Hi :)
There is alway Google Docs!  That is probably the same as "Google Drive 
Documents" in giving you Cloud storage space that you can set various parts of 
to share with various different groups of people or make open to anyone that 
happens to want to visit.  Sadly they use the MS formats but documents can 
still be read by LibreOffice.  Unlike MS Office they use the a more generic 
implementation of MS formats so documents can be read by all versions of MS 
Office and by LibreOffice/OpenOffice and the rest.  Similarly documents created 
using LibreOffice can be read by all the rest too.  It's only MS Office 2007, 
2010, 2013 and 365 that keep using non-standard versions of their own format.  


You might have been thinking of LibreOffice Portable which can supposedly be 
installed onto a Cloud but i thought that was more for single users to be able 
to access all their own settings where-ever they are and which machine or OS 
(as long as it's always a version of Windows) they are using.  
https://www.libreoffice.org/download/portable/


I think most of us shudder a bit about sharing programs over the Cloud and 
prefer to have local programs installed on local machines.  Then bandwidth is 
only used up when sending or receiving documents. 

LibreOffice does allow people to "Track changes" so that when one person has 
finished doing their edits they can then make it available for other people to 
see and make further changes or accept/reject individual changes.  Another 
option is to have a document that everyone can see and download to make their 
own changes and then "Compare Documents" but that sort of workflow tends to be 
a nightmare.  

Our own documentation team has a "sign out" sheet so that people know who is 
working on which chapters.  Then a person just picks another chapter to work 
on.  When a chapter has been completed it gets signed in again and the person 
who made changes sends an email to the mailing list to summarise the types of 
changes and "flag up" anything particularly weird they might have had to deal 
with.  The sign-out sheet is a wiki-page that anyone can edit.  


Another route might be to set up a special "wiki"-pages but even then it tends 
to be 1 person at a time that does the editing.  It shows the "history" of a 
page so you can see who made which changes and revert the page to a previous 
version if they made a right mess or were deliberate spammers.  You can see 
ours at 
https://wiki.documentfoundation.org/Main_Page


Another thing you might have seen is that you can read all sorts of documents 
within your web-browser but you usually need to get an Add-on to allow you to 
do that.  Without the add-on the document simply gets downloaded properly.  
Within the web-browser you typically can't edit the document but can read it or 
save it to your machine and then edit your local(=downloaded) copy.  


There was a really flashy web-browser interface that would allow many multiple 
users to edit all at the same time but that is not attracting as many devs as 
it needs so it's developing very slowly.  


One of the advantages of OpenSource is that some of the money you save on 
licensing fees could be used to pay a dev or some devs as employees to work on 
particular issues your company chooses to work on.  Taking rough figures
2,000 desktops x £100 (average license fee for an average MS Office bundle) = 
£200,000
One dev experienced in working with C++ might be £30,000 per year full time in 
wages but times 3 for overheads (heat,light,electricity) plus rent of office 
space.  So, about half and that's for a full-timer.  If you think of a couple 
of part-timers (so they can bounce ideas off each other) then you can think of 
considerably less.  Perhaps 10% of the saving might be good to spend on 
employing a dev.  

SuSE, Redhat, Google, Canonical, Oracle, IBM, various governments and many 
others do that sort of thing for these sorts of projects.  The work they do 
gets shared by everyone else but in return they get work paid for by others or 
done by volunteers so they end up getting a LOT more than they paid for.  


Just a few ideas!  Hope something there helps you work out a way to get what 
you are looking for or gives you other ideas of better work-flow!
Good luck and many regards from 
Tom :) 







>________________________________
> From: "[email protected]" <[email protected]>
>To: [email protected] 
>Sent: Tuesday, 18 June 2013, 15:28
>Subject: Re: [libreoffice-users] Question
> 
>
>Another chance would be GOOGLE DRIVE DOCUMENTS. They are quite simple too,
>but user can have a cloud environment with a doc+spreadsheet available free
>desktop.
>
>    Federico Quadri
>
>    Mirosław Zalewski <[email protected]> ha scritto:
>> On 18/06/2013 at 12:02, Пузырев Алексей <[email protected]> wrote:
>>> We have a local network and over 2000 users. We consider software
>>>    LibreOffice Online, so that users can work with "*.odf" files via
>>>    web-browser. Will we be able to implement such LibreOffice Online.
>>   No. LibreOffice web browser interface, which you probably refer  
>> to, was proof-
>>   of-concept quality. It's sole purpose was to show that something  
>> like that is
>>   possible. It could be nice toy for hacker, but is in no way suitable for
>>   corporate environments. Deploying it for 2000 users would be a disaster.
>>
>>   You *might* have better lack with Open-Xchange, which has text documents
>>   support since some time. It is very basic, though.
>>   <http://www.open-xchange.com/>
>>   --
>>   Best regards
>>   Mirosław Zalewski
>
>
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