kmail date headers translated to local time.

2004-07-29 Thread Sebastian Luque
Hi there,

I've been searching the web for a way to show the timezone offset as a phrase 
in kmail replies. Basically, just a placeholder, so that when I reply 
messages, the phrase says something like:

On Mon, 23 Jul 2004, at 12:00 -0500, someone wrote:

It's very similar to the question you posed to freebsd-questions. I'd be happy 
to hear whether you found a solution to your problem or know how to do what I 
need. Thanks a lot in advance.

Greetings,
Sebastian
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kmail date headers translated to local time.

2004-04-15 Thread Malcolm Kay
I have just upgraded to FreeBSD 4.9 Release and also installed
a later version (3.1.4) of kde. I don't use the kde windows 
manager, I have it installed mainly for kmail.

On this new version I find the Date/Time in the headers gets
translated to my local Date/Time which I find something of a 
disaster -- I like to know what the author's clock said! If I
really want to know the translated time it was always available
in the Messages window.

When I found that I could customise the date display to include
the time zone offset from UTC I thought my problem was solved.
But, alas, it still showed my local time with my time zone 
offset which to me seems quite rediculous -- after all I know
MY time zone offset.

Is there some way I can switch this back to the earlier behaviour?
I know I can get it back by displaying all headers; but this
is a rather unsatisfactory extreme.

It seems that many modern applications for unix are trying to 
catch up with MS-windows negative features. Fortunately they
still have some way to go!

Malcolm
 

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