Showing posts with label bloat. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bloat. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 27, 2010

Response to .DOC Attachment

What do you do when you receive an email file attachment in Microsoft's .DOC format? Sure, we could open it in OpenOffice.org and go about our business, but there's no guarantee that this will remain true for future versions of .DOC. Use of proprietary formats are a danger to interoperability and to future innovation. One good thing to do is to reply to the email and explain why they should send the attachment in a standard format. I've seen several canned email responses in the past, but most are too brief to explain the issue, or too harsh in their wording to satisfy my tastes. I was prompted to write a response after receiving such an email attachment today, and I have combined some of the best ideas from elsewhere and added some of my own. Here is what I would recommend:
The document you have sent was not saved in an accepted format for Internet mail.

It was saved in a proprietary format that is unreadable on several types of computers because the method for decoding the document is kept secret by Microsoft and is purposefully changed with each new release of Microsoft Word so that existing users of Microsoft Word will be forced to pay for expensive upgrades in order to continue to read Word Documents sent by others. For example, in 2010, Microsoft Office Home & Business 2010 was priced at $279.99, and Microsoft Office Professional 2010 was priced at $499.99.

Recent versions of Word have started using a newer, patented OOXML format. In many countries, it is actually illegal for other products to decipher this format. This is a lock-in technique used by Microsoft to maintain their monopoly on Office software, and by extension, their monopoly on the operating system market, since they have not released a cross-platform version of Microsoft Office compatible with other operating systems.

In most cases, the size of the file saved in Microsoft's secret, proprietary format is also substantially larger than a standards compliant file containing the same information and the same formatting.

It is also important to note that Microsoft Word documents are often infected with viruses. Excel, Access, and Power Point files are also vulnerable to infection. This potential for infection is largely due to the Macro language and the "Visual Basic for Applications" language which are built into the format to provide powerful programming capabilities. While powerful, these features were not protected with proper security precautions, and the majority of users do not actually use these features or even know that they exist.

What to do instead:

If you continue to use Microsoft Word, please have the courtesy to “Save As” one of the following formats: ODT (if available), DOS Text, HTML, or Portable Document Format (PDF) and after saving, send the resulting file as an attachment.

Alternatively, you could use a product such as AbiWord, KOffice, Google Docs, NeoOffice, or OpenOffice.org that allows you to save your document in the Open Document Text Format (ODT), which is an ISO/IEC International Standard, and is supported by such notable companies as Apple, Adobe, Google, IBM, Intel, Nokia, Novell, and Sun Microsystems. If you don't have one of these programs, I would recommend OpenOffice.org, which may be downloaded free of charge and used for any purpose, personal or commercial.

A third option is to simply type your message directly into mail (instead of typing into Microsoft Outlook or Microsoft Word) so that you won't need to use an attachment at all.

In the highly unlikely event that your document cannot be converted to an open, non-proprietary format, consider printing it and mailing it by post, or scanning it, and sending it in a standard graphic format such as PNG or JPG.

Thank you.

Thursday, July 10, 2008

Firefox 3

After using FF3 for a while, it's time to give a review.

Smart Location Bar, AKA the Awesome Bar

It's not really fair starting with the worst feature in the new Firefox, but I'm not the one who named it the awesome bar, so I don't feel too bad.

This is the only new feature that actually HINDERS my use of the internet. I have a few different early extensions installed to try and revert it back to usefulness, but alas, it's still broken. Instead of the old, type what you want to get what you want, now the procedure is much more arcane. Firefox tries to guess which sites you would like to visit by looking in your history, favorites and so on. If I am typing in the address bar, I am usually typing an address, rather than fumbling around trying to find a site I have been to. If I wanted to open one of my favorites, I would ... use my favorites! If I'm looking for a site I visited last week, I would search through my history.

I'll use a visit to Firefox.com as an example of the new process. in FF2 if I wanted to go to firefox.com, I would type firef in the address bar, and by that time, I would be able to pick firefox.com off of the drop down list by pushing the down arrow once or twice and then pushing enter.

Now, however, when I type in firefox, I get every website that has firefox anywhere in it's address, title or even a keyword I added to one of my favorites. I have to either, type the entire address out, or search though a lengthy list in order to reach my destination.

I am just waiting for the perfect extension that will fix my complaints.

Tagging!

I was very excited about adding tagging to firefox, but it was fairly poorly implemented, so .... more waiting for the bugs to be worked out.

I have a complex bookmark sorting system involving 200 folders, sub folders and sub-sub folders. Firefox doesn't give you a way to know what tags you have already used. In huge multi-user systems, letting each user tag items and then reaping the combined efforts of the masses is a great idea. But, the individual needs a concrete way (or ways!) to stay consistent and organized. After all, that's the point of having bookmarks in the first place - finding them again.

There were quite a few bugs involving duplicate tags, blank tags and so on. There is no way to tag a bookmark when you add it through the menu, nor can you add tags when you right click a bookmark in the bookmark menu.

That said, I can happily ignore the tags until they fix them, unlike the awesomebar, which broke a feature I use(ed) regularly.

Themes

I don't care all that much for the default XP or linux themes, and winstripe, the theme I was using on FF2 (since I didn't like its default theme either) isn't going to be updated to FF3.

I've been using Qute, but it's a bit too bubbly and soft for me.

Memory Leaks

Nope, still leaky. It might even be worse now. A few minutes ago, FF3 was using 300,000 K .. after a restart, it's using 137,000. I believe that FF2 only used about 40,000 while running.

Anything good about it?

Yes! There are a few nice things about the new version. Animated PNGs! I haven't tried any out yet, but as a web developer, this is a step in the right direction.

FF3 seems more stable than 2, less crashes and firefoxen running after you close them.

Most extensions are being ported over to FF3, so I won't have to leave much behind.

Over all, I am disappointed in all of the new features, but only one of them has made my life difficult so far. I feel that the Firefox team was rushed, or they are getting to large, or something and inefficiency has crept in. Either way, FF3 was released before it was really ready for all of the fans. So, I guess I'll be waiting for 3.1

Saturday, June 28, 2008

Ubuntu Hardy Heron is Unstable

I've been running Hardy now for quite a while, and I've come to the conclusion that it isn't stable. I will probably be downgrading to Gutsy very soon, however much I dislike the idea of doing so. To me, downgrading doesn't feel like I'm being part of the solution, but rather that I'm just bypassing the problem.

Here are the things I've been having problems with so far in Hardy. And, for the record, I've tried all of these things with compiz disabled as well, with no improvement:
  1. On occasion (sometimes as frequently as once an hour), gnome-terminal will open with a blank (frozen, not invisible) window, there will be a grey bar where the menus should be, and I have to terminate the process. I've tried waiting it just stays there blank. Once this happens, nautilus, gedit, and even some of the file-related dialog boxes, and possibly the pop-down calendar from the gnome panel all crash in the same way, creating a blank box, and in the case of anything associated with the gnome panel, freezing the panel entirely. Restarting GDM doesn't help. I've tried everything. There seems to be nothing logged showing that there was any problem. Rebooting is the only solution.
  2. Firefox 3. Not only is it annoying (due to AwesomeBar), but it feels less polished than Firefox 2. My Firefox 2 did crash every once in a while. I finally decided to reinstall Firefox 2, and give it a try. Firefox 3 unfortunately did things to the configuration which makes Firefox 2 suck as well, since it tries to run off of the same settings. I deleted the extensions.rdf file and start FF2 and everything seems almost OK. But, if I ever run FF3 again, it ruins FF2 (removes all extensions, mostly.) This means I cannot ease into FF3 while still using FF2 for my day to day work. I will thus be uninstalling FF3.
  3. Random lock-ups. I haven't had this problem as much as some people have been reporting, but I have had some unusual lock-ups. One of them involved my screen suddenly appearing scrunched left-to-right and streched up-and-down with big black bars on either side and everything completely frozen (including the mouse pointer) requiring a hard reset.
  4. Thunderbird is barely usable. I use Thunderbird with an IMAP account. Previously, it has worked like a charm, but now all of a sudden, it routinely crashes without an explanation. It seems to crash in two different ways. The first way will be, while checking my inbox, new messages will appear, but the program is still catching up (not usable yet), and all of a sudden the entire program will just disappear. Messages, and the main window, poof, they're gone. No word as to why. This happens about 1 in 5 times that I open Thunderbird. The other one happens about 3 out of 5 times that I open thunderbird, and it involves clicking on my Inbox and the program immediately going comatose. When compiz is on, the window dims to a dark gray to show me that the program isn't responding, and no matter how long I wait, it never wakes back up. I have to kill the process (or click the X and force quit it) in order to try again. Yes, that adds up to 4 out of 5 tries that Thunderbird doesn't work. Every once in a while I am lucky and it will work, in which case it is usually stable for the entire session until I close it.
I'm a web developer. Browsing the web, using SSH through a terminal, and checking my email are nearly all that I do on my computer, and Hardy Heron isn't ready for ANY of those tasks. Gutsy Gibbon worked perfectly with all of them. I will probably be moving back to gutsy, but I'm afraid of what a downgrade might involve as far as my user configuration files are concerned. I guess I will be making backups before downgrading.

Thursday, March 13, 2008

Desktop Diet!

A great presentation by Rasterman, the head coder of Enlightenment.



I tried out E17 the other day, and it's not as good as I hoped it would be. Ah well!