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Fast labels and Card layout with Gimplabels

  • worldlabel.com; By Nathan Willis (Posted by rossendryv on Oct 23, 2009 7:38 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story
Gimplabels is a set of scripts for the Gimp image editor that make creating labels and business cards a snap. It works part of its magic by depending on the GUI label designer gLabels

Free Desktop Publishing with Scribus

  • blog.worldlabel.com; By Nathan Willis (Posted by rossendryv on Sep 17, 2009 6:05 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: Reviews
Scribus is the leading open source solution for desktop publishing (DTP); it supports professional features like press-ready color separations and PDF output, as well as every media file type under the sun.

Labels from the command line with LabelNation

  • blog.worldlabel.com; By Nathan Willis (Posted by rossendryv on Aug 27, 2009 1:12 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: Tutorial; Groups: Linux
Ever tire of laying out a sheet of address labels in OpenOffice.org or Word templates when you’re in a hurry? Karl Fogel’s LabelNation may be able to help. It is a small free software tool that whips out printer-ready label layouts from the command line.

OpenOffice.org Opens up for Business

The economic situation is eating into your profits, and the MS Office licenses look more expensive than before. OpenOffice.org is a free office suite that includes a word processor, spreadsheet, slide presentation, drawing program, and database. It’s compatible with practically all operating systems and runs well on old and new computers alike.

Printing labels in Ubuntu

  • blog.worldlabel.com; By Bruce Byfield (Posted by rossendryv on Apr 6, 2009 10:17 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: ; Groups: Ubuntu
Many users are content with the label and mail merge features in OpenOffice.org Writer, Abiword or KOffice for basic jobs. What if you want a smaller, dedicated program for elaborate formatting or graphics. In these cases, you should consider turning to gLabels

Linux Puzzle Games to train your intellectual skills

  • blog.worldlabel.com; By Dmitri Popov (Posted by rossendryv on Mar 27, 2009 9:03 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: ; Groups: Linux
There are Linux games for every taste: first person shooters, board and arcade games, strategy games. But if you prefer to train your intellectual skills instead of blasting monsters or conquering the world, there are a few high-quality puzzle games, too. In this article we will take a look at some of the best puzzle games for Linux.

Moving to Linux: slow-go or rip-and-replace?

  • blog.worldlabel.com; By Christian Einfeldt (Posted by rossendryv on Mar 19, 2009 9:55 AM EDT)
  • Groups: Linux; Story Type: News Story
Lots of governments, businesses and individuals are turning to FOSS during the global recession, according to a recently-released study. But how do you go about it? Do you stick a toe in the water, or dive in head-first to your new FOSS computing environment? This article helps new users think out the steps for migrating to Free Software, and gives a couple of examples.

Hedging against recession open source software

Is free and open source software (FOSS) a way to cut business costs? As concern about recession - even depression - deepens, more and more companies are asking this question. However, many have trouble knowing how to begin to find an answer.

Everything You Need to Know About Mail Merge in Openoffice.org:

If you haven’t tried OpenOffice.org’s mail merge feature because you find it confusing or difficult to use, you are in luck. This in-depth guide to mail merge with OpenOffice.org explains all the intricacies of using this powerful feature. Learn how to use the mail merge feature to create letters, labels, and envelopes. The guide is also available as a free PDF Ebook document for your perusal

Free Software As a Social Movement

Like nearly everyone else these days, I use computers to write, read email, browse the web, store music and photos, and generally organize my life. Unlike most people, I'm using a free operating system, rather than Microsoft's Windows/Vista, or Apple's Mac OS. Specifically, I'm using Ubuntu, a popular distribution of GNU/Linux.

Libre Graphics Meeting ‘08, Plea for support

The organizers of the 3rd Annual Libre Graphics Meeting (LGM) 2008 in Poland are making an urgent plea to raise $20,000 to pay for conference expenses and travel of open source developers so they may attend and have a productive face-to-face conference. The funds are critical to keep the momentum of success from previous conferences and to pave the way for the future development of open source graphic applications. There are 16 short days left to raise the necessary monies to ensure the developers’ travel is paid so they may attend this important meeting.

Creative Commons LiveContent DVD Delivers Free Content/Software

  • Fanaticattack.com (Posted by rossendryv on Mar 13, 2008 3:05 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: Reviews
The Creative Commons recently released LiveContent 2.0 a Free Live DVD. We checked it out and wanted to give you an overview of what it’s all about. Basically, it’s a Fedora Live DVD with free and open source content that comes loaded with Creative Commons’ (CC) licensed material. CC allows creators like artists, scientists, authors, etc. to share their works with the world so that you can reuse and remix this work legally. Also included are all you favorite FOSS programs.

How to Switch Office Suites from Microsoft Office to OpenOffice.org

How to set up OpenOffice.org to work how you want it with templates and clip art, configurations, shortcuts, and more. You’ve been thinking about it for a while. You’ve seen the PDF converter and sighed longingly; you’ve blushed before the skeptical glances of your open-source and anti-Microsoft friends who say “You’re still using Microsoft Office?” you’re looking at your budget and wondering why you would pay to get Microsoft Office 2007. And you’ve received Word 2007 files and haven’t been able to open them, so you know there’s going to be some file format issues no matter what you do. But you haven’t switched over to OpenOffice.org. Quite yet. I’m here to help.

A Deluge of Facts KOs OOXML (Office Open XML)

  • Fanaticattack.com; By Russell Ossendryver (Posted by rossendryv on Feb 11, 2008 8:31 PM EDT)
  • Groups: Microsoft
Microsoft’s position is hardening as the ISO vote on OOXML (DIS 29500) in Geneva approaches at the end of this month. We know more clearly now how Microsoft and its proxy group, ECMA, will position Microsoft’s OOXML specification in advance of the vote. In short, Microsoft is betting that its influence with National Bodies will allow it to push through a specification which elevates its own interests over that of truly competitive, open international standards. In the end, it will be Microsoft’s own inflexibility that will be its undoing, and that undoing means knocking the OOXML out of approval for ISO status.

Microsoft Cuts Off Access To Old Documents and why open formats matter!

Tucked in with the many security updates (and the restoration of one’s ability to paste text from a web page into a Word document!), a very interesting modification to the Office 2003 software waits quietly for installation with Service Pack 3. Unbeknownst to the user installing this “Pack 3,” their Office software is about to be imbued with a runaway power: the cutoff of access to your old documents. The vendor-neutral quality makes ODF a superior format for document retention.

Questions Microsoft about OOXML Cannot Answer in Geneva

  • Fanaticattack.com (Posted by rossendryv on Jan 11, 2008 5:28 AM EDT)
  • Story Type:
There are some important questions regarding OOXML’s upcoming ISO bid that Microsoft cannot answer or just simply won’t. From 25-29 February 2008 in Geneva, Switzerland, the ISO community will hold a Ballot Resolution Meeting (BRM) of the National Boards to discuss and vote finally on OOXML as an ISO standard. This article raises questions that Microsoft should answer to the satisfaction of the ISO community as part of the deliberation leading up to the BRM vote.

The Deprecated “Smoke Screen” of MS Office Open XML (OOXML)

In an effort to win quick converts to its bid to have Microsoft Open Office XML (MOOXML) accepted as an ISO standard, Microsoft is deprecating parts of its widely-criticized MOOXML. But whatever the new Microsoft OOXML file format with deprecated parts will eventually look like (if such a format ever appears in an actual application), these cosmetic changes don’t really make a difference for Microsoft or the world.

Reasons for National Boards to vote no for OOXML

There will be a BRM (Ballot resolution meeting) in Geneva on 25-29 February 2008 to answer the comments by National Standard Boards on OOXML and to resolve issues. Microsoft has set up a situation where many of the shortcomings and thousands of comments which need to be resolved at the BRN will not be addressed. They have closed this process as much as possible and have delayed National Boards from having adequate time to review proposed changes.

Stuffing it Up - ODF and OOXML Document Format Battle

This three-part summary on Microsoft's main strategy in its attempt to replace its own OOXML format in place of the current ODF format as an ISO standard. Its starts from the development of ODF at OASIS to the current gridlock at ISO due to the large influx of new members. Industry Motive: To preserve a monopoly and the fight to protect a four-billion-dollar per year cash cow against those who stand for open standards, against those who want to create even playing fields, fair competition, innovation and open access for everyone to benefit.

Using Openoffice.org Templates

Howto use Openoffice.org Templates to make Labels

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