James Stroud wrote:
> On Dec 20, 2010, at 1:53 PM, Jacob Keller wrote:
>> what is the .odp file extension?
>
> http://tinyurl.com/mjokqs
>
> A .odp file is an "open document presentation". It is the open version
> of a power point presentation.
>
> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OpenDocument
>
> An .odp file is an ISO standard--like the country code you dial when
> you call your favorite Aunt.
>
> You can open a .odp file with the free office suit called OpenOffice.
> Just download it from http://www.openoffice.org/ and start
> double-clicking to open the file just like you would if you were using
> some other presentation software.
>
> Also, Jlliu Liu set a good example by sending the document in an open
> format so anyone can open it (even though some may not have heard of
> an odp file before). *By using an open format, Jlliu Liu has catered
> to convenience rather than catering to ignorance,* and has increased
> the range of people who can provide him with help.
>
> James
But there was a double extension in the name of the file provided
initially (.png.odp if I remember well).
Programs that check viruses in incoming emails remove all files that
carry double extensions because this is a way to "hide" the real nature
of the file. They also remove .exe files and others (like having too
many spaces in a file name).
Fred.
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