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No Abiword For Mac?

aliya writes "With Abiword's version 1.90 coming out, their cocoa developer has announced that he will no longer work on a Mac version of the software because he doesn't want to support the company which treated him so poorly. There is a still a somewhat-supported X11 version available, though it is not kept current, and it appears that Abiword will join the abundant ranks of 'almost supported' word processors for Mac OS X."

85 comments

  1. this is why I'm self-employed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Too bad, obviously the guy was fully capable of programming yet Apple thought he was "incompetent". Who knows what that means in the bizarre realm of office politics, etc.

    Anyway, good luck to him, and to be honest, I'm waiting for an Apple-branded word processor to continue along the lines of Keynote. I've never used an open-source office app that really worked well, and MS stuff is pricey.

    1. Re:this is why I'm self-employed by larry+bagina · · Score: 2, Informative

      AppleWorks is apple branded, though most definitely not along the lines of Keynote.

      --
      Do you even lift?

      These aren't the 'roids you're looking for.

    2. Re:this is why I'm self-employed by red5 · · Score: 1

      True, AppleWorks bites. It's okay if your a coder and all you use your word processor for is reading spec sheets saved in .doc format. I fear the day I'll nead to make something with it. No multi-undo WTF?

      MS Office $500, AppleWorks $50. I guess you get what you pay for.

      --
      I know I'm going to hell, I'm just trying to get good seats.
    3. Re:this is why I'm self-employed by Tukla · · Score: 1
      all you use your word processor for is reading spec sheets saved in .doc format

      Hell, Appleworks 6 crashes whenever I try to open a Word doc with it. Pretty lame.

    4. Re:this is why I'm self-employed by theWrkncacnter · · Score: 1

      Works perfectly every time for me. Even saving to different versions of word. All my AW documents saved in word format open fine on WinWord as well.

      --
      -1 (Troll) is antihammer
  2. "Incompetent?" Maybe. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Obviously it's entirely possible that this individual is incompetent. Whether he is or is not isn't something that any of us-- us bystanders-- are qualified to comment on.

    What is absolutely, undeniably true, however, is this: incompetent or not, he's bloody immature.

    I say good riddance. Leave the programming to the grown-ups, please.

    1. Re:"Incompetent?" Maybe. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Troll

      yeah, immature, right. So, you'd continue supporting people who screw you over like this? Gimme a break. You zealots let Apple get away with murder, which is why they do stuff like this. You macheads suck.

    2. Re:"Incompetent?" Maybe. by mbbac · · Score: 2, Funny

      He worked on iCal. It's a good app in theory, but the execution lacks the polish of most Apple applications. It is entirely probable that he is incompetant.

      --

      mbbac

    3. Re:"Incompetent?" Maybe. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wow, moron. You should be on the Psychic network. I don't use Linux. This is APPLE.slashdot.org.

      I use a Mac. Probably for longer than you have. YOU zealots are usually newbies who haven't been around long enough to get screwed by Apple, or more likely, the stupid broke bitches who don't even HAVE a Mac, they just dream of "the lickable GUI".

      Welcome to the world of business, my ass. In the world of business, where I'm from, people DON'T continue to support people who screw them over. It's a free goddam market retard, if he wants to leave, let him go.

      But you or whoever the other AC was calling him immature, insulting his work, and saying "we don't need him anyway" is a complete idiot. THAT'S zealotry. Defend Apple without knowing the facts. Lose a good free word processor due to Apple screwing a guy, at least in his mind, which means that Apple wasn't tactful again, and you insult him as he leaves. Smart move, child. Macs don't have enough software as it is, regardless of what the ads and MacPropaganda sites tell you.

      3% market share. Think about it.

      And are you insulting Objective-C? Don't you know who's baby that is? You're stupid.

  3. Talk about shooting yourself in the foot by sco08y · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Who on Earth would want to advertise their sour grapes to every prospective client or employer?

    If you're pissed, just say, "look, I'm having difficulty negotiating a good deal with these people" or some kind of euphamism.

    But don't let everyone know that things got messy!

  4. Killer App? Just How Much Does This Matter? by TheWanderingHermit · · Score: 5, Insightful

    From the cited post: "I had no reason to be a loyal customer (sort of like I was until 1988) and offer them what could *possibly* be a killer app on
    MacOS X
    "

    I should point out that AbiWord was a VERY integral part of the software system that got my business going. I can't say that the overall system, and therefore my company, would never have gotten off the ground without AbiWord, but the open document format and load of command line options/commands made it possible for me to save months of work by just dropping in command line uses of AbiWord in Perl scripts. The AbiWord programmers are great to work with and have been very kind and helpful to me.

    However, I recently changed the entire system over to OpenOffice.org. While AbiWord has some wonderful features, OOo has a fully documented programming language and API. It's a full blown office suite -- if, by chance, anyone didn't know.

    While AbiWord was very important to me and I have nothing but the utmost respect for the programmers and people behind the project, I cannot see anyone realistically seeing it as a "killer app."

    To be honest, while I love choice and all the options in OSS, I think Linux in particular and OSS in particular, would be much more widely adopted (and would be much more of a competitor to Micro$oft) if, instead of having so many OSS word processors and spreadsheets, all that effort had been focused on creating one kick-ass office suite. Once done, different groups could take the code from that suite and customize it to their hearts' content, much like what's happened with Mozilla -- one browser, but many groups have taken the source code and created their own versions (like Galeon and Konqueror).

    While no AbiWord on OSX is not good news, I think the actual number of users (in proportion to the total number of Mac users) who will be effected by this is very low. I'm sure most people that spend the extra money on a Mac tend to either buy their own word processor, or use OOo, since it is almost out of beta for OSX.

    While AbiWord is a great program, it is hardly a killer app.

  5. So what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    If it's a job worth doing, one of any of the thousands of OSX developers who are competent enough to fill his shoes will step up to the plate and give it a shot.

    Welcome to the wacky world of open source projects. Maintainers may die, but projects will always live - provided they're of use to somebody.

  6. Re:Killer App? Just How Much Does This Matter? by andy2kxp · · Score: 4, Informative

    actually Konqueror is not based on mozilla, although it's goal is the same, a standards-compliant web browser, it uses it's own lighter-weight engine called kHTML which is also used in Apple's Safari.

  7. Re:So? by usr122122121 · · Score: 5, Funny
    ....what's the big deal?
    The big deal is that immediately after posting his rant, the company that makes Opera decided he had the perfect attitude for the job... so they gave him a spot on their Executive Team.

    ;-)

    --

    -braxton
  8. Wow, that's some ego he's got there by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful


    Oh no, he couldn't possibly have actually been incompetent, the company must be lying and firing him for no good reason.

    And of course *his* word processor is a "Killer App".

    Oh, I'm sorry, the killer app in word processing happened a couple decades ago. sheesh

    And companies don't usually fire their most competent employees (at least not intentionally without other good reasons to get rid of them). Either this guy did something he's not mentioning to get himself fired, or he was just near the bottom of the competency ladder when the time came to shave off a couple rungs.

    1. Re:Wow, that's some ego he's got there by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Possible, but I've seen enough of these type of articles to know it's more than coincidence. Where there's smoke, there's fire.

    2. Re:Wow, that's some ego he's got there by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe he meant killer app in that, when I used to run it in Linux, it died every fucking time I tried to do anything useful with it. Open up one of those "funny" Word document attachments from a friend with it, perhaps; write a 300 page dissertation -- no thanks.

    3. Re:Wow, that's some ego he's got there by GlassHeart · · Score: 1
      And of course *his* word processor is a "Killer App".

      The funny thing is, a "killer app" is something so important that people will make a major purchase decision based on wanting it. In this case, a killer app will make people switch to a Mac.

      Microsoft Word is available (for a cost) on both Windows and Macs. Abiword is available (for free) on both Windows and Macs.

      From Apple's perspective, what killer app?

    4. Re:Wow, that's some ego he's got there by Therin · · Score: 1
      And companies don't usually fire their most competent employees (at least not intentionally without other good reasons to get rid of them).
      True to a point; yet it does happen when they either want to get rid of a smaller number of people yet get a larger savings on the books, hence they can the most expensive people. Or they want to get rid of those who might lead in a direction they no longer want to go, and the most capable technically are the ones others will listen to most. Lose the leaders, and the sheep are easier to herd into a canyon. Or they have done all the hard definition and design and implementation work, and want to sit on their laurels. In which case they believe maintenance can be done by cheaper assets.

      Just wait till it happens to you; it's not a pleasant surprise even when they do ask you to contract back when they realize they've made a huge mistake.
      --
      John 17:20
  9. Re:So? by djupedal · · Score: 2, Funny

    Oh...so this isn't actually about software. I get it, thanks.

  10. Hello pot? This is the kettle... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Interesting
    "he will no longer work on a Mac version of the software because he doesn't want to support the company which treated him so poorly."


    Boy, if this isn't the pot calling the kettle black. I can't count the articles and responses in forums like this one where so many computer users are labelled "joe sixpack", "jane user" and "phb" simply because they do not care about computers as much as those who frequent these web sites. I truly hope this guy takes an introspective look at his decision and realizes that perhaps he was treated so poorly by the community because the community felt they were treated poorly by him.
    1. Re:Hello pot? This is the kettle... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He quite Abi Word because he doesnt want to support APPLE. The company apple.. not the community. He said he likes the AbiWord community, and wants to continue working on AbiWord, but not on the OS X branch, because he was treated badly by Apple.

      RTFA.

    2. Re:Hello pot? This is the kettle... by Suppafly · · Score: 1

      I truly hope this guy takes an introspective look at his decision and realizes that perhaps he was treated so poorly by the community because the community felt they were treated poorly by him.

      he wasn't treated poorly by the community, he was treated poorly by the company.

  11. and i never knew it existed! by snuffdiddy23 · · Score: 1

    i have used abiword on x11 as my primary word processor for some time. it is better than openoffice.org in that it takes less than half a week to load and seems to cover everything i need.

    funny i have tried over a thousand of the 7000 os x apps and never heard of it. i guess no one will lose sleep over that one.

  12. The killer app. Of course! by Chucker23N · · Score: 3, Informative

    Excuse me? I've given AbiWord a try once. It was fast, really fast. And simple. It had the most important features of those you'd expect from a word processing app. And that is all there is to it. There are no special features. There is no interface consistency to anything - not to Aqua, not to KDE, not to GNOME, not to Windows, or even Motif. No innovation.

    It is a simple word processing app, and though a Cocoa interface would have been interesting, it wouldn't have been a miracle. And not a "killer app", either.

    1. Re:The killer app. Of course! by seann · · Score: 2, Informative

      To reply instead of moderate.

      A cocoa interface is 10x differnt than a X11 port.

      For example the ability to run the program without an x server.

      --
      I'm a big retard who forgot to log out of Slashdot on Mike's computer! LOOK AT ME.
    2. Re:The killer app. Of course! by Chucker23N · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Of course. I agree that a Cocoa interface

      1. feels much more native
      2. doesn't require an X server
      3. is more work than a simple backend port (which already exists)

      . That doesn't make this word processing app a killer app at all. Wonderful features, where are thou?

  13. Is it my imagination... by Llywelyn · · Score: 4, Insightful

    ...or is this guy talking more about his /dedication/ than the /quality of his work/ as to why they should have kept him?

    I don't know why this guy got fired--perhaps they weren't satisfied with his work, perhaps there were politics involved, perhaps they needed to trim their staff and he wasn't valuable enough to keep--I don't know. What I do know is that he seems to be saying that he deserved to keep the job because he wanted the job and was dedicated to it--not because he was particularly qualified to keep it.

    Also, this has just marginarlly above a 0% chance of become "the killer app" on MacOS X. A good app? Perhaps. Widely used? Maybe. A killer app that everyone downloads right after getting a mac? Not a chance.

    I've used Abiword. It's good, but it isn't *that* good.

    --
    Integrate Keynote and LaTeX
    1. Re:Is it my imagination... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      as to why they should have kept him?



      They could have at least given him a less shitty reason for firing him.

  14. It's a shame... by nizcolas · · Score: 3, Interesting

    ...abi was canceled. I made the trek over to the net lab simply to use a copy of abiword installed on my network drive. Whenever people ask me what it is, I usually tell them it's MS Word that works.

    Sounds prety corny but think about it, how many times have you wanted to use word and just have it leave you alone? Everytime I've used Word, even on a mac, im constantly annoyed by pop ups and "hints."

    Yes they can be disabled but with Abi they're not even there in the first place. In my opinion, Abi is the most full featured software that lets me get my work done, without bugging me the entire while. I was hoping the Abi team would pick up the mac and make a full os x native version. Hopefully someone else will pick up the code and finish the job, but I'm not going to hold my breath.

    --
    If you get an error, type "OVERRIDE" or "SECURITY OVERRIDE" and then try the optimize command again.
  15. Oh well by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    No AbiWord for AtheOS either, so why is this getting a Slashdot front page story?

    1. Re:Oh well by heXXXen · · Score: 1

      It isn't...it's getting a Slashdot Apple page story.

    2. Re:Oh well by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So what's your point?

  16. Old habits die hard I guess by djupedal · · Score: 1

    The idea is to load once, use often. With the price of ram, and the inherent stability of OS X, it simply doesn't make sense to dismiss an app once you have it running. I load 10 or more apps, including OO, at start, and leave them running.

  17. Understandable by buckhead_buddy · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Going on what the developer perceives of the situation, it's completely understandable.

    He was working as a new Apple employee after a year of contract work and was an eager supporter of the platform making many sacrifices to take the job. Additionally, he developed the Cocoa/AbiWord software as a hobby on top of his paid work. He says that Apple terminated him during his probationary period with the reason of "incompetence" and he feels that this is documentably untrue and unfair.

    Personally, I think AbiWord is cool and I think Apple makes some cool stuff. But whether this story is true or fair is irrelevent. This is his perception of the way he has been treated and I feel he's absolutely right for terminating this hobby if this is what he perceives.

    It's disappointing. I sympathize with the guy in his current situation. And I hope that someone takes over AbiWord development (it is pretty cool stuff). It's too bad that this had to happen in this way.

    1. Re:Understandable by OmniVector · · Score: 1, Insightful

      no offense but, there are so many solutions to edit word documents in OSX that I've yet to even consider abiword. OpenOffice, or Micro$oft Office have word doc editors with integrated graph & spreadsheet programs. Abiword is fine for *nix, but it's got little use in a largely commercial based operating system (at least it has for me thus far, and I used to use abiword in linux).

      Besides, if i really want to run abiword that badly in osx, i'll just run the gtk version through fink/x11.

      --
      - tristan
    2. Re:Understandable by 1155 · · Score: 3, Interesting

      or maybe ical sucks? There are any number of complaints against the application, maybe they wanted someone else working on the project. eh. Still doesn't mean he should just give up on the entire platform, unless he is just really bitter.

    3. Re:Understandable by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The problem with all of abiword's competitors is that they just take too long to start up and take up too much disk space and RAM.

      That said, the one feature that stops me from using abiword for many small things is the lack of tables.

      If a genie gave me one free wish for abiword, it would be to have a text-console only version, which of course would have to coerce all fonts into one and drop some formatting and etc.

  18. And in other news... by PrimeWaveZ · · Score: 5, Funny

    The developer of selfQuit has decided to stop development of their "possible" killer app for OS X because someone said their friend who knows a guy who works at an Apple store made fun of the program.

  19. Who on earth are you talking about? by fm6 · · Score: 1
    I don't see Hubert Figuière mentioned anywhere on the Opera web page.

    I'm suprised everybody's willing to accept that Figuière's been badly treated. He mentions that he was on probation. His English seems a little weak, but he's gotta know that "probation" does not mean, "we want you to work here forever". And he mentions that he had to commute 500 kilometers every day. I'm guessing that means 2+ hours each way. How much justice could anybody do to their job after spending that much time on the road?

    Frankly, I think his whole post shows an excessive sense of entitlement. Come on, Hubert, showing up for work every day isn't something you get a medal for. If you didn't hear anybody tell you that your work wasn't up to snuff, maybe you just weren't listening.

    1. Re:Who on earth are you talking about? by usr122122121 · · Score: 1
      I don't see Hubert Figuière mentioned anywhere on the Opera web page.
      WHOOOOOOOOOOOOOSH! [the sound of a joke flying over someone's head :-p ]
      --

      -braxton
    2. Re:Who on earth are you talking about? by mithras+the+prophet · · Score: 1

      hoping you're kidding? We all agree that this guy sounds like a loser.

      Gransparent poster mentions Opera because the Opera team have also been indigant whiners, just like Hubert Figuière.

      --
      four nine eighteen twenty-7 thirty-nine forty-7 fiftyeight sixty-nine seventy-9 eighty-8 one-hundred-and-nine one-twenty
    3. Re:Who on earth are you talking about? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      500 km every day is a very long way, I don't know about in the states, but in Canada highways are 100km/hour so if it was just 2.5 hours each way that's purely at (nearly) full speed on the highway the whole time, no traffic.

      Adding traffic time, he's at 3 hours each way, that's 6 hours a day. If he's trying to make a good impression, then say he's working 10 hour days. Now we're at 16 hours, he only has time to sleep.

      Really, he doesn't even have time to sleep, because he was working on AbiWord at night :)(I'm not giving him a social life because...really...he's an open source developer).

      No wonder he was incompetant, he was sleep deprived.

      (In all likelyhood however I assume he was taking some kind of high speed public transit.)

  20. So, he worked on iCal? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

    Maybe he is incompetent.

  21. I'd like to hear the other side by wowbagger · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Some folks here have positted that the man may have been fired as part of a reduction in force, and the "incompetence" arguement was a smokescreen.

    That seems unlikely to me - usually it is the reverse, and incompetent moron being fired with some made-up RIF so as to avoid problems.

    Here in the US, If you lay somebody off as part of an RIF there's very little they can do about it - unless they can somehow show that you were not reducing force in his area at the time of the RIF there's little legal ground to file a wrongful termination suit.

    However, if you terminate somebody for incompetence, they can bring suit for wrongful termination, and insist that you prove they are incompetent. Since they will challenge everything you say, and your case will be heard by twelve people too incompetent to get out of jury duty, you are very likely to win.

    I know - for years I had to deal with an engineer who didn't know an FFT from a HITG(*) and management was unwilling to do anything about it because of their fears of a suit.

    (*)hole in the ground

    1. Re:I'd like to hear the other side by trimbach · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Yeah, firing someone for performance reasons (i.e., failing to adequately peform the duties of their position) gives the former employee lots of appeal rights, but if this guy was fired during his probationary period that's a whole 'nother matter. Probationary periods exist to give the employer an opportunity to see if newly hired employees really are as good as the resume/interview/background checks indicate they should've been. If it turns out the employee doesn't cut the mustard the employer can release the new employee with (near) impunity. Any employee who is employed beyond their probationary period is deemed to have implicitly "passed" a review of competence and THEN they get all kinds of rights if you fire them.

      Which makes sense... if the employer says you really are competent (by keeping you after your probationary period) then if at some future point they say you suck it's reasonable to assume that they'd have to prove it. This is why well-run organizations take new employee probationary periods VERY seriously, because they know they could easily get stuck with a bad apple if they let the probabtionary period pass without reviewing the situation.

      But the rules on probationary employment are generally so lax that it's possible to fire someone for lots of reasons that have little or nothing to do with competence. Personal hygiene. Shoe size. Rudeness. Whatever. So who knows? The bottom line is Apple didn't want him anymore so they made him go away. If he's having trouble dealing with this he really should see a therapist... even if he had issues with his work group or manager it's silly to think Apple, Inc. has any feelings one way or the other about him.

  22. potential Mac developer by benhuot · · Score: 1

    I'd be interested in making a cocoa version of Abiword. I have lots of time, know a little bit a bout programming, and I have a new eMac (1 GB RAM). I think OS X could use another word processor that is native to OS X. We are still waiting for Mellel to be finished. Mariner Write and Zwrite are expensive and are not fully featured. Appleworks is nice, but I don't want to have to rely on one word processor.

    1. Re:potential Mac developer by Chucker23N · · Score: 1

      If you know about the concepts of OOP (object-oriented programming), Cocoa / Objective-C aren't all that hard. Buy a book in the $30-50 range and you'll learn it in a few weeks.

      If you don't know about them, it'll take you longer and won't be as simple as it looks like.

  23. NOT being immature by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    First off, I do not believe he is being immature in taking this course of action. It would be immature to delete the code base, and make it not available. It would be immature to introduce bugs directly in the OSX version directly.

    I worked for a mortgage insurance company and they pull the same crap on me. Instead of being "incompetent" they said I didn't do anything. Well, when you aren't given anything to do, and you have reviewed the code base over and over again for bugs, what can you do? So, when I started looking for a house, I decided that I would NOT use them for my mortgage insurance. Is that being immature? No, it is choosing a company to support a company or not. Because of the way that they treated me, I did not want to support them. Personally, I think I did more to hurt my former employer's bottom line, than this guy is.

    BTW, I have been a Mac-head since 1989...

    1. Re:NOT being immature by Llywelyn · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Except that "textbooks are given to children, not to schools."

      There is a difference--a huge difference--between voting with your wallet and abandoning sales from that company because you are pissed with their practice, and refusing to develop an application that might--at most--get a reference on one of Apple's download pages and will predominantly be used--not by Apple employees--but by a small subset of the community.

      --
      Integrate Keynote and LaTeX
    2. Re:NOT being immature by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He has no interest in supporting Apple. Similarly, many (most) Mac-based coders have no interest in supporting Windows - despite the huge gains to be had in market share. That's their CHOICE. That's OKAY. That's FREEDOM. DIG IT.

      Anyway, judging from the hate mail I see here, Mac users don't want him anyway - even though I'd wager that NONE of them actually *used* his software.

      The Apple community is fascist. I'm not trolling, just stating a fact. It allows NO breaking of party ranks. It allows NO independent thought. You're either 100% with Apple, or you're 100% against them. Apple users force developers into one camp or the other, and thus they lose a LOT of developers.

      Of course, when they lose Microsoft, Adobe, and all the other big developers in a few years due to Apple being complete assholes, the zealots will still cry "we don't need them anyway! They suck! Get lost, losers!" but really, Apple's market share will drop further, which is no good for anybody. Microsoft has always bent over backwards to respect, nurture and woo developers. Apple hates their devs and demands undying loyalty, giving nothing in return. They demand 30 hours of unpaid overtime per week, and then insult you for your code quality or bad hygiene, having slept in your fucking cubicle three nights in a row. Sure, Apple can make its own browser based on open code, and they can borrow OpenOffice.org, and they can borrow a lot of good stuff from the Linux and Unix guys to stay afloat. But the open source guys don't HAVE a Photoshop to borrow and rerelease (yes, I know the Gimp. It's NOT Photoshop). They don't HAVE *many* of the products the Mac community will lose if Apple doesn't lose their Hitler Complex and start behaving decently to people. If you haven't noticed, they want to kill third party developers and regain total control. Don't believe me? Wait and see. It's already happening.

  24. Terrible grammar, redundancy, similar writing... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hello, Hubert.

  25. Just because you do a job... by MoneyT · · Score: 2, Informative

    doesn't mean you do it well.

    Probation period = we test you out and see if we like what you bring to our company.

    Guess they didn't like him.

    And of course, instead of saying "Screw apple, I don't need them" turning arround, writing abiword PPC and turning it into an international best program, he's just going to cancel it.

    Another question. I'm going to assume for the moment that AbiWord is an opensource program. So how could his PORT of the program be his killer app?

    --
    T Money
    World Domination with a plastic spoon since 1984
    1. Re:Just because you do a job... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Notice they hired him AFTER they had him as a contractor for some time. Incompetance usually results in lots of boss-employee meetings and generating of "improvement goals" and shit, and you know you are the "problem employee" long before they take you into the conference room for "the talk."

      Firing people is one of the things most likely to generate legal fees for an employer, even in an "at will" state. Because of this, mediocre managers usually avoid offering a reason if they live in an at will state, or even if they don't. If you are ever in the position to fire someone, always document the incompetance with a number of reviews and memos beforehand. Ideally, the person sees the writing on the wall and finds another job.

      Coming out of the blue and firing someone for incompetance is a sure way to get your manager ass canned, in a real company that is. Maybe Apple "Thinks Different."

    2. Re:Just because you do a job... by MoneyT · · Score: 1

      But working as a contractor and working as an employee are two different things. Our local school hires contractors to do wiring over the summers, but there's no way they would last more than a few days as regular employees.

      And it is entirely possible, when he was a contractor, he was doing different work, and his incompetence showed up later.

      --
      T Money
      World Domination with a plastic spoon since 1984
  26. Possability by Llywelyn · · Score: 4, Insightful

    "Too bad, obviously the guy was fully capable of programming yet Apple thought he was "incompetent"."

    Maybe "incompetence" referred to some other, more nebulous, quality. Maybe they were unsatisfied with his hygine, or his appearance. Perhaps he is a damn good coder but can't keep to documentation or follow orders. Perhaps he is a God of Programming(tm) but can't communicate with others (and the managers were getting sick of slipping pizza boxes under the door).

    We, as outsiders, can do nothing but speculate but don't assume that "incompetence" had anything to do with the quality of his code.

    --
    Integrate Keynote and LaTeX
  27. Who Cares? by Enrique1218 · · Score: 1, Redundant

    (feel free to assign -1 troll) Millions of mac users today are dismayed by the announcment of whoever that he won't be developing his ever popular word processing app for the Mac. Oh!! how will they ever type another document? Analysts suggests, this may be the end of the mac platform. Just from this guy's little blurp, he is very ego-centric. This guy is putting a personal gripe over any possibility of moving his app one level above obscurity. That's ok I'll continued using Word.

    --
    You don't have to be smart to use a Mac, you just have to be smart enough to buy one
  28. Re:Poss[i]bility by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And then again, don't assume that it didn't...

  29. I would have installed AbiWord... by thatguywhoiam · · Score: 3, Informative
    ... but TextEdit, which has been reincarnated from its previous feeble form (known as SimpleText), brandishing its new spell checking and PDF-handling and non-80k-limit... threatened to beat the crap out of any incumbent word processors I dared install.

    And you know what? I believed it.

    --
    If Jesus wants me it knows where to find me.
    1. Re:I would have installed AbiWord... by jcr · · Score: 1

      TextEdit, which has been reincarnated from its previous feeble form (known as SimpleText)

      TextEdit has nothing to do with SimpleText. TextEdit came from NeXTSTEP, not the old Mac OS.

      -jcr

      --
      The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
    2. Re:I would have installed AbiWord... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      TextEdit is the ONLY editor I've found that can make the Zapfino ligature. Or any ligature for that matter. I ask you, what's the point of a word processor that doesn't make the text look good?

      (For those not in the know, fire up TextEdit, choose the Zapfino font, and type "Zapfino", and Bob's your uncle, and he feel pretty.)

    3. Re:I would have installed AbiWord... by levin · · Score: 0

      I don't mean to nit-pick, but for future reference, TextEdit would actually be the incumbent word processor (the one already in use). In keeping with the political tone of this posting, a more appropriate description of any newcomer word proccessors would be "freshman," or perhaps, "challenging."

      --

      `which fortune`
  30. hurting the wrong group by mkelley · · Score: 2, Insightful

    This will only hurt Abi's success on the Mac and hurt this guys chances of getting a job on par with Apple.

    Apple already has Microsoft and Openoffice and even TextEdit. There are dozens of good word processors out there, and Abi will never be the killer app for OS X. If anything's a killer app, it's Konfabulator. A word processor hasn't been a killer app since 1985.

    It's a shame, I like and have advocated Abi at various times, but with putzs like this, I'm almost ashamed at even suggesting it.

    --

    m.kelley
    life is like a freeway, if you don't look you could miss it.
  31. book suggestion by davebo · · Score: 1

    In a followup to what the other responder said, I'd suggest "Cocoa Programming for Mac OS X" by Aaron Hillegass.

    Excellent, excellent book.

  32. Re:Well of course they fired him. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This remark is (of course) stupid, and if you were a little bit more clever, you will have noticed he worked... in France (as stated in http://www.figuiere.net/hub/) so...

  33. glad by sawanv · · Score: 0

    Iam glad that the stupid crap abiWord shit isnt available for OSX. Fucking peice of crap I lost count of how many of my docs it has ruined on Linux. I finally wised up and now use kword, that is in case vim and aspell and a2ps isnt enough. let the shit rot...