RacerX
Old Rhapsody User
U.S. District Judge Colleen Kollar-Kotelly stated in a discussion about file formats warned the parties that she wanted all documentation " In Word. We don't want Acrobat. That doesn't work."
Okay, why doesn't it work? PDF doesn't require you to buy anything in order to read it or in many cases to make it. It can be read on more platforms than almost any other file type (a majority of the files I have on my Rhapsody ThinkPad are PDFs, and Adobe didn't even make a version of Acrobat for Rhapsody). Word cost a lot and the documents can only be read on a handful of platforms (Windows and Macs mainly, and some others using StarOffice or AbiWord if it is saved as a Word 97 doc).
They finally decided on WordPerfect, but then again who has WordPerfect? Is there a free WordPerfect reader out there? What about platforms that don't have a WordPerfect solution available to them?
I think this shows that Kollar-Kotelly is very bias, not that asking the parties to reach a settlement (after a conviction had been upheld by a higher court and her duties only required her to decide on a punishment) wasn't a bias act to begin with.
Okay, why doesn't it work? PDF doesn't require you to buy anything in order to read it or in many cases to make it. It can be read on more platforms than almost any other file type (a majority of the files I have on my Rhapsody ThinkPad are PDFs, and Adobe didn't even make a version of Acrobat for Rhapsody). Word cost a lot and the documents can only be read on a handful of platforms (Windows and Macs mainly, and some others using StarOffice or AbiWord if it is saved as a Word 97 doc).
They finally decided on WordPerfect, but then again who has WordPerfect? Is there a free WordPerfect reader out there? What about platforms that don't have a WordPerfect solution available to them?
I think this shows that Kollar-Kotelly is very bias, not that asking the parties to reach a settlement (after a conviction had been upheld by a higher court and her duties only required her to decide on a punishment) wasn't a bias act to begin with.