Follow what Rory says.  Verifying is usually a redundant set since most 
browsers check the CRC when the have finished downloading.  The SHA MD5 
whatever are if you are downloading from a site you do not trust and think the 
official site had been altered.


On February 8, 2020 at 2:30:59 PM, Rory O'Farrell (ofarr...@iol.ie) wrote:

On Sat, 8 Feb 2020 21:10:23 +0000 (UTC)  
Carol <crr...@aol.com> wrote:  

> Thanks for the help!  I was on a Mac but I will be putting Open Office on our 
> PC with Windows 10.  The instructions on 'Verification' seems complicated.  
> In a message dated 2/8/2020 3:14:52 PM Eastern Standard Time, 
> dbel...@comcast.net writes:  
>  
> Are you on a Mac with Catalina installed as the latest OS?  
>  
> If so, Apple requires that you go through an extra step to install (not just 
> download0.  
>  
> Try these instructions: 
> https://www.openoffice.org/download/common/instructions.html  
>  
> Do not download Open Office from anyplace other than  
> www.openoffice.org/download  
>  
>  
>  
> On February 8, 2020 at 1:01:59 PM, Carol Reese1 (crr...@aol.com.invalid) 
> wrote:  
>  
> I have not yet downloaded Open Office because I’m not clear on what is 
> needed. Is ‘Verification of Integrity’ required? Or can I just download Open 
> Office? I can’t understand exactly what to do to verify.   
> Thanks :)  
>  

Be aware that a different version is needed for Windows. Select that from the 
URL you have been given. Normally in Windows the built-in file checking is 
adequate; when in Windows you double click the download it will (99.9% of time, 
depending on how good your Internet connection is) install or complain. If it 
complains you have a bad download and should try again.  


--  
Rory O'Farrell <ofarr...@iol.ie>  

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