If you compile it perhaps there’s a compile-time option?
Aphyr, on
A few people have asked for a higher quality image for use as a background. This is a copy at 1600x1200.
Smurf, on
That’s beautiful!
Aphyr, on
Well, that applies to OpenOffice 1.1.4, but 2.0 doesn’t use that configuration file, and nothing I can find in the user configuration directory or the installation directory contains the “FORCE_DESKTOP” string. Likewise, duplicating the environment variables from gnome-session doesn’t seem to make a difference. Must be something else. :-/
Nodes can be arbitrarily parented and their relationships resolved at any depth, so through some recursive XSLT templates it’s possible to get threaded replies.
Nathan Vegdahl, on
Oooooh…. nifty.
M. Mckenney, on
Ah. Somehow you can make even the most mundane items into a aesthetic and capturing composition. =)
If you compile it perhaps there’s a compile-time option?
A few people have asked for a higher quality image for use as a background. This is a copy at 1600x1200.
That’s beautiful!
Well, that applies to OpenOffice 1.1.4, but 2.0 doesn’t use that configuration file, and nothing I can find in the user configuration directory or the installation directory contains the “FORCE_DESKTOP” string. Likewise, duplicating the environment variables from gnome-session doesn’t seem to make a difference. Must be something else. :-/
http://lists.debian.org/debian-openoffice/2004/02/msg00087.html
Very nice
AHHH KYLE.
beautiful.
Nodes can be arbitrarily parented and their relationships resolved at any depth, so through some recursive XSLT templates it’s possible to get threaded replies.
Oooooh…. nifty.
Ah. Somehow you can make even the most mundane items into a aesthetic and capturing composition. =)