On Mon, 05 Jan 2009 12:26:49 -0600, Douglas St.Clair <[email protected]> wrote:


If the Open Office team wanted to address security (backup, authentication, restoration, etc) as well as disk space issues then I would suggest to approaches. First consider which of those storage issues they want to address and then produce specifications, documentation and APIs that would allow people working on those solutions a stable route to merging the features of their software with Open Office. For example a merger with subversion or CSV version control software would go a long way toward making this a team product rather than a single user product. Asking the Open Office team to replicate version control is probably silly and not necessary when good stuff already exists it only needs to be integrated. The same for encryption and backup.

There are extensions for SVN multiple backups and remote achieve on extensions. Natively you can put a path for your backup documentos. Currently is stored on your profile folder but you can modify it for remote storage.

When it comes to storage issues questions like should files be encrypted, should each version be saved as a complete file or as the differences between it and the previous one make a major difference in the amount of disk space as well as the amount of network traffic the a user will take. I think if the Open Office team thought about these

I dont think encrypted backups is something that any software provide out of the box. But there is a way to have encripted backups on the OS side like truecrypt or other utilities. An extension could connect to OOo to make it truecrypt aware.

questions and produced a document that gave guidelines as to the direction they feel they want to go with each option then groups with tools that fill the bill may see working with Open Office to their advantage and visa versa. Right now without such guidance I don't expect that major open software development groups would the opportunities for synergy. It would take some work and coordination and I don't know if there is or ever will be the will or funding to support it.

On Jan 4, 2009, at 1:56 PM, Riley wrote:

I would like to propose a future Project for Open Office, unless somebody knows a program already does this. I've had many hard drives crash in the past so I've developed this habit of placing copies of files on additional partitions. A great habit to have, so if the system partition goes down I still have my files. But now my whole hard drive has become filled with copies!

I know Norton used to have a program for cleaning up the hdd but, I believe Open Office people could write one better. I'd like to see where the copies were placed in subdirectories named after their original location. And after copying all the copies to one partition that way (or a new hard drive or backup external drive), then show comparisons of the files for exact copies and dates or not, with a point & click demolition of the ones not to save... without deleting the subs under it, which I suppose would be a recopying first to the directory of the one being deleted, then deletion.

I just think Open Office could do a much better job of cleaning up hard drives than what is on the market. I trust Open Office people more than anybody. Besides, if you make a product like that I really need I'd find some Donation money here somewhere, I'm sure of it. Seems like a good project, a couple days work for a few hundred thousand dollars donation... from the Group! Whew.

Thanks. Woody

http://tinyurl.com/StardustEnergy (my recent contribution to the Cause)






--
Alexandro Colorado
CoLeader of OpenOffice.org ES
http://es.openoffice.org

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