Difference between revisions of "Documentation/Administration Guide/How to deploy OpenOffice.org though a network"

From Apache OpenOffice Wiki
Jump to: navigation, search
Line 9: Line 9:
 
A new way to install {{OOo}} was introduced with {{OOo}} {{OOo2.x}}. Previous releases were using an installer which worked on all platforms in the same way. There was not much difference between an {{OOo}} installation on Windows and on Solaris. This prevented network administrators from using standard network software deployment tools.
 
A new way to install {{OOo}} was introduced with {{OOo}} {{OOo2.x}}. Previous releases were using an installer which worked on all platforms in the same way. There was not much difference between an {{OOo}} installation on Windows and on Solaris. This prevented network administrators from using standard network software deployment tools.
  
The OpenOffice.org installer can use the most popular installation packages for each platform (Solaris pkg, Linxu RPM and DEB, and Windows MSI), and network administrators can use the command line interface to deploy {{OOo}} through the network.  
+
The OpenOffice.org installer can use the most popular installation packages for each platform (Solaris pkg, Linux RPM and DEB, and Windows MSI), and network administrators can use the command line interface to deploy {{OOo}} through the network.  
  
 
{{PDL1}}
 
{{PDL1}}

Revision as of 08:28, 18 July 2008


A new way to install Apache OpenOffice was introduced with Apache OpenOffice 2.0. Previous releases were using an installer which worked on all platforms in the same way. There was not much difference between an Apache OpenOffice installation on Windows and on Solaris. This prevented network administrators from using standard network software deployment tools.

The OpenOffice.org installer can use the most popular installation packages for each platform (Solaris pkg, Linux RPM and DEB, and Windows MSI), and network administrators can use the command line interface to deploy Apache OpenOffice through the network.

Content on this page is licensed under the Public Documentation License (PDL).
Personal tools