>From what I read, you have found a way to utilize OOo to do similar as KeyNote etc. Is this correct? If so how do you do it?
Chris > http://www.tranglos.com/free/ - Here's a link to the screenshots if > anyone wants them. I love this program Simon, but I've found that it > just doesn't meet my needs anymroe. Since I work primarily at home I > can take the time out to organize things carefuly as I go. But before > when my mind was constantly scattered, KeyNote was my savior. > > Sadly. All things pass, and my immense use of KeyNote gradualy > dissipated as I found ways to better integrate the foundational > aspects of OpenOffice to give me a more rounded result, and more > manageable system of tracking my information. > > Rigel > > Simon Lilburn <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Hi all, > > I've been using OpenOffice.org since slightly after its 1.0 release > (so, I think that would be around the end of 2002) both as a student > and as a writer. I have, to echo the general consensus, enjoyed the > product thoroughly. OOo 2.0 solidifies that totally for me; the beta > shows a very well-rounded product that will be more intuitive for > newer users (IMO, anyway). To get to the point, I'm wondering if I can > make quite a large suggestion for the future of OOo (2.5, 3.0 onward) > for the incorporation of another office suite-style application. My > top three open-source programs (as far as usage goes) are Firefox, OOo > and KeyNote-- all of which I use constantly on a daily basis. My > problem stems from the fact that whilst Firefox and OOo are all on > Linux (which I'm planning on switching full-time on to), KeyNote is > only on Windows. [BTW, I'm talking about the open-source program > called KeyNote at http://www.tranglos.com/free/keynote.html, not the > Apple presentation software]. Basically, the software is a > three-paned, tabbed, tree-based notepad for taking lots of notes that > need to be organized in a very structural way; something which word > processors just can't do. For research (both as a writer and as a > student), I find it second-to-none. > > I don't believe software like this (maybe OneNote comes slightly > close) has been incorporated into Office software yet, and I think > this is OOo's chance to add a another program into the stable of what > an office suite is. And, from what very little I know about software > development, I believe most of the capabilities are already within > OOo; they are just not structured in this way. > > Well, sorry for posting a long one and keep up the good work. > - Simon. > > --------------------------------------------------------------------- > To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For > additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > > > > --------------------------------- > Do you Yahoo!? > Yahoo! Mail - now with 250MB free storage. Learn more. --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
