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The RPi was designed for the Educational field and the "computer/electronics hardware experimentation".

As for how well LO works on it, I wish there was someone on this list that has one "now" to see how well it works. I hope to buy one in the future when the next version comes out.

To see what RPi can do, please look at the last half of the MasgPi "e-magazines" and the projects that are shown. That will tell you about the "experimentation" use of the system.
http://www.themagpi.com/



On 12/25/2012 01:31 PM, timofonic timofonic wrote:
Hello.

I may have not followed all of this, but I have some questions.

Does the port to ARM mean LO has also been optimized to have less
resource usage in terms of processing and memory efficiency before
ported to ARM? What are the minimal requeriments for a comfortable and
full featured usage of LO? Are there comparisons of this versus other
equivalent software?

Maybe those questions are more appropiate for techie people, but a
nicely explained reply would be great for everyone.

Regards.


On Mon, Dec 24, 2012 at 2:58 PM, webmaster-Kracked_P_P
<webmaster@krackedpress.com> wrote:
I am not the only one on these lists that is looking into the Raspberry Pi
and its Raspbian OS [Debian fork to work on the RPi].

I have not bought it yet, but it would be nice to know and "talk to" anyone
who has bought this super small format computer.  For about $35 USD, plus a
Class 4-10 SD card, you have a computer than can use a HDMI Monitor or TV,
USB keyboard/mouse, and USB Hard drive with a powered hub.  It seems to be
designed for the Education Market or those who just want to "play" with an
all-in-one computer.  The only real "problem" is the RPi has the processing
power of about a 300MHz Pentium II [according to their site] but with a
really "rad" graphics card [Blu-ray quality according to their site] .  So
it is a little slow.

That being said, I would like to know how "well" LO works on the RPi and
other info about that system.

Well, it is real nice that the RPi has opted to have LO on their system.
http://store.raspberrypi.com/



On 12/20/2012 06:13 AM, Italo Vignoli wrote:
The full fledged free office suite is available on the credit card sized
single-board computer developed by the Raspberry Pi Foundation

Cambridge (UK) and Berlin (Germany), December 20, 2012 - The Raspberry
Pi Foundation (http://www.raspberrypi.org/) and The Document Foundation
(http://www.documentfoundation.org/) announce the availability of the
full fledged version of LibreOffice (http://www.libreoffice.org/) on the
Raspberry Pi, the credit-card sized computer created with the intention
of stimulating the teaching of basic computer science in schools. The
Raspberry Pi is a little PC which plugs into a TV and a keyboard and can
be used for many of the things that most desktop PC can do, like
spreadsheets, word-processing and games.

LibreOffice is the first comprehensive office suite to run on a 40
dollar credit card sized PC, without any compromise on features and
performances. LibreOffice has been ported to ARM by multiple
contributors from Canonical, Debian and RedHat, and was packaged for the
Raspberry Pi by Rene Engelhard as a part of his work as the Debian
maintainer for LibreOffice.

"The availability of LibreOffice, the best free office suite ever, on
the Raspberry Pi - the most affordable PC ever, targeted to hardware and
software enthusiasts, and schools - is extremely important for The
Document Foundation, because it will contribute to the growth of the
brand awareness in key market segments", comments Bjoern Michaelsen, a
Canonical developer and a deputy member of the Board of Directors of The
Document Foundation.

"I'm very impressed that the LibreOffice team didn't have to make any
changes to the code in order for it to compile and smoothly run on
Raspberry Pi", said Eben Upton from the Raspberry Pi Foundation. "It's
also great to have a comprehensive office suite available in the Pi
Store at launch, making people even more aware of the potential of this
device".

LibreOffice is available from the Raspberry Pi Store
(http://store.raspberrypi.com/projects/libreoffice), which is described
here: http://www.raspberrypi.org/archives/2768 (including instructions
on how to install it). Raspberry Pi Foundation announcement press
release is here: http://blog.indiecity.com/?page_id=2269.

UPDATE (December 20, 2012): The license blurb has been fixed, and it now
links to the LGPLv3 text.

About the Raspberry Pi

The Raspberry Pi is a tiny computer, designed to fit in a pocket, and
cheap enough to be bought with pocket money. It was developed by the
not-for-profit Raspberry Pi Foundation in Cambridge to help children
engage with computer programming, and has won dozens of awards in its
first year of release. Additional information at
http://www.raspberrypi.org.


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