On 2009-11-16, at 04:51, Nicholas Clark wrote:
Bear with me on this one. There are "only" 1024 lines:
...
You've run out of file descriptors, and not noticed. How careless.
Gnome. Just say Gno.
I think Windowmaker is about the fanciest window manager I want to
use, really, and it's already
Bear with me on this one. There are "only" 1024 lines:
evolution 6508 nclark0r CHR1,3 6570 /dev/null
evolution 6508 nclark1w FIFO0,5 15528 pipe
evolution 6508 nclark2w FIFO0,5 15528 pipe
evolution 6508 nclark
On 2009-06-02, at 07:47, Nicholas Clark wrote:
SYNOPSIS
evolution [OPTIONS] [MAILTO]
DESCRIPTION
This manual page briefly introduces the evolution command.
Evolution
is a graphical groupware suite, a single application for
reading and
sending e-mail and for
SYNOPSIS
evolution [OPTIONS] [MAILTO]
DESCRIPTION
This manual page briefly introduces the evolution command. Evolution
is a graphical groupware suite, a single application for reading and
sending e-mail and for managing calendars, address books, notes, to-do
pe...@taronga.com (Peter da Silva) wrote:
> > I had the pleasure of seeing a Windows NT 3.5 box with two monitors
> > attached. Displayed was an alert at the center of the *desktop*,
> > split evenly between the two screens.
>
> Unfortunately, that behavior has not changed since then, nor is
On Wed, Sep 3, 2008 at 1:03 AM, Peter da Silva wrote:
> On 2008-09-03, at 02:39, Nicholas Clark wrote:
>>
>> Dear Evolution [...] why do you break this workflow horribly by deciding
>> to force the first
>> app to drop its selection as soon as I touch a key?
>
>
> I had the pleasure of seeing a Windows NT 3.5 box with two monitors
> attached. Displayed was an alert at the center of the *desktop*,
> split evenly between the two screens.
Unfortunately, that behavior has not changed since then, nor is it
restricted to Windows.
On Sep 11, 2008, at 2:02 PM, Peter da Silva wrote:
Emphasis on "think windows works". I havent found any Linux apps that
work the way Windows _actually_ works.
Indeed.
Of course MS seems unable to remember how Windows worked,
when it worked.
I miss Windows NT 3.51, that was the last shippi
> Emphasis on "think windows works". I havent found any Linux apps that
> work the way Windows _actually_ works.
Indeed.
> Of course MS seems unable to remember how Windows worked,
> when it worked.
I miss Windows NT 3.51, that was the last shipping version that actually
followed a consistent us
2008/9/3 Peter da Silva :
> On 2008-09-03, at 02:39, Nicholas Clark wrote:
>>
>> Dear Evolution [...] why do you break this workflow horribly by deciding
>> to force the first
>> app to drop its selection as soon as I touch a key?
>
> Because it's written by t
that sentence. "Windows works". :-)
> If they think that that holds, they are most surely deluded on a quest to
> emulate same.
Oh I don't know, by forcing a counter-intuitive, inconsistant, overly
complex workflow in an application that randomly loses data, dies, or
oth
On Wed, Sep 03, 2008 at 03:03:59AM -0500, Peter da Silva wrote:
> On 2008-09-03, at 02:39, Nicholas Clark wrote:
> >Dear Evolution [...] why do you break this workflow horribly by
> >deciding to force the first
> >app to drop its selection as soon as I touch a key?
>
&
On 2008-09-03, at 02:39, Nicholas Clark wrote:
Dear Evolution [...] why do you break this workflow horribly by
deciding to force the first
app to drop its selection as soon as I touch a key?
Because it's written by the great minds of the new age of Linux who
think that the way to wi
Dear Evolution,
So, every other X app I've tried works together as follows
I have a selection highlighted in the first app.
I swap to the second app
I do some typing to make the place ready for the paste
I paste
WIN.
And the second app will only force the first app to drop the selection
So, I accidentally drag the current folder from the folder list over to
the message list. I'd expect some nice little notice, like "Moving a
folder to itself is just retarded. PEBKAC. Please click OK to continue.
HAND."
Buuut, what happens? Evolution faithfully duplicates every
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