On 9/28/06, Michael V. De Palatis <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > On Thu, Sep 28, 2006 at 09:03:37AM -0500, Steve Bergman wrote: > > As a Gnome app, it should use the default application for that file > > type. > > > > In Gnome 2.14, I just tried it. In Nautilus, right-clicking on a pdf > > file and selecting "properties->open with", I found that xpdf is the > > default for .pdf files. Opening a pdf with epiphany opens it in xpdf. > > I changed it in nautilus to use "Document Viewer" (Evince) and now > > epiphany opens it in evince. > > Well, unfortunately that doesn't work for me. I should be forced into > using the Gnome settings daemon just so that I can get my web browser > to use the appropriate helper applications that I want. > > This is really probably my biggest complaint about Epiphany -- It is > over-reliant in areas such as this on being a Gnome application, which > means that those of us who prefer not to use Gnome have a harder time > using it.
There are other non-GNOME browsers. From the project page: "Epiphany is the web browser for the GNOME desktop. .... Epiphany ties together many GNOME components in order to let you focus on the Web content, instead of the browser application. As part of the GNOME project.... ...fits in perfectly with GNOME...." I'm fairly sure they're targeting the GNOME desktop, and are thusly making it easiest for its users. I, for one, appreciate the simplicity over using Firefox with its rather complicated implementation of filetypes and actions. _______________________________________________ epiphany-list mailing list [email protected] http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/epiphany-list
