Openoffice linux
Product: AMD Athlon(tm) 64 X2 Dual Core Processor 4000+ Under Kubuntu 9.04 on my modest system, the lshw command reports the following: **sigh** I really oughtn’t to even have to write this in the comments on any article. If you think an issue is important yet others don’t, you have the choice to either let the issue pass, whine about how others don’t think the same way you do, or take action and get the issue more in the open.
![openoffice linux openoffice linux](https://images.gutefrage.net/media/fragen/bilder/wie-lade-ich-open-office-auf-linux-runter/0_original.jpg)
I find that we just have to deal with it. It’s really all a matter of perspective, and sometimes there are issues that may be important to you but aren’t quite as important to others… happens all the time in life. I don’t know about you, but the release of OOo 3.1 isn’t something I’d bother about whether on the fist page or the second page. It sometimes seems to me that some people thrive off of criticism and spreading ill-will. …but when “worthy” items appear on, people come out of the woodwork just to criticize OSNews, its editors, Thom (there are more editors aside from Thom, and often he gets the brunt of “mistakes” that other editors have made, so I suggest at least checking the name of the author of the article in question before going on a rant towards a specific editor if a rant is what you’re after), the president or prime minister or whatever of their respective countries, the Easter Bunny, and their fathers. I’ve noticed that whenever “worthy” (what some people may call “worthy”) items appear on the front page, hardly anyone gives a hoot. OpenOffice now correctly displayed itself in the GTK+ theme that I had selected with gtk-chtheme. So I manually installed that as well, and then it was all sweet. It also contains a QuickStarter for the “notification area”. This package contains the Gtk plugin for drawing OOo’s widgets with Gtk+ and a Gtk/GNOMEish File Picker when running under GNOME. Package Name: -gtk - GTK+ integrationĭetails: is a full-featured office productivity suite that provides a near drop-in replacement for Microsoft(R) Office. I saw a package that had this description: So I started up KPackageKit, and searched for OpenOffice. Worked like a charm for firefox and other GTK applications. I had used gtk-chtheme to select the Qt4 theme for GTK applications, rather than the default Raleigh.
![openoffice linux openoffice linux](https://dwaves.de/wp-content/uploads/2018/04/Screenshot-OpenOffice-LibreOffice-6.0.2.1.png)
Now I had previously solved the problem of appearance of GTK applications in KDE4 (Kubuntu) by installing gtk-chtheme. When I first started OpenOffice under Kubuntu, I got the horrible Raleigh appearance theme. After that, the “apt-get upgrade” step worked.
#OPENOFFICE LINUX INSTALL#
So I did “apt-get install -java-common” and that worked. When done from the command line, that step reported that -java-common was not installed. Everything worked as expected except the last step “apt-get upgrade”.
![openoffice linux openoffice linux](https://metztli.blog/media/blogs/nochtli/quick-uploads/p126/apacheoo-4.1.3-2016-10-05_19-30-01.jpg)
I had to use apt-get from the command line. I’m not exactly sure what is going on here, but I did get OpenOffice installed in Kubuntu after a couple of tries. Install OpenOffice 3.1 in Ubuntu (Jaunty, Intrepid and Hardy) Well, at least for Ubuntu/Kubuntu/Xubuntu anyway, people make repositories, outside of the distribution’s main repositories, for new releases of software.