Try connecting a web browser to http://localhost:8888. Fproxy listens to port 8888 by default and acts like web server so you view so-called freesites and retrieve files from Freenet through a web browser. When invoked this way, Fproxy will respond with a gateway page with some links somewhere in there toward the bottom I believe. You'll probably want to try The Freedom Engine first since it has links to quite a few other freesites listed on it.
At 10:36 PM 08/14/2002 -0700, Cortland Haws wrote: >OK, this might seem funny, but what do you do once you run the OS X >version of Freenet? Sit back and feel good? Isn't there a built in client >or something? I read that there was something called FProxy, however I >couldn't find it or how to use it. Information this simple should be on >the website. >-- Cortland Haws > <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Mail > <http://home.earthlink.net/~pixelcort/> Blog > <http://homepage.mac.com/pixelcort/> Site > <>< > > >_______________________________________________ >support mailing list >[EMAIL PROTECTED] >http://hawk.freenetproject.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/support _______________________________________________ support mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://hawk.freenetproject.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/support
