Dec 31
- You cannot bring about prosperity by discouraging thrift.
- You cannot strengthen the weak by weakening the strong.
- You cannot help little men by tearing down big men.
- You cannot lift the wage earner by pulling down the wage payer.
- You cannot help the poor by destroying the rich.
- You cannot establish sound security on borrowed money.
- You cannot further the brotherhood of man by inciting class hatred.
- You cannot keep out of trouble by spending more than you earn.
- You cannot build character and courage by destroying men’s initiative and independence.
- And you cannot help men permanently by doing for them what they can and should do for themselves.
William J. H. Boetcker
(Not by Abraham Lincoln as most think)
Dec 23
There is a recent discussion about why iWork Pages were not getting through Windows servers for clients with their proposals and HR for job applicants. So why is this?
Well, seems like there are a number of reason:
- You’re sending the files as a Pages document to someone that has MS Word and they can’t read Pages documents.
- You’re sending the files through Apple’s Mail program and not selected the Edit > Attachments > Always send Windows friendly attachments.
- Their using Windows servers “virus” software is turned up WAY to high to allow any of them to get through.
Solutions?
- File > Export or Print > Print to PDF any Pages document to send it to the intend client.
- Check the Always send Windows friendly attachments.
- Tell the client to to talk with their IT department or System Administrator to ratchet down or lighten up the virus protection software to allow “false positives” to get through.
- Export your file into a Word document and open and save that document in Word format.
Why this last step? Because of this comment from another person that has gone through the headache of this issue
I believe Alex might have solved the issue with the metadata comment. Firewalls that are screwed down too tight see the MAC PDF as a virus and stop the file at the wall with no bounce back. Chatted with an IT friend of mine at a large corporation and they have recently discovered the same issue and narrowed it down to the metadata issue. No simple resolution for them either other than adjust the firewall “rules” or advise staff to work with Word or know that recipient can receive a iWork ’09 PDF.
PS On Wednesday night I tried the Pages PDF conversion on my wife’s MACBook Pro running Snow Leopard with Pages 09 and same thing – no show at destination of municipal government office so I know problem wasn’t specific to my unit.
Hope this helps someone if you’re using iWork Pages
Dec 23
Here’s a good list of being innovative from a list of books by BusinessWeek.
Dec 22
Here’s a good link about why you need to consider web browsers and your web site design and the amount of money going through your business.
Dec 20
Not hearing is not as good as hearing, hearing is not as good as seeing, seeing is not as good as mentally knowing, mentally knowing is not as good as acting; true learning continues up to the point that action comes forth [or, only when a thing produces action can it be said to have been truly learned] - Chinese wisdom
Dec 18
If you highlight a section of text and then using the OPT key click and drag and drop the selected section of text it “copies” the text to be placed where you want it.
Dec 14
Here’s the latest of Apple Technical Notes for iWork ’09 for those that are interested to some of the updates.
Dec 13
As one who is not a graphic artist I see my Mac with Snow Leopard installed has a number of fonts installed, but how the heck does one know which ones are used where in which case?
As a business owner it would be nice if some graphic artist took a list of the fonts that come with a Mac give a quick outline of where each of them would be used, such as: writing, books, web, art, graphic art, etc.
Anyone out there that has done this for us average folks?