Monday, September 18, 2023

Life Skills - Things That Last - LibreOffice

PreAmble

 I recently saw a couple of youtube videos that changed the way I look at things .. hopefully this will be the first of a few posts that explain some things and maybe one or two people will benefit.

Intro

When I was in my early teens, my Mother taught me to touch type (she was a secretarial teacher). She also tried to teach me shorthand which I never really cottoned on to, though I wish I had.

Never in my wildest imaginings did I realise how valuable the skill of using a keyboard was going to be. Fast forward to today and I still remember that lesson. Learn something worthwhile and you have it for life.

Things Change

So how does that relate to things today? Well for one thing document formats change so frequently that if you author something in for example MSWorks .. well in a few years it is not able to be read. This is a real worry these days. If you have an MSWord document from a while ago (yes you probably have to be old to appreciate this) .. well MSWord cannot read it.

I have many documents in MSWorks .. the only way I can read them is with LibreOffice.

It is called Vendor Lock In ... or alternatively obsolesence.

Another problem (apologies for using MSWord as the whipping boy) is that these proprietary products change - MSWord is certainly guilty of that - you get a new version and then you have to learn all over again.

So.

Are there any quality, free authoring products that you can rely on forever?

Yes. Lots.

LibreOffice

First out of the gate for the curious is "LibreOffice". LibreOffice is actively developed, is free and available for all platforms you are ever likely to use. It reads and writes more document formats than MSOffice and will be there forever, still able to write those document formats.

Why would you NOT use LibreOffice as your suite?

Here is the Wikipedia entry for it ....

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/LibreOffice

Things That are Worthwhile

Here is a list I'll be talking about in future posts.

Applications:
Emacs (orgmode, the killer app)
Vim (vimwiki - a second brain)
Obsidian (another second brain)

Markup Formats
Groff
LaTeX
Markdown
AsciiDoc

Web Apps
Trello
Simplenote

Video conference
Jitsi



Saturday, August 5, 2023

 A Long Time


Yes, it has been ... I lost interest in my blog for a long time however I'll have another go at it.

This blog is about Debian Linux, FreeBSD, Aviation and anything else I take a shine to.  Oh, did I mention Emacs, Groff and LaTeX?  Of course there is "Plain Text Accounting" ... oh I could go on.

If you have an unused laptop or computer lying around, how about you go to "Linux Mint" and download the "Linux Mint Debian Edition" (LMDE5) installation iso.  It will give you a gentle introduction to Linux, keep you safe and let you see what you can do for free on your machine.

I have been using Debian for perhaps 20 years .. have not paid for software for as long as I can remember (I'm old so that may not be as long as you might think).


Today's hook.

"Emacs for OSX"

I've recently realised that if you have that on your Mac, all the Mac key combinations work, which makes Emacs that much more freindly out of the box.  But beware ... Emacs is like going down Alice's rabbit hole .. there is so much to find out.


Geoff.