I've always seen that FOSS sites assume you already know what the product
is and can do. FAQs usually never contain the question WTF is this, which
one would assume is a FAQ.
Here, here! I wish I had a dollar for every time I picked up a clue
about a gee whiz neato toy from a mailing list or
Randy Edwards [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Subject: Re: Mozilla.org - An Open Source possibility?
I've always seen that FOSS sites assume you already know what the product
is and can do. FAQs usually never contain the question WTF is this,
which
one would assume is a FAQ.
Here, here! I wish I
On Thu, Dec 04, 2003 at 11:32:49PM -0500, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I'm not saying that this is the only way, but it certainly seems like *a*
way.
Comments?
I've always seen that FOSS sites assume you already know what the product
is and can do. FAQs usually never contain the question
Interesting.
All the Mozilla that is fit to print.
In lieu of news, how about a hints and kinks corner?
md
--
Jon maddog Hall
Executive Director Linux(R) International
email: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 80 Amherst St.
Voice: +1.603.672.4557 Amherst, N.H. 03031-3032 U.S.A.
WWW:
Jon maddog Hall wrote:
Interesting.
All the Mozilla that is fit to print.
In lieu of news, how about a hints and kinks corner?
I know you probably meant a *Linux* hints and tips, but a Mozilla one
would be nice, too.
Personally I use Mozilla on all my computers and when I install it there
On Fri, 2003-12-05 at 15:35, Brian Chabot wrote:
Jon maddog Hall wrote:
Interesting.
All the Mozilla that is fit to print.
In lieu of news, how about a hints and kinks corner?
I know you probably meant a *Linux* hints and tips, but a Mozilla one
would be nice, too.
Hello list,
Has anyone been to http://www.mozilla.org lately?
I find it rather interesting. Heavy marketing, with quotes from reviews,
just like for a commercial product. Links to order CDs right from the front
page. Links for affordable telephone support, too. All very slick, with
nice