On Sat, Oct 9, 2010 at 5:23 PM, Scott Furry <[email protected]> wrote: > How do you expect LibreOffice to be updated?
For windows, it should check whether there is an update both when the program starts up and at regular intervals, with an option to force a check. By default it should probably download the update to a temporary directory in the background, then when the download is complete notify the user it is ready to install. If the user is not running one of the programs, it should give the user the option to install the update, be notified in a certain period of time, or install the update manually later. If the user is running one of the programs, it should offer to install then, wait until the user closes the program, or install manually later. If it installs then, it should save their entire session and their open documents, close the program, install the update, delete the temporary files, start up the programs again, and restore the session. If the user chooses to install when they close the program, it should wait until all the programs have closed, then begin the installation. For Linux, I would just use the built-in package manager. I use openSUSE, which provides optional up-to-date versions of all OOo programs (and LO eventually I assume). > How do you Install/Update LibreOffice? For windows, I go to the go-oo website and download the latest version, then I install it, then I delete the temporary files. For Linux, I just use the package manager. > What do you expect when Installing/Updating LibreOffice? For windows, I expect that it would simply ask my permission to do the update, then the rest would be automatic. It would not interfere with my work more than asking, it would not leave anything unnecessary behind. On Linux, I expect it to work the same as the rest of the software I use. No more, no less. I don't want it doing it's own thing, the package management solutions I have available to me fit my needs perfectly. The last thing I want is a program trying to bypass this by doing its own, independent updates. I prefer having everything centralized in one interface, and this is much safer and more reliable. > Other programs have separate updating programs (iTunes being an example), if > it was technically feasible, would having a separate install program for > LibreOffice (with updating features) be useful to you? For windows, yes. Especially if it was able to handle the downloads as well, so you just download a small installer and it automatically retrieves what it needs from a server (or a list of mirrors). This is how Adobe does things with both flash and acrobat on windows. It is a bit annoying there because it requires installing stuff on your web browser, but if it was a stand-alone program it would be perfect for something like LO. > Would having a download and update site, as well as a Unix|Linux package > repository site, be of value to you? A windows download and update site would be useful to me. A linux one would not, since as I said openSUSE does a great job of keeping up-to-date versions of packages available. It may be more useful to users of other distributions. -Todd -- To unsubscribe, e-mail to [email protected] All messages you send to this list will be publicly archived and cannot be deleted. List archives are available at http://www.documentfoundation.org/lists/discuss/
