michael <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in [EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED], on
01 Sep 2001:
>
>
> DeMoN LaG wrote:
>
>> michael <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in [EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED], on
>> 31 Aug 2001:
>>
>>
>>>Thanks Fulvio, I figured that I was just a really bad person
>>>for wanting to control my word wrap, I just wanted
>>>confirmation that it was me and not NetZilla that was the
>>>problem.
>>>
>>>Hey everybody, maybe The DOJ should sue Mozilla or AOL or
>>>whoever the flock makes this bloated mess masquerading as a
>>>"Communicator" now, to force them to separate into a browser
>>>company, a newsreader company and an email company.
>>>
>>
>> If Mozilla came bundled with over 95% of all new computer
>> purchased, always ran in the background, and was integrated so
>> tightly with the system it couldn't be uninstalled than I would
>> agree. otherwise, you don't like it, don't use it
>
>
> Well, I was kinda joking there, but not really...
>
> If AONetZiLLa needs to get split up, it's not because they
> are abusing monopoly power, it's because they are abusing
> usability.
I completely disagree. The only thing needed to be included for Mozilla
to do mail and news is support for the nntp, IMAP, SMTP, and POP3
protocols. The rendering engine handles displaying the messages, the
GUI is nothing but some small graphics. The overhead in including a
mail/news client in the package is under 2 megs. And as you can see in
the installer, there are options to not install those components. If
you don't want them, don't install them. Easy as that
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