+1 Hang in there, Rob. I don't think you'll be sorry.
-- I'm so busy, I don't know whether I found a rope or lost my horse! <>< Earl -- ________________________________ From: Tom Davies <[email protected]> Hi :) I recommend sticking with LibreOffice despite the petty bickering of this week. We recently got some very heavy news about our colleagues in a different project and couldn't talk about it. We needed to "blow-off some steam". It does happen sometimes but it's not typical of OpenSource. LibreOffice and TDF is unique in being an ancient project with roots (people, ideas, habitual work-flow and such) going back over a decade yet being an ultra-new project. A great chance to spring-clean. Even though we have been bickering we have still been helping each other and new people, as Dotan pointed out. There is documentation out there but often problems that arrive here need cogitating before getting good answers and it's only by working together, nudging each other, that we can get a good answer out there (unless it's an easy question). So, please stick with it and you will find it well worth while as there are a lot of good times here too :) Good luck and regards from Tom :) ________________________________ From: Rob Smith <[email protected]> To: [email protected] Sent: Thu, 2 June, 2011 8:18:21 Subject: [libreoffice-users] Top/Bottom Posting Nonsense I have never seen so many so-called adults whining like bullied kids over a subject that, in the greater scheme of the next Millenia doesn't mean squat! I used to use a KayPro 16 to compute on, and even accessed a BBS with it using a 9600 Baud modem. Would I do so today because that's how it used to be done? Not a chance! Most of the younger folks I know (I'm a dinosaur at almost 60) top post by default, because in a Microsoft world, that is what they learned. Right, wrong, or indifferent, it's the way things are today. If you want to go back to the way things were done "in the good old days," I hate to break it to you, but time always moves forward, and the only constant is change. If you truly believe that limiting access to the Open Source community only to folks who do things in one particular way will grow that community, you might want to get a reality check. If you think that all this infighting will help the community grow, you are wrong. If you cannot adapt and change today, you will be left in the dust with the rest of computing's dinosaurs. After recently hearing a talk on LibreOffice at an Open Source software conference, I decided to give it a try, replacing the OpenOffice install that came standard on my Ubuntu Linux LTS desktops. I joined this list in case I would need some assistance with an issue. I have seen more petty bickering on this one non-issue over the past several days than I have seen people helped. I've always been led to believe that Open Source was all about freedom, but there are some folks here who just don't seem to give a damn about that, and their main focus is to make sure that all the automatons do as they are told. Unlike some, I DO know how to unsubscribe, and I also know how to uninstall, both of which I am going to do! There are other choices out there, and LibreOffice needs users more then users need LibreOffice. THAT is the fact Jack! GROW UP! -- Rob Smith -- Unsubscribe instructions: E-mail to [email protected] In case of problems unsubscribing, write to [email protected] Posting guidelines + more: http://wiki.documentfoundation.org/Netiquette List archive: http://listarchives.libreoffice.org/www/users/ All messages sent to this list will be publicly archived and cannot be deleted
