NoOp wrote:
On 05/23/2010 02:23 PM, Jens Hatlak wrote:
Rob Lindauer wrote:
The Seamonkey install instructions I've been using (successfully) for a
year or two have me expand the Seamonkey tar/bz2 file into a
subdirectory under home, and manually add an entry in my Gnome/Kde menu,
as opposed to
Jens Hatlak wrote:
Rob Lindauer wrote:
The Seamonkey install instructions I've been using (successfully) for a
year or two have me expand the Seamonkey tar/bz2 file into a
subdirectory under home, and manually add an entry in my Gnome/Kde menu,
as opposed to installing via Synaptic/Apt. The
On 05/25/2010 04:40 PM, Tony wrote:
...
I have a related question - I have set up my laptop with Ubuntu 10.4 LTS
and installed 2.0.4 from the Ubuntu Software Respository. Seems to be
working fine but no mail/news just browser composer. I think I see the
appropriate files for mail/news but
Philip Chee wrote:
On Sun, 23 May 2010 15:54:26 -0700, NoOp wrote:
On 05/23/2010 02:23 PM, Jens Hatlak wrote:
Basically all extensions that have default preferences and/or
components. All these had to be installed somewhere under the SeaMonkey
application directory.
You might have
On 05/23/2010 09:25 PM, Philip Chee wrote:
On Sun, 23 May 2010 15:54:26 -0700, NoOp wrote:
On 05/23/2010 02:23 PM, Jens Hatlak wrote:
With SeaMonkey versions before 2.0 there were extensions that needed to
be installed into the application directory so you needed access to that
directory,
NoOp wrote:
On 05/23/2010 09:25 PM, Philip Chee wrote:
On Sun, 23 May 2010 15:54:26 -0700, NoOp wrote:
Can you please advise which extensions required root access? Note: not a
confrontational question, just curious as this is the first I've heard
of this.
Basically all extensions that have
Mon, 24 May 2010 21:38:51 +0200, /Jens Hatlak/:
NoOp wrote:
/home/username/seamonkey119/./seamonkey -no-remote -mail -browser
BTW: -no-remote does nothing with SeaMonkey version prior to 2.0. Just
remove it.
I remember this has come up before
Stanimir Stamenkov wrote:
Mon, 24 May 2010 21:38:51 +0200, /Jens Hatlak/:
NoOp wrote:
/home/username/seamonkey119/./seamonkey -no-remote -mail -browser
BTW: -no-remote does nothing with SeaMonkey version prior to 2.0. Just
remove it.
I remember this has come up before
On 05/24/2010 12:38 PM, Jens Hatlak wrote:
NoOp wrote:
On 05/23/2010 09:25 PM, Philip Chee wrote:
On Sun, 23 May 2010 15:54:26 -0700, NoOp wrote:
Can you please advise which extensions required root access? Note: not a
confrontational question, just curious as this is the first I've heard
of
On 05/23/2010 12:27 PM, Rob Lindauer wrote:
The Seamonkey install instructions I've been using (successfully) for a
year or two have me expand the Seamonkey tar/bz2 file into a
subdirectory under home, and manually add an entry in my Gnome/Kde menu,
as opposed to installing via
Rob Lindauer wrote:
The Seamonkey install instructions I've been using (successfully) for a
year or two have me expand the Seamonkey tar/bz2 file into a
subdirectory under home, and manually add an entry in my Gnome/Kde menu,
as opposed to installing via Synaptic/Apt. The rationale as I recall
NoOp wrote:
On 05/23/2010 12:27 PM, Rob Lindauer wrote:
The Seamonkey install instructions I've been using (successfully) for a
year or two have me expand the Seamonkey tar/bz2 file into a
subdirectory under home, and manually add an entry in my Gnome/Kde menu,
as opposed to installing via
On 05/23/2010 06:31 PM, Phillip Jones wrote:
NoOp wrote:
...
Or, if you want an 'unofficial' Ubuntu system install that works (32bit
63bit):
63 bit?
Yeah... I was watching the Sharks get wooped by the Blackhawks at the
time dropped a bit in the process :-)
NoOp wrote:
On 05/23/2010 06:31 PM, Phillip Jones wrote:
NoOp wrote:
...
Or, if you want an 'unofficial' Ubuntu system install that works (32bit
63bit):
63 bit?
Yeah... I was watching the Sharks get wooped by the Blackhawks at the
time dropped a bit in the process :-)
Thought maybe
On Sun, 23 May 2010 15:54:26 -0700, NoOp wrote:
On 05/23/2010 02:23 PM, Jens Hatlak wrote:
With SeaMonkey versions before 2.0 there were extensions that needed to
be installed into the application directory so you needed access to that
directory, which usually meant you needed to be root.
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