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My thoughts on biology, teaching, life, and exploring the living world via the digital one. Only my opinions are represented by these postings, they do not represent the viewpoints of any funding agency or Geospiza, Inc.

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Sandra Porter I am a microbiologist and molecular biologist turned tenured biotech faculty turned bioinformatics scientist turned entrepreneur. My passion is developing instructional materials for 21st century biology (Geospiza Education).

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    « That which cannot be mentioned by name | Main | Everything old is new again »

    Opening up new VISTAs

    Category: Humorteaching
    Posted on: February 13, 2007 8:50 PM, by Sandra Porter

    I received a mysterious file last week, via e-mail from one of my students. According the e-mail, the file contained the answers to an assignment.

    I downloaded the file and double-clicked it. Nada.

    I did notice that the file had an unusual extension. Most Word documents have ".doc" at the end. This one had ".docx"

    I thought that must be a mistake, so I tried other options for opening it with Microsoft WORD, even editing the extension to change it to ".doc"

    No. That didn't work.

    Then, I tried TextEdit, all I saw were strange characters.

    I did a few other things, but all I could see was gibberish.

    I complained about this, naturally, to my husband. Not only was he not sympathetic, he said that, working in bioinformatics, I should know how to look inside any file.

    Fine! Challenge accepted.

    I opened the terminal window, typed the path to the file and typed "cat"

    Still more gibberish, but I recognized one piece. The letters "xml"

    We both thought that was strange. "Is your student using OpenOffice?" he said.

    Nope. It was a new computer, with VISTA.

    Needless to say, that experience made me enjoy this little film clip on the wonders of using voice recognition software to write a Perl script. It made me laugh. Kind of hysterically. Even if you haven't ever written or contemplated the inner workings of a computer program, you'll find this funny, at least for while.

    Beware, there's some bad language towards the end.


    Comments

    #1

    You need a docx converter. On the Mac, use this:

    http://www.versiontracker.com/dyn/moreinfo/macosx/31504

    I don't know of one under Windows.

    Posted by: John Wilkins | February 13, 2007 9:54 PM

    #2

    Vista, RWARG!
    If only Vista had the chutzpah to take on an iconic logo form, Tux could kick its ass all over the cyperspace.

    Posted by: Toaster Sunshine | February 13, 2007 10:14 PM

    #3

    Once I learned what the problem was, I taught him how to save the file in a Word 97-2003 format. I'm sure he has (or will have) other instructors who either use Macs (like me) or haven't yet upgraded to VISTA.

    Posted by: Sandra Porter | February 13, 2007 10:15 PM

    #4

    Toaster S.,

    Tux is sooo cute.

    Posted by: Sandra Porter | February 13, 2007 10:18 PM

    #5

    Alternatively, give 'em a copy of OpenOffice and/or PDFWriter and tell them to save the files as nice, standard PDF...

    Posted by: SMC | February 13, 2007 10:31 PM

    #6

    You can point him to http://sourceforge.net/projects/odf-converter/ which will allow him to save in the OpenDocument format directly from Office(or batch convert existing docx files). Anything to keep the document out of the ghastly pseudostandard that is "OpenXML".

    Posted by: JTP | February 13, 2007 10:56 PM

    #7

    Those familiar with the classic landscaping of Capability Brown will know the technical meaning of the word "vista": it's a carefully controlled view, limited to a single direction by the designer of your environment.

    Posted by: derek | February 14, 2007 5:53 AM

    #8

    It's actually nothing to do with Windows Vista. The problem is he's using MS Office 2007. You'd have the same issue if he bought a new laptop with Windows XP and Office 2007.

    MS has downloadable updates for earlier versions of Office that allow you to save/read the new open formats, and I see somebody's already given you info on a tool you can use on the Mac. You probably will have to find a way to read the open formats eventually.

    Posted by: Cathy | February 14, 2007 11:52 AM

    #9

    Hmm yes, hit the same problem - my girlfriend sent me a essay to proof - I was first tipped off that something was wrong when Gmail refused to recogise the document I know had come from Word..

    Slightly frustrating because as a practicing bioinformatician as well I am either sat in front of an OS X laptop or Linux desktop.

    I was trying to extract the document text with 'strings' not 'cat' which normally works on Word documents but apparently not this docx format. I can see this is only the beginning of many many unreadable documents ending up in my inbox..

    Posted by: Daniel Swan | March 6, 2007 4:44 AM

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