On 12/1/13 10:29 PM +0900, regz91 wrote:
Trane Francks wrote:
On 12/1/13 3:32 PM +0900, regz91 wrote:
LnrB wrote:
WaltS wrote:
sean nathan wrote:
> Stéphane Grégoire wrote, On 11/30/2013 06:10 AM:
>> Hi,
>>
>> Ed Mullen a tapoté, le 27/11/2013 08:33:
>>> What theme do you use?  Default? Modern?  Or some add-on?
>>
>> <https://addons.mozilla.org/fr/seamonkey/addon/debian-simple/>
>
> I've mostly never understood why folks spend so much time on
> personas/themes etc... As long as everything works I'm happy. Also
every
> time someone mentions a theme, I'm usually confronted with "This
theme
> not available for Seamonkey 2.whatever ...
>
> This simple grey installed fine, everything works satisfactorily, but
> I'm wondering why there's a giant swirly in the upper right corner?
>
>
>
>


It is the Debian logo, and part of the theme design.

<http://www.debian.org/>


I had that once, a long time ago, before I got it through my thick head
that Linux was GeekWare and I would never speak Penguin.
(';')
You should have tried out more newbie friendly distros rather than using
"build everything yourself" and use "command line for everything"
distros.

You must mean Slackware. :^)

Yes. slack is included. The best list of easy to use vs difficult to use
distros is beautifully compiled by Arch wiki. Whatever is put  under
"Source-based" and "Minimalist" are going to be really tough to use.

Link:-
https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Arch_Compared_to_Other_Distributions

I learned Linux on Slackware, starting with Slackware 3.1 (AKA Slackware 96). I stuck with the distro through Slackware 12.0, after which I bailed to OS X as my primary OS. As a web host admin, I also work with CentOS and Ubuntu. I rather like Ubuntu, but still have an emotional connection with Slack after all these years.

There was a time in Slackware's history where Patrick decided to drop SeaMonkey as an official package. I was most grateful when he reversed the decision. SeaMonkey is still maintained as an official package under Slackware.

One of the great things about SeaMonkey over all my years with it is that its profiles port easily between Linux and OS X. When I moved from Linux to Tiger, all that was required was FTPing my profile from the Linux box to Tiger and changing write perms. It simply could not have been easier. Much love to SeaMonkey in that regard.

--
/////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
// Trane Francks    [email protected]    Tokyo, Japan
// Practice random kindness and senseless acts of beauty.
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