MS Project sous Linux

MS Project sous Linux - Logiciels - Linux et OS Alternatifs

Marsh Posté le 10-01-2005 à 18:26:11    

Salut!
 
je cherche un equivalant de MS Project pour Linux (MDK 10.1). histoire de lire et modifier les fichiers MS Project.
 
ou a la limite une methode pour faire tourner MS Project sur Linux. (avec plein d'explication car je suis un gros debutant).  
 
merci d'avance! ;-)

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Marsh Posté le 10-01-2005 à 18:26:11   

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Marsh Posté le 10-01-2005 à 19:01:10    

Y'a Imendio Planner, mais je pense pas qu'il ouvre les fichier msproject .
 
planner-0.12.1-1mdk

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Marsh Posté le 10-01-2005 à 19:13:59    

Effectivement planner marche bien mais c'est un peu léger...
regarde du coté de crossover office... voir wine pour faire marcher MS Project sous Linux.


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"Every solution breeds new problems"
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Marsh Posté le 10-01-2005 à 20:02:35    

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Marsh Posté le 10-01-2005 à 20:10:20    

mr project est pas trop mal

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Marsh Posté le 10-01-2005 à 23:08:11    

Planner c'est le nouveau nom de MR Project !!!


---------------
"Every solution breeds new problems"
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Marsh Posté le 11-01-2005 à 08:36:54    

j'assaye le wine de MDK10.1 (mis a jour), il demare le setup.exe et me di dans une fenetre "could not find find package to install in this media" ? il parle de quel package la? ya rien d'autre.  
 
sinon je vai tester ganttproject mais sur le site ya trois possibilité de telechargement :  
*.zip
*.jar
*-scr.zip
 
je prend koi? pour etre compatible linux. car moi a par .rpm voire .tar a la limite je connais rien d'autre.
 
Merci

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Marsh Posté le 11-01-2005 à 15:30:10    

c'est pas une bonne chose d'utiliser wine, tu incites les dév à ne développer que pour un seul os ("les autres n'auront qu'a se démerder avec les émulateurs" (même si wine is not emulator bref))
 
pour faire tourner gant, il te faut installer une machine virtuelle java, et télécharger l'arhive java (.jar)
 

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Marsh Posté le 11-01-2005 à 16:58:44    

Citation :

Myth 2: "Wine is bad for Linux"
One undeniable fact exists: there is a vast software library that works with Microsoft's operating systems. Many of these applications already have Linux equivalents, however for most people there remains a handful of programs keeping them tied to Windows. Some of these programs have almost no chance of getting ported to Linux (e.g. Microsoft Office), others simply can't be ported because they've become abandonware (e.g. TurboTax 1999). Would I want to have Windows just because someday I may need to access an old tax program?
 
The fact that Wine exists won't prevent companies from porting their software, but having less than a few percentage points of marketshare will. Wine puts more free software into the hands of people who would otherwise not use it. In turn, history has repeatedly shown that larger marketshare leads to more commercial development. More commercial development has always led to more efforts to develop better free software equivalents.


http://www.winehq.org/site/myths#wine_bad
 


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Celui qui pose une question est idiot 5 minutes. Celui qui n'en pose pas le reste toute sa vie. |  Membre du grand complot pharmaceutico-médico-scientifico-judéo-maçonnique.
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Marsh Posté le 11-01-2005 à 17:05:26    

Mjules a écrit :

Citation :

Myth 2: "Wine is bad for Linux"
One undeniable fact exists: there is a vast software library that works with Microsoft's operating systems. Many of these applications already have Linux equivalents, however for most people there remains a handful of programs keeping them tied to Windows. Some of these programs have almost no chance of getting ported to Linux (e.g. Microsoft Office), others simply can't be ported because they've become abandonware (e.g. TurboTax 1999). Would I want to have Windows just because someday I may need to access an old tax program?
 
The fact that Wine exists won't prevent companies from porting their software, but having less than a few percentage points of marketshare will. Wine puts more free software into the hands of people who would otherwise not use it. In turn, history has repeatedly shown that larger marketshare leads to more commercial development. More commercial development has always led to more efforts to develop better free software equivalents.


http://www.winehq.org/site/myths#wine_bad


 
Chouette, un troll.
 
A mon avis wine est une mauvaise chose car il encourage les gens (le windowsien récemment converti notamment) à penser que leur liberté est moins importante que la qualité des logiciels utilisés.

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