Why pay for Microsoft Word when you can get a product that will
almost certainly meet all your needs for free?
The best free alternative I have come across is Kingsoft Writer.
I think is is better than its better known rivals Open Office and Libre
Office.
It can open and save files in Microsoft Word format (including
docx files). And it has the advantage of being able to create pdf files, and of
having a tabbed interface.
The program supports spell-checking, columns, tables, and
styles, as well as more advanced features such as footnotes and tables of
contents.
Kingsoft Office is made by a Chinese company. And as well as the
word processor it has a spread-sheet program and a presentations
programme.
Sunday, 20 July 2014
Thursday, 17 July 2014
Supporting the Charlie Reid Community
Over the past few months I’ve watched with the greatest of concern what has happened to the Charlie Reid Centre in Glasgow’s Elmbank Street.
It is a long complicated story but one that more people need to know about and respond to.
Background
The Charlie Reid Centre was run by Support in Mind Scotland . The Centre provided support for people with serious long term mental health issues. Members of the Centre could receive counselling and support, learn new skills, and take part in social events. A cafe, also open to the general public, was run by the members.
The main funding for the Centre was from Glasgow City Council via a block grant. But with the move to “personalisation” or “self directed support” the Council took the decision to withdraw the block grant.
Centre members could apply for an individual budget which they could then spend on membership of the CRC (or on other support).
Support in Mind Scotland said this in May:
“Support in Mind Scotland is deeply saddened to announce that our fight to keep our long standing Glasgow service open, the Charlie Reid Centre, has been lost and the centre will close on May 30th. The financial challenges in replacing a large core grant from Glasgow City Council with income generated from budgets allocated to our service users proved insurmountable and the organisation had no choice but to recognise the loss.”So the Charlie Reid Centre is now closed.
What the CRC had going for it was that
Tuesday, 15 July 2014
Not being friends does not have to mean that you are enemies
I came across an interesting blog post today from Brian Donnelly.
Here is a very short extract:
"Learning that it is okay not to like someone, that it’s okay not to agree with them is important - it’s what you do that matters. Not being friends does not have to mean that you are enemies. That is a message I have seen young people benefit from exploring on many occasions. If you think about it there must be a few people in your life you don’t like, you don’t and never will agree with – you don’t hound and abuse them at every opportunity – you may have learned the hard way that a family Christmas dinner is not the time to get these feelings off your chest. It might be a colleague or your boss – most people learn to use their developed social skills that enables them to work effectively or not fall out with the whole family."
It's well worthwhile reading the whole blog post. It is at
http://briandrespectme.blogspot.co.uk/2014/06/do-we-really-all-have-to-be-friends.html
http://briandrespectme.blogspot.co.uk/2014/06/do-we-really-all-have-to-be-friends.html
Friday, 11 July 2014
Wednesday, 9 July 2014
Sunday, 6 July 2014
Some old photographs
Saturday, 5 July 2014
Learning from Charles Dickens
I'm reading "Hard Times" at present.
I have to confess I haven't read much Dickens. At school we had to read Dickens as a "home reader", and I found it a struggle then.
As I read "Hard Times" I'm surprised at how this novel seems to be directed at changing people's thinking rather than just being an entertaining story.
I hadn't realised just how "radical" Dicken's writing was. For example this quote
I have to confess I haven't read much Dickens. At school we had to read Dickens as a "home reader", and I found it a struggle then.
As I read "Hard Times" I'm surprised at how this novel seems to be directed at changing people's thinking rather than just being an entertaining story.
I hadn't realised just how "radical" Dicken's writing was. For example this quote
"in to the relations between employers and employed ... there must enter something of feeling and sentiment; something of mutual explanation, forbearance, and consideration; something ... not exactly stateable in figures; otherwise these relations are wrong and rotten at the core and will never bear sound fruit."
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