Ed Web Blog

Andy Carvin is one of those people who has created name recognition through his(/her) online presence. First with Public Television (if I remember correctly) and now with the Benton Foundation.

You can become familiar with EdWeb (the web site), WWWEDU] (a listserv – pronounced We Do) and now the “Waste of Bandwidth Blog.” A wide range of topics – educational and otherwise – are explored.

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Open Office

Cindy bought me a new iBook as a late Christmas present. We visited one of the Apple Stores in Minneapolis last weekend and she could not help herself. Over break I also installed Panther (OSX.3) on my desktop machine. Having two machines upgraded to run Panther gave me the opportunity to do something I have wanted to do for some time to try OpenOffice. I could have probably found a way to do this earlier, but the instructions I had made use of X11. X11 is free, but when I tried to download it before the only version available from the Apple site required 10.3. X11 (X windows I think) allows “UNIX types” a graphical interface and allows OSX users to open a UNIX application on the Mac desktop. Anyway, this is how I understand it and you hardcore UNIX types can certainly correct me if I am wrong. I don’t pretend to know exactly what I am doing here and that is part of what I find encouraging.

OpenOffice is pretty much an Open Source equivalent of MicroSoft Office to word processing, spreadsheet, presentation applications. It is actually a good deal more similar than just offering the same suite of applications. OpenOffice will accept Word, Excel, etc. files and will save back to these same file types.

Open Office Image

I have been using OpenOffice now for a week or so (mostly word processing and spreadsheet work) and I have been very impressed. I would certainly encourage anyone using the Panther operating system to give it a try (see the following links for some help). The implementation I installed makes use of a third item that launches both XDarwin and OpenOffice. It is my impression that this makes the entire process easy for those of us without the background to function easily in UNIX. At this point I simply double click the appropriate icon and both X11 and OpenOffice launch. Once you are in the applications, the experience of word processing or using the spreadsheet is pretty much what you are used to (actually I have to keep reminding myself to use the control key instand of the command key).

Some schools, businesses and countries are taking a close look at Open Source software. Why? Well, most of the software is free. I can’t say the money is my personal motivation (I also purchased a student/educator version of Office over break – $129 – so I hope Bill is willing to forgive this post). I think the world of technology will simply be a better place if there continues to be a reasonable level of competition.

OpenOffice Download for the Mac
Educators and Open Source Software

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