I installed oooqs-1.0-0.rc3.2mdk.i586.rpm on my Mandrake 9.1 system and
it appears to work fine. I haven't done any timings to see if it sped
anything up a lot.
Joe
G. Roderick Singleton wrote:
On Sun, 2005-04-24 at 09:20 -0400, David Teague wrote:
Steve wrote:
Can't find the Linux quickstart (m95). Any clues as to where
I might find it?
G. Roderick Singleton wrote:
As it is for KDE, I do not know. Try google. I think its called
OpenOffice Quick start (ooqs)
Now I'm curious.
I know that under Linux, some dynamic libraries are
loaded at boot-up and others are loaded at program
startup, so it seems reasonable that a Quick Start that
speeds up OO.o start-up is certainly feasible for Linux.
I did a Google search on the string Roderick suggests:
OpenOffice Quick start ooqs
I found many references to Linux OO.o quick start
application for both Gnome and KDE. It is not clear that
OO.org wrote such a program, but several people seem
to have written one.
They are all externally developed. To my knowledge the only one that
works and is distributed is the one for KDE.
One promising link appears to be
GNOME Notifier http://www.tuxpan.com/fcatrin/indexen.php... about an
application to preload OpenOffice called OpenOffice QuickStart. ... have in
gnome notifier so I just cut it a bit to give life to gnome-ooqs . ...
www.tuxpan.com/fcatrin/indexen.php - 12k - Cached - Similar pages
If you have it working, I'd be interested.
The part of this page interesting to me is:
GNOME OpenOffice QuickStart
While looking for some material about OpenOffice to give on the TV Show , I
remembered about an application to preload OpenOffice called OpenOffice
QuickStart. I found a very old version for GNOME that doesn't work with the
current API. The core code is very basic and the user interface code is very
similar of what I have in gnome notifier so I just cut it a bit to give life
to gnome-ooqs . [http://cvs.gnome.org/viewcvs/gnome-ooqs/] It is still not
working 100% perfect, but soon it will do
I wish this one worked and was active.
--
"The end of science is not to prove a theory, but to improve mankind."--Manly
Hall (1901-1990) Canadian philosopher
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