On Fri, May 22, 2020 at 9:56 PM Andras Timar <[email protected]> wrote:
> Hi, > > On Fri, May 22, 2020 at 10:29 PM Simon Phipps <[email protected]> wrote: > >> Hi! >> >> On Fri, May 22, 2020 at 9:06 PM Andras Timar <[email protected]> wrote: >> >>> I disagree. It's a myth. Yes, it can be hard, when firewalls, load >>> balancers, 50000 users etc. are involved. It's the case when one needs >>> professional support. But for the hobbyist, how hard is it to install CODE >>> with a few clicks in Univention, or to follow my "5 minute" guides? >>> >> >> I'm sure you have done a great job for suitably-skilled people wanting a >> quick evaluation, but the truth is that approach only takes you to the >> point where the questions start. I have tried to get a LiOn system running >> at home and have not succeeded in getting anything I can leave running for >> my family, unlike the Asterisk-based phone system we are using (on a Pi) or >> the NextCloud appliance we have installed (Pi-based). >> >> > If there were binaries for Pi, probably installation would be easy. In > fact, I think that Pi support would be a nice community project and would > not hurt any commercial interest. > There is already an armht/arm64 LibreOffice, both the one the Raspbian folks distribute and a more up-to-date version in Debian (thanks Rene!). There is also a work-in-progress Debian package, https://salsa.debian.org/libreoffice-team/libreoffice/libreoffice-online (again thanks to Rene). But I'm told it's just too hard to unpick all the Javascript packages to make it Debian-installable. So, if you can help get that sorted maybe we can have some easy LiOn Pi after all! The ideal would be something that runs from the GUI as a NextCloud plug-in that, given the location and credentials of a freshly installed Pi, would squirt LiOn into it and configure both ends to use it. Cheers! Simon -- *Simon Phipps* *Office:* +1 (415) 683-7660 *or* +44 (238) 098 7027 *Signal/Mobile*: +44 774 776 2816
