Thanks for the comments. As for Windows' folder organization ("Also the folder structure is radically different on Windows.") , I can only say "NOT ON MY MACHINE!"
This whole puerile concept of "My this" and "My that" is, in my humble opinion, rather bone-headed and makes a number of unwarranted assumptions about the many varied uses of a computer. This is precisely why I have several Windows partitions that I have carried over to Ubuntu. For example, if you have "projects" or "hobbies" that you wish to keep organized such as (to name a few of mine) Genealogy, Development, and Photography, does it make sense to have subdirectories/folders for each of these projects under My Documents, My Pictures and so forth, or to have (in my case) entire partitions devoted to each project (which, by the way makes for much easier backups, since I tend to work on one subject for a time to the exclusion of the others)? In my case, under Genealogy, I have subfolders for record images that I've scanned or otherwise obtained ("My Pictures" just seems like a lame, inaccurate, and vague description although that's where the file extension suggests to Windows it should be dumped), documents I've written, photographs I've taken in cemeteries and other places of interest around the world (would this be "My Pictures-2" in Windows parlance?). There are many, many subfolders under this one subject, and I sure don't want to intermingle these files with my financial records, PL/SQL code, Music files, etc. etc. So, I very early on attempted to ignore Windows' mandated structure (even "My Downloads," which I keep segregated so that I don't need to sift through various utility installation programs to locate German census sheets from the mid-nineteenth century and so forth). I think it's nice that they attempt to help the user get "organized," but I find that they're just simply not that good at that themselves, so I'd rather not have their help. "My Music" is another lame and vague category. I have, as I guess most folks do, a collection of "music" that I listen to on the computer (e.g. mp3's and such), but I also have a collection of music scores (some of my own - MuseScore is a terrific program by the way - and many by my pals J.S.Bach and Charles-Valentin Alkan that I have obtained in order to attempt some greater understanding of their particular genius). "Music" is, of course, a nice generic description of each of these two groups of files, but doesn't at all help distinguish them, and I certainly don't wish to intermingle them. I now realize this has degenerated into a discussion that's way off topic, and more appropriate for some other forum (and for that I apologize), but - this whole wish to get things organized in a way that makes sense to me and is convenient from a file management standpoint is what started this whole discussion. I'm only sorry that Ubuntu seems to have been a little infected by this Windows approach, although they are much nicer about it (Windows howls like crazy each time I attempt to thwart its control over what even Microsoft calls ("MY" documents). Again, apologies for the rant, and have a great day. -- View this message in context: http://nabble.documentfoundation.org/Opening-Files-in-Writer-tp4006889p4009687.html Sent from the Users mailing list archive at Nabble.com. -- For unsubscribe instructions e-mail to: users+h...@global.libreoffice.org Problems? http://www.libreoffice.org/get-help/mailing-lists/how-to-unsubscribe/ Posting guidelines + more: http://wiki.documentfoundation.org/Netiquette List archive: http://listarchives.libreoffice.org/global/users/ All messages sent to this list will be publicly archived and cannot be deleted