Perhaps the question and discussion should focus not on LO or OO but on Google Docs and its applicability as a substitute to the great product, free of charge, Open Office.
> On September 18, 2019 at 12:39 PM "W. Robert J. Funnell, Prof." > <[email protected] mailto:[email protected] > wrote: > > > Is there any more substance to the claim about malware in LO than > there is to the claim about OO going away? I doubt it. > * Robert > > > > On Wed, 18 Sep 2019, JD wrote: > > > > That wind you got was just some people's brain fart because they > are > > the club of a derivative software called libre' office. This club > > wants > > to discourage people from using OpenOffice and junp onto the band > > wagon of Libre' Office, which many programmers on the inside have > > intimated to me privately that it contains malware that transmits > > one's > > documents to multiple ip addresses. > > > > > > > > On 9/18/19 9:17 AM, Mike Kuldayev wrote: > > > > > > > > >> > >> > >> *Mike Kuldayev* > >> > >> History Department Head & AP/CC Teacher > >> > >> *_______* > >> > >> *P:* 509-319-2402 *F:* 888-317-6571 > >> > >> [email protected] mailto:[email protected] > >> > >> www.enlightiumacademy.com <http://www.enlightiumacademy.com> > >> > >> Hello, > >> > >> I'm working in an online school and our teachers frequently encourage > their > >> students to download Open Office for free from your homepage. Recently, > >> I've got wind that Open Office might be going away and/or students > won't be > >> able to download it for free in the near future. So, I just wanted to > >> follow up with you to see if that's truly the case or just empty rumor? > >> > >> Thank you much, > >> > >> MK > >> > > --------------------------------------------------------------------- > To unsubscribe, e-mail: [email protected] > mailto:[email protected] > For additional commands, e-mail: [email protected] > mailto:[email protected] >
