2009/10/16 Mark C. Miller <mr.mcmil...@gmail.com>:
> On Tue, 13 Oct 2009 17:25:24 +0800, zhu xiaodong wrote:
>
>> Hello all;
>>
>> I am a user of openoffice. Now we encounter some issues which need to be
>> fix soon. Could some of you give me some hints for them? Thanks in
>> advance. The issues are :
>> 1 if I open a file from a network share, it opens in read only mode only
>> if I am not the owner.
>> If I copy the file to my desktop and then copy and replace the file on
>> the server, I can now open it without the Ready-Only happening. But that
>> file cannot be opened by someone else without the Read-Only happening.
>> This does not happen with any other program, Word, Adobe products, etc,
>> and files on our server, only Openoffice. I can even take the same file
>> that opens as read-only in OpenOffice and open it in Word or TextEdit
>> and it is fine.
>>
>> 2 if I login unix with the language setting is English(canada) which can
>> input Chinese words, the openoffice is always crashed. Or could not be
>> run. If I use the system default setting for the language
>> setting(English - United States ISO8859-1), there is no problem.
>>
>> Did you enounter these problem? How do you deal with them? Any
>> suggestion are high appreciated.
>> Hope can get you feedback, thanks a lot.
>>
>> PS: our OS is Solaris 10, and the openoffice version is 3.1.0 , and the
>> file server is netapp.
>>
>> Regards
>> Zhu xiaodong
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
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>
> This thread just amazes me; a Chinese speaker asks a question in really
> good English and is helped by a Spanish speaker who also expresses
> herself well in English.
>
> Find me a "regular" person in this country who could response in Chinese
> or even Spanish ... we just don't teach our children the important
> stuff.  Too busy playing sports.

And, on top of that, Chinese and Spanish are the two most common
languages in the world (even if you split Chinese into several
languages, as you should, the most common of them is still the most
common language in the world, followed by Spanish)!

There are thousands of languages in the world (I think something like
6000 or so), so even a small language like mine, Swedish, is quite
common compared to most of the languages in the world - we are among
the top 100 languages, I thing somewhere around 80th or 85th or
something). There are a lot of languages to learn… :D

>
> My hats off to everyone.  What a great community!
>
> mcm
>
>
>
> --
> Mark C. Miller, Indianapolis Indiana USA
>
>
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