Hi Riccardo,
FYI, the emacspeak project has a module called g-client, which implements a
number of interfaces to google for various google services (calendar,
gphoto, greader, etc) and includes an authentication and login process. You
may find it of interest. Although it is part of the emacspeak
Tassilo Horn [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Tim X [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Hi Tim,
5. Dired key: It would be nice to have a defcustom value that would
specify a dired map key that would call doc-view on a file (with a
new doc-view function that doesn't prompt for the file name). This
would
Bill Clementson [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
5. Dired key: It would be nice to have a defcustom value that would
specify a dired map key that would call doc-view on a file (with a new
doc-view function that doesn't prompt for the file name). This would
make it easier to browse pdf files in
Lucas Bonnet [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Richard Stallman [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
You're wrong, EMMS is indeed a GNU project.
It seems that EMMS is a GNU package--a separate one.
I will look at the situation with EMMS and mplayer.
What do you mean by situation? EMMS supports several
Joost Kremers [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Tim X wrote:
David Hansen [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
[...]
While I can appreciate what your saying, I think you may be missing some of
the
subtlety of Richard's point.
and perhaps you're missing some of the subtlety of david's point: if
mplayer did
David Hansen [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
On Wed, 18 Jul 2007 19:18:18 +1000 Tim X. wrote:
David Hansen [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Free software somehow has to interact with the real world, which -
sadly - is dominated by proprietary software and file formats. A lot of
people switched
, so I will refraim from further posts and will restrict my response to
responding to the points you raise (and not bring in any new ones).
Tim X wrote:
No, I'm afraid you totally missed my point. I appreciate what David was
saying
and said as much and in fact summarised what I thought
David Hansen [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Free software somehow has to interact with the real world, which -
sadly - is dominated by proprietary software and file formats. A lot of
people switched to free software after free office software became
reliable in reading M$ office files. I think
Richard Stallman [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
;;; codesearch.el --- allowing users to search for open-source code on
Would you please call it free software code?
Using the term open source downplays the ethical issues
which are the most important issues.
See
Richard M. Stallman [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
In my case I have GD installed on my machine because I think it helps
me, and I wanted to interface to it, to make my Emacs experience
better. If there were a free replacement I would use that instead and
interface to that one.
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