bzzzzzzt
Next!
]]>I like Ulysses and will probably check out their latest tool. I don't know if they still do, but back in the 1.0 days, I wrote a review and they sent a license code, so they might be willing to give you a freebie in return for a review - yours will be read by far more than mine ever was.
]]>Something like a 30" to 40" flat panel that is on about a 30 degree slope in front of them that works via multi touch and really does allow them to manipulate designs. From early concepts down to construction docs.
Hardware will get there way before the design/CAD software does.
What I want is a computerised sketch pad:
So, what I'm looking for is something on which I can draw in a traditional non-computerised way, but that makes it easy to pass back and forth between computerised and non-computerised manipulation. I suspect that with this, the software will get there before the hardware does.
]]>It's an interesting gadget. It's a way of getting some touch-screen and gesture function out of an ordinary monitor. The UI needs to be revised to work with fingers rather than mouse pointers. When we go to a supermarket we can avoid having to go past a conventional checkout. There is hardware which uses scanners and touch screens, You can take a scanner around the shop with you.
This new UI tech is getting it into use, but it is a specialised tool.
]]>In the past year I've been working with an org that is Word centric and it is entertaining to watch the "Word is fine" folks spend much time fixing Word created errors, but they are so used to it they don't see it. Humans are the affordance system for Word. It is the technology doesn't watch out for us and help us, we have to mind and watch out for it.
The last 6 months I have been talking with a decent number of very large organizations who have been running into a Word dead-end. Their folks that work out of the office and in the field (sales, field engineers, site examiners, etc.) all shifted to light tablets (mostly Android or Apple iOS) and lack Word. For compatibility and occasionally the lack of network access they have been using text tools with markdown (often with GUI interface for markdown, yet many use text insertions too). (There isn't a markdown tool of choice as there are seemingly as many markdown text editors as there are hairs on a dog, but they all work together relatively well.) The people found the didn't fuss with their words and tools, most of their words were placed into an online capture tool, and almost never were printed. Markdown allowed them to share files across their own devices and share with others.
The pain point has been this past year with their organizations moving to Office 365 their organization had no idea that 25% to 40% of their organization had not only stopped using Word, but are radically opposed to ever having to use it again. The organization has been having to pay for their "seat" to Microsoft and the companies want their money back. The companies are also finding the "new way" is growing by around 2% each month. They are trying to sort out how to embrace this "new way" in the next year and how to get out of the multi-year Microsoft contract.
One organization I chatted with this past 6 months is a worldly organization that has the aim to look after the world and they are trying to get out of Word mostly because of the comments change tracking has introduced errors and wrong versions because of an unusable interface. The problem costs them into the millions each year for time spent managing the errors. The problem has nearly lead to international disasters on a few occasions, but was averted with heavy discussions and many hours with teams trying to trackback to get the correct language into the final document. There are a few text and markdown co-editing tools that are in rather early release stages, but even these nascent tools have been showing fewer problems and ease of collaborative editing than Word. But, they are not ready to fully jump over to these solutions, yet they are certain Word is on its last legs in their organization.
]]>That rant is at http://bsdly.blogspot.ca/2013/11/compatibility-is-hard-chartestdoc-is.html, for you to enjoy or bitch about, but it does come with real data!
]]>The sweetener from MS and the awarding body involved was being able to add the MS logo to all of our documentation. Translation, price increase on fees charged, more money all round so pay raises all round.
We ran through a mock test and as previously stated, failed. 3 people who used word on a daily basis, running courses and using it in the business generally.
The online test software worked by logging every key stroke and mouse movement, it couldn't measure final results, it had to test the process. I can't remember specifics but I always remember one of our failed questions. We took 3 steps to format part of the test document, the test software said we should have taken 6 or 7. This was a common theme throughout the test.
If we had taken up the pilot we would have had to revamp every course (there was a test for each Office module) to take account of this and train people in a specific, mostly longer, process.
So not only did they want you to use their software. You had you use it in the way they thought you should use it.
MSSPEAK!
]]>Someplace upthread, I've raised the point that they've admitted that Windoze8 is designed for touch screens, to the exclusion of all else.
]]>I did this on a G4 PPC Mac with OS 10.4.11 Tiger installed. AppleWorks 6 is also installed on this machine, so i did side-by-side viewings to check accuracy. Pages ’09 shipped with the Snow Leopard Box Set, so it ought to work at least with that OS on MacTels, but i did not test this.
One likely explanation between MSB’s findings and mine is that i used AppleWorks 6 documents. Many of you may remember that there was some sort of format change between earlier ClarisWorks and AppleWorks versions to AppleWorks 6, whereby when AppleWorks 6 encountered a ClarisWorks 3 or 4 or AppleWorks 5 document, it would convert it before opening it (as Pages does with the AW 6 docs). It is very likely not possible to go directly from CW 3 or 4 or earlier or AW 5 to Pages, though in a perfect world it ought to be.
This is all part of The Apple Way (the Apple business model/world view): people are supposed to get so excited they pee themselves with each sequential major upgrade of hardware/OS/other software, and faithfully buy each item right away when it comes out. I’ve never done this myself and almost certainly never will, but i have learned over the years that Apple does tend to cover this scenario in terms of one-way migrations of user content… just don’t skip any steps!
]]>(Don't love Big Brother Microsoft, but that's a whole other story.)
]]>In that case why have I been using Windows 8 with a GUI desktop and no touch input devices for the last two years? Again, like the Lords of the Copybook Headings, I say that touch is another interface for Windows 8, not an exclusive means of interacting with the system. Heck, it's even got a command window yep, Textronix 4014 emulation mode with the background set to dark green and text as white Lucida for old-school types like myself.
Even Win8RT tablets and Win8Phone phones will work with keyboards and mice, trackballs, pen tablets etc. if they are plugged in or connected by Bluetooth. I don't know whee you got the incorrect information about touch excluding everything else from Win8 but it's so totally wrong I have to think it's part of a deliberate disinformation campaign by someone feeding the prejudices of others.
]]>I run Linux on my servers and laptop. At work I still do Solaris too. My son does MacOSX and the wife does Windows. So I tend to look for cross platform solutions. I have a Blackberry for work and we have iPads and Android tablets at home.
I settled on KeepassX. It runs on all of them (the Blackberry is readonly). Syncing the database(s) is another issue.
I also recommend using virtual solutions like VirtualBox or VMware. Put everything on a file server (sync with Dropbox or the like) and use remote clients. I have a windows only scanner working in a VM from a thin client. If you run VirtualBox on Apple hardware, it should be able to run MacOSX w/o violating Apple's license as well. That's a way to keep Scrivener running for you.
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