Skinning Cats on the Internet
By brendan at 14 October, 2008, 6:15 pm
After email and web browsing, the number one tool I use on the computer would have to be the standard office suite. You know; Word, Excel, Powerpoint. But if you have read any of the previous weeks blogs, you would also know that I have just moved over to a Linux based Netbook . And in the world of Linux; Word, Excel and Power point don’t exist. So I had a problem to solve.
Being a good technologist, I had to come up with a conceptual framework first that dealt with the different ways I would need to generate documents. Answering questions like whom am I creating it with, sharing it with, in what content and in what format. Once I had figured that out I went looking for answers.
Bugger me though if I didn’t come up with more than one solution.
| No. of Documents | Creator | Reader | Final Format | Solution Chosen | |
| Single | Me | Private Individual | PDF or Microsoft Office. | Open Office | |
| Single | Me & Private Individual | Me & Private Individual | Web | Google Docs | |
| Many | Me & Private Team | Me & Private Team | Web | Wiki | |
| Many | Me | Public | Web | Blog |
Probably best then if I explain each solution I decided to use.
Open Office
Open Office is a full blown Open Source office suite that runs on Linux and Windows. It is now fully compatible with Microsoft Office, that has all the same functionality plus a bit extra. Therefore its the obvious choice for when I want to whip up a document, spreadsheet, drawing or presentation. A couple of other cool things about Open Office.
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Its Free – a saving of $200-$600 per user.
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You can get it in Linux, Windows & Mac flavours, so I can use the same product at home and at the office.
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The user interface now looks a hell of a lot like Microsoft Office (making a really low learning curve).
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Open Office natively stores its document in ODF format , the open standard, rather than Microsoft’s proprietary standards. So I am unlikely to get stuck with document I can’t read in a couple of years.
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Open Office can save documents in Microsoft’s proprietary formats if you need to (you know .doc, .xls, .ppt). This interoperability is seamless in all but the most complex documents.
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Open Office natively prints to PDF format , so you don’t have to purchase PDF generating software. Another cost saving.
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Did I say its free?
Google Docs
Sometimes though I realised I wanted to communicate something with one of my Flinders Pacific clients, but didn’t want to get caught up having to constantly resend a document that was changing. For instance when I arrange a dinner, I normally get harassed for the minutiae of what’s going on, “has so-and so got invited yet?” , “what did they say?”, “how many are coming now?” etc. things get worse too, if I create a spreadsheet but leave it on the wrong computer. The solution therefore was Googledocs . For small lists, I create a spreadsheet, then share it with the client. I can then update it from wherever I am, and the client is satisfied that they can get up to date information simply by checking on the internet.
Wiki
Sometimes though its not just one document I am collaborating on but a whole suite. For instance the operations manual for the Churchill Club is a whole series of documents covering accounting, marketing and event management. These documents are always a work in progress as we add new bits as we run into them. In fact sometimes they’re just a couple of dot points. I say we as there is a small geographically dispersed team building and using them, however they are not for public consumption. Since there is a suite of documents, I decided a Wiki is a much better solution as its:
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Native web format (html)
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Searchable
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Pages can be edited by anyone (just click the edit button at the bottom of each page).
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Can be secured or made private (just turn on security and authorise users).
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Natural environment for developing documents that are always changing
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Lends itself to a team constantly editing, rather than two individuals going back and forth.
I chose dokuwiki as the wiki solution as its just too easy to deploy, it doesn’t even require a database back end, and it is designed for small team document collections.
Blog
Finally I decided that the blog format (web pages through a blogging engine) is best suited for the blogs I write for Smartcompany. I realised its just silly to write a document in say word format, the have it edited to be suitable to be printed as a web page. Why not make it a web page in the first place. So I set-up a Wordpress Blog at http://wordpress.l2i.com.au. Its where I keep all my completed articles, and partially written ideas as drafts (note you won’t be able to see anything there that you can’t already see on Smartcompany).
So I have now solved my documentation problem and all the other major problems other than accounting software. Next week I will cover off the new Accounting solution implemented and the benefits I have discovered from moving it off the desktop.












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