ion."
Other text indicates that the RTF specification is freely available and covered
under Microsoft's Open Specification Promise, as I have already described.
-Original Message-
From: Tom Davies [mailto:tomdavie...@yahoo.co.uk]
Sent: Friday, April 27, 2012 11:36
To: user
#x27;s Open Specification Promise, as I have already described.
-Original Message-
From: Tom Davies [mailto:tomdavie...@yahoo.co.uk]
Sent: Friday, April 27, 2012 11:36
To: users@global.libreoffice.org
Subject: RE: [libreoffice-users] Re: rtf import broken in 3.5.1?
Hi :)
Who is developin
Hi :)
Who is developing the Rtf format? Who is maintaining it and working at any
problems that arise with it?
Regards from
Tom :)
--- On Fri, 27/4/12, Dennis E. Hamilton wrote:
From: Dennis E. Hamilton
Subject: RE: [libreoffice-users] Re: rtf import broken in 3.5.1?
To: users
ril 27, 2012 00:13
To: users@global.libreoffice.org
Subject: Re: [libreoffice-users] Re: rtf import broken in 3.5.1?
Dňa 26.04.2012 21:28, Tom Davies wrote / napísal(a):
> Hi :)
> What!! An "agreed" 'Open' Standard that MS never quite implemented in the
> way they h
Hi, all.
I know Microsoft's so-called "open" spec can be really bad. I only use
Microsoft stuff in some public computers, because there is no second
choice.
Thank you for all people trying to spread such ideas. However, most
people I know it is not that serious about software freedom. Many
people
i, 27/4/12, Milos Sramek wrote:
From: Milos Sramek
Subject: Re: [libreoffice-users] Re: rtf import broken in 3.5.1?
To: users@global.libreoffice.org
Date: Friday, 27 April, 2012, 8:13
Dňa 26.04.2012 21:28, Tom Davies wrote / napísal(a):
> Hi :)
> What!! An "agreed" 'Open'
Dňa 26.04.2012 21:28, Tom Davies wrote / napísal(a):
Hi :)
What!! An "agreed" 'Open' Standard that MS never quite implemented in the way
they had promised but still managed to push as the unifying standard that all other
companies had to follow. The format they promised would have long term
Hi :)
What!! An "agreed" 'Open' Standard that MS never quite implemented in the way
they had promised but still managed to push as the unifying standard that all
other companies had to follow. The format they promised would have long term
support so that historical archives and such could reli