I've been using Google calendar http://google.com/calendar for several weeks now, and it has been terrific from my Fedora/Firefox platform. I can access it from anywhere, share it with my associates, and it is very reliable. I can definately see a use for a similarly available on-line spreadsheet. Like you, I would need it to read and write ODF (.odf) files, and that is the feedback that I will be sending to Google when the spreadsheet product is actually available.
It is interesting that, when a company starts to slide, the sloppiness seems to creep into all levels of the organization. Groklaw has recently been running a thread on the shoddy research of a reporter at the Boston Globe who trashed the Massachusetts CIO.
Now they wrap newspapers with credit card numbers.
You're wrong. The coup was in November of 2000. September 11 was used to consolidate power. It's getting worse; try this little gem: http://www.rollingstone.com/news/story/10432334/wa s_the_2004_election_stolen/1
"I am committed to helping Ohio deliver its electoral votes to the president."
Diebold is just following through on its promises.
How about requiring him to use AOL as his ISP forever?
I've been using Google calendar http://google.com/calendar for several weeks now, and it has been terrific from my Fedora/Firefox platform. I can access it from anywhere, share it with my associates, and it is very reliable. I can definately see a use for a similarly available on-line spreadsheet. Like you, I would need it to read and write ODF (.odf) files, and that is the feedback that I will be sending to Google when the spreadsheet product is actually available.
Now they wrap newspapers with credit card numbers.