
hi there all I have just downloaded Open Office version 3.0 (64bit) onto my acer (Im running Ubuntu 8.04 Hardy). I was expecting a program that would install the applications on my computer but there wasn't one. I attempted to run synaptic Package Manager to pick up the downloaded DEBS packages, but it doesn't appear to have recognised the newer packages, only the older 1:2.4.1 packages. There is a update script, but I cant even begin to understand it. Is there anyone who has experienced this? Glenn Morrissey.

I got OpenOffice 3.0 installed by adding 'http://ppa.launchpad.net/openoffice-pkgs/ubuntu intrepid main' to the software sources list. I don't know if that'd apply for the 64-bit edition, though. Sandy Glenn Stuart Morrissey wrote:
hi there all
I have just downloaded Open Office version 3.0 (64bit) onto my acer (Im running Ubuntu 8.04 Hardy). I was expecting a program that would install the applications on my computer but there wasn't one. I attempted to run synaptic Package Manager to pick up the downloaded DEBS packages, but it doesn't appear to have recognised the newer packages, only the older 1:2.4.1 packages.
There is a update script, but I cant even begin to understand it. Is there anyone who has experienced this?
Glenn Morrissey.

2009/1/29 Chakat Sandwalker <sandwalker(a)gmail.com>:
I got OpenOffice 3.0 installed by adding 'http://ppa.launchpad.net/openoffice-pkgs/ubuntu intrepid main' to the software sources list. I don't know if that'd apply for the 64-bit edition, though.
It does apply to amd64 and ppc versions, as well as i386. Have to say PPA's (personal package archives) are are great thing. I'm also running a PPA of MythTV for VDPAU support. -- simon

Glenn Stuart Morrissey wrote:
hi there all
I have just downloaded Open Office version 3.0 (64bit) onto my acer (Im running Ubuntu 8.04 Hardy). I was expecting a program that would install the applications on my computer but there wasn't one. I attempted to run synaptic Package Manager to pick up the downloaded DEBS packages, but it doesn't appear to have recognised the newer packages, only the older 1:2.4.1 packages.
Synaptic (And all apt variants and frontends) use remote repositories - they don't act on manually downloaded files. A repository could be on the same machine as you are running, but it still needs to be a specially crafted repository If you're manually downloading software for Ubuntu, you can still install it of course, but if it's not a Ubuntu specific .deb file it may be a lot of effort to get it installed. IF you have downloaded the right Ubuntu .deb file (eg, right ubuntu version, right architecture), then you should be able to install it with the "dpkg -i filename" command in a shell, where filename is the name of the .deb file you just downloaded. Or you can install gdebi, the gnome dpkg interface, and if you double click on the .deb file in nautilus it should install at that point.

How I did it; First, remove all of the OOo2.4 packages via synaptic. Then untar the OOo3.0 package. Make sure you got the DEB one not the RPM one (which seems to be the default download if you're using Linux)
From a terminal, cd into the directory you just unpacked and install all the deb packages; cd Desktop/OOO300_m9_native_packed-1_en-US.9358 sudo dpkg DEBS/desktop-integration/*.deb DEBS/*.deb
After that all the OOo3.0 programs should appear on your applications menu.. (the ppa repo is easier, but if you already downloaded...) 2009/1/30 Daniel Lawson <daniel(a)meta.net.nz>:
Glenn Stuart Morrissey wrote:
hi there all
I have just downloaded Open Office version 3.0 (64bit) onto my acer (Im running Ubuntu 8.04 Hardy). I was expecting a program that would install the applications on my computer but there wasn't one. I attempted to run synaptic Package Manager to pick up the downloaded DEBS packages, but it doesn't appear to have recognised the newer packages, only the older 1:2.4.1 packages.
Synaptic (And all apt variants and frontends) use remote repositories - they don't act on manually downloaded files. A repository could be on the same machine as you are running, but it still needs to be a specially crafted repository
If you're manually downloading software for Ubuntu, you can still install it of course, but if it's not a Ubuntu specific .deb file it may be a lot of effort to get it installed. IF you have downloaded the right Ubuntu .deb file (eg, right ubuntu version, right architecture), then you should be able to install it with the "dpkg -i filename" command in a shell, where filename is the name of the .deb file you just downloaded. Or you can install gdebi, the gnome dpkg interface, and if you double click on the .deb file in nautilus it should install at that point.
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On Fri, 2009-01-30 at 10:30 +1300, Bruce Kingsbury wrote:
D'Oh!... I meant dpkg -i
cd Desktop/OOO300_m9_native_packed-1_en-US.9358 sudo dpkg -i DEBS/desktop-integration/*.deb DEBS/*.deb
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Thanks Bruce, that did the trick. glenn.
participants (5)
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Bruce Kingsbury
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Chakat Sandwalker
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Daniel Lawson
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Glenn Stuart Morrissey
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Simon Green