On 3/6/2010 12:12 AM, Bill Davidsen wrote:
Justin Wood (Callek) wrote:
On 3/5/2010 6:04 PM, Bernard Mercier wrote:
Jens Hatlak avait énoncé :
Bernard Mercier wrote:
In a linux forum (puppylinux) I have a discussion with a guy who
prefers
FireFox because of the autoupdate function where updates are done
in the
background and only the changed files are replaced.

Is there something like this in SeaMonkey and if no will it be
there and
when?

SM 2 already has support for that (Help> Check for Updates). Maybe it's
disabled if you installed SM through your Linux distribution or the
user
you're running it with doesn't have write permissions for the
application directory.

HTH

Jens
As far as I see, when the 'update' is detected, SeaMonkey proposes to
go to the
web site and download a new version.
That's not what FF does, it updates automatically only thos files
which have a
need for it.


Yes the newest SM version does the background update; the "Go to
website" was only for the earlier series. If its installed via a
vendor (Linux Vendor) it *might* be different.

I think you mean a background download, as of 2.0.2->2.0.3 it still
required an application reboot, nothing remotely "background" about it.
The material can be gotten background if you enable that, but you don't
actually run the updates until a boot.


semantics, semantics; You are correct though. But it is JUST LIKE firefox ;-)

--
~Justin Wood (Callek)
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