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Name:Waski_the_Squirrel
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Open Source Software (I)

I want to save you hundreds of your dollars. If you're in a position to make software decisions for your school (or business), I can save you thousands or even tens of thousands of dollars. Feel free to send me part the savings. The magic word is "FOSS" which stands for "Free and Open Source Software."

In my personal life and my professional life, I use mostly FOSS. I use a few proprietary programs for various reasons, but most of the rest of it is FOSS. In all honesty, I do use a few proprietary programs: I love my Mac. However, this post and the next few are about FOSS. Try it! As I noted in my last 3 entries, we need to think outside the box.

OpenOffice

OpenOffice was my first introduction to FOSS. When you hear its name, think "Microsoft Office." It's a suite of programs that include a word processor, a spreadsheet, a database, a drawing program, and presentation software. I won't try to compare it to the Microsoft product. There are plenty of emotional arguments about that out there...and a few factual ones.

I will say that users of office software, either Microsoft or OpenOffice, rarely use even a fraction of what the software has available. For a huge example: how many of my readers use the "styles" on their word processors? This feature is a huge labor saver. It improves consistency of documents, portability, and it makes it easier to edit and change documents. Your boss wants headings to be blue? One quick change if you used styles.

There are a lot of other features you don't use because you don't need them. Many of us entirely avoid the entire database program in their office suite. People who could be well served by a database, use the spreadsheet instead. Of course, many of us (including me) don't most of the functions in the spreadsheet.

You probably won't miss most of the features in Microsoft Office if you switch to OpenOffice. You may have to relearn the interface, but it really isn't that different. Ever move to a new town? Migrating to a new piece of software is much easier. Try it out. The price is right.

I'll offer you a discount on that first check you're sending me. The cheap version of Microsoft office costs only $150. The professional version costs $500. By that logic, I've saved most of you $150. That should pay for the new graphing calculator I really want.

More Software

Just a quick preview: over the next few days, I want to note a few more programs to try out. At the end, I want to do two things I didn't do when I covered this topic next year. First, I want to talk about use of this software in school. Second, I want to talk about familiarity vs. functionality.

The software I plan to cover includes: LYX, KeyJNote, Dr. Geo, GIMP, Inkscape, Linux, LATEX, Firefox, Thunderbird, Seamonkey, F-Spot, Xournal, Tellico, Scribus, and Moodle. I have a few days, so I may think of some other software. Save some money.


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"I don't need physics." (III)

Stop looking at school as vocational training! As I mentioned before in parts 1 and 2, to look at school from a purely vocational viewpoint is to lose out on important skills.

Physics is one of those great courses that teaches about reading graphs, looking for patterns, mathematical thinking, and provides a good basis for concepts in the other sciences. It's a good course for understanding things. It's a great thinking course. (That's where I was headed with my last entry...though I got sort of wrapped up in roundabouts.)

The arts have gotten short shrift so far. That's a lack of familiarity on my part. However, one of the important skills in our world is creativity. Richard Feynman used creativity to come up with the explanation for the Challenger accident. Einstein broke out of the mechanical model in Physics with creativity. Remember, creativity is originality.

What the arts do is provide an outlet for creativity. They allow "outside the box" thinking. When Richard Feynman decided that the rubber o-rings got too cold, that was WAY outside the box. There are a lot of people out there who are not willing to think outside of the box (I didn't say not capable). This is a lack of confidence or laziness. Art and music help develop the confidence. (They won't cure laziness.)

Believe it or not, I can draw...badly, but I can do it. I can do photography, I can retouch pictures, and I can create passable results. I write science fiction as a hobby. It's not real good, but I don't care. I even blog (to my audience of 3). These things are all examples that someone like me can be creative, despite a lack of talent. Too many of us avoid creativity or outside the box thinking because of a lack of talent, or perceived lack of talent.

Take that art and music so that you can create despite a lack of talent. (Or, better still, discover a talent you never knew you had.)

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