfectly, Linux isn't ready for prime time.  Let's forget the
fact that Windows might have issues supporting {fill in the blank} as
well.  lol

This thread could not have come at a better time since I recently read
the TechRepublic article and another article about Linux being an
alternative to Windows.  In the other article, I was floored by various
comments made by others who had read that article.  Comments about how
Linux is good for basic things and not good for productivity.  So,
if you want to just read email and surf mainstream websites, Linux is
great.  If you want to do real work, you need Windows for that.   I
had to laugh since I find myself doing real and productive work on
Linux on a daily basis, and without using the command line unless I want
to use ImageMagick to process some images in batch.

I've switched my mom to Linux and while she's not doing anything
sophisticated, I've noticed her computer question volume has decreased
significantly.  Her computer usage hasn't changed much from when she
used Windows XP except I think she's actually listening to more music on
her computer now, while reading email and surfing the web.

Sorry for being so long winded.  :)

Peace...

The other Tom

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Re: [libreoffice-users] Linux alternative

2015-07-18 Thread Gary Dale

On 18/07/15 05:15 PM, Harvey Nimmo wrote:

On Sat, 2015-07-18 at 16:05 -0400, Gary Dale wrote:

On 18/07/15 02:25 PM, Harvey Nimmo wrote:

On Sat, 2015-07-18 at 08:21 -0400, Tim---Kracked_P_P---webmaster wrote:

On 07/18/2015 03:42 AM, Eric wrote:

On 07/17/2015 05:25 PM, charles meyer wrote:

For those on the list using or contemplating Linux, this was
interesting.

http://www.techrepublic.com/article/alternative-is-the-question-linux-is-the-answer/


No one really addressed software only written for Windows - e.g.
Dragon Naturally Speaking.

There doesn't seem to be a good open source or Linux-based voice
recognition software.

That can be a deal breaker.

yes it can be. As someone dependent on NaturallySpeaking,  I can tell
you that most of the native limits speech recognition solutions do not
measure up and would probably take a multimillion dollar effort to
make a functional equivalent.

   Then there is the issue of supporting it, fixing bugs, adding
features, working with the community current open-source funding
techniques just don't measure up to the financial needs of critical
projects like this would be.

   So how is it, I am using NaturallySpeaking to dictate on the next?
Well the wine solution is pretty fragile and doesn't work with the
latest NaturallySpeaking. It still has problems with using community
supported extensions such as natlink and vocola.

   Instead, I'm using a different solution which is running
NaturallySpeaking in a Windows virtual machine and using a tool I
developed called speech bridge (See github)  to link speech
recognition functionality in Windows to whatever the hell Linux is doing.

   It's moving slow, I am changing things as I need them. I'm getting to
the point where I could use some assistance but I'm going to hold off
asking until I have a good specification/Definition.

--- eric


There are only two or three Win-only software I need to use, that I have
not found an easy to use alternative for a .deb based Linux OS.  Also, I
have not found any way to use my external USB-based wifi antenna, for
better/faster useful access 10 floors below my router's antennas.  IF
so, then Linux would be use for that work environment,

Also, for the speech issue, I have never been able to got that to work
properly for Ubuntu and Linux Mint, as least text to speech.  I have not
worked with speech to text or speech system control before, so I have
not really looked into that, much.

I couldn't find a good OCR solution for linux either. Project for
someone?

Cheers
Harvey

You're kidding right? Check out https://help.ubuntu.com/community/OCR
for a quick overview of the current state of affairs.


No, I'm not really kidding. Command line programs are only the start of the 
journey.
It is quite a bit more to have something that is well integrated with
the corresponding display and text tools.


The command line tools are excellent but they are just the backends. 
Choose the GUI that suits your purposes. Some are better tuned to 
preserving column structures while others do a great job on multiple 
pages You have choice. You can use a different GUI or different 
backend for different purposes.


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Re: [OT] Re: [libreoffice-users] Linux alternative

2015-07-18 Thread Gary Dale

On 18/07/15 06:30 PM, Malgosia Askanas wrote:
Heh heh.  But then the _real_ top reason would be that you can't 
acquire a Linux machine in a hurry.  True enough.


No, the real reason is that people don't have the option in front of 
them to even realize that it is possible.


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Re: [libreoffice-users] Linux alternative

2015-07-18 Thread James Knott
On 07/18/2015 11:00 AM, Gary Dale wrote:
 And after looking at Windows 8, it seems to be getting worse, not better. 

I have to use 8.1 on my work computer and have 10 in a virtual machine. 
While 10 is an improvement on 8.1, it's still nowhere near what W7 was.

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Re: [libreoffice-users] Linux alternative helpsupport

2015-07-18 Thread Tom Williams
On 07/18/2015 11:28 AM, Tom Davies wrote:
 Hi :)
 Something i really appreciate most about Linux is that it's so easy to
 change the gui - or more importantly that if you don't like the crazy new
 things that have been done to the gui then you can fairly easily go back to
 the old one or on to something else entirely.  The under-laying system
 remains the same.
Back in the day, I used to have 3 or 4 window managers I used to
switch between.  lol

As for Windows 8's metro, I mean modern UI, I'm not digging it and I
never have.

The other Tom

-- 
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Stay with me... Sway with me.../

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Re: [OT] Re: [libreoffice-users] Linux alternative

2015-07-18 Thread Malgosia Askanas

On 2015-07-18 04:02 PM, Gary Dale wrote:

The top reason people find hard is almost certainly that you have to
install it.


That's not entirely accurate.  There are a few (not many) companies that 
specialize in selling Linux-preinstalled machines.  The two that 
immediately come to mind are System76.com and ThinkPenguin.com .


-malgosia

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Re: [libreoffice-users] Linux alternative

2015-07-18 Thread Gary Dale

On 18/07/15 11:35 AM, Luuk wrote:

On 17-7-2015 23:47, Gary Dale wrote:

On 17/07/15 05:25 PM, charles meyer wrote:
For those on the list using or contemplating Linux, this was 
interesting.






Frankly though, I'm confused as to why more software vendors don't
compile to libwine .



libwine is about 'bondage'..


It seems some people are just into bondage.  :)





Not really. Wine has a free license (LGPL). While the individual 
programs you run on Wine may have other licenses, you aren't obligated 
to use programs whose license doesn't meet your expectations.


What Wine and Libwine do is allow developers to develop and test 
cross-platform programs on a Linux platform. I have a program that I 
developed exactly that way. While I could compile a Linux-specific 
version, I find it easier to just market the single version since it 
runs on Linux and Windows.


The point is that there is no extra work to develop and sell a Linux 
version of your software if you use the right products. And you not only 
get a larger target market but also give your customers greater flexibility.


For example, I support a small office that uses a Windows-only program. 
The developers not only don't make a Linux version but they double-down 
on bondage by only using Windows databases (Access or SQLServer for an 
extra charge). Had they supported MySQL/MariaDB, I could have at least 
moved the database to a separate server without worrying about extra 
licensing, etc..


Windows is like a pyramid scheme that way. They sucker developers into 
using only their products so that users have no choice but to buy 
licenses to run their products properly.


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[libreoffice-users] Linux alternative helpsupport

2015-07-18 Thread Tom Davies
Hi :)
I think this mailing list is often quite helpful about wider issues than it
is meant for.

This mailing list has been quite supportive of people with questions about
various versions of Linux.  I really like it when someone who has been a
huge help to others about technical issues in LibreOffice is then supported
by others in return.


My history with Linux ...
It took me a few goes before i found which version of Linux suited me
most.  I'm very much a pointclick user so i went with Gateway (or
user-friendly) distros to start with.  Mostly they are all good and so just
settling with anything is good but sometimes trying a different flavour
makes things feel more comfortable.

Mageia (formerly Mandriva in the same way that LibreOffice was formerly
OpenOffice) felt magical to me, fresh from Windows, but i didn't like the
blues in the default theme at the time.  Wolvix was a really friendly and
tiny team.  I could imagine meeting them at certain types of gigs and
enjoying beers and moshing.  But Slackware is not hugely easy for
pointclick users so i tried a few others and settled on Ubuntu as being my
main distro while still doing a bit more distro-hopping.

Something i really liked was that during that stumbling around
distro-hopping stage nothing i learned was wasted.  Even just using Wolvix
and it's excellent installer helped me learn how to use Mageia and others
better.  The biggest step was from Windows but moving around between
different distros felt like everything stayed the same except the wallpaper
and other fairly trivial bitsbobs.


Over the last 7-8 years i have accidentally learned a few command-line
things so i would have to remember to use different names for a few things
but the basic grammar of the commands remains the same and most of the
commands are identical in all versions of linux.

I have also accidentally learned how to ssh into remote machines (at least
ones i've been given passwords for!) to do a bit of systems administration
on multiple machines at once and i can rsync or scp to rapidly upload stuff
to the company's web-hosters or between desktops or between servers - all
with the same commands regardless of which version/flavour of linux they
use.

I've also learned how to create virtual machines to use Windows inside
Linux gaining the advantage of Linux solid foundations and minimal use of
resources to abstract-away some of the typical problems of installing
Windows.

Plus i would have never learned about powerful tools to clone drives and
many other things that i would probably never have learned, or that having
learned once would have to keep relearning new tools in order to keep doing
the same thing.



Wine and Play on Linux and Crossover and others are all great ways of
running Windows programs within Linux without needing an extra layer(s) for
emulators or virtual machines.

Some versions/flavours of Linux can be installed within Windows, such as
Ubuntu's Wubi and Puppy-Linux but that seems to be an odd way of doing
it.

Using Windows as the base and then having another OS within that either as
the Wubi or the Puppy-Linux way or inside a virtual machine seems a bit
weird to me.  Windows is not really a good stable foundation plus it tends
to be quite heavy in it's use of resources and doesn't have a reputation of
playing well with others.  Linux is much stronger on bare-metal so you'd
be missing some of the key advantages of Linux and really kinda combining
the worst aspects of both types of OSes.  However, many people have a lot
of success with it and it might be a good way-in.


So, anyway, i hope that people do ask more questions about how to use Linux
on this mailing list and that we are able to help signpost people to the
best places to ask questions or even just quickly help directly solve the
problem.

Regards from
Tom :)




On 18 July 2015 at 16:00, Gary Dale garyd...@torfree.net wrote:

 On 18/07/15 04:31 AM, yahoo-pier_andreit wrote:

 On 07/18/2015 09:32 AM, Thomas wrote:

 On 2015/07/18 6:50, Jack Wallen wrote:

 Thank you for sharing that, Charles (I'm the author). Glad to know it
 resonated.

 Jack

 Thank YOU, Mr. Wallen, for your article.
 Although I know, this does not belong here, just a word.
 I have been trying (STRUGGLING) to move away from MS and get friendly
 with Linux for 7-8 years now!
 So far with little success. Yet, I still keep trying.


 many thanks jack, :-)
 I'm not an expert, I start to use linux, basically opensuse, in 2000, and
 I agree with thomas, my son, my sister, my nephews uses linux, but, if I
 didn't install it and configure it and solved the problems that rised up
 and sometimes continues to pop up, they never started to use linux. too
 complicate... :-)


 The same issue afflicts Windows. It's just that Windows usually comes
 pre-installed. Having performed a lot of installs of both types, I've found
 the Linux installs to be simpler and a lot faster. Windows may get to the
 login screen a bit faster but then you've got 

Re: [libreoffice-users] Linux alternative

2015-07-18 Thread Luuk

On 18-7-2015 18:00, Gary Dale wrote:

Windows is like a pyramid scheme that way. They sucker developers into
using only their products so that users have no choice but to buy
licenses to run their products properly.



And that is exactly why you should not _DEVELOP_ using libwine

(using it, because there's not yeat a good alternative, is a complete 
different story




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Re: [libreoffice-users] Linux alternative

2015-07-18 Thread Tom Davies
Hi :)
+1

But Wine is about bondage in the sense that it keeps you using stuff that
is made for Windows.


Making stuff that needs Wine in order to work kinda keeps you locked-in to
the Windows world.

By contrast we see many native GnuLinux programs are then ported over to
Mac and Windows apparently without a huge amount of effort.  Firefox and
LibreOffice/OpenOffice are great examples of that as they have then become
serious competitors to alternatives that were only written for Windows and
then have been unable to be ported to anything else.

If programs plan to become cross-platform then initially writing for Linux
seems to be the optimum route.  Writing for Mac seems to be the next best
option.

Starting with Windows means programs or almost anything else faces a
nightmare up-hill struggle.  Even Microsoft themselves take an extra whole
year to port their office suite to Mac and even then it's a stripped-down
version.


Writing for Wine is a neat trick that i have not heard of before.  It
sounds like it neatly avoids any need for porting at all.  Wine runs on Mac
too so that is all 3 major platform covered in one hit.  It feels like
there must be an inherent flaw aside from the ethical issue of not quite
breaking free of the Windows world.  If not why on earth wouldn't everyone
be doing this? ;)

Regards from
Tom :)







On 18 July 2015 at 17:00, Gary Dale garyd...@torfree.net wrote:

 On 18/07/15 11:35 AM, Luuk wrote:

 On 17-7-2015 23:47, Gary Dale wrote:

 On 17/07/15 05:25 PM, charles meyer wrote:

 For those on the list using or contemplating Linux, this was
 interesting.

  

  Frankly though, I'm confused as to why more software vendors don't
 compile to libwine .


 libwine is about 'bondage'..

  It seems some people are just into bondage.  :)




  Not really. Wine has a free license (LGPL). While the individual
 programs you run on Wine may have other licenses, you aren't obligated to
 use programs whose license doesn't meet your expectations.

 What Wine and Libwine do is allow developers to develop and test
 cross-platform programs on a Linux platform. I have a program that I
 developed exactly that way. While I could compile a Linux-specific version,
 I find it easier to just market the single version since it runs on Linux
 and Windows.

 The point is that there is no extra work to develop and sell a Linux
 version of your software if you use the right products. And you not only
 get a larger target market but also give your customers greater flexibility.

 For example, I support a small office that uses a Windows-only program.
 The developers not only don't make a Linux version but they double-down on
 bondage by only using Windows databases (Access or SQLServer for an extra
 charge). Had they supported MySQL/MariaDB, I could have at least moved the
 database to a separate server without worrying about extra licensing, etc..

 Windows is like a pyramid scheme that way. They sucker developers into
 using only their products so that users have no choice but to buy licenses
 to run their products properly.


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Re: [libreoffice-users] Linux alternative helpsupport

2015-07-18 Thread Tom Davies
Hi :)
Something i really appreciate most about Linux is that it's so easy to
change the gui - or more importantly that if you don't like the crazy new
things that have been done to the gui then you can fairly easily go back to
the old one or on to something else entirely.  The under-laying system
remains the same.

I actually really like Unity but i also quite like the Win8 metro thing now
that i've found how to move things around and pin/unpin things from it.
The Windows key is good for getting to a classic desktop or back to the
menu/Metro-thingy on 8.1.  I've also been getting into KDE recently too,
despite the blue.

Regards form
Tom :)



On 18 July 2015 at 19:11, M Henri Day mhenri...@gmail.com wrote:

 2015-07-18 19:09 GMT+02:00 Tom Davies tomc...@gmail.com:

 Hi :)
 I think this mailing list is often quite helpful about wider issues than
 it
 is meant for.

 This mailing list has been quite supportive of people with questions about
 various versions of Linux.  I really like it when someone who has been a
 huge help to others about technical issues in LibreOffice is then
 supported
 by others in return.


 My history with Linux ...
 It took me a few goes before i found which version of Linux suited me
 most.  I'm very much a pointclick user so i went with Gateway (or
 user-friendly) distros to start with.  Mostly they are all good and so
 just
 settling with anything is good but sometimes trying a different flavour
 makes things feel more comfortable.

 Mageia (formerly Mandriva in the same way that LibreOffice was formerly
 OpenOffice) felt magical to me, fresh from Windows, but i didn't like the
 blues in the default theme at the time.  Wolvix was a really friendly and
 tiny team.  I could imagine meeting them at certain types of gigs and
 enjoying beers and moshing.  But Slackware is not hugely easy for
 pointclick users so i tried a few others and settled on Ubuntu as being
 my
 main distro while still doing a bit more distro-hopping.

 Something i really liked was that during that stumbling around
 distro-hopping stage nothing i learned was wasted.  Even just using Wolvix
 and it's excellent installer helped me learn how to use Mageia and others
 better.  The biggest step was from Windows but moving around between
 different distros felt like everything stayed the same except the
 wallpaper
 and other fairly trivial bitsbobs.


 Over the last 7-8 years i have accidentally learned a few command-line
 things so i would have to remember to use different names for a few things
 but the basic grammar of the commands remains the same and most of the
 commands are identical in all versions of linux.

 I have also accidentally learned how to ssh into remote machines (at least
 ones i've been given passwords for!) to do a bit of systems administration
 on multiple machines at once and i can rsync or scp to rapidly upload
 stuff
 to the company's web-hosters or between desktops or between servers - all
 with the same commands regardless of which version/flavour of linux they
 use.

 I've also learned how to create virtual machines to use Windows inside
 Linux gaining the advantage of Linux solid foundations and minimal use of
 resources to abstract-away some of the typical problems of installing
 Windows.

 Plus i would have never learned about powerful tools to clone drives and
 many other things that i would probably never have learned, or that having
 learned once would have to keep relearning new tools in order to keep
 doing
 the same thing.



 Wine and Play on Linux and Crossover and others are all great ways of
 running Windows programs within Linux without needing an extra layer(s)
 for
 emulators or virtual machines.

 Some versions/flavours of Linux can be installed within Windows, such as
 Ubuntu's Wubi and Puppy-Linux but that seems to be an odd way of doing
 it.

 Using Windows as the base and then having another OS within that either as
 the Wubi or the Puppy-Linux way or inside a virtual machine seems a bit
 weird to me.  Windows is not really a good stable foundation plus it tends
 to be quite heavy in it's use of resources and doesn't have a reputation
 of
 playing well with others.  Linux is much stronger on bare-metal so you'd
 be missing some of the key advantages of Linux and really kinda combining
 the worst aspects of both types of OSes.  However, many people have a lot
 of success with it and it might be a good way-in.


 So, anyway, i hope that people do ask more questions about how to use
 Linux
 on this mailing list and that we are able to help signpost people to the
 best places to ask questions or even just quickly help directly solve the
 problem.

 Regards from
 Tom :)




 On 18 July 2015 at 16:00, Gary Dale garyd...@torfree.net wrote:

  On 18/07/15 04:31 AM, yahoo-pier_andreit wrote:
 
  On 07/18/2015 09:32 AM, Thomas wrote:
 
  On 2015/07/18 6:50, Jack Wallen wrote:
 
  Thank you for sharing that, Charles (I'm the author). Glad to know it
  resonated.
 
  Jack
 
  

Re: [libreoffice-users] Linux alternative helpsupport

2015-07-18 Thread Johnny Rosenberg

 Tom, you might want to take a look at Linux Mint (current version 17.2) ;
 if you're using a desktop as your main box, I think you will find the GUI -
 I personally prefer Cinnamon - far superior to Ubuntu's Unity (Cinnamon
 can, of course, be installed on Ubuntu to replace Unity) and the OS is a
 dream to use. On my triple-boot machine, it boots (from GRUB), for example,
 much more quickly than Windows 8.1 Pro, which I keep around solely in order
 to be able to help retirees with their Windows problems. It doesn't
 require, as does Windows, that the machine be rebooted just about every
 time a minor update is installed, and things like the BSOD simply don't
 appear

You guys who use Mint with Cinnamon (from now on I will only say
”Mint”, but I mean Mint with the Cinnamon desktop every time), I would
like to know a little more about a few details, if you don't mind:
I currently use Ubuntu 14.04 and I have used Ubuntu since 7.04. I was
very impressed by the first version I installed, then even more
impressed for every new version up to 10.10. After that it seems like
the Ubuntu team spied on my. ”Now, let's see what features Johnny
Rosenberg like to use… aha… aha… I see… yes, that one too, ok, let's
remove them!”

So basically everything that I like with Ubuntu is gone now or doesn't
work. Let's asume that I want to give Mint with Cinnamon a go, what
about the following?
In old Ubuntu version, let's say a wrote a Bash script that I intended
to use with FLAC files. That's not too crazy, because I actually wrote
quite a few such scripts…
Now, I want to run these scripts with on FLAC files without too much
effort. I just want to right click a FLAC file, then ”Open with” and
finally just select my script.

To make this happen, in old Ubuntu I could just right click a FLAC
file → Properties → Open with, and from there just enter a command
line manually to reach my script.
This is of course impossible in Ubuntu 14.04. There are methods, but
none of them works. I have edited text files, been fiddling around
with Ubuntu Tweak and other tools, but no success. Nautilus Actions
doesn't seem to work properly anymore and so on. It's possible to use
the Script folder (~/.local/share/nautilus/scripts) but then my script
will be available for ALL kinds of files. Not good.
What about Mint in this case?

I use icons on my desktop. Maybe I shouldn't, but I find it
convenient. I try to have just a few of them, though. Anyway, I want
my icons on certain places and in certain sizes. I size up important
icons, for instance. This works in Ubuntu, but when I logout and then
login again, or restart the computer, all of my desktop icons are the
same size again and placed from up to down, left to right in
alphabetic order…
Does this work properly in Mint?

My Android phone always appear on different places. If I write a
script that will move files to and from my phone, I need to write
special routines to determine where the phone is located. At the
moment it's at ”/run/user/1000/gvfs/mtp:host=%5Busb%3A001%2C006%5D/”,
for instance. I find that annoying and it reminds me about Windows’
silly drive letters, which I also find annoying and… well, silly…
What about Mint in this case? Connecting Android devices that is, I
already know that Mint doesn't use drive letters… :P


Kind regards

Johnny Rosenberg



 So I agree with Jack Wallen - Linux *is* the answer to the question of
 alternatives to Windows. I'd disagree with him just a bit when it comes to
 «good» and «bad» Windows OSs - the problem with Vista (Windows 6.0) wasn't
 the OS itself, which was, in fact, a great improvement over XP (Windows
 5.1) - try defragging the same files on the two systems and you'll see what
 I mean - but rather that it was released before the manufacturers of
 peripherals like, e g, printers, had gotten around to creating drivers that
 worked with it, which was a real bummer for consumers. Two years later,
 when Windows 7 (i e, Windows 6.1), which amounted to a Vista SP with a
 better GUI, was released, those drivers were in place, and everybody, i e,
 Windows users, breathed a sigh of relief, Then came Windows 8 (Windows
 6.2), a relatively minor upgrade from Windows 7, where the MS leadership
 made the disastrous mistake of forcing the Metro GUI on all users. However,
 all that had to be done to make the new OS work in a way familiar to
 Windows users was to install the lovely little shell program from *Classic
 Shell* http://classicshell.net , which gave users a GUI almost
 indistinguishable from that of Windows 7. I don't know how many retirees we
 have saved from throwing their computers out the window by this simple
 expedient. In Windows 8.1 (Windows 6.3), Microsoft started a slow retreat
 back to the familiar start button, but even here the installation of
 Classic Shell was needed to bring relief to users who communicated with
 their computers mainly via a mouse/touchpad and a keyboard, rather than
 sweeping their fingers over a touch 

Re: [libreoffice-users] Linux alternative helpsupport

2015-07-18 Thread M Henri Day
2015-07-18 19:09 GMT+02:00 Tom Davies tomc...@gmail.com:

 Hi :)
 I think this mailing list is often quite helpful about wider issues than it
 is meant for.

 This mailing list has been quite supportive of people with questions about
 various versions of Linux.  I really like it when someone who has been a
 huge help to others about technical issues in LibreOffice is then supported
 by others in return.


 My history with Linux ...
 It took me a few goes before i found which version of Linux suited me
 most.  I'm very much a pointclick user so i went with Gateway (or
 user-friendly) distros to start with.  Mostly they are all good and so just
 settling with anything is good but sometimes trying a different flavour
 makes things feel more comfortable.

 Mageia (formerly Mandriva in the same way that LibreOffice was formerly
 OpenOffice) felt magical to me, fresh from Windows, but i didn't like the
 blues in the default theme at the time.  Wolvix was a really friendly and
 tiny team.  I could imagine meeting them at certain types of gigs and
 enjoying beers and moshing.  But Slackware is not hugely easy for
 pointclick users so i tried a few others and settled on Ubuntu as being my
 main distro while still doing a bit more distro-hopping.

 Something i really liked was that during that stumbling around
 distro-hopping stage nothing i learned was wasted.  Even just using Wolvix
 and it's excellent installer helped me learn how to use Mageia and others
 better.  The biggest step was from Windows but moving around between
 different distros felt like everything stayed the same except the wallpaper
 and other fairly trivial bitsbobs.


 Over the last 7-8 years i have accidentally learned a few command-line
 things so i would have to remember to use different names for a few things
 but the basic grammar of the commands remains the same and most of the
 commands are identical in all versions of linux.

 I have also accidentally learned how to ssh into remote machines (at least
 ones i've been given passwords for!) to do a bit of systems administration
 on multiple machines at once and i can rsync or scp to rapidly upload stuff
 to the company's web-hosters or between desktops or between servers - all
 with the same commands regardless of which version/flavour of linux they
 use.

 I've also learned how to create virtual machines to use Windows inside
 Linux gaining the advantage of Linux solid foundations and minimal use of
 resources to abstract-away some of the typical problems of installing
 Windows.

 Plus i would have never learned about powerful tools to clone drives and
 many other things that i would probably never have learned, or that having
 learned once would have to keep relearning new tools in order to keep doing
 the same thing.



 Wine and Play on Linux and Crossover and others are all great ways of
 running Windows programs within Linux without needing an extra layer(s) for
 emulators or virtual machines.

 Some versions/flavours of Linux can be installed within Windows, such as
 Ubuntu's Wubi and Puppy-Linux but that seems to be an odd way of doing
 it.

 Using Windows as the base and then having another OS within that either as
 the Wubi or the Puppy-Linux way or inside a virtual machine seems a bit
 weird to me.  Windows is not really a good stable foundation plus it tends
 to be quite heavy in it's use of resources and doesn't have a reputation of
 playing well with others.  Linux is much stronger on bare-metal so you'd
 be missing some of the key advantages of Linux and really kinda combining
 the worst aspects of both types of OSes.  However, many people have a lot
 of success with it and it might be a good way-in.


 So, anyway, i hope that people do ask more questions about how to use Linux
 on this mailing list and that we are able to help signpost people to the
 best places to ask questions or even just quickly help directly solve the
 problem.

 Regards from
 Tom :)




 On 18 July 2015 at 16:00, Gary Dale garyd...@torfree.net wrote:

  On 18/07/15 04:31 AM, yahoo-pier_andreit wrote:
 
  On 07/18/2015 09:32 AM, Thomas wrote:
 
  On 2015/07/18 6:50, Jack Wallen wrote:
 
  Thank you for sharing that, Charles (I'm the author). Glad to know it
  resonated.
 
  Jack
 
  Thank YOU, Mr. Wallen, for your article.
  Although I know, this does not belong here, just a word.
  I have been trying (STRUGGLING) to move away from MS and get friendly
  with Linux for 7-8 years now!
  So far with little success. Yet, I still keep trying.
 
 
  many thanks jack, :-)
  I'm not an expert, I start to use linux, basically opensuse, in 2000,
 and
  I agree with thomas, my son, my sister, my nephews uses linux, but, if I
  didn't install it and configure it and solved the problems that rised up
  and sometimes continues to pop up, they never started to use linux. too
  complicate... :-)
 
 
  The same issue afflicts Windows. It's just that Windows usually comes
  pre-installed. Having performed a lot of 

Re: [libreoffice-users] Linux alternative

2015-07-18 Thread Harvey Nimmo
On Sat, 2015-07-18 at 12:00 -0400, Gary Dale wrote:
 On 18/07/15 11:35 AM, Luuk wrote:
  On 17-7-2015 23:47, Gary Dale wrote:
  On 17/07/15 05:25 PM, charles meyer wrote:
  For those on the list using or contemplating Linux, this was 
  interesting.
 
  
 
  Frankly though, I'm confused as to why more software vendors don't
  compile to libwine .
 
 
  libwine is about 'bondage'..
 
  It seems some people are just into bondage.  :)
 
 
 
 
 Not really. Wine has a free license (LGPL). While the individual 
 programs you run on Wine may have other licenses, you aren't obligated 
 to use programs whose license doesn't meet your expectations.
 
 What Wine and Libwine do is allow developers to develop and test 
 cross-platform programs on a Linux platform. I have a program that I 
 developed exactly that way. While I could compile a Linux-specific 
 version, I find it easier to just market the single version since it 
 runs on Linux and Windows.
 
 The point is that there is no extra work to develop and sell a Linux 
 version of your software if you use the right products. And you not only 
 get a larger target market but also give your customers greater flexibility.
 
 For example, I support a small office that uses a Windows-only program. 
 The developers not only don't make a Linux version but they double-down 
 on bondage by only using Windows databases (Access or SQLServer for an 
 extra charge). Had they supported MySQL/MariaDB, I could have at least 
 moved the database to a separate server without worrying about extra 
 licensing, etc..
 
 Windows is like a pyramid scheme that way. They sucker developers into 
 using only their products so that users have no choice but to buy 
 licenses to run their products properly.
 
The rather dishonest propaganda of proprietary software tends to be: if
you don't pay for a product, then you *are* the product. What they fail
to say is that if you do pay for a product, you are also the product and
pay considerably to remain the product as well.

Cheers
Harvey


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Re: [libreoffice-users] Linux alternative

2015-07-18 Thread Gary Dale

On 18/07/15 01:04 PM, Luuk wrote:

On 18-7-2015 18:00, Gary Dale wrote:

Windows is like a pyramid scheme that way. They sucker developers into
using only their products so that users have no choice but to buy
licenses to run their products properly.



And that is exactly why you should not _DEVELOP_ using libwine

(using it, because there's not yeat a good alternative, is a complete 
different story




That's not really a good argument. Software freedom is about choice. A 
lot of people don't have the option to quit Windows right away (if ever) 
so I give them the option of running software that runs on multiple 
platforms - the same as Mozilla, The Document Foundation, GIMP and a lot 
of others do.


Being Open Source and under a Free License, I can't keep anyone else 
from recompiling my software to run on Windows, so why shouldn't I do it 
myself?


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Re: [libreoffice-users] Libre Office Base

2015-07-18 Thread Peter Goggin
I have read with interest the comments about Libre Office.  Over the 
years I have managed large (100 Million records and small databases ( 1 
million records or less) using Oracle, running in Unix machines. I have 
also developed  a number of small ( less than 100,000 records ) using a 
variety of data base software (e. g. Paradox, Dbase, MS Access etc ). 
Over the last few years, since I retired I have run Oracle  on Linux. 
Mysql, and now Libre Base.  For my current needs I have found Libre Base 
more than adequate.  I use straight out of the box and use its internal 
data base engine. I currently run four data bases, the largest has about 
10,000 records.  I have found it possible to produce the reports I need 
and the data summaries etc just as easily as I could in MS Access or 
even Oracle. The developers deserve congratulations on producing this 
product.  If I were forced to pay for MS products I would have to stop 
my computing since XP is no longer supported and I cannot afford to buy 
the latest windows and associated software.


Like all software Libre Base has its quirks and the documentation 
probably needs improving but overall it is a very useful product. If 
problems occur it is well worth reading the available documentation and 
then if the solution is not obvious e-mail the list.


Regards


Peter Goggin







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Re: [libreoffice-users] Linux alternative

2015-07-18 Thread Tim---Kracked_P_P---webmaster

On 07/18/2015 11:54 AM, charles meyer wrote:

Hi Jack,

You’re most welcome.

I think many Windows users are married to old verbiage they heard
years ago (some unfounded) about how you’ll need to learn to code or
have to learn language like the old DOS to make Linux work and so
propelled by fear they remain with Windows.

I’m looking forward to all the good work and advancement Eric (on this
list) makes with his foray into voice recognition but can you or Gary
on this list or others recommend any Linux-based voice recognition?

Nuance has dragged their heels in so many ways including developing
voice recognition for more than one voice at a time so I don’t feel
like I can count on them to offer a Linux-based version by 2020 when
MS is supposed to end W7 support.

Thanks for disabusing readers of their “Linux-fear” in your article
and for your and others voice recognition recommendations.

Charles.



I started with computers when punch-cards were still common and 
computers smaller than a refrigerator was not.


I wished I still remembered all the programming skills I have back then 
[but that ended with the strokes].  Users are pampered with a GUI and 
other modern items on their really small sized systems, compared to 
what I started working with.  You try writing a general ledger 
accounting system from scratch in COBOL and then tell me that people do 
not have it so easy now.  Well, at least if you do not have to do the 
GUI programming from scratch instead of using templates, or needing to 
do AI work withing a game environment.  But the basic business stuff was 
much harder to produce back then when colored printing, or even 
graphical printing, from a low to middle environment business computer 
was not available at all.  I was programming computers for over a decade 
before I ever saw a colored printer, let alone afford one.




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Re: [libreoffice-users] [OT] Operating Environment Survey

2015-07-18 Thread James Knott
On 07/18/2015 09:25 PM, James E Lang wrote:
 The big discussion of Linux over the past 24+ hours has me wondering: What 
 operating environment(s) do other members of this list use at home and at 
 work? What factors influence the choice?


Personal:
All computers run openSUSE 13.1
ThinkPad E520 came with Windows 7 and can dual boot
Run Windows 10 in VirtualBox
Google Nexus 5 phone and Nexus 7 tablet

Work: (I didn't choose either of these.)
ThinkPad X131e running Windows 8.1
iPhone 6


I like Linux, ThinkPads and Android.

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Re: [libreoffice-users] [OT] Operating Environment Survey

2015-07-18 Thread Tom Williams
On 07/18/2015 06:25 PM, James E Lang wrote:
 The big discussion of Linux over the past 24+ hours has me wondering: What 
 operating environment(s) do other members of this list use at home and at 
 work? What factors influence the choice?

 To set the tone, here are my answers:

 • I am retired so at work is not applicable
 • At home we have a desktop dual boot Windows XP (and Ubuntu Linux) computer, 
 a laptop dual boot Kubuntu Linux (and pre-installed Windows Vista) computer 
 and several other laptop, desktop, and dedicated server (Ubuntu Linux based) 
 computers. I also have Android Lollipop, Android Kit Kat, and Android Jelly 
 Bean tablets and phones. I have nothing from Apple.
 • Windows XP is used primarily for single player gaming and e-Sword Bible 
 software though it also is used to run LO, FireFox and Pegasus Mail 
 (proprietary though free of cost).
 • Kubuntu Linux is my general purpose go to environment. My first Linux 
 system used what I believe was the penultimate marketed version from SuSE 
 before the first release of Open SuSE. I liked the flexibility that was 
 inherent in the KDE desktop environment and found the UI to be quite similar 
 to that of Windows at the time. I have briefly tried Gnome and Unity desktop 
 environments but KDE is my personal first choice.
 • If I had a tablet computer that I thought could support my Linux usage it, 
 too, would run Kubuntu Linux, LO, etc.
 • Apple equipment is too expensive for me and from what I've heard about the 
 company's software policies, they are too restrictive to suit me.
 • Dual boot capabilities are seldom used to deviate from the above 
 information.
 • The BSODs on Windows influenced my initial adoption of Linux.



At work, I use Windows 7.

At home, I use Ubuntu Linux (64-bit) and have been a Linux devotee for
years.  I first switched from Windows XP to Slackware back in the late
1990s.  I installed Slackware 8 from CD and installed only the base
system and compiler.   Most everything else, I built from sources I
would download, including X11 (XFree86).  :)

I switched to Ubuntu around 7.04 to see what the Linux experience was
like without compiling everything all the time.  Now, I just don't have
the time to build everything from source to keep the system updated.

Peace...

The other Tom

-- 
/When we dance, you have a way with me,
Stay with me... Sway with me.../

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[libreoffice-users] [OT] Operating Environment Survey

2015-07-18 Thread James E Lang
The big discussion of Linux over the past 24+ hours has me wondering: What 
operating environment(s) do other members of this list use at home and at work? 
What factors influence the choice?

To set the tone, here are my answers:

• I am retired so at work is not applicable
• At home we have a desktop dual boot Windows XP (and Ubuntu Linux) computer, a 
laptop dual boot Kubuntu Linux (and pre-installed Windows Vista) computer and 
several other laptop, desktop, and dedicated server (Ubuntu Linux based) 
computers. I also have Android Lollipop, Android Kit Kat, and Android Jelly 
Bean tablets and phones. I have nothing from Apple.
• Windows XP is used primarily for single player gaming and e-Sword Bible 
software though it also is used to run LO, FireFox and Pegasus Mail 
(proprietary though free of cost).
• Kubuntu Linux is my general purpose go to environment. My first Linux 
system used what I believe was the penultimate marketed version from SuSE 
before the first release of Open SuSE. I liked the flexibility that was 
inherent in the KDE desktop environment and found the UI to be quite similar to 
that of Windows at the time. I have briefly tried Gnome and Unity desktop 
environments but KDE is my personal first choice.
• If I had a tablet computer that I thought could support my Linux usage it, 
too, would run Kubuntu Linux, LO, etc.
• Apple equipment is too expensive for me and from what I've heard about the 
company's software policies, they are too restrictive to suit me.
• Dual boot capabilities are seldom used to deviate from the above information.
• The BSODs on Windows influenced my initial adoption of Linux.

-- 
Jim
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Re: [OT] [libreoffice-users] Linux alternative

2015-07-18 Thread toki


On 07/18/2015 10:08 PM, James Knott wrote:

 Tell that to all the scientists who use supercomputers.  The vast majority of 
 them, including my cousin, run Linux.  

If you want state of the art software, that costs a fortune, you run *Nix.

If you want almost state of the art, that costs a small fortune, it is
as likely to run on Mac OS X, as on Windows.

If you want software that is almost state of the art, but is
affordable, you run Windows.

If you want software that is good enough for most purposes, you run Linux.

Joe Sixpack wants something slightly better than good enough for most
purposes, but doesn't want the cash outlay that state of the art
requires. Thus far, Windows has been that happy medium.

jonathon


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