Tables not showing up right in Internet Explorer
I created my company's website in Sea Monkey Composer (I love the editor) and the page looks perfect in Chrome, Firefox, and Safari. However, when I pull the web pages up in Internet Explorer, the tables I created are all smashed together or showing the wrong size. I have no idea how to fix it. I am not a big HTML guru, that is why I like the WYSIWYG editor in Sea Monkey. Here is the site link: http://www.glamsmash.com and example of this issue can be found on every page, especially http://www.glamsmash.com/about.html or http://www.glamsmash.com/services/html. Please help me figure this out, thanks! ___ support-seamonkey mailing list support-seamonkey@lists.mozilla.org https://lists.mozilla.org/listinfo/support-seamonkey
How do I convert database?
I am using SeaMonkey 1.1.13 on a Linux 2.6.27.7 kernel and Slackware 12.2 distribution. I would like to convert my database, including the Address Book and other Mail info, Bookmarks, etc. to SeaMonkey 2.1b3 on a Linux 2.6.37.6 kernel and Slackware 13.37 distribution. How do I go about doing this in a fail-safe manner? - Yaakov -- web site www.yaakov.ca == My home site. Many ideas... ___ support-seamonkey mailing list support-seamonkey@lists.mozilla.org https://lists.mozilla.org/listinfo/support-seamonkey
Re: Tables not showing up right in Internet Explorer
Glamsmash Productions wrote: I created my company's website in Sea Monkey Composer (I love the editor) Is this a new web site? The code underneath looks very much 1990s. New work should be DOCTYPE HTML 4.01 Strict, instead of Transitional. Are you transitioning from older legacy pages? You might want to consider updating by switching to something more modern than the ancient Composer. AFAIK, it hasn't been worked on for a long time. Perhaps you could at least use the standalone fork called KompoZer. http://www.kompozer.net/ and the page looks perfect in Chrome, Firefox, and Safari. However, when I pull the web pages up in Internet Explorer, the tables I created are all smashed together or showing the wrong size. I have no idea how to fix it. I am not a big HTML guru, that is why I like the WYSIWYG editor in Sea Monkey. I don't understand what you mean when you say smashed together or wrong size. Do you have a better description? (I don't use Windows, so no Internet Explorer here.) You may mean that there is no space between the words and the pictures. If so, you need padding in the table cells. Tables for layout concept is also quite old. These days we use divs to create column and layout. Here is the site link: http://www.glamsmash.com and example of this issue can be found on every page, especially http://www.glamsmash.com/about.html or http://www.glamsmash.com/services/html. http://www.glamsmash.com/services.html Please help me figure this out, thanks! From the Home page: based [in] New York City who's [whose] mission is to conceptualize In house [Inhouse] services ..probably others... You may check your pages for errors here: http://validator.w3.org/ and http://jigsaw.w3.org/css-validator/ Questions of this nature should be put to a web-authoring newsgroup, such as alt.html -- -bts -This space for rent, but the price is high ___ support-seamonkey mailing list support-seamonkey@lists.mozilla.org https://lists.mozilla.org/listinfo/support-seamonkey
Re: Tables not showing up right in Internet Explorer
Beauregard T. Shagnasty wrote: Glamsmash Productions wrote: I created my company's website in Sea Monkey Composer (I love the editor) Is this a new web site? The code underneath looks very much 1990s. New work should be DOCTYPE HTML 4.01 Strict, instead of Transitional. Are you transitioning from older legacy pages? There are, sadly, still valid reasons for using HTML 4.01 Transitional. Consider the following report : I discovered today that I need to use the S element in what was, until now, an HTML 4.01 Strict document. The reason : CSS text-decoration allows only one value, and thus a stretch of text cannot be both struck- through (as per MSS) and underlined (used to indicate the stretch of text to which a dynamically-displayed lexicographic note applies). HTML 4.01 Strict does not allow S and hence an element in HTML 4.01 Strict cannot be both struck-through and underlined. Philip Taylor ___ support-seamonkey mailing list support-seamonkey@lists.mozilla.org https://lists.mozilla.org/listinfo/support-seamonkey
Re: Tables not showing up right in Internet Explorer
Philip TAYLOR wrote: Beauregard T. Shagnasty wrote: Glamsmash Productions wrote: I created my company's website in Sea Monkey Composer (I love the editor) Is this a new web site? The code underneath looks very much 1990s. New work should be DOCTYPE HTML 4.01 Strict, instead of Transitional. Are you transitioning from older legacy pages? There are, sadly, still valid reasons for using HTML 4.01 Transitional. Consider the following report : I discovered today that I need to use the S element in what was, until now, an HTML 4.01 Strict document. The reason : CSS text-decoration allows only one value, and thus a stretch of text cannot be both struck- through (as per MSS) and underlined (used to indicate the stretch of text to which a dynamically-displayed lexicographic note applies). HTML 4.01 Strict does not allow S and hence an element in HTML 4.01 Strict cannot be both struck-through and underlined. s is deprecated. One should use strike ... /strike instead. This works, but of course u is deprecated as well. pText is strikeustruck-through and underlined/u/strike./p Of course, this thread isn't a SeaMonkey problem, but one of web design. -- -bts -This space for rent, but the price is high ___ support-seamonkey mailing list support-seamonkey@lists.mozilla.org https://lists.mozilla.org/listinfo/support-seamonkey
Re: How do I convert database?
Yaakov Nahum Ben-Avraham - Яаков Нахум Бен-Аврахам - יעקב נחום בן אברהם wrote: I am using SeaMonkey 1.1.13 on a Linux 2.6.27.7 kernel and Slackware 12.2 distribution. I would like to convert my database, including the Address Book and other Mail info, Bookmarks, etc. to SeaMonkey 2.1b3 on a Linux 2.6.37.6 kernel and Slackware 13.37 distribution. How do I go about doing this in a fail-safe manner? - Yaakov Kernel levels are irrelevant for this operation, Slackware levels are also meaningless for those of us who do not use Slackware. I believe the conversion is done automatically when you start the newer Seamonkey, although I would make some preparations first: - Clear your Cache - take a backup of your $home/.mozilla directory (this is the fail-safe part). - Start the new Seamonkey. I seem to remember reading that the newest versions of Seamonkey no longer contain the code to migrate 1.x levels, but your Seamonkey level is old enough for that not to be a problem. ___ support-seamonkey mailing list support-seamonkey@lists.mozilla.org https://lists.mozilla.org/listinfo/support-seamonkey
Re: Only check for new mail after opening Mail Newsgroups
BIll Spikowski wrote: Rufus wrote: Kevin L. Hill wrote: On Fri, 20 Apr 2012 11:45:16 -0400, BIll Spikowski wrote: Snip The situation I was inquiring about was the only glitch in my grand plan, which happened when I leave a SM browser window open at my office to download some huge file overnight. Now I know this will be OK as long as I exit all of SM first, then reopen only a browser window. Also, when a hidden SM process is stuck running, that messes my system up because email continues to download. But overall, I couldn't be happier with SM mail and the flexibility it provides me, and the great help that's available in this newsgroup! Bill, if you are about to leave your SM Browser, only, up overnight for your big file download, a couple of minutes after you close SM completely, do a three finger salute, Ctrl-Alt-Del) to see if SM is still running. If so, end task on it. Then start your Browser-only SM for the overnight session. HTH -- Daniel ___ support-seamonkey mailing list support-seamonkey@lists.mozilla.org https://lists.mozilla.org/listinfo/support-seamonkey
Picky-Picky (was:- Re: Message Appearance)
Snip at least a decade or more. Is that a tautology?? (Follow-up set to mozilla.general -- Daniel ___ support-seamonkey mailing list support-seamonkey@lists.mozilla.org https://lists.mozilla.org/listinfo/support-seamonkey
Re: How do I convert database?
A Williams wrote: Yaakov Nahum Ben-Avraham - Яаков Нахум Бен-Аврахам - יעקב נחום בן אברהם wrote: I am using SeaMonkey 1.1.13 on a Linux 2.6.27.7 kernel and Slackware 12.2 distribution. I would like to convert my database, including the Address Book and other Mail info, Bookmarks, etc. to SeaMonkey 2.1b3 on a Linux 2.6.37.6 kernel and Slackware 13.37 distribution. How do I go about doing this in a fail-safe manner? - Yaakov Kernel levels are irrelevant for this operation, Slackware levels are also meaningless for those of us who do not use Slackware. I believe the conversion is done automatically when you start the newer Seamonkey, although I would make some preparations first: - Clear your Cache - take a backup of your $home/.mozilla directory (this is the fail-safe part). - Start the new Seamonkey. I seem to remember reading that the newest versions of Seamonkey no longer contain the code to migrate 1.x levels, but your Seamonkey level is old enough for that not to be a problem. Yes, when I read the OP, I was wondering why Yaakov was just going to SM2.1b3 and why to a b3 level at all?? Why not to SM2.1 final, and then update through to SM2.8 or the soon to be released SM2.9?? -- Daniel ___ support-seamonkey mailing list support-seamonkey@lists.mozilla.org https://lists.mozilla.org/listinfo/support-seamonkey
Re: saving email as text file
MCBastos wrote: Interviewed by CNN on 21/04/2012 19:35, Rick Merrill told the world: Yes but - it would be nice to make it automatic. I think the eml is from a Microsoft standard - it should be fixable somewhere inside, say, Windows XP. Just an addendum to my previous post: You might be thinking of .msg, the format Office Outlook uses. .MSG is based on a Microsoft format called COM stuctured storage OLE2 compound documents The .eml format (used, among others, by Outlook Express) is supposed to be RFC822-based. At least, the Mozilla version is. Thanks for the tour de force - I should try .msg! ___ support-seamonkey mailing list support-seamonkey@lists.mozilla.org https://lists.mozilla.org/listinfo/support-seamonkey
Re: How do I convert database?
Daniel wrote: A Williams wrote: Yaakov Nahum Ben-Avraham - Яаков Нахум Бен-Аврахам - יעקב נחום בן אברהם wrote: I am using SeaMonkey 1.1.13 on a Linux 2.6.27.7 kernel and Slackware 12.2 distribution. I would like to convert my database, including the Address Book and other Mail info, Bookmarks, etc. to SeaMonkey 2.1b3 on a Linux 2.6.37.6 kernel and Slackware 13.37 distribution. How do I go about doing this in a fail-safe manner? - Yaakov Kernel levels are irrelevant for this operation, Slackware levels are also meaningless for those of us who do not use Slackware. I believe the conversion is done automatically when you start the newer Seamonkey, although I would make some preparations first: - Clear your Cache - take a backup of your $home/.mozilla directory (this is the fail-safe part). - Start the new Seamonkey. I seem to remember reading that the newest versions of Seamonkey no longer contain the code to migrate 1.x levels, but your Seamonkey level is old enough for that not to be a problem. Yes, when I read the OP, I was wondering why Yaakov was just going to SM2.1b3 and why to a b3 level at all?? Why not to SM2.1 final, and then update through to SM2.8 or the soon to be released SM2.9?? I tried to use Slackware for a while in the mid 90's and seem to remember that updating software was . . . pretty fraught. Then again, configuring it to do what I wanted was pretty fraught as well so I checked out Red Hat and SuSE and then moved on. Going back to the point, Slackware 13.37 was released a year ago this week, my guess would be that it came with that level of Seamonkey. ___ support-seamonkey mailing list support-seamonkey@lists.mozilla.org https://lists.mozilla.org/listinfo/support-seamonkey
Re: Tables not showing up right in Internet Explorer
On 4/21/12 11:00 PM, Glamsmash Productions wrote: I created my company's website in Sea Monkey Composer (I love the editor) and the page looks perfect in Chrome, Firefox, and Safari. However, when I pull the web pages up in Internet Explorer, the tables I created are all smashed together or showing the wrong size. I have no idea how to fix it. I am not a big HTML guru, that is why I like the WYSIWYG editor in Sea Monkey. Here is the site link: http://www.glamsmash.com and example of this issue can be found on every page, especially http://www.glamsmash.com/about.html or http://www.glamsmash.com/services/html. Please help me figure this out, thanks! Try posting your question to the comp.infosystems.www.authoring.html newsgroup on a non-Mozilla newsgroup server. -- David E. Ross http://www.rossde.com/. Anyone who thinks government owns a monopoly on inefficient, obstructive bureaucracy has obviously never worked for a large corporation. © 1997 by David E. Ross ___ support-seamonkey mailing list support-seamonkey@lists.mozilla.org https://lists.mozilla.org/listinfo/support-seamonkey
Re: Tables not showing up right in Internet Explorer
Glamsmash Productions wrote: I created my company's website in Sea Monkey Composer (I love the editor) and the page looks perfect in Chrome, Firefox, and Safari. However, when I pull the web pages up in Internet Explorer, the tables I created are all smashed together or showing the wrong size. I have no idea how to fix it. I am not a big HTML guru, that is why I like the WYSIWYG editor in Sea Monkey. Here is the site link: http://www.glamsmash.com and example of this issue can be found on every page, especially http://www.glamsmash.com/about.html or http://www.glamsmash.com/services/html. Please help me figure this out, thanks! http://www.granneman.com/webdev/coding/css/centertables/ -- Ed Mullen http://edmullen.net/ For every action, there is an equal and opposite criticism. ___ support-seamonkey mailing list support-seamonkey@lists.mozilla.org https://lists.mozilla.org/listinfo/support-seamonkey
Re: saving email as text file
Paul B. Gallagher wrote, On 22/04/2012 00:07: Ray_Net wrote: WLS wrote, On 21/04/2012 19:13: What is preventing you from changing the .eml extension to .txt? When i save it with the .txt extension double-clicking on it - NOTEPAD opens it showing Subject: the subject From:the from address Date:the date sent To:the to address MAIL TEXT When I saved your message as .eml and opened it with Notepad, I saw the full headers and everything, as if I had hit CTRL-U. BUT !!! When i save it with the .eml extension, if i double-click on it - SM opens it showing Subject: missing or blank From:missing or blank Date:missing or blank To:missing or blank MAIL TEXT Is this another unresolved SM bug ? When I opened exactly the same file with SeaMonkey, everything was there, properly formatted, no omissions or corruptions. So if it's a bug, it's peculiar to your installation (I'm using 2.8 as well). ok, i have re-tested and this is the new complain: When i save it with the .txt extension double-clicking on it - NOTEPAD opens it showing Subject: the subject From:the from adress Date:the date sent To:the to adress MAIL TEXT BUT !!! When i CHANGE the .txt extension to the .eml extension, if i double-click on it - SM opens it showing Subject: missing or blank From:missing or blank Date:missing or blank To:missing or blank MAIL TEXT So, SM cannot show the saved headers which are in the .txt file. ___ support-seamonkey mailing list support-seamonkey@lists.mozilla.org https://lists.mozilla.org/listinfo/support-seamonkey
Re: Tables not showing up right in Internet Explorer
David E. Ross wrote: Try posting your question to the comp.infosystems.www.authoring.html newsgroup on a non-Mozilla newsgroup server. Alternatively, if the code is exactly as emitted from Seamonkey Composer, file a bug report that, in certain circumstances, the composer can emit invalid code : http://validator.w3.org/check?uri=http://www.glamsmash.com/ Philip Taylor ___ support-seamonkey mailing list support-seamonkey@lists.mozilla.org https://lists.mozilla.org/listinfo/support-seamonkey
Re: saving email as text file
Rick Merrill wrote, On 22/04/2012 13:37: MCBastos wrote: Interviewed by CNN on 21/04/2012 19:35, Rick Merrill told the world: Yes but - it would be nice to make it automatic. I think the eml is from a Microsoft standard - it should be fixable somewhere inside, say, Windows XP. Just an addendum to my previous post: You might be thinking of .msg, the format Office Outlook uses. .MSG is based on a Microsoft format called COM stuctured storage OLE2 compound documents The .eml format (used, among others, by Outlook Express) is supposed to be RFC822-based. At least, the Mozilla version is. Thanks for the tour de force - I should try .msg! SM save as .msg or save as .eml gives the same result. SM save as .txt give a different result, the header are the simplified one, and changing the extension as .eml permit by a double-click to open in SM BUT the headers is not shown. ___ support-seamonkey mailing list support-seamonkey@lists.mozilla.org https://lists.mozilla.org/listinfo/support-seamonkey
Re: Tables not showing up right in Internet Explorer
Glamsmash Productions wrote: I created my company's website in Sea Monkey Composer (I love the editor) and the page looks perfect in Chrome, Firefox, and Safari. However, when I pull the web pages up in Internet Explorer, the tables I created are all smashed together or showing the wrong size. I have no idea how to fix it. I am not a big HTML guru, that is why I like the WYSIWYG editor in Sea Monkey. Here is the site link: http://www.glamsmash.com and example of this issue can be found on every page, especially http://www.glamsmash.com/about.html or http://www.glamsmash.com/services/html. Please help me figure this out, thanks! The first thing you will want to do is make your web document compatible for web standards, and then for Internet Explorer. Within your tables declarations you have used a CSS element called: margin-right: auto; and margin-left: auto; IE ignores those elements if the DOCTYPE is not compatible. Your DOCTYPE: !DOCTYPE html PUBLIC -//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN Change your DOCTYPE to: !DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC -//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/loose.dtd; Notice the quotes after the EN and the complete doctype. The entire doctype should be on a single line with only one blank space between the quots of EN and http:// You will need to modify the doctype in a text editor and set Komposer (Composer) to not change the HTML coding when opening a web document. Good luck, Michael G -- Armadillo Web Development www.armadilloweb.com Cell: 903.244.3644 Opening your Door to Opportunity and inviting the world to walk through. Character is doing the right thing... Even when no one is watching... ___ support-seamonkey mailing list support-seamonkey@lists.mozilla.org https://lists.mozilla.org/listinfo/support-seamonkey
Re: saving email as text file
On 04/21/2012 05:26 PM, Ray_Net wrote: WLS wrote, On 21/04/2012 19:13: Rick Merrill wrote: When ever I File Save As File the default extension is .eml but I would like it to be .txt (as I don't use Outlook...) Thx, What is preventing you from changing the .eml extension to .txt? When i save it with the .txt extension double-clicking on it - NOTEPAD opens it showing Subject: the subject From:the from adress Date:the date sent To:the to adress MAIL TEXT BUT !!! When i save it with the .eml extension, if i double-click on it - SM opens it showing Subject: missing or blank From:missing or blank Date:missing or blank To:missing or blank MAIL TEXT Is this another unresolved SM bug ? When I save it with the .eml extension, and select SeaMonkey mail from one of the 3 mail programs on my system, it just opens the browser. If I change the pref to open Mail and Newsgroups, it opens Mail and Newsgroups, and doesn't display the message. Is that an unresolved SM bug or, bug of the Linux build? Thunderbird and KMail display the message properly, as does my text editor program. -- Thunderbird Beta | openSUSE 12.1 | KDE 4.7.2 Humans aren't a color of skin, a religion, a sex, a sexual orientation, or a flag. We are human beings and that is how we need to see and treat each other. - Justin Sane ___ support-seamonkey mailing list support-seamonkey@lists.mozilla.org https://lists.mozilla.org/listinfo/support-seamonkey
seamonkey vs. PDFs (macintosh)
I wonder if others are experiencing similar problems, or have ideas on how to resolve this: I'm running SM 2.8 on a Macintosh (OSX 10.6.8, Snow Leopard), and more precisely: Build identifier: Mozilla/5.0 (Macintosh; Intel Mac OS X 10.6; rv:11.0) Gecko/20120312 Firefox/11.0 SeaMonkey/2.8 For a long time (multiple releases), PDFs have never presented inside SeaMonkey - despite installing Adobe's standard collection of plug-ins. Instead, SeaMonkey always treated PDFs by opening them in a helper application - in my case, set to Apple's Preview. Since the last Adobe updater, SeaMonkey seems to try to open PDFs inside a browser window, but they don't actually open - I just get a blank white page. It doesn't seem to matter how I set the preferences for helper applications - the default is listed as Adobe Reader, the other choices are Preview and Adobe NPAPI plug-in. No matter what the setting, SeaMonkey tries to open the file in a browser window, and fails - I can't seem to get it to revert to it's previous behavior of giving a choice to save or open in Preview. Note that the plug-in seems to work fine in Safari, but also fails in Firefox. Any thoughts, suggestions? Thanks, Miles Fidelman -- In theory, there is no difference between theory and practice. In practice, there is. Yogi Berra ___ support-seamonkey mailing list support-seamonkey@lists.mozilla.org https://lists.mozilla.org/listinfo/support-seamonkey
Re: saving email as text file
On 22.04.2012 16:32, Ray_Net wrote: --- Original Message --- So, SM cannot show the saved headers which are in the .txt file. In SM 2.8 I show exactly the same headers no matter how saved. -- Jay Garcia - www.ufaq.org - Netscape - Firefox - SeaMonkey - Thunderbird Mozilla Contribute Coordinator Team - www.mozilla.org/contribute/ Mozilla Mozillian Member - www.mozillians.org Mozilla Contributor Member - www.mozilla.org/credits/ ___ support-seamonkey mailing list support-seamonkey@lists.mozilla.org https://lists.mozilla.org/listinfo/support-seamonkey
Re: seamonkey vs. PDFs (macintosh) - RESOLVED
A little googling reveals that: - this is a common problem - apparently the latest Adobe reader is simply incompatible with the latest SeaMonkey or Firefox There are two suggested work-arounds: - set SeaMonkey/Firefox to open in 32-bit mode - this DOESN'T work for me, SeaMonkey promptly and repeatedly crashes when trying to open a PDF - disable the Adobe NPAPI plug-in (via add-on manager) - SeaMonkey then automatically opens preview after loading a PDF - works fine Sigh... Miles Miles Fidelman wrote: I wonder if others are experiencing similar problems, or have ideas on how to resolve this: I'm running SM 2.8 on a Macintosh (OSX 10.6.8, Snow Leopard), and more precisely: Build identifier: Mozilla/5.0 (Macintosh; Intel Mac OS X 10.6; rv:11.0) Gecko/20120312 Firefox/11.0 SeaMonkey/2.8 For a long time (multiple releases), PDFs have never presented inside SeaMonkey - despite installing Adobe's standard collection of plug-ins. Instead, SeaMonkey always treated PDFs by opening them in a helper application - in my case, set to Apple's Preview. Since the last Adobe updater, SeaMonkey seems to try to open PDFs inside a browser window, but they don't actually open - I just get a blank white page. It doesn't seem to matter how I set the preferences for helper applications - the default is listed as Adobe Reader, the other choices are Preview and Adobe NPAPI plug-in. No matter what the setting, SeaMonkey tries to open the file in a browser window, and fails - I can't seem to get it to revert to it's previous behavior of giving a choice to save or open in Preview. -- In theory, there is no difference between theory and practice. In practice, there is. Yogi Berra ___ support-seamonkey mailing list support-seamonkey@lists.mozilla.org https://lists.mozilla.org/listinfo/support-seamonkey
Re: seamonkey vs. PDFs (macintosh) - RESOLVED
I guess I never noticed this because I immediately went back to Reader 9.x due to not liking the interface changes in Reader 10...I've read that a lot of people don't - the menu options in particular. I guess enough people did that to get Adobe's attention - I recall recently doing an update for my 9.x installs. -- - Rufus Miles Fidelman wrote: A little googling reveals that: - this is a common problem - apparently the latest Adobe reader is simply incompatible with the latest SeaMonkey or Firefox There are two suggested work-arounds: - set SeaMonkey/Firefox to open in 32-bit mode - this DOESN'T work for me, SeaMonkey promptly and repeatedly crashes when trying to open a PDF - disable the Adobe NPAPI plug-in (via add-on manager) - SeaMonkey then automatically opens preview after loading a PDF - works fine Sigh... Miles Miles Fidelman wrote: I wonder if others are experiencing similar problems, or have ideas on how to resolve this: I'm running SM 2.8 on a Macintosh (OSX 10.6.8, Snow Leopard), and more precisely: Build identifier: Mozilla/5.0 (Macintosh; Intel Mac OS X 10.6; rv:11.0) Gecko/20120312 Firefox/11.0 SeaMonkey/2.8 For a long time (multiple releases), PDFs have never presented inside SeaMonkey - despite installing Adobe's standard collection of plug-ins. Instead, SeaMonkey always treated PDFs by opening them in a helper application - in my case, set to Apple's Preview. Since the last Adobe updater, SeaMonkey seems to try to open PDFs inside a browser window, but they don't actually open - I just get a blank white page. It doesn't seem to matter how I set the preferences for helper applications - the default is listed as Adobe Reader, the other choices are Preview and Adobe NPAPI plug-in. No matter what the setting, SeaMonkey tries to open the file in a browser window, and fails - I can't seem to get it to revert to it's previous behavior of giving a choice to save or open in Preview. ___ support-seamonkey mailing list support-seamonkey@lists.mozilla.org https://lists.mozilla.org/listinfo/support-seamonkey
Re: send mail causes abort - Fixed
On 04/18/2012 09:48 AM, A Williams wrote: ... In the last 10 days I have had one machine where the root partition was damaged, files missing in /bin, /etc and somewhere else as well. Only that partition was affected. /usr, /home, /var, /boot were all ok. Still an absolute pain to recover from. The cause is still unknown but it feels as though I was cracked. Then the power supply went on my other main machine. Cause unknown but totally unrelated to the first problem of course. Finally I have the time to go back to this problem. That last link did the job - the main Evergreen repository still has the old Seamonkey but the Test one has the new Seamonkey and it works. Of course it had updates to another 60-odd packages but none of them has toasted this machine :-) Thank you, you may not know SuSE but you still provided all the help I could possibly have asked for. Now I'll post another problem . . . You are most welcome. I'll have to load up openSuSE in a virtual machine just to see how it goes. Glad you got it sorted out. Gary ___ support-seamonkey mailing list support-seamonkey@lists.mozilla.org https://lists.mozilla.org/listinfo/support-seamonkey