However, they do not use LaTeX, but rather MathType. I am running Lubuntu 12.04, and cannot afford to buy any software at the present. This company wants me to type up math in MathType (or TeX, then convert to MathType format), and insert the math equations and what not into a MS Word document (I believe MS Word 1997-2003 format). My contact sent me a free version of MS Office 2010 Starter software, but I have yet to be able to get it to install at all.
Additionally, I would like to not have to rely on wine and ANY windows software if at all possible. I am already having to use a trial version of MathType under Wine, but I cannot find anyway to add the MathType equations into say LibreOffice, or Abiword without destroying their format - and (this is important!) this company wants the end result to be still editable using MathType. Please any help would be appreciated as I have already spent two days researching and have found nothing yet.
To say it short: You can't run MS Word starter software on Ubuntu without an virtualiser programm (with installed windows) or wine or other software. As you said, you do not want to install this kind of helping software so the answer is clear: there is no solution to install MS Word Starter on your system.
With LaTeX you can't write a Mathtype and MS Word document, so you have to use the software the company wants to be used. Or to persuade them to use a typogaphical much more better software called LaTeX ...
Am I correct that Ubuntu desktop and server are the same os but that desktop runs X and lacks things that a server might have like dhcp server, mysqld, apache, etc.? And that if I add those items it would in fact be a server with X instead of just the command line that is given with the server?
The differences are just in what's bundled as a default packaging to make things easier. In reality the difference between a server and workstation are just the purpose they're used for; Linux is Linux in either case (indeed Windows NT variants were largely just differences in packaged tools/dll's and some registry hacks to enforce licensing differences for how much you paid for your license...the kernel was the same and the base OS was the same).
In other words, Ubuntu Server and Ubuntu Desktop are two sides to the same coin. Server was just meant to run by default with some packages to make it easier to set up a LAMP server or file server by default while desktop looks nicer and has office tools/GUI/etc. for desktop users.
That's correct. The default install of a desktop installs the ubuntu-desktop meta-package, which pulls in the normal GUI interface stuff. It also includes metapackages ubuntu-minimal and ubuntu-standard, which together comprise the basic Linux utilities.
The best answer is correct, but when I was googling this I expected to find an instruction of how to remove 'desktop' packages (gnome, xserver, etc) from my Ubuntu installation. I've found that I can use tasksel to remove ubuntu-desktop packages:
To take an extreme example, I don't think people will want to run a production web site on Windows 7 instead of Windows Server 2008 even though it's capable of doing that.But with Windows, I can see that there's monetary incentive to do that. Windows 7 is less expensive compared to Windows Server 2008. With Linux, I believe using server version is a lot easier rather than using desktop version and then optimizing it to match a server version.
Ubuntu or any Linux OS is basically built with group of packages. The desktop version have packages more suitable to desktop users where as server installation have packages for server users. Now the question is if someone has installed Desktop then by installing which packages the system can also work as server. so request all experts to provide one by one apt-get commands to convert desktop into server by installing various packages.
Yes. I usually install server then use tasksel to put a desktop on top of it. However, I have done it the other way around a couple of times...install desktop the use tasksel to turn on the server features and LAMP. Someday I may make the effort to see what packages are installed but, for now, that's what works for me. Mind you I am not working an enterprise server in a production environment,just development laptops.
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