On Wed, 21 Oct 1998, Simon Hill wrote:
>
> I think this can be solved by setting:
>
> MOZILLA_HOME/directory=/where/you/installed/netscape
>
>
Nope - see my previous post.
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If you get the "can't find java40.jar" message you definetely need to
set your CLASSPATH variable. That should in most cases fix it right up.
If that still doesn't wory, what I would try is removing *all* copies of
Netscape from your system if possible and reinstalling. If you are
using Debian
Simon Hill wrote:
> I think this can be solved by setting:
>
> MOZILLA_HOME/directory=/where/you/installed/netscape
hrm, now I'm given that nasty "can't find java40.jar" message. So I renamed
cert7.db and key3.db tovert7.bad and key3.bad (as suggested in the UFAQ). No
help...
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CJ Crouchet wrote:
> this is a really stupid reply to the question but you do have java part
> compiled into the kernel
> i am just starting from the base case
yup, always a good place to start (at the beginning...)
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Justin Georgeson
Insti
I think this can be solved by setting:
MOZILLA_HOME/directory=/where/you/installed/netscape
On Wed, 21 Oct 1998, Justin Georgeson wrote:
> When I try click on a link that loads a java applet in its own popup
> window,
> I'm given this error message:
> -
> Java reported the following error on
this is a really stupid reply to the question but you do have java part
compiled into the kernel
i am just starting from the base case
Justin Georgeson wrote:
> When I try click on a link that loads a java applet in its own popup
> window,
> I'm given this error message:
> -
> Java reported th