Frame Border

L.O. Ver. 3.4.2 .on Windows Vista 64 bit.

I recently noticed if I placed border on writer (.odt) file, it doesn't show the border no matter how thick I adjust.

Open Office 3.4.0. displays and prints with no problem.

Is there anybody experiencing same problem?

Hi an,

A.N. wrote (20-08-11 17:15)

L.O. Ver. 3.4.2 .on Windows Vista 64 bit.

I recently noticed if I placed border on writer (.odt) file, it doesn't
show the border no matter how thick I adjust.

How where do you apply a boarder?

Open Office 3.4.0. displays and prints with no problem.

Is there anybody experiencing same problem?

I would have problems downloading OpenOffice.org 3.4 - it does not (yet) exist ...

Regards

Cor Nouws wrote:

Hi an,

A.N. wrote (20-08-11 17:15)

L.O. Ver. 3.4.2 .on Windows Vista 64 bit.

I recently noticed if I placed border on writer (.odt) file, it doesn't
show the border no matter how thick I adjust.

How where do you apply a boarder?

Open Office 3.4.0. displays and prints with no problem.

Is there anybody experiencing same problem?

I would have problems downloading OpenOffice.org 3.4 - it does not (yet) exist ...

Regards

I attached the actual file with the frame.

See if it shows if you open with LibreOffice.

OpenOffice I use is actually 3.4.0, developer's version.

Hi,

A.N. wrote (03-09-11 17:32)

I attached the actual file with the frame.

Can you please send it off list?

See if it shows if you open with LibreOffice.

OpenOffice I use is actually 3.4.0, developer's version.

OK, that was M105 IIRC. Have that too to test.

Thanks,

Hi :slight_smile:
The Nabble forum can be a good place to put attachments. Nabble is just a
different way of viewing the email threads. It's fairly easy to use and
registration is fairly easy too. I'm getting quite into it now :slight_smile:
Regards from
Tom :slight_smile:

one more set of username-password to remember!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Hi :slight_smile:
Ahh, i have 3 usernames with 1 being my top preference and the other 2 only if
i'm not allowed to use my favourite one. Then i generate passwords from a
fairly simple algorithm applied to the website's name. Where i need greater
security i just extend that algorithm.

So, even without writing down a list of passwords i can usually work out what my
password probably was - which is useful since i am not always at the same
location. Writing the passwords and usernames in a text-file can be useful but
then it's tricky trying to give it a good name and hiding it's location so that
only you can access it easily.

Regards from
Tom :slight_smile:

could you plz share the algorithm,if possible?

Hi :slight_smile:
Lol. NO. :wink: lol. That would give you all my passwords for everything!

Ok, the simple one is something like
1. take the website name and reverse it
2. add 1 to each character so that a becomes b, b becomes c etc
3. replace certain letters with special characters where possible, eg L might
always be ; (the key next to it or m becomes < or something
Some sites don't allow special characters so i tend to have a "simpler" version
where letters become numbers for places such as ZdNet.

That sort of thing. So just decide on the rules you are going to use and keep
that a secret. Then you can generate your password for each site quite easily.
The trick is to avoid making your rules tooo complicated! You have to be able
to apply it easily without using pen&paper or leaving a trace of how you
calculated the password. So it has to be easy to remember but difficult for
other people to guess at :slight_smile:

Regards from
Tom :slight_smile:

ok thank you

For real password security algorithms see:
https://www.grc.com/otg/goals.htm
The the discussion about the details of this system can be found here:
http://media.grc.com/sn/sn-315-lq.mp3
and
http://media.grc.com/sn/sn-316-lq.mp3

HTH
Dave

Hi :slight_smile:
Wow, so i stumbled on a weak form of something that could be used to generate
very strong passwords. I don't take it quite so far for forums and such-like.
Regards from
Tom :slight_smile: