What the hell do these icons mean?
OpenOffice provides a fantastic replacement for M$ word and excel. I prefer to post in this
format, even though OpenOffice can read and write M$ documents, to encourage people to
switch to non-proprietary document formats, that the whole world can share freely.
See also
Richard Stallman's
writeup on the evils of word attachments.
PDF is a widely supported format for "digital paper". I use the
xpdf viewer on linux hence the icon. Windows users may want to try
GSView.
This icon stands for a link to a web page. The content will be stuff that I have posted. I recommend
not using the Internet Explorer browser for pragmatic as well as political reasons. Why not give the much superior
mozilla firefox a whirl? It makes life on the web
seriously more fun. Plus it's where I nicked the icon from.
OGG vorbis is a patent-free, and higher quality way to encode
digital music than mp3. Most music players support it. I am really chuffed with xmms
on linux, and I often use the proprietary winamp when I am on a windows machine.
This icon means the file is a plain text file. Plain text is the most straightforward way to communicate
when using a computer. It's made up of characters that can be read and understood by humans. Plain text files include
most source code for programs, as well as HTML and
XML. The ASCII
form of plain text is used by all files on this site. In building the site I have used extensively the
Bluefish HTML editor, jEdit
and the vim text editor, all of which are
free software projects, and all of which I thououghly
recommend fulfilling for your plain text viewing and editing requirements.