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October 20, 2005

OpenOffice.org 2.0 Ships


Nate Mook at BetaNews:

After over two years in development, the final version of OpenOffice.org 2.0 has been made available for download. The productivity suite offers a word processor, spreadsheet, presentation builder and a database — all for free and available in 36 languages for Windows and Unix based platforms.

Perhaps the most notable addition in OpenOffice.org 2.0 is support for the OASIS OpenDocument format, which could prove to be the first true rival to Microsoft’s proprietary Office formats. OpenDocument is a completely open standard that has been chosen for use by several countries and the Commonwealth of Massachusetts.

More feature details by following the link. Right now www.openoffice.org seems to be hammered by downloaders, but BetaNews is providing their own download mirror for the versions for Windows, Linux, FreeBSD, and MacOS.


Posted at 11:39 am. Filed under Companies, Office software, OpenOffice, Software

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October 19, 2005

2 Free Visual Basic .NET eBooks from Microsoft


SlickDeals.net has the links:

Free Book - Introducing Visual Basic 2005 for Developers
Free Book - Upgrading Microsoft Visual Basic 6.0 to Microsoft Visual Basic .NET


Posted at 3:40 pm. Filed under Companies, Microsoft, Programming, Visual Basic

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E Ink shows color, paper-like display


Martyn Williams at InfoWorld:

E Ink, a U.S.-based developer of electronic-paper type flat panel displays, has developed a color version of its screen technology and is showing it at the FPD International exhibition that opened Wednesday in Yokohama, Japan.

It’s based on similar technology to the company’s monochrome displays that are already in production and can be found in a handful of products like Sony’s Librie electronic book reader.

The main difference is the addition of a color filter. The prototype on display in Yokohama is a 6-inch display with 400 by 300 pixel resolution. That works out to 83 pixels per inch which is half that of the commercial screen used in the Sony e-book reader.

E Ink anticipates the display will be ready for commercialization at the end of 2006, said Bischoff. Potential applications include ATM screens, digital camera viewfinders, and mobile phones, he said.

The E Ink press release has more and some photos. Aside from the lightweight form factor,

E Ink’s electronic ink technology creates an image that looks like a printed page from all angles and maintains the same contrast ratio under all lighting conditions, including direct sunlight. Aimed at handheld devices, the display uses up to 100 times less energy than a standard liquid crystal display (LCD), so product designers can shed weight and greatly extend battery life.

Besides the color display, they are also showing a “tablet sized” greyscale display:

E Ink Corporation in USA, the leading supplier of electronic paper display technology, today announced that LG.Philips LCD, one of the world’s leading innovators of thin-film transistor liquid crystal (TFT-LCD) technology, and E Ink have built a 10.1″ flexible electronic paper display.

Less than 300 microns thick, the paper-white display is as thin and flexible as construction paper. With a 10.1″ diagonal, the prototype achieves SVGA (600×800) resolution at 100 pixels per inch and has a 10:1 contrast ratio with 4 levels of grayscale.

E InkĀ® Imaging Film is a novel display material that looks like printed ink on paper and has been designed for use in paper-like electronic displays. Like paper, the material can be flexed and rolled. As an additional benefit, the E Ink Imaging Film uses 100 times less energy than a liquid crystal display because it can hold an image without power and without a backlight.

No word on any applications or dates for this one.


Posted at 1:32 pm. Filed under Companies, Displays, E Ink, Electronic Paper, Notebook, Tablet PC

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