Hi!
from my mailcap:
text/html; netscape %s; test=RunningX
text/html; lynx %s
text/html; lynx -dump %s; copiousoutput
Where can i find a decent RunningX script?
What i want is to run netscape only when i run mutt locally on my pc at home
within the window manager. However when i
I have a question regarding the date and time displayed in the Date:
header of e-mails. Is the time displayed there according to the senders
timezone or my timezone?
Say I get an e-mail with this header:
Date: Wed, 26 Jul 2000 06:29:24 -0700 (PDT)
Has this mail been sent at 06:29 my time, or
Andre --
...and then André Dahlqvist said...
% I have a question regarding the date and time displayed in the Date:
% header of e-mails. Is the time displayed there according to the senders
% timezone or my timezone?
It's displayed according to whatever timezone is specified. More
properly, I
g'o'tz --
...and then g'o'tz ohnesorge said...
% David T-G wrote:
%
% Ahhh... I can't stand PINE and use mutt instead (try it; you'll never go
...
%
% Be warned about Mutt: if it doesn't find enough free space on your harfdisk, it will
% mess up your mail files badly. Use the "one separate
On Thu, Aug 03, 2000 at 12:00:32PM +0200, Jan Houtsma wrote:
Where can i find a decent RunningX script?
What i want is to run netscape only when i run mutt locally on my pc at home
within the window manager. However when i am at work and telnet to my house
and start mutt from there i don't
On Thu, Aug 03, 2000 at 11:20:07AM -0700, Gary Johnson wrote:
On Thu, Aug 03, 2000 at 12:00:32PM +0200, Jan Houtsma wrote:
Where can i find a decent RunningX script?
What i want is to run netscape only when i run mutt locally on my pc at home
within the window manager. However when i
Hello Mutt Users!
On ro 02 sie 2000 19:14:19 GMT Drew Bloechl wrote:
$ host -l pgp.net | grep wwwkeys
and pick one in or near your country. Personally I use
wwwkeys.nl.pgp.net since wwwkeys.us.pgp.net seems to frequently be down.
I thought that wwwkeys are web-based only and didn't try
Never mind my stupid question. I just found a line DISPLAY=:0.0 in
my /etc/zshenv file which always (so also at a telnet session)
sets the DISPLAY variable, which caused netscape to start instead of
lynx or w3m when, from mutt, i visited an url in a telnet window.
I appologize and close this
Jan Houtsma [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote on Thu, 03 Aug 2000:
Only thing that works is manually unsetting $DISPLAY.
Having $DISPLAY defined usually means that there's an X session running.
Why do you have it defined anyway (in that telnet session) if you're not
doing stuff from inside an X