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View Full Version : Other Non-Fiction Calender 2007 for Sony Reader


MMascaro
11-12-2006, 10:06 PM
Here is a 2007 calender I made for the Sony Reader. It's a PDF with the first page is a whole year calender. The next six are two months each. I have included the Excel creation file. I run it thru open office to convert it to a PDF. You can edit the Excel to add Appt or such and recompile it to PDF to have a simple scheduler. I am working on a 1/2 month per page version for a more detailed appt calender.

NatCh
11-12-2006, 10:44 PM
Nice, MMascaro, thanks for sharing your work!

MMascaro
06-11-2007, 08:53 PM
Could whom ever is running the book list add the 2007 calender to the list.

JSWolf
06-11-2007, 10:18 PM
Could whom ever is running the book list add the 2007 calender to the list.
You need to post in the proper forum (Reader Book Uploads) for that. And you need to have your title in the correct format so it can be found easily.

Jon

HarryT
06-12-2007, 01:58 AM
As Jon says, if you upload to "Book Uploads" it will appear in the index automatically. The index works from thread titles - I would suggest calling it something like "Calendar 2007" so it indexes correctly.

JSWolf
06-12-2007, 11:01 AM
As Jon says, if you upload to "Book Uploads" it will appear in the index automatically. The index works from thread titles - I would suggest calling it something like "Calendar 2007" so it indexes correctly.
Harry, maybe you could move this thread and make sure the title was correct?

HarryT
06-12-2007, 11:26 AM
Oh I see - hadn't realised that the file was actually attached :grin:. Yes, of course I'll move it. Good idea!

HarryT
06-12-2007, 11:29 AM
Done! And thanks too to the original poster for using the phrase "whom ever" so correctly. I sometimes despair that knowledge of the difference between "who" (subject) and "whom" (object) is vanishing from the English language.

Yes I know I'm deeply sad for saying that :book2:

Dr. Drib
06-12-2007, 06:30 PM
Also, "whom" is often used as an interrogative.

Simply answer the question and one finds that "whom" is indeed the object of a sentence.

"I am talking to you [Sam, Sandy].


I =subject
you [sam, Sandy] = object


:smash:

Don