On 2011-06-18 5:39 AM, Simos Xenitellis wrote:
And there is no better way to do this than have the 'git repositories'
of the LibreOffice source code.
You were correct earlier - he is merely pointing out that nowhere in the
license agreement (I haven't read it so am not making the same claim)
With the help of the *Brazilian team*, an effort to organize an
international version of LibreOffice Magazine has been created.
If you are interested in participating, on a regular basis, to the
production of the LibreOffice Magazine International (the
international EN version) please feel
Dennis, Tanstaafl,
I take your point. Users that have 3.3.2 installed can only get the code
for 3.3.3 from the website. As discussed above, I think this meets the
spirit of the license but not the specific letter. Simon's idea about
downloading the repo at the 3.3.2 marker is a great one, but
On Mon, Jun 20, 2011 at 11:22 PM, John LeMoyne Castle
lemoyne.cas...@gmail.com wrote:
Dennis, Tanstaafl,
I take your point. Users that have 3.3.2 installed can only get the code
for 3.3.3 from the website. As discussed above, I think this meets the
spirit of the license but not the specific
1. We want to add a paragraph somewhere in the About dialog box which
says that if we are interested in the source code, we should read a
specific Wiki page,
for example
http://wiki.documentfoundation.org/Development/AvailabilityOfSourceCode
I see a problem here. Usually GNU/Linux