Richard Lyons wrote:
> On Monday 06 September 2004 21:43, Paul Gear wrote:
> [...]
>
>>I have another criteria which you may or may not find relevant: is it
>>cross-platform. This is a critical issue to me, because i need to be
>>able to recommend the tool to the end users i support, and most of
On Tue, 7 Sep 2004 00:59:48 +0100, Richard Lyons <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Monday 06 September 2004 21:43, Paul Gear wrote:
> [...]
> >
> > I have another criteria which you may or may not find relevant: is it
> > cross-platform. This is a critical issue to me, because i need to be
> > able
On Mon, Sep 06, 2004 at 17:33:10 -0700, Mike Fedyk wrote:
> He meant will gnumeric run on windows
Windows builds are possible now, but a lot still needs to be done; see e.g.
http://mail.gnome.org/archives/gnumeric-list/2004-September/msg00011.html
> or mac...
http://fink.sourceforge.net/pdb/pack
from
oocalc to presentation ... without using a third party language like
perl/python.
Granted, as a statistician, my needs are far above those of most "normal"
users and my guess is that for most users either gnumeric or oocalc will
work nicely.
I think you have given me a reason to spend
On Monday 06 September 2004 16:50, Kamaraju Kusumanchi wrote:
> Hi all
>My intention is not to start a flamewar but to get opinions on
> which spreadsheet software is better? While having choice is better, I
> would prefer to start with one and stick to it if possible. In
> particular I am
On Monday 06 September 2004 07:41 am, Kamaraju Kusumanchi wrote:
> Hi all
>My intention is not to start a flamewar but to get opinions on
> which spreadsheet software is better? While having choice is better,
> I would prefer to start with one and stick to it if possible. In
> particular I
Richard Lyons wrote:
On Monday 06 September 2004 21:43, Paul Gear wrote:
[...]
I have another criteria which you may or may not find relevant: is it
cross-platform. This is a critical issue to me, because i need to be
able to recommend the tool to the end users i support, and most of them
still
On Monday 06 September 2004 21:43, Paul Gear wrote:
[...]
>
> I have another criteria which you may or may not find relevant: is it
> cross-platform. This is a critical issue to me, because i need to be
> able to recommend the tool to the end users i support, and most of them
> still use Windows
On Mon, 6 Sep 2004 22:28:04 +0200 J.H.M. Dassen (Ray) wrote:
[...]
> sendmail.cf does not resemble line noise. It resembles the result of
> somebody banging his head on the keyboard. Anybody who has worked with it
> will understand why.
> Seth Breidbart in <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
That's cool
Kamaraju Kusumanchi wrote:
> Hi all
>My intention is not to start a flamewar but to get opinions on
> which spreadsheet software is better? While having choice is better, I
> would prefer to start with one and stick to it if possible. In
> particular I am looking for
>
> 1) things which ca
On Mon, Sep 06, 2004 at 15:41:16 +, Kamaraju Kusumanchi wrote:
>My intention is not to start a flamewar but to get opinions on
> which spreadsheet software is better?
As the maintainer of the Debian packages for gnumeric, I'm not the most
objective source of information. Still, you may
On Mon, Sep 06, 2004 at 03:41:16PM +, Kamaraju Kusumanchi wrote:
> Hi all
>My intention is not to start a flamewar but to get opinions on
> which spreadsheet software is better? While having choice is better, I
> would prefer to start with one and stick to it if possible. In
> particula
Hi all
My intention is not to start a flamewar but to get opinions on
which spreadsheet software is better? While having choice is better, I
would prefer to start with one and stick to it if possible. In
particular I am looking for
1) things which can be done in one but cant be done in anot
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