Linked by Thom Holwerda on Fri 13th Jul 2012 23:39 UTC
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RE[4]: Comment by Luminair
by Neolander on Wed 18th Jul 2012 19:51
in reply to "RE[3]: Comment by Luminair"
"-While Notepad is pretty bad, Windows 7's Wordpad is decent. As an example, it does properly open text files from all OSs. It can also offer Abiword-like basic formatted text editing (which is sadly enough for many people, who have never learned how to get the most of a word processor)."
It's sad in the other direction - I mean, there's really nothing wrong when people could be generally happy with something like Abiword (even something between Abiword and Wordpad, really; preferably with a touch of Lyx or TeXmacs) ...and yet, they often still insists on MS Word.
It's sad in the other direction - I mean, there's really nothing wrong when people could be generally happy with something like Abiword (even something between Abiword and Wordpad, really; preferably with a touch of Lyx or TeXmacs) ...and yet, they often still insists on MS Word.
I guess that this is an inescapable outcome when the de facto standard for editable text documents is a proprietary file format...
Regarding the "there's nothing wrong with people being satisfied with Abiword's feature set", I don't know... It sure is perfect for quickly writing small documents, but anytime I see someone manually parsing a 30-page document just to rectify hand-applied title formatting, I die a little on the inside... I'll be the first to admit that modern "heavy" word processors have too many features, but there are a few gems that everyone should know about IMO.
Edited 2012-07-18 20:00 UTC
RE[5]: Comment by Luminair
by zima on Wed 18th Jul 2012 20:59
in reply to "RE[4]: Comment by Luminair"
And "something between Abiword and Wordpad [...] preferably with a touch of Lyx or TeXmacs" would also be about better formatting (the LyX or TeXmacs part) - giving less manual control over it, really, that's large part of the problem: UIs making it straightforward to micro-manage documents, so people do just that and settle on it.
At least that de facto standard thing is beginning to change in places ( http://www.webmasterpro.de/portal/news/2010/02/05/international-ope... and doesn't your place has some non-trivial deployment projects?) ...too bad it's still mostly about Word-like application.




Member since:
2005-07-06
It's sad in the other direction - I mean, there's really nothing wrong when people could be generally happy with something like Abiword (even something between Abiword and Wordpad, really; preferably with a touch of Lyx or TeXmacs) ...and yet, they often still insists on MS Word.