Gary Schnabl wrote,
However, there is a need to spare users from entering some areas where the conversions to/from OOo and other apps fail. As I mentioned before, that should be the primary impetus for having such a guide. And having that guide's advice changed afterwards to relate to the evolving development of OpenOffice and the other apps/suites.

IOW, practical advice and workarounds, mostly. No charts, any longer--please! Charts are only so informative. My IQ is at the 99.9+ percentile, but still I find charts with an X or three or their absence to be a needless mental exercise when I want to know out whether something works or not. I'm sure that our people and also lurkers could suggest material for a useful, current Migration Guide.

There is training (learning, how-to) material, and there is reference material. Comparison tables may or may not be useful for training, but I believe they can be quite useful as "quick reference" material, and some people really like that sort of thing. Of course, that doesn't mean the Migration Guide is the place to put it.

I'm keen on task-oriented rather than reference material as a priority for users, and I've agreed all along that what you want to add to that book is definitely important and needed, so I don't mind at all if you dump the comparison tables in the Migration Guide. If the "Cluesheets" people update their quick reference cards to v3, then the info is available, just not from us.

Am I correct that you're also in favour of dumping the comparison tables in Chapter 1 of the Getting Started book? Is there anything else in GS Ch1 that you recommend not including in the v3 book? I'm a bit dubious about the value of a "New features" list, which I don't think is all tht useful to anyone unfamiliar with an earlier version of OOo.

--Jean

---------------------------------------------------------------------
To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Reply via email to