Dear Drew and Everyone:

Thank you for your reply and interest.  To answer your questions and provide 
commentary on what has led me to LibreOffice the following:

No, I do not run any type of e-mail newletter or newletter.  My journey to 
LibreOffice and the Digital Commons came as a result of arrogant Microsoft 
representatives less than one third my age telling me that I do not have a 
choice with software and that I will eventually have to use their product one 
way or another.  The Mircosoft southeastern regional headquarters is located 
less than four direct miles from where I reside in Roswell, Gerogia, USA.  In 
the past I have been in attendance at their meetings representing various 
companies and had finally gotten to the point where I was totally irritated 
with their Madison Avenue Mircosoft Uber Alles mantras and had started looking 
for other solid alternatives.  Open Office was under the direct control of 
Oracle and was just as bad as Microsoft in the sense that they, along with many 
other companies and entities do not support the basic principles and values on 
which LibreOffice was founded http://www.documentfoundation.org/foundation/.  

When LibreOffice forked from Open Office, it began to get my attention.  It was 
not until I read Richard Stallmans commentary on open file formats 
http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/no-word-attachments.html, and word processing did 
I begin to take this more to heart as it focused and highlighted the main 
issues.  Another turning point was when I had another company, that is not 
involved in the computer industry, demand that I use Microsoft Office and Word 
files to communicate with them or not do business with them because I was "not 
with the program."  After this I started putting this closing in my e-mails 
when I authored PDF files.  Here is another link about the issue: 
http://www.fsf.org/campaigns/opendocument/reject.  Another link which 
highlights the underlying issue of freedom and software: 
http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/open-source-misses-the-point.html. 

Thank you for pointing out the fact that I had overlooked the fact that 
LibreOffice is one word, not two.  It is not being picayunish to point out 
errors, and I welcome any constructive commentary.  I am of the ilk that I 
endeavour to dot all the "i's" and cross all the "t's" as a matter of course.  
As a result I looked at the logo and trademark pages which I would not have 
scrutinized had you not brought this to my attention.   One question that was 
not answered is that if LibreOffice is a registered trademark, should not the 
registered trademark symbol ® be used with the logo?  Am I missing something 
here?  

In closing, 

"Hold fast to your dreams, for without them life is a broken winged bird that 
cannot fly." 
   --Langston Hughes 

All the Best,

Volodymyr*************

-----Original Message-----
From: drew [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Tuesday, November 22, 2011 3:41 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [libreoffice-marketing] Marketing Libre Office with E-mails.From 
Volodymyr in Atlanta.

On Tue, 2011-11-22 at 14:03 -0500, Volodymyr Vladimir I.
Druzhshchienschkyj wrote:
> Atlanta, Georgia USA 
> 
> 13:57 (UTC -05) Tuesday 22 November 2011 
> 
> Hello Everyone:

Howdy,

> The following is my attempt to promote Libre Office and its benefits to 
> society.  
>
> With many companies they will include advertising in e-mails or SMS that are 
> sent without specific user consent.  Examples of this are, "Sent using X, Y, 
> or Z hardware", or something similar.  
> 
> With each e-mail that includes a PDF authored by myself, which is the way I 
> prefer to write, I include the following text in the last section of the 
> e-mail after the closing and before the legal notifications.  
> 

Cool - so I take you run some type of email newsletter or newsletters,
yes?

Well, I think it's wonderful that you use, like and want to promote the
package and OSS in general.

I suppose, were I being a bit picayune-ish there are a few small things
I would point out.

The name is LibreOffice, one word.

It is a registered trademark and should be treated as such.

So if I may suggest a small change in wording:
[see below your original text]

> <<<
> 
> The attached PDF file was created and exported using Libre Office, a Free 
> Open Source office suite that is the product of an international 
> collaboration for the Digital Commons and that of Open Source .  It is 
> available for Linux, Mac, Windows and other operating systems at: 
> 
> http://www.libreoffice.org <http://www.libreoffice.org/>   
> 
> in different languages.  
> 
> The result of these efforts is such that the quality and dedication is beyond 
> what any salaried employee of any major corporation could ever be monetarily 
> motivated to deliver.  The Digital Commons and that of Open Source Software, 
> forms the foundation for true unrestricted creativity and value-adds, 
> artistically, economically, and intellectually.  The Digital Commons and that 
> of Open Source Software, does not hold progress and innovation captive to the 
> legal force of restrictive licensing agreements.   This is about unrestricted 
> Liberty, the future, longevity, and the highest possible evolution of true 
> achievements.  
> 
> >>>

>>>
The attached PDF file was created and exported using the Free Open
Source office suite LibreOffice. LibreOffice is produced by The Document
Foundation, an international, non-profit and volunteer run organization
working for the Digital Commons and promotion of Open Source software.
It is available for Linux, Mac, Windows and other operating systems at: 
> 
> http://www.libreoffice.org <http://www.libreoffice.org/>   
> 
> in different languages.  
> 
> The result of these efforts is such that the quality and dedication is beyond 
> what any salaried employee of any major corporation could ever be monetarily 
> motivated to deliver.  The Digital Commons and that of Open Source Software, 
> forms the foundation for true unrestricted creativity and value-adds, 
> artistically, economically, and intellectually.  The Digital Commons and that 
> of Open Source Software, does not hold progress and innovation captive to the 
> legal force of restrictive licensing agreements.   This is about unrestricted 
> Liberty, the future, longevity, and the highest possible evolution of true 
> achievements.  
>>>

<snip>

Beyond that, like I say it's great that you want to be booster for the
package and I hope you will find other ways to interact with and support
the LibreOffice community.
> 
> All the Best,

and to you,

Drew Jensen

-- 



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