Follow up to be absolutely specific:
~$ dpkg --status mozilla
Package: mozilla
Status: install ok installed
Priority: optional
Section: web
Installed-Size: 24
Maintainer: Takuo KITAME <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Version: 2:1.5-3


On Tue, 2003-12-16 at 10:44, Peter Garrett wrote:
> Ithought I mentioned that apt installed debian's "mozilla 1.5-3". That's
> what the "about" entry in the help menu of the browser reports. I gree
> that the /etc/ file points to alternatives, as the name suggests. In my
> case it points to  /usr/bin/mozilla-1.5 .
> 
> Rather puzzling, then, that it doesn't launch mozilla, wouldn't you say?
> Incidentally, that's where the menu link points as well.
> 
> On Tue, 2003-12-16 at 10:30, Ray Olszewski wrote:
> > I don't use Mozilla here so can't help you with most of what you ask about. 
> > I can clear up one bit of confusion, though.
> > 
> > At 09:43 AM 12/16/2003 +1100, Peter Garrett wrote:
> > [...]
> > >Can anyone explain what might have happened? BTW, "which mozilla"
> > >returns /usr/bin/mozilla, and checking "ls -al /usr/bin/mozilla" shows
> > >that it is a link to "/etc/alternatives/mozilla".
> > >"/usr/bin/MozillaFirebird" is not a link; it appears to be the
> > >executable binary, or the launch script for it.
> > >
> > >I'm cautious about altering the link for /usr/bin/mozilla, as I assume
> > >it is a way for Debian to find the binary... but then the link doesn't
> > >do what it's designed to do!
> > 
> > Are you sure? /etc/alternatives/mozilla will itself be a link to something, 
> > to whatever real app is supposed to be running as "mozilla". This is a 
> > standard bit of Debianish stuff ... if you look in /etc/alternatives, you 
> > should find you have links for any number of apps that come in many 
> > versions, including such basics (on my system, anyway) as vi,  editor, awk, 
> > and telnet. You need to see what the /etc/alternatives/mozilla symlink 
> > points to in order to figure out what is going on with your system. It 
> > might well point back to "/usr/bin/MozillaFirebird", for example.
> > 
> > As to your general problems ... please do recall that Sid is currently the 
> > Unstable version of Debian. It gets weird from time to time, though the 
> > weirdness is usually transitory ("dpkg-reconfigure" is one good response to 
> > this; so is waiting an hour and doing an apt-get update/upgrade).
> > 
> > Also, Sid changes often enough that saying you installed the "latest" of 
> > anything is no help ... you really should report a package version,
> 
> please look in my original post and above
> 
> >  unless 
> > (a) you literally installed just before you sent the message and (b) you 
> > hope for help only from someone who also installed just before reading the 
> > message.
> > 
> > Since "mozilla" is a wrapper package that installs other packages as 
> > dependencies (works the same way as the kernel packae James was asking 
> > about earlier today),  you may just have hit some sort of transient 
> > mismatch among the dependencies.
> > 
> > 
> > -
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