Some Journals Rejecting Office 2007 Format
hormiga writes "Some scholarly journals are rejecting submissions made using new Office 2007 formats. Science and Nature are among publishers unwilling to deal with incompatibilities in the new formats, and recommend using older versions of Office or converting to older formats before submission. The new equation editor is cited as a specific problem. Rob Wier recommends that those publishers consider using ODF instead."
Huh, strange that Science and Nature are using a standard text editor format at all. You'd thing something TeX-based would be more suited for this purpose(based on my experiences on writing math on computers).
We're still prying some professors away from Word Perfect 5.1.
Why would you submit a journal paper in a closed, binary format? I'm surprised those two journals would even accept Microsoft formats. It makes a lot more sense to use something like TeX, to split the markup from the content, much the same way CSS and HTML work together. Not only is it easier to edit and send around the lab for editing, it's also much easier on the copy editors when they want to typeset it for printing. As far as I know, the journal only takes your images and text, and lays them out on the page. All of the extra crap Word stuffs into it's files is superfluous anyway.
-Ryan
AUWYHSTOT (Acronyms are Useless When You Have to Spell Them Out Too)
That journals accept anything but TeX/LaTeX. Of course some still accept typewritten documents (with a transcription fee), but if you have access to a computer why use Word (or OO writer) for serious writing?
Is it just me or is the new Office UI AND incompatible format coupled with the requirement of 3D cards to run Vista creating a perfect storm of backlash. If any one of these things were to come alone it would not have been this bad, but judging by the reaction from several companies including my own, this i driving people to look at OSX as a viable option.
The war with islam is a war on the beast
The war on terror is a war for peace
Microsoft has been pushing "upgrades" that break files from earlier releases for a couple decades now, and I've never heard of a publisher (or any other organization) standing up to them before like this. Generally, they just go along meekly, since "that's what computers are like, y'know".
What do you think might have given some of the publishers a backbone?
I'm assuming that they haven't actually converted to non-MS (or non-IBM) systems. That would be just too bizarre to believe. Do you think that they've actually noticed that non-MS systems can usually read files from 20 years ago without problems? Is this some sign of a pending movement in which more organizations will actually start standing up to the Market Leader?
Nah; it can't be. Something very strange must be going on behind the scene.
Those who do study history are doomed to stand helplessly by while everyone else repeats it.
...I would love to say "Ha Ha! Proof that Microsoft's end is near." But this is typical for version changes. If you didn't yet spent the thousands of $$ to upgrade, then you won't be able to read the newer formats. It's that simple. The only real story here is they are pushing ODF, which is nice to see.
I thought that they barely took office format at all anymore. I was under the impression that they preferred LaTeX. Everyone that I know in my department (Aerospace Engineering) would not think of using anything but LaTeX for journal submissions- to do otherwise is cruel to the typesetters and asking for your article to look horrible.
In general, a WYSIWYG format, whether ODF or DOC format, will not be what you get in the journal, since any good journal will do some heavy formatting changes in order to make your article fit and play nice with the rest of them.
Just use RTF instead of *any* MS format.
---- Booth was a patriot ----
It's not important that people will use open-source software for writing documents.
It's more important that MS supports ODF.
If you mod this up, your slashdot background will turn into a beautiful sunset!
My department has started getting Office 2007 files and we find it irritating. We are not ready to go there yet. We have many macros that interface to our database that must be rewritten. It will probably be a year or so before our small I.S. department has time to convert to Office 2007.
The amount of money that will be spent to rewrite code that works with Word 2007 will not be insignificant and the real down side is that we get virtually nothing for our effort!
The race isn't always to the swift... but that's the way to bet!
Okay, I know the popular stance on this site will be "Why aren't they using x open source open standard format! Why aren't they using some latex!?!!?"
..and TBH I am not even sure how latex works...how can you expect writers to know about this format which is primarily (as far as I can tell) used in *nix?
Firstly, I am a CS major and have a number of linux machines
If it were me, I'd just demand PDF and be done with. So much wasted energy in this.
Censorship is obscene. Patriotism is bigotry. Faith is a vice. Slashdot 2.0 sucks.
For years and years, I fell into the fold where if Microsoft came out with something new, I upgraded. Latest and greatest was always the best. Then when XP came out, I somehow didn't find myself rushing to upgrade. The computer I was using at the time would barely run the OS and the newer Office software didn't mean anything to me except for occasions when someone would send me a document I couldn't read. (Though at some time close to that I was also trying out OpenOffice...guess what I was using to open those documents! Also around that time, I was starting to use Linu for more than a router and network server) I guess around that time I started questioning the wisdom of blindly upgrading.
:(
Now at my office, shortly after Vista came out, people started asking me when we would upgrade. My answer was simply that I could see no business case at this time for doing so. Some people were actually happy to hear me say it... others were just like "okay..." My stance on Office is the same except I may have some issues if one of the primary office apps (that is build on office) is updated to require the newer office suite. I'll be unhappy but I won't have any choice...
But to hear these cases where people are pushing back against the upgrades? I'm very very happy to hear it.
Thats the real key.
And just wait until you start getting 'protected documents' or emails.
---- Booth was a patriot ----
There is a compatibility pack for Office 2000, Office XP, and Office 2003. Maybe they should research that!
8 6761033.aspx
http://office.microsoft.com/en-us/products/HA1016
I use to have a machine that BSOD on upgrade to service pack 2. Office 2007 won't install on pre SP2. From another machine I used Word 2007 to send out resumes to several prospective employers only to have them request 1997-2003 format because they couldn't read my Word documents. I do government work now and where I work they have standardized on Windows 2000 with the Office 2003. I doubt Office 2007 would work on their machines and for reasons of security and stability and having gotten so many machines all working together smoothly they won't be upgrading to XP anytime soon. Maybe Windows 2000 is inferior to XP in most aspects, but big organizations HATE reworking everything to get it to work again when they have work to get done TODAY.
You can save 1997-2003 format from 2007, but it doesn't do it by default.
When I upgraded my Wife's machine to IE7 it broke all her access to bank accounts, which ironically would inform her she needed to "upgrade" to IE6.
This is just the kind of crap that will cause OS to win eventually (even if it is still years off). BTW, we use a mix of Windows and Linux and we UPGRADE the Linux all the time -- no big deal.
Letter To Iran
The parable has the wrong ending:
Next comes community outrage and jailtime for fraud. Let's hope we see some of that for all the intentional waste M$ has created in two decades of coercive monoply.
The author does get one thing right but fails to follow up on it correctly:
This is true but by this argument the lowest cost solution should be chosen and M$ has screwed themselves by creating a new non free format. Before they pushed OOXML, it could be argued that everyone had access to a M$ Word Processor. The use of a non free format created plenty of problems, but changing formats created others and people could pretend nothing was wrong. Now OOXML is used by none, so that choice maximizes the transaction costs for everyone. This should drive everone to Open Office, which costs nothing to install, works well with the old format and comes with a superior free format that all government agencies should be moving toward.
Friends don't help friends install M$ junk.
[p]Macros that have worked even back in Office97 are now broken. A contractor at work tried to go buy Office at any Brick n' Mortar place, and since 2007 is the only one available, he's pretty much screwed... [p]I wish OOo had really good macro compatibility. If it does, let me know (email shown)
Lyx allows you to write TeX without having to learn all the funny commands. It's just like how you can use KOffice to write ODF documents or MS Office 2007 to write OOXML documents ;-) There are other LaTeX front ends that allow you to generate documents without having to learn all the tags, but I like Lyx and its free.
Think global, act loco
I submit to some physics journals (Physical Review D, for example). They -prefer- LaTeX source with .eps figures. Though I use BibTeX with an external .bib database for references, I explicitly cut-and-paste the contents of the resulting .bbl file into the main paper draft.
I -think- they'll allow PDF or postscript submission of the whole thing, but it's slower to process, and they might add charges.
Personally, I'm suprised that anyone accepts the Office 2007 format.
127.0.0.1
I'm not even reading this. This is pointless. 90% of the journals I've ever submitted to have been PDF or bust. What a bollocks statement. Of course they're rejecting the Office 2007 format, they rejected every single other format before that too! "PDF, please." Now, rejecting PDFs that were created in Office 2007, that would be funny.
Go ahead, flame me, but this is ridiculous and not even news. Guess what? ODF will be rejected too and they'll say "GAH! PDF!!" On the other side of the composition fence, while powerful for its features, TeX-based stuff has lost out to the much more powerful WYSIWYG editors now available out there (includes both free and pay-office varieties). It is still great though, for whoever is still a TeX junky (and I get the picture that once you are one you always are).
She got a new computer with Vista/Office 2007. Started doing my docs (I'm a lawyer) without paying attention to the save dialog. I then get a bunch of work with the docx extension. Put the kabash on that pretty fast. But . . . that is how MS will achieve ubiquity with their new format.
While I applaud the refusal to accept Word 2007 format docs, why not go all the way and refuse to accept ANY proprietary Microsoft formats?
For those with older Office (2000 to 2003), why not use the Microsoft Office Compatibility Pack for Word, Excel, and PowerPoint 2007 File Formats? I have not run into any 2007 files yet since I still use 2000, but at least I am ready if any appear.
Ant(Dude) @ Quality Foraged Links (AQFL.net) & The Ant Farm (antfarm.ma.cx / antfarm.home.dhs.org).
The point is that they did try and it turns out that Word 2007 screws up the math, even if you save the results in Office 2003 formats. As it turns out, mathematics is the language of Science and Nature. So, while many of us can go thought life without ever writing a contour integral, most of us will never be published in Science or Nature either (the closest I got was Physical Review Letters). Unless you want to assure us that you can handle complex math expressions with you free patches, I would suggest that you have a bit more respect for the staff of Science and Nature. They are reacting to a observed problem. I'll bet you that they tried the free patches before they decided to warn scientists all over the world about submitting articles using Word 2007.
Think global, act loco
Word Options -> Save -> topmost option "Save files in this format".
Stop pulling such nuggets out of your ass.
There's a convenient OSS library called wvWare that can convert .doc to various other formats, including xml, html, and plain text. You can run it from the command line, or from scripts. Is there any similar OSS software that runs on Linux, and can, e.g., convert .docx to html or plain text? Please don't tell me I just have to write some XSLT transformations in Java or something :-), and no, I'm not suggesting that something like wvWare would be sufficient for most scientific journals.
Find free books.
The first time I opened a 2007 Word document on my machine (with only Office 2003), Word was smart enough to go "Hey, can I download the compatibility patch for you?"
I said yes, and in one click I was able to open the document up. I imagine the same holds true for the other Office apps, though I haven't tried it.
-David
I find this report a bit disingenuous because the implication is that this is unique Microsoft and Office. Not that I'm defending this at all, because it's extremely frustrating but I would say compatibility would be a much larger issue with Adobe and Quark software.
Given the industry they're in I tend to think compatibility with page layout applications is more important than compatibility with Office. I can only imagine the problems they'll encounter in upgrading to Adobe Creative Suite 3, assuming they do so at all. If other publications I've dealt with are any indication I wouldn't be surprised if they're still using Quark 3 and InDesign 1.
it's good to see that you're open minded
Yes and I know second rate when I see it. Windoze is hopelessly outclassed by any GNU/Linux distribution. It's important for people who know computing to recommend what's best.
When you "help" your friends put Windoze on their computer, you are not really helping them. Send them to the local shop and make them pay for their folly. If it's a work related thing, their boss should pay for it. Windoze is only easy because so many people help M$ out every day. Keeping up with Windoze is a waste of time that only helps people who are screwing you. The less you tax yourself with Windoze, the more expensive it becomes for those who demand it.
None of this really matters because M$ is failing. Vista is a flop. No one wants it. Vendors are losing money and many are in open revolt. As the upgrade train grinds to a halt, the end of M$ is near.
Friends don't help friends install M$ junk.
IMO they should just upgrade and start accepting the new format, for one simple reason. Office 2007 features a HUGELY improved "equation editor". Believe it or not, for most things you can come close to what you can do in TeX. This was a huge downside of Office before 2007.
although it'd be nice if Slashdot editors can be bothered to spell his name correctly. Many posts so far express some surprise that journals even accept anything other than Latex. Having been through the system several times, I can say that the reason that big journals like Science and Nature accept MS docs as the default format is because of biologists. Essentially, Latex is used only in Mathematics and Physics related sciences. Unlike them, most biologists don't know much about computers, and couldn't really give a rat's arse about the formats. Having trained in Physics (Bachelor) and Med/Bio (PhD) and now working in bioinformatics, I have had many arguments with people about this particular issue. My argument being that, the fact that the scientific process is an open process should also mean that the format in which the data are preserved should also be open, and not locked in some proprietary format like MS Doc and, yes, shock-and-horror, Powerpoint files. I've bitched many times to my old boss that he was spending a few thousand dollars on getting Photoshop licenses just to crop some pictures or change the levels. Although the lack of proper CYMK support in GIMP is a bit of a setback, but even then, just a couple licenses would have been sufficient for that purpose, rather than getting a license for every machine. I mean, these guys were using Photoshop as an image _viewer_! The situation in Physics is quite diffferent. Of course there are many hardcore OSS users, but many people just used BSD/Linux/(and even some old Unix machines are still chugging along), simply because they are free and they are sometimes also the best tools for the job. I remember in a few years ago working with an Astrophysics group during a summer vacation, and we had some time on the Parkes telescope, and we were able to remotely control the telescope from Sydney, which would have been impossible under MS Windows (at the time). Back to the point, ODF would hopefully bridge this difference, since if the biological scientists want to learn Latex, a WYSIWYG editor using ODF (such as OpenOffice.org) should be acceptable to them.
Are you saying you have a PhD? Really? In what?
And for those who don't know, Lyx is a GPL'd TEX front end that attempts to give a WYSIWYG-like front-end that produces TEX output. I'm just honestly interested to know if its good enough for professional use.
The difference is that people writing in those papres, id est Physicist and Mathematicians, are very well versed in informatics. Most of them have at least some basic knowledge of Unices, and at least do program in Mathlab and a little bit in Fortran.
They can understand what TeX is, and given the quantity of formulae they have to work with, they understand the advantages that TeX has to offer regarding them.
Nature is much more about life science. In those field you can find scientist which are way much more dexterous in manipulating micropipettes than computers. Most of them see computers as things that just have to work. They fire it up and use the mail client (Outlook express. Thunderbird is you have luck), browse a little bit (Internet Explorer or Firefox depending on the university) to find papres that they won't read on screen anyway but print on paper, and write with a word processor (i.e.: Word). They only time they write with anything else is... when they fire up PowerPoint to prepare a poster (Yes. There are tons of people abusing Powerpoint to do posters instead of using a proper publishing tools).
The couple of them who feel enlightened and feel the urge to be different than the mass of sheeps, they buy Macs and install "Microsoft Office for Mac" on them.
Most of them don't realise that there other thing besides Word to handle text documents. And they all feel too much accustomed to Word to switch to anything else. They are the people who are upset when universities try to push for OpenOffice.org, because, they say, University should prepare their student to be proficient with tools that they will encounter later in professional life, and Word is what those student will find (as if being proficient with word processing in general was much different than learning Word down to the button position and being completely lost each time microsoft decides to change the layout for each new generation).
Want a worse example ? Medical doctors (I'm one). Some of the fellow doctors I've seen still do all their document formatting using space bar. There are highly considered specialists with a long list of publication that smash repeatedly on the space bar until things seem grossly aligned on screen. And then don't understand while the document doesn't come the same when they print it. Or open it in another version of Word.
Those are the mythical "80%" people that only use "20%" of the feature of an office suite. Not a different set of "20%" than anyone else. The basic "20%" that form the common ground of any office suite. The "20%" of features that Word shares with Notepad.
They have no concept of "styles" or flagging "titles" (they probably imagine an "index" is something you write tediously by hand. Usually they transmit that job to interns. Who go though the document painfully fixing the format so the "index" function works as intended).
And you want them to switch to TeX when submitting papers to Life-Science journal ? They will just faint at the idea of launching something that doesn't look exactly like what they are used to on screen, and will have a hard time to find out which is the new icon to click to save.
And don't let me start about the level of maths and statistics we learn in medical school (near to absolute zero). Most of us hire a statistician whenever some button on a calculator need to be pressed. There's no such thing as a need for a better formula-writing environment.
Thankfully the arrival of bioinformatics, medical informatics, medical imaging and such computer intensive speciality in the field of life science will bring a little bit more computer litteracy. (Thankfully for me that are fields that I'm studying too, so there's plenty of job opportuni
"Sufficiently advanced satire is indistinguishable from reality." - [Tips: 1DrYakQDKCQ6y52z6QbnkxHXAocMZJE61o ]
It's a great way to put an end to the upgrade madness that forces many to use bootleg software to keep up. I use Corel 10, and so I need to tell people to save their files in the older version also because I just won't spend the money. I sure hope this idea really spreads. It should be pretty obvious that the reason for the incompatibilities is an attempt to force us to upgrade. Spread the word. Use generic or open formats. Then let's watch the software makers squirm a little. They can burn in hell.
What?
I fail to grasp the meaning of this news. So the new xml based formats are distinctively different than the previous ones (different serialization), and since businesses aren't so quick to move to a brand new and untested piece of software, they reject it. Furthermore, their current press preparation products can't import the new format yet.
And?
You can be sure 2-3 years from now they'll be accepting Office 2007 documents just fine.
To those suggesting latex and pdf... please, have you ever worked in a magazine? While PDF and PostScript is usually how the final print is being exports, you don't just paste a PDF on the page that someone submitted and call it a day. There's extensive typesetting, adjusting of the whole material, addition of ads, checks for style consistency. What about Latex... this comes from the same people who said we should scratch all media players and Flash, and go for Ogg: in your dreams, Linux fans.
Word is a good format for submission since it's flexible enough and the content can be pasted in, say PageMaker or InDesign, and adjusted for print. All products support some level of import from DOC formats, and they don't support import from DOCX format.
ODF would be good too... if... there was support in said press preparation software. And there isn't any I know of.
So, while I like ODF and so on, don't just declare blindly the open formats the best thing just yet, since there are far more practical reasons commercial formats enjoy such popularity in the industry.
Adobe did not sue Microsoft about anything related to PDF creation in Office. Even the most irresponsible published articles on the subject only claimed that Adobe was threatening to -- and then, the ONLY source for that assertion was Microsoft themselves.
Think about it for a second. I'd bet it's ten times more likely that Microsoft was worried it could be sued by (just about anyone, Adobe, Nuance, whoever) if they included XPS generation in Microsoft Office, because then they'd be using their monopoly in an existing product to bootstrap the dominance of a new product (or in this case, format) -- the type of thing Monopolies get in trouble for. I'd bet their legal guys went like, er, we might get in trouble if we bundle XPS generation, we should unbundle it.
And then someone inside Microsoft went, well hey, that's going to be pretty stupid if we bundle PDF support but unbundle XPS support. That'd basically be a crib death for XPS. So let's hold PDF back too, and blame the whole thing on Adobe. Microsoft has been trying to claim that XPS is somehow more of an open standard than PDF anyhow, and spreading an uncorroborated rumor about Adobe being litigious about their format is totally harmonious with that strategy.
If this was just about Adobe and PDF, Microsoft would have unbundled PDF but left XPS support bundled in. No published report has explained how any possible Adobe "intellectual property" threat about PDF accounts for the unbundling of XPS generation.
The real truth is, Microsoft is holding back their PDF generation stuff because they can't afford to let it sit any higher on the totem pole than their support for their competing format.
I say bring on a Microsoft PDF READER. Apple has one. Adobe could use a kick in the butt to get competitive in the Reader department, and Foxit just ain't doing it.
> because you are a paid M$ PR hack.
Translation: No matter how completely wrong my beliefs are, and how much I twist reality to fit into my world view, anyone who does not pray to the same gods as I do must be in Bill Gates' pocket. I also think creative spelling makes me seem more insightful. Plz mode me up!!
they use Word because the collaboration features are so much more robust, because that's what most people are familiar with, and all the journals accept it.
No, they use it because the journals demand it. I'm glad that's changing. Word is crazy, quirky and wastes the users time. It also forces you to use Windoze, which itself sucks life. You should know that from all the problems your wife has at times like this when there's no Mac version available.
For collaboration, subversion works great. If it has not already been worked into Open Office and others, it won't take much to do it. All of this is old hat for people who have been combining work from hundreds of people to make free software. The collaboration tools M$ introduced a couple of years ago are late and second rate as usual.
Friends don't help friends install M$ junk.
It's actually quite easy, if you use it regularly.
It's not just easy, it's a huge time saver. Trying to making a long Word DOC act right is a death by a thousand clicks and it never really works well. Open Office is better, but it is still clicky, clicky and can auto-wrong things. If you just have to have buttons to press, use Kile.
Word Perfect was a reasonable editor for the purpose, but it was slain long ago.
Friends don't help friends install M$ junk.
Has anybody at Slashdot ever actually submitted anything to a journal? You are all advocating LaTeX but the truth is many journals will not accept anything other than a single column .doc file that they can copy and paste into their fancy typesetting software. A LaTeX file is useless to them as they use none of its typesetting features. I tried it once and got turned down because they wanted the .doc version pain in the ass but I learned my lesson.
Because if they acted out of monetary interest instead, they would be shills.
There is a compatibility pack for Office 2000, Office XP, and Office 2003. Maybe they should research that!
Oh, you mean that thing that sucks life that Rob describes in his "Interoperability by Design" article? What makes you think that will fix the equation editor problem with M$'s new formats?
It's always been this way with M$. You change versions, you lose work. Office 2007 is just a bigger problem not a different problem. It's good to see it being rejected.
Friends don't help friends install M$ junk.
How not at all exciting.
.doc format.
/. molehill mountain.
Where I work, we likewise aren't using Office 2007 format... because we aren't set up to use Office 2007.
However, we have a few people with the converter pack (free download), so we just open it in Office 2003 (works with O2000 and OXP as well), then save it in
So wow, a magazine isn't set up to use a new format. Talk about another
Office 2007 user here. This is not a big deal, I have already set 2003 as my default "save as" to accommodate the slow change. I will also add that there are free conversion tools available. It's not as if we are etching the words into stone where they will remain that way forever lol...
My XP box dies....can't do vista while in first draft. Go mac....so happy. Have to buy Word for Mac...sacrilege.
Editors like things to be uniform. Their job is to get things to print properly at the end of the day - both from a writing and from an "interface with the printers" standpoint - and that's where things can get dicey when using a writing program that the PRINTING industry views an non-standard, which many small press publishers view anything other than Word and .pfd as being.
No, I am not talking about the larger academic publishing houses, but smaller journals often do not have the money to USE the higher-priced academic printing firms and have to play with the smaller companies, simply because these journals have circulations which are quite small, relatively speaking. This happens to people writing their dissertations all the time, too, especially when they have to use serious scientific notation in math, genetics or other graphically-oriented scientific notational areas of research, or have to use lots of color-specific photographs.
Small, short-run print shops are often run by people who are NOT the most capable individuals on the planet when it comes to handling even simple graphic placement problems, let alone handling scientific notational alignment issues and trying to tweak a (to them) unusual text creation program to properly interact with their press equipment. Especially with regards to notational placement and statements that they simply have no clue as to where anything SHOULD go, of course...
Don't believe me?
Ask ANY small-run magazine editor about Printers. You will get an education in a new area of single-strand virology that masquerades as marginally tool-using anthropoids! But beware! The language that they use will be neither pleasant, nor fit for polite company. In some cases, drunken veteran members of the Merchant Marine Service have been known to tell these people to mind their language during such discussions - it can get THAT bad!
Just a word from the other side of the desk - the editorial side...
So what the fuck is wrong with plain text? (accompanied by common image formats where necessary)
This is just another XML panacea freak. ODF, OOXML... all garbage. Plain text works fine and is universally readable.
Plain text and images should work fine for journal submissions, scalable vector graphics should not be necessary for the print needs of normal scientific journal articles.
XML is retarded, face it.
"Personally, I'm surprised that anyone accepts the Office 2007 format."
Not as surprised that slashdot is getting up in arms over what format a "dinosaur" uses.
What makes you think that will fix the equation editor problem with M$'s new formats?
They did "fix" the equation editor. The result is the new one that Office 2007 uses by default.
The original one was a third-party package Microsoft bought and put into Word, and could be somewhat daunting. The new one is simpler and built into the ribbon, but really only useful for one-line formulas.
Something everyone's missing, though: THE ORIGINAL EQUATION EDITOR IS STILL IN OFFICE 2007!. Put in your "Microsoft Equation" object the same way you always have - insert->object.
DATABASE WOW WOW
I wonder why no one has mentioned LaTeX apps that can do WYSIWYG editing. You don't have to use a simple text editor, memorize all the LaTeX formatting code and know how to typeset the document. Sure, most of the WYSIWYG LaTeX apps are not freewares, but neither is MS Word.
Being an OpenOffice user, I found this annoying. Even more so when the tables in the document became very messy on export to .doc. It make much more sense for large achidemic organizations to use more global filetypes, such as OpenDocument formats or Portable Document Format.
7|-|3r3 15 /\/0 r3450/\/ 4 4/\/^/ 54/\/3 |+3r50/\/ 70 7|-|1/\/|< 7|-|3/\/\53|_\/35 (|_3\/3|2 |33(4|_|53 7|-|3^/ /\/\4/\/463|) 70 |=|_|r7|-|3r /\/\4/\/6|_3 7|-|3 3/\/6|_15|-| |_4/\/6|_|463.
we, liek, get taht u, liek, hate M$ n lollerz, but u need hlep
All those dollar signs are clogging the internet's tubes. The little copy editors inside older computers can't handle that degree of brokenness. If you post using that new-fangled Tux-powered OS, I'm sure that constitutes some kind of animal cruelty. "M$" is just as unfunny as "Linsux", "open sores", and "twatter", and makes the grammar-nazi schizoid voice in my head go absolutely bonkers with uncontrollable hell-spawned fury, endangering countless potentially Linux-using children.
Some AC used to troll your posts with a message like this:
twitter, please read this carefully. Following this advice will make Slashdot a better place for everyone, including yourself.
From http://www.ibiblio.org/pub/linux/docs/HOWTO/Advoca cy
There's a lot of wisdom in these lines. Take it or leave it; just for goshsakes don't bite anyone.
DATABASE WOW WOW
Of course the choice of tools used for writing scientific documents has nothing to do with the soft/hard distinction either so it's not that likely that you'd see significantly different behavior by the two groups.
have anything to do with cracks in the G4 cube?
Why should they pay good money out of their pocket to please Microsoft ?
They are printing, not editing equations !
As usual, if you pay me for Word 2007 and all following forced Microsoft release then, thanks, I will use it.
If you are not going to, please stop advocating it without comparing it with other alternatives.
I'm no Microsoft fan, but this frankly is bullshit. "Second rate" as compared to what? Show me a free software equivalent to Word/Excel revision control system and the SharePoint/Office integration. Go on, I'll be waiting here doing my nails.
Jesus and it really busts my chops when people use that stupid dollar sign. What are you, twelve?
They could use PDFs made from TeX/LaTeX like they already do?
While the editor may be better, it's no good if it doesn't get the math right! And if they're going to upgrade, why not go to ODF, where no one vendor will create new problems like this for you every few years?
=you don't talk to mathematicians often. There's nothing BUT LaTeX for math. Heck, buy a recent goof math book, it's likely to be typeset in LaTeX! Even CS people use it.
I've been using the latest office and vista since they came out and really enjoy both. The updates to the equation editor, table layout options, and the overall design of each program (word, excel, powerpoint, etc) are really great.
Some people don't really know what they are talking about though--while this article has legitimate concerns, it is very easy to save compatible documents. Save as and then choose 'Word 97-2003 compatible,' done. Stop complaining.
For the first time ever it DOES get the math right. It's ironic that they insist on the version of Word that couldn't render good looking math to save its life.
If you did, you'd see that their insistence on using Word 2003 doesn't make any sense whatsoever. I'm a die hard TeX user, and I won't be switching to Word or anything else, but if I was using Word, I'd be using W2007 - anything else is torture.
David Carlisle has made changes to omml2mml.xsl stylesheet supplied by Microsoft to fix the issue.
1 0C9F7F3!2029.entry
m athml-from-office-20007.html
http://bhandler.spaces.live.com/blog/cns!70F64BC9
http://dpcarlisle.blogspot.com/2007/04/xhtml-and-
In Finland, the Ministry of Justice recently switched to ODF. Other Finnish ministries and parapublic organizations are expected to follow soon.
Software is not supposed to be about how to work around a useability issue. - Ken Barber
And the beancounter takes them at their word.
So this is MS's fault.
FTA:
/sarcasm
Isaac Newton wrote, "If I have seen further it is by standing on the shoulders of giants".
and Microsoft:
"I have seen further by killing everyone else taller than me and stealing whatever visions they had."
Seriously, it is about time someone cried "Enough!" Endlessly reworking things that work, and have worked for long periods of time, simply to suit Microsoft's warped vision of forced upgrades to ensure a continuous revenue stream is counterproductive! Microsoft loves the "churn" they create; it virtually insures that no one else will ever create something innovative. Everyone else is too busy reworking their tools to comply with whatever "new" (new only in that it does the same old thing in a different way) version Microsoft has created.
the lack of proper CYMK support in GIMP is a bit of a setback
In pre-press, yes (most of my career is in digital graphic arts). In scientific imaging, is it really a must-have feature? It's very hard to imagine CMYK being useful at all; it's entirely based on the properties of particular printing inks.
Even its importance in pre-press is waning, as the industry has already moved away from pre-separated film-based imagery (transparencies drum scanned to CMYK) and towards digital images in native RGB. I know that a lot of my time in the past 5 years was spent learning how to colour-correct and separate RGB images directly (a lot of photographers - who might have been top notch in film - produce awful digital shots).
Can you tell me then... why Photoshop's admittedly excellent CMYK support is important to scientific image processing?? Is it in order to provide separations of RGB images for publication? Even in the rare case that a magazine has provided sensible and complete specifications for its separations, that's not a task that most Photoshop users are competent to do, in any case (trust me :).
you had me at #!
You can still purchase WordPerfect, http://www.corel.com/servlet/Satellite/us/en/Conte nt/1150905725000
Word is a pain at removing hidden codes while WordPerfect's Reveal Codes makes it extrememly easy to spot the problem and to delete it. I often cut and paste from Word into WordPerfect to get rid of Word's hidden codes. For instance, I was recently given an MS Word document with double pagination. My secretary spent several hours trying to get rid of it. I cut and pasted the document into WordPerfect and was done correcting the problem in a matter of minutes.
I don't hate MS because its MS. I hate MS because of what they have done to fine products that are not theirs.
Is this equation editor based on a version of MathType? MathType is what the non-LaTeX-using production offices use to set equations. The previous version of Equation Editor was based on a (very) old version of MathType, and so equations embedded in pre-2007 Word can be imported and set correctly using the current MathType (much improved over the version that went into Word). If Word 2007's is based on something else, it's possible that this could break the equation imports, and this could be a reason for the rejection of Word 2007 format.
I didn't say we purchased Office 2007. We get attachments from other State Departments who have.
I didn't "blame" anyone in my post. I just expressed my frustration at the fact that others send us attachments that we can't use and that fact is putting pressure on us to "upgrade" to a product that gives us nothing. Frankly my time could be better spent than doing a long drawn out conversion that yields no benefits! I'm not even sure what the compelling reason would be for anyone to move to Office 2007 except that older versions of Office will lose Microsoft's support.
Now although I didn't assign blame in my last post, if you want to get into that discussion I am more than willing.
The race isn't always to the swift... but that's the way to bet!
Why on earth is your department trying to roll that one out? The version you are currently use is still available on the market, even under site license. Why go out of the way to ask for pain?
The publication does not want to take responsibility.
It is true that RGB->CMYK separation is non-linear, non-reversible, and for optimal results depends on complex details of the actual printing process. Asking for CMYK images is certainly not a solution, for all those reasons, and fundamentally there is no assurance that what the author sees is what will be printed, even - or especially - if she delivers a CMYK file.
Consider what the author is "seeing", and imagines she'll see on paper: Is it an image on her CRT (likely to be wildly different from the magazine she'll have in her hand later)? Is it an image from her desktop printer (ditto)? The only way the author can have confidence in what her picture will look like, is if the publication provides a "contract proof", with adequate time for a revision cycle, before publication. That's the traditional way.
The digital workflow introduces more room for error, because 1) the author generally isn't trained to make separations, even if the publication provides a specification (those are often ambiguous and confusing); 2) the author isn't equipped to proof them; 3) the author usually won't understand the limitations of the rest of the production process, and she'll eventually have to suck it up when it goes pear-shaped and the picture is nothing like she imagined it would be.
Of course this can all happen with RGB submissions too, but there are fewer pitfalls. For example, a well-trained separator will recognise if an image has a lot of colours outside CMYK's reproducible gamut, and can bring this problem to the author's attention. If properly configured, Photoshop can produce a decent 'soft proof' which will reveal such problems. But the devil is in the details, and 99% of users won't have the training to configure it (and virtually no scientific authors will have calibrated monitors).
The crucial ingredient here - often skipped - is the proof/approval process. A colour-calibrated PDF is better than nothing, but still depends on the viewing conditions.
you had me at #!
Pretty much anything written with LaTeX has that ugly LaTeX look.
I'm sure you could write lots of TeX code to avoid this, but then you've given the "fairly quickly" advantage to Word.
In a couple of mags and a book (Digital Audio Processing). These needed code and math both. In all cases, the publisher (Miller Freeman at the time) begged me not to use Word, or any fancy features whatsoever. They wanted to earn their share of the bucks doing all the formatting. Not that they did a great job, mind you, but they were all running on Macs and simply could not handle anything fancy in an MS format. So the math got written on paper and was scanned, and they did their "magic" to it, along with any graphs. Eventually it worked, but it seemed pretty stupid to be writing about computer stuff, to be published by a company that specialized in same, and they couldn't hack the least bit of fancy formatting done by the author. So all was written in gedit and run through lin2win...When it's your paycheck at stake, you do what is required, no matter how silly.
Doug Coulter, not logged in.
There's stuff like "salary sacrifice" that lets clueless accountants authorise purchases of laptops that are used half and work and half at home without the IT department finding out until it's too late. That's how I get to look after virus and spyware riddled Vista machines suddenly trying to connect to an NT4+samba domain. Of course they didn't get any antivirus since Vista is invincible, went to lots of spyware spreading porn sites becuase the company doesn't really own the machine and can't get on the domain becuase they have the cut down hobby version of Vista which probably isn't legal for work purposes anyway. Yes I did put linux on it - but it still has Vista to be used at home and hopefully not get reinfected after the fresh install and antivirus.
Please have a look at the Microsoft blog: http://blogs.msdn.com/microsoft_office_word/archiv e/2006/10/04/Equations-in-Word-2007.aspx
It is based on something less proprietary, and more TeX-like. The output is nicer too. I believe Nature and Science will accept the new .docx format some time. The ODF recommendation does not make sense, simply because no authors will be using it.