Yep. IMHO, it's the only way to fly :-)

Since version 1.0.x, GNOME has been as solid as a rock for me. I found KDE 
2.0 to be simply unusable, but from 2.1 things got really good. I love GNOME 
for its ultra-configurable Panel and its equally versatile Sawfish WM. At the 
same time, I love KDE for Konqueror (both as a browser and as a file manager) 
and Kmail.

At the moment I have Mandrake 8.0 with both GNOME 1.4 and KDE 2.2b1 
installed. KDE has never been quite as stable as GNOME for me (YMMV), and 
running KDE apps like Konqueror and Kmail in GNOME provides me with the 
ultimate in flexibility. If a KDE-related process goes rogue (as it does on 
occasion; it is a beta after all), I can simply kill all of KDE ("killall 
kdeinit") and load it back up again. GNOME stays up, totally unharmed.


On Fri, 20 Jul 2001 23:09, Ravi Malghan wrote:
> can Konqueror be run on a gnome environment?
> Thanks
> Ravi
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "s" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Sent: Thursday, July 19, 2001 7:12 PM
> Subject: Re: [newbie] Best browser for linux?
>
> > Konqueror is my fave.  Opera, mozilla, galeon, and slipknot (or something
>
> or
>
> > other that comes with the power pack) are all adequate enough, but
>
> konqueror
>
> > is undoubtedly the best (imo).  And if you like a netscape, get 6.1.  It
>
> is
>
> > very stable and useable, cause your right, 6.0 will crash every dern time
>
> you
>
> > open it.  If you like text only lynx is neato in a terminal (I like to
>
> play
>
> > with it sometimes and it's handy if your X won't boot - so remember it
> > for future reference), and then there's links.
> > -s
> >
> > On Thursday 19 July 2001 10:25 am, you wrote:
> > > Hello: I have Mandrake 8.0 and use the default browser Netscape which
>
> comes
>
> > > with it. But this sucks specially on pages where there are some
> > > applets.
>
> I
>
> > > tried installing Netscape 6.0, it works great but crashes very often.
>
> Does
>
> > > anybody have any suggestion on which broswer works great?
> > >
> > > Thanks
> > > Ravi

-- 
Sridhar Dhanapalan.
        "There are two major products that come from Berkeley:
        LSD and UNIX. We don't believe this to be a coincidence."
                -- Jeremy S. Anderson

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