Re: Pine, Qmail, and time zones

1999-02-23 Thread Chuck Milam


On Mon, 22 Feb 1999, Fred Lindberg wrote:

 It may be configuration problem. Look at where /etc/localtime links.

/etc/localtime - ../usr/share/zoneinfo/US/Central
 
 I use UTC on the computer and pine puts .. + (  ). Mutt doesn't do
 the "(  )" thing. Maybe changing MUAs would help?

That may be an option for me, but not for my users.  *Sigh*

Here's something interesting:  I have TWO date lines in my mail messages,
it seems.  (Maybe this is normal?):

Date: Tue, 23 Feb 1999 07:51:14 -0600
Date: Tue, 23 Feb 1999 07:51:14 -0600 (EST) -- Where does this come from?

Well, I'm off again in further search of the answer...

--
Chuck Milam I.T. Division - Academic Computing
[EMAIL PROTECTED] University of Wisconsin at Oshkosh




Re: Pine, Qmail, and time zones

1999-02-22 Thread Chuck Milam


On Fri, 19 Feb 1999, Harald Hanche-Olsen wrote:

 Nor is it generated by qmail.  Date: header fields are only generated
 in two places within qmail:  In qmail-inject, which always uses time
 zone -, and in predate.  Both of them print only the numeric time
 zone.
 
 So this is a pine and/or a library problem, not a qmail one.

Of course, the guys over on the Redhat list insisted that this was neither
a Redhat Linux nor a Pine problem.  

Back to the grind...

--
Chuck Milam I.T. Division - Academic Computing
[EMAIL PROTECTED] University of Wisconsin at Oshkosh



Re: Pine, Qmail, and time zones

1999-02-22 Thread Fred Lindberg

On Mon, 22 Feb 1999 12:17:24 -0600 (EST), Chuck Milam wrote:

Of course, the guys over on the Redhat list insisted that this was neither
a Redhat Linux nor a Pine problem.  

It may be configuration problem. Look at where /etc/localtime links.

I use UTC on the computer and pine puts .. + (  ). Mutt doesn't do
the "(  )" thing. Maybe changing MUAs would help?


-Sincerely, Fred

(Frederik Lindberg, Infectious Diseases, WashU, St. Louis, MO, USA)