

To edit in a graphical text editor (gedit, kate, gvim, emacs) use the following command:Īgain, substitute gedit for your chosen GUI text editor. To get emacs to run on the command line without the windowed GUI use the -nw option. Substitute vim in the above for your favourite command-line editor. To edit the list from a command-line text editor (vi/vim/nano/pico/emacs), open a terminal and use the command: To check the partner repo is enabled, you'll need to take a look at /etc/apt/sources.list: So your first stop should be to check /etc/apt/sources.list and ensure that the partner repository is uncommented. However, if you still want to find/install the OpenOffice packages rather than using Libreoffice - If memory serves the Openoffice packages are in the partner repo. The page in the link explains all of the different bits of software you'll need to install alongside Libreoffice in order to get OpenMeetings installed and running. And as LibreOffice is installed by default in recent versions of Ubuntu, you shouldn't need to worry about installing OpenOffice.

I haven't tested it myself, but it looks like it should work.Īccording to the article, Openmeetings will work with LibreOffice as well as OpenOffice. The instructions should work on any other recent versions of Ubuntu from what I can see.

This blog post explains how to do it in Ubuntu 12.04.
