So we’ll see a release in November this year?
Somewhere between Linux woes, gaming, open source, 3D printing, recreational coding, and occasional ranting.
🇬🇧 / 🇩🇪
So we’ll see a release in November this year?
Usually you just see LibreOffice and nothing else, so it’s fine, I guess. Not a web-based editor, but usable.
Ah, I see. Not as native web application, though.
They’re using Alpine Linux, install X and Openbox and Xvnc and serve KasmVNC via Nginx and connect via KasmVNC to that X instance. LibreOffice is started in fullscreen and looks like a slightly blurry web application.
But in reality it is just a regular desktop installation with some extra things.
@[email protected], maybe this is a solution? I wouldn’t recommend it because it’s not really a web-based document editor.
So, LibreOffice can be used over the Internet in a web browser?
Ca. 20 years ago I worked for a company that used X forwarding for their backup management system (a Java application running on one of the servers) which somewhat worked on their wired LAN (at least most some of the time).
This was just unreliable and slow and had issues left and right.
Back than I tried this. The performance was horrible, even on a good connection. It was barely tolerable on LAN, but over the Internet … no. Just no. There were and are better solution for accessing a remote machine.
Because I don’t like software getting in my way I just cobbled together some HTML and CSS and call it a day.