On Wed, Jan 5, 2011 at 11:32 AM, drew <d...@baseanswers.com> wrote:
> On Wed, 2011-01-05 at 17:11 +0100, Jonathan Aquilina wrote:
>> If we are looking to promote this to corporations it will need to have
>> one, and we could give them the option to install one. A home user might
>> opt out of installing it if they don't want an email client
>
> Right - well, it depends to a degree on how you define "it" being part
> of the suite - in the case of LibreOfficeBox, which is the distribution
> DVD created by the OOoDev team, most of whom are also part of the
> LibreOffice team the disc includes Thunderbird - so at one level it is
> at least "bundled" together . (They also include SeaMonkey in that
> package.)
>
> Now there is no English version of that DVD, which I propose is where
> members of the English speaking community could get involved - it could
> be recreated in English.
>
> For that matter, using the LibreOfficeDVD project as a reference, other
> groups could form to create alternate "bundles". Following the reference
> these groups need not be formal projects in TDF but could form as
> auxiliary projects.
>
> Anyway - it just seems to me that when this conversation comes up, as it
> does from time to time, that this approach never is brought up.
>
> Thanks
>
> Drew

Rather than having other groups providing bundles, what about an
alliance of a few groups that provide a single, comprehensive
installer?  For instance perhaps LibreOffice, Mozzila, Gimp, and
Inkscape come together and release one installer with all those apps
bundled in.  It would be any single group or member responsible,
instead an agreement between the groups to release it.  Then on the
respective websites they could release their own app, as well as the
bundle for those who want it.

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