Re: Stripping all formatting from Word doc



In article <BF36065F.13094%REMOVETHISoffice@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>,
Clive Huggan <REMOVETHISoffice@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:

> On 27/8/05 6:14 AM, in article
> labolide-E74FBF.13143026082005@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx, "Kurt"
> <labolide@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>
> <snip>
>
> > No, I was actually hoping just to use Word, but as the discussion
> > progressed, it seems as though I'll have to spend more some time playing
> > with it- to see if it's really faster to work within it.
> >
>
> And from Kurt's earlier comment:
>
> > Am I the only one still lamenting that MS should have stopped at Word 5?
> > Fast startup, fine features, and easy to edit.
>
> Hello Kurt,
>
> This has been an interesting thread!
>
> If Word 5's operation is familiar to you, you might get some use, when
> familiarizing yourself with Word 2004, from some notes titled "Bend Word to
> Your Will", which are available as a free download from the Word MVPs'
> website (http://word.mvps.org/MacWordNew/Bend/BendWord.htm).
>
> They started off in 2001 when, screaming, I made the migration from Word
> 5.1a to 2001. Despite growing in size (the page extent is now about 170
> pages) and covering significant changes in Word 2004, the underlying
> starting point is still migration from 5.1. ("Bend Word to Your Will"
> doesn't cover Word X -- I skipped that version.)
>
> [Note: "Bend Word to Your Will" is designed to be used electronically and
> most subjects are self-contained dictionary-style entries. Be sure to read
> the front end so you can use the document to best advantage and select the
> right settings for reading it.]
>
> I have yet to meet one person who used Word 5.1 <nostalgic sigh> and
> denigrates it. But the world moves on (not necessarily upwards).
>
Hi Clive,

Look forward to reading what you compiled. It's not that I dislike the
fact that software developers want to add more features each year, it's
more that they often write them as if the world is supposed to revolve
around their program and they need to be everything for everybody.

And when a program gets to be an industry standard, we all become slaves
to the programmer's whims.

Kind of like having to buy a Ford Excursion SUV when all you need is a
reliable car.

--
To reply by email, remove the word "space"
.



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