Thomas H. George wrote:
Seamonkey crashes when I enter www.cnn.com with the error message
(seamonkey-bin:25788): gdk-CRITICAL
**:gdk_x11_xatom_to_atom_for_display: assertion `xatom != none` failed.
My system is Debian Sqeeze, ATM 64 2x Dual Core Processor.
I suspect the problem may be with
Robert Kaiser wrote:
Craig wrote:
Sorry if this info is self-evident but I looked in 2.0 RC's release
notes, and elsewhere, and came up dry.
Is the gloda search engine a part of Seamonkey 2.0?
gloda is a database backend that allows indexing of messages, it's not a
search engine.
Apart from
Stan wrote:
Having trouble posting thru a different news server and trying to pin
down problem.
Stan, many news servers have test groups specifically for the purpose of
testing connections without annoying normal users, e.g. on this server
post tests to mozilla.test.
HTH
Daniel
Jens Hatlak wrote:
David Wilkinson wrote:
If I want to migrate an SM1 profile to SM2 on a new Windows 7 machine,
do I have to have SM1 installed, or can I just copy the SM1 profile to
my new machine and import it to SM2?
SM1 itself is not needed, but probably its profile database, a file
Keith Whaley wrote:
jim wrote:
On Fri, 23 Oct 2009 06:55:35 -0400, jim j...@earthlink.com in
mozilla.support.seamonkey wrote:
Seamonkey 1.1.18 -- How to: NOT download messages on server first
time in
Win Xp SP2
Seamonkey 1.1.18
Obviously this is a simple setting -- somewhere. I did not
Phillip Jones wrote:
Robert Kaiser wrote:
Phillip Jones wrote:
Developers never, ever, ever, ever listen to end users.
Then it's good that SeaMonkey is being developed by users.
Or did you complain that different users have different opinions about
what they want?
Robert Kaiser
Its
asmpgmr wrote:
On Oct 24, 5:40 pm, Robert Kaiser ka...@kairo.at wrote:
1) Tabs were not in IE until very recently (IE7) while Mozilla has had
them for ages (Opera was the first tabbed browser, though).
2) The vast majority of users love tabs, please accept that while you
might be one of our
Daniel wrote:
Robert Kaiser wrote:
Craig wrote:
Sorry if this info is self-evident but I looked in 2.0 RC's release
notes, and elsewhere, and came up dry.
Is the gloda search engine a part of Seamonkey 2.0?
gloda is a database backend that allows indexing of messages, it's not
a search
Rod Lovett schrieb:
Hi,
I notice that in Linux composing mail in Seamonkey mail, and copying
and pasting images to the main body of the message is easy.
This fails in XP, Vista and Windows 7 especially, no image is
transferred to the main body of the message on copying and pasting. Why
cj schrieb:
My ISP's ftp address is www.username.talktalk.net instead of the
usual ftp.username.com
I think this is preventing me from publishing my web pages from
composer.
Has anyone got a solution???
Why should a subdomain influence the ftp-connection?
I've been using subdomain
asmpgmr wrote:
Granted but why do things like change the download progress dialog UI
to be less usable because you don't like dialogs (Your words:
Download progress dialogs ? Eww!). There really is no reason why
this can't look more or less the same as SeaMonkey 1.x
If you love ugly, then you
Daniel wrote:
Robert, if I read your reply properly, there is a part of the SeaMonkey
download that is completely, as things stand now!
Why is it then included at all??
Because extensions can use it. And it's not much download space, JS code
compressed quite well.
And, btw, SeaMonkey 2.0 is
Smiles wrote:
good day
I have had a problem with my computer so I stop deleting emails from my
pop server now the problem is fixed I did a test download from one of my
accounts but did not bring everything down just the new items than the
server deleted all items.
On two accounts I must
Daniel wrote:
Jens, shouldn't David be able to just create a new profile name in SM
2.0's Profile Manager and point it to the SM 1 profile's location having
copied it to the new machine?
Yes, this is what I am wondering. This is how I move profiles between SeaMonkey
1.x installations on
A couple of things happened to me this morning.
1. If I junk the next to last email in my unread list I see the last
email in my view email window but it is missing (disappeared) from the
list of messages window and nothing in the list of messages window is
highlighted. If I press delete
Leonidas Jones wrote:
Phillip Jones wrote:
Mark Hansen wrote:
On 10/23/09 18:32, Phillip Jones wrote:
Developers never, ever, ever, ever listen to end users. The think
they no more how a program should look like than the users that have
to use it.
Good God, have you a bone to pick or
Daniel wrote:
---snip---
Phillip, if you painted your house Green, because you liked Green, would
it matter to you if someone suggested you should have painted it Blue??
Or even a slightly different shade of Green??
The Guys that are doing the development are
Daniel wrote:
asmpgmr wrote:
On Oct 24, 5:40 pm, Robert Kaiser ka...@kairo.at wrote:
1) Tabs were not in IE until very recently (IE7) while Mozilla has had
them for ages (Opera was the first tabbed browser, though).
2) The vast majority of users love tabs, please accept that while you
might
Robert Kaiser wrote:
asmpgmr wrote:
Granted but why do things like change the download progress dialog UI
to be less usable because you don't like dialogs (Your words:
Download progress dialogs ? Eww!). There really is no reason why
this can't look more or less the same as SeaMonkey 1.x
If
Ray_Net wrote:
Benoit Renard wrote:
NoOp wrote:
There two other methods that you can try:
1. Right-click on the Inbox folder, select 'Rebuild Summary File'.
If that doesn't work:
2. Close SeaMonkey and delete (or better yet, rename) the inbox .msf
files, see:
Phillip Jones wrote:
Tabs waste resources. Each page in a tab as cache and use memory to
store. While I have 2 GB Memory in current Laptop with today's web
pages that can be easily filled up is I have a bunch of Tabs open.
What are you talking about? I only have 160 MB of RAM, and I can easily
Phillip Jones wrote:
And if I were to use Thunderbird I actually like Postbox better because
the last one I downloaded still allowed javascript in email.
You do realise that JavaScript in mail is a big security risk, right? It
doesn't have a place in e-mail messages in the first place. It's a
Robert Kaiser wrote:
1) Tabs were not in IE until very recently (IE7) while Mozilla has had
them for ages (Opera was the first tabbed browser, though).
If I remember correctly, Maxthon was first with tabs, but that was a
shell for IE. Opera was the first web browser to be shipped with tabs
asmpgmr wrote:
I don't like tabs either and see them as a pointless waste of screen
space when the OS already has window management and its own taskbar
which can be hidden
The taskbar becomes less efficient the more buttons it has. Having tabs
means that your taskbar is not cluttered with
Phillip Jones wrote:
For example I've always thought Tabs was not what most users wanted,
because it was a gee-whiz-bang feature that was in IE. we had to have it.
You're wrong.
OR, how about killing javascript, in Thunderbird.
Security risk, as pointed out above.
There was a Feature in
asmpgmr wrote:
Granted but why do things like change the download progress dialog UI to be
less usable
As with the loss of the About dialog, this was fallout from the
conversion from XPFE to Toolkit, which (surprise) has no progress
dialogs either, so from my point of view you should be
asmpgmr wrote:
On Oct 24, 5:40 pm, Robert Kaiser ka...@kairo.at wrote:
1) Tabs were not in IE until very recently (IE7) while Mozilla has
had them for ages (Opera was the first tabbed browser, though).
2) The vast majority of users love tabs, please accept that while
you might be one of our
Phillip Jones wrote:
Robert Kaiser wrote:
asmpgmr wrote:
Granted but why do things like change the download progress
dialog UI to be less usable because you don't like dialogs (Your
words: Download progress dialogs ? Eww!). There really is no
reason why this can't look more or less the same
Sun, 25 Oct 2009 16:36:01 +0100, /Benoit Renard/:
Plus, with tabs, I can rearrange them with dragdrop. Something that
Windows couldn't do with its taskbar until Windows 7!
For this I'm using Taskbar Shuffle
http://www.freewebs.com/nerdcave/ - very handy.
--
Stanimir
Sun, 25 Oct 2009 12:41:45 -0400, /David Wilkinson/:
FireFox 3 remembers the zoom setting for each site, so that when you go
there again it still looks the way you want. But SM2 does not have this
feature.
Why not? Is there (or will there be) an extension to do this?
AFAIK it is Firefox
On Oct 25, 8:14 am, Neil n...@parkwaycc.co.uk wrote:
asmpgmr wrote:
Granted but why do things like change the download progress dialog UI to be
less usable
As with the loss of the About dialog, this was fallout from the
conversion from XPFE to Toolkit, which (surprise) has no progress
Paul B. Gallagher wrote:
I think it's dysfunctional to have a download process complete silently
without telling me it succeeded, or worse yet, stall silently without
telling me there's a problem. I don't know when I can go open the file,
or if it's even there.
I agree that the new design has
On Oct 25, 10:02 am, Robert Kaiser ka...@kairo.at wrote:
Paul B. Gallagher wrote:
I think it's dysfunctional to have a download process complete silently
without telling me it succeeded, or worse yet, stall silently without
telling me there's a problem. I don't know when I can go open the
asmpgmr wrote:
Well the tiny round buttons aren't good. I've never seen any app have
buttons like that, it needs normal buttons. Also what do you perceive
as wrong with the 1.x design ? It looks perfectly fine to me. People
who don't like dialogs can use the download manager and that's great,
Daniel wrote:
Serge Popper wrote:
Installed SeaMonkey 1.1.18 a couple of weeks ago and have had no
problems until tonight. When I started SeaMonkey, my incoming mail
folder opened normally but was not downloading my new mail. I clicked
on the get messages and a little widow opened saying
Robert Kaiser wrote:
asmpgmr wrote:
Well the tiny round buttons aren't good. I've never seen any app have
buttons like that, it needs normal buttons. Also what do you perceive
as wrong with the 1.x design ? It looks perfectly fine to me. People
who don't like dialogs can use the download
Benoit Renard wrote:
Phillip Jones wrote:
Tabs waste resources. Each page in a tab as cache and use memory to
store. While I have 2 GB Memory in current Laptop with today's web
pages that can be easily filled up is I have a bunch of Tabs open.
What are you talking about? I only have 160 MB of
On 10/24/2009 12:33 PM, Robert Kaiser wrote:
Craig wrote:
Sorry if this info is self-evident but I looked in 2.0 RC's release
notes, and elsewhere, and came up dry.
Is the gloda search engine a part of Seamonkey 2.0?
gloda is a database backend that allows indexing of messages, it's not a
Benoit Renard wrote:
Phillip Jones wrote:
And if I were to use Thunderbird I actually like Postbox better
because the last one I downloaded still allowed javascript in email.
You do realise that JavaScript in mail is a big security risk, right? It
doesn't have a place in e-mail messages in
Benoit Renard wrote:
asmpgmr wrote:
I don't like tabs either and see them as a pointless waste of screen
space when the OS already has window management and its own taskbar
which can be hidden
The taskbar becomes less efficient the more buttons it has. Having tabs
means that your taskbar is
asmpgmr wrote:
On Oct 25, 10:02 am, Robert Kaiser ka...@kairo.at wrote:
Paul B. Gallagher wrote:
I think it's dysfunctional to have a download process complete silently
without telling me it succeeded, or worse yet, stall silently without
telling me there's a problem. I don't know when I can
On Oct 25, 10:37 am, Robert Kaiser ka...@kairo.at wrote:
asmpgmr wrote:
Well the tiny round buttons aren't good. I've never seen any app have
buttons like that, it needs normal buttons. Also what do you perceive
as wrong with the 1.x design ? It looks perfectly fine to me. People
who
Robert Kaiser wrote:
asmpgmr wrote:
Well the tiny round buttons aren't good. I've never seen any app have
buttons like that, it needs normal buttons. Also what do you perceive
as wrong with the 1.x design ? It looks perfectly fine to me. People
who don't like dialogs can use the download
Phillip Jones escribió:
Robert Kaiser wrote:
asmpgmr wrote:
Granted but why do things like change the download progress dialog UI
to be less usable because you don't like dialogs (Your words:
Download progress dialogs ? Eww!). There really is no reason why
this can't look more or less the
Fun times
regrettable as it is my boss has made a Google group for subcontractor
to contact
I would like to set up a mail filter based on emails forwarded from
them. I could enter all 500 emails in to a list but would prefer to use
the from email address which Google uses but there is no
Paul B. Gallagher wrote
I think it's dysfunctional to have a download process complete silently
without telling me it succeeded, or worse yet, stall silently without
telling me there's a problem. I don't know when I can go open the file,
or if it's even there.
I think neither the Download
Phillip Jones wrote:
Benoit Renard wrote:
Phillip Jones wrote:
And if I were to use Thunderbird I actually like Postbox better
because the last one I downloaded still allowed javascript in email.
You do realise that JavaScript in mail is a big security risk, right?
It doesn't have a place
Smiles wrote:
Ray_Net wrote:
Benoit Renard wrote:
NoOp wrote:
There two other methods that you can try:
1. Right-click on the Inbox folder, select 'Rebuild Summary File'.
If that doesn't work:
2. Close SeaMonkey and delete (or better yet, rename) the inbox .msf
files, see:
Ray_Net wrote:
Smiles wrote:
Ray_Net wrote:
Benoit Renard wrote:
NoOp wrote:
There two other methods that you can try:
1. Right-click on the Inbox folder, select 'Rebuild Summary File'.
If that doesn't work:
2. Close SeaMonkey and delete (or better yet, rename) the inbox .msf
files, see:
Robert Kaiser wrote:
Daniel wrote:
Robert, if I read your reply properly, there is a part of the SeaMonkey
download that is completely, as things stand now!
Why is it then included at all??
Because extensions can use it. And it's not much download space, JS code
compressed quite well.
And,
Phillip Jones wrote:
Daniel wrote:
asmpgmr wrote:
On Oct 24, 5:40 pm, Robert Kaiser ka...@kairo.at wrote:
1) Tabs were not in IE until very recently (IE7) while Mozilla has had
them for ages (Opera was the first tabbed browser, though).
2) The vast majority of users love tabs, please accept
Benoit Renard wrote:
Phillip Jones wrote:
For example I've always thought Tabs was not what most users wanted,
because it was a gee-whiz-bang feature that was in IE. we had to have it.
You're wrong.
OR, how about killing javascript, in Thunderbird.
Security risk, as pointed out above.
Serge Popper wrote:
Daniel wrote:
Serge Popper wrote:
Installed SeaMonkey 1.1.18 a couple of weeks ago and have had no
problems until tonight. When I started SeaMonkey, my incoming mail
folder opened normally but was not downloading my new mail. I
clicked on the get messages and a little
Jens Hatlak wrote:
Daniel wrote:
Jens Hatlak wrote:
David Wilkinson wrote:
If I want to migrate an SM1 profile to SM2 on a new Windows 7 machine,
do I have to have SM1 installed, or can I just copy the SM1 profile to
my new machine and import it to SM2?
SM1 itself is not needed, but
asmpgmr wrote:
Now I realize this is subjective and that you think progress dialogs
are soo backwards, only really old software uses such a thing.
That's not what I think but you seem to be so convinced that I do that
you ignore anything I'm saying anyhow, it seems.
Robert Kaiser
Craig wrote:
Btw, how was the release party? Any embarrassing photos? I would've
loved to drop by but I found myself on the wrong continent...
The party is on Monday, i.e. still about 18 hours away - and it won't be
very embarassing, as it's still on the day _before_ the actual release
and
On Oct 25, 4:52 pm, Robert Kaiser ka...@kairo.at wrote:
asmpgmr wrote:
Now I realize this is subjective and that you think progress dialogs
are soo backwards, only really old software uses such a thing.
That's not what I think but you seem to be so convinced that I do that
you ignore
On 10/24/2009 04:03 AM, Benoit Renard wrote:
NoOp wrote:
There two other methods that you can try:
1. Right-click on the Inbox folder, select 'Rebuild Summary File'.
If that doesn't work:
2. Close SeaMonkey and delete (or better yet, rename) the inbox .msf
files, see:
On 10/25/2009 05:59 PM, Robert Kaiser wrote:
- just meet me at the usual place, the Karaoke bar :)
Ah! Perhaps a paypal account for a singing instructor?
enjoy,
-Craig
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