Well said!
Being installed in India, I have seen first hand how un-wired people are
around here. So a plain desktop is still a must for the next little while.
Looking at the future, I am remembering the Web4All event at the WWW
conference. There was a constant focus on enabling the Web for mobile
Hello Christoph,
sorry, but an HTML5 LibreOffice could be also installed locally in a client,
as I said before. And the LibreOffice Community will only have to maintain
one HTLM5 version for any platform. Now there are 3 versions, Linux, Mac, &
Windows.
So, as conclusion, a HTML5 LibreOffice has
On 01/19/2011 12:15 PM, Christophe Strobbe wrote:
At 11:48 19/01/2011, Jaime R. Garza wrote:
Hello,
I believe the best feature for the enterprise will be to port
LibreOffice to
HTML5, this could be also installed locally in the clients, needing
just a
browser to run.
If LibreOffice doesn'
At 11:48 19/01/2011, Jaime R. Garza wrote:
Hello,
I believe the best feature for the enterprise will be to port LibreOffice to
HTML5, this could be also installed locally in the clients, needing just a
browser to run.
If LibreOffice doesn't go in direction WebBased, it will be soon irrelevant
Hello,
I believe the best feature for the enterprise will be to port LibreOffice to
HTML5, this could be also installed locally in the clients, needing just a
browser to run.
If LibreOffice doesn't go in direction WebBased, it will be soon irrelevant
in the enterprise (as soon as Google Docs, MS
Hi
I have collected some features enteprises will love to have implemented
in LibreOffice and listed them in
http://wiki.documentfoundation.org/Development/Crazy_Ideas#Features_Enterprises_Will_Love_To_Have_Implemented
Some are quite easy to implement, other may require a longer time for
deve