4.4 Alpha 1
What are the Seamonkey2 Issues
Can someone point me to a discussion of the Seamonkey2 issues? I am using it in 4.3.2 and am loving it, except that the browser becomes horribly confused when my laptop runs out of battery. I'm still unable to restore automatic login to this site for instance.
If Seamonkey is dropped, those of us using it as an IMAP mail client will have to run Thunderbird as well, hardly a "lightweight" option. For the non-geek, what does the heavy Firefox/Thunderbird combination give us that a stable Seamonkey would not? The interfaces seem very, very similar, to the extent that Mozilla help documentation does not distinguish between Firefox/Seamonkey browser and Thunderbird/Seamonkey Mail, except for a few points.
Since Seamonkey2 is only at 2.04, perhaps it it too early to give up on it just yet?
If Seamonkey is dropped, those of us using it as an IMAP mail client will have to run Thunderbird as well, hardly a "lightweight" option. For the non-geek, what does the heavy Firefox/Thunderbird combination give us that a stable Seamonkey would not? The interfaces seem very, very similar, to the extent that Mozilla help documentation does not distinguish between Firefox/Seamonkey browser and Thunderbird/Seamonkey Mail, except for a few points.
Since Seamonkey2 is only at 2.04, perhaps it it too early to give up on it just yet?
Dont forget Open Office Writer can do HTML, AND it is 'drag and drop'. I guess quite a few have the .sfs installed.technosaurus wrote: I like seamonkey's editor as well... have been using it since netscape composer days back in the mid 90s, but just as an exercise I sat down to try writing a web page in abiword-2.8.2 and was pretty impressed with the results (gui only manual remaster howto). I did miss the quick browser preview capability, but it had the added benefit of being able to export to many different formats that seamonkey cannot and it has a grammar plugin and many others.
Spup Frugal HD and USB
Root forever!
Root forever!
OK, but personally I strongly dislike auto updates, I usually turn it off. If given a choice, fine.Sure, but does that then make auto-update or installation of a later version impossible without also adding dbus?
Depends too on how small techno can get dbus and dbus.glib I guess. Maybe just go with Midori . if it runs cups, then whack in a browser downloader of some description.. maybe [ ]
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- technosaurus
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FYI - I compile without automatic updates and Sylpheed can handle IMAP since version 0.4.99 (currently 3.0.2).
The avoidance of automatic updates is to avoid the annoyance of unnecessary popups for those that run without creating a save file or who often boot with pfix=ram and to avoid incompatibilities with the mainline versions that often carry unnecessary dependencies such as those mentioned.
Sylpheed will open html links in an external browser, but you may need to set preference to /usr/local/bin/defaultbrowser ... that is one thing that I neglected to do in my pet (other preferences as well)
also since Barry has always compiled seamonkey with ldap disabled, I did the same for sylpheed... Unlike Claws mail, sylpheed's plugin system is new so perhaps gpg, ldap etc... can be shifted to plugins in the future. The main difference with Claws is that it can do html with a webkit based plugin... which would favor using midori as the browser...
Seamonkey-1.1.19 ~10MB
last of the 1.X legacy, but still a good choice for now
Firefox-3 + Sylpheed ~10.5MB (no small html viewer +~.5MB)
Works on more sites without having to reset the user agent string. No html emails in Sylpheed except as attachments (could be + or - depending on the user ?)
Seamonkey-2.X ~12MB (no small html viewer +~.5MB)
problems with mail attachments
Midori + Clawsmail including gnutls & html viewer plugin ~8MB (including webkit and other dependencies)
downfalls - needs flash9 or additional mozilla libs - previously had problems resolving https, but webkit would provide a future port for the Puppy Browser since vala has good webkit bindings
Opera - good but proprietary and much larger now unless someone got permission to localize it and have unite as a separate package
... It appears that Seamonkey1 is likely the best choice for the 4.4 series, but Midori/webkit may be the way to go in the future, however it only takes a few minutes for me to crank out a firefox build - so why not?... over 25% (est.) of those who downloaded the last iso ended up downloading the firefox pet anyways (unfortunately I would need to rebuild Midori and all of its dependencies, because I'm not quite happy with the last build)
The avoidance of automatic updates is to avoid the annoyance of unnecessary popups for those that run without creating a save file or who often boot with pfix=ram and to avoid incompatibilities with the mainline versions that often carry unnecessary dependencies such as those mentioned.
Sylpheed will open html links in an external browser, but you may need to set preference to /usr/local/bin/defaultbrowser ... that is one thing that I neglected to do in my pet (other preferences as well)
also since Barry has always compiled seamonkey with ldap disabled, I did the same for sylpheed... Unlike Claws mail, sylpheed's plugin system is new so perhaps gpg, ldap etc... can be shifted to plugins in the future. The main difference with Claws is that it can do html with a webkit based plugin... which would favor using midori as the browser...
Seamonkey-1.1.19 ~10MB
last of the 1.X legacy, but still a good choice for now
Firefox-3 + Sylpheed ~10.5MB (no small html viewer +~.5MB)
Works on more sites without having to reset the user agent string. No html emails in Sylpheed except as attachments (could be + or - depending on the user ?)
Seamonkey-2.X ~12MB (no small html viewer +~.5MB)
problems with mail attachments
Midori + Clawsmail including gnutls & html viewer plugin ~8MB (including webkit and other dependencies)
downfalls - needs flash9 or additional mozilla libs - previously had problems resolving https, but webkit would provide a future port for the Puppy Browser since vala has good webkit bindings
Opera - good but proprietary and much larger now unless someone got permission to localize it and have unite as a separate package
... It appears that Seamonkey1 is likely the best choice for the 4.4 series, but Midori/webkit may be the way to go in the future, however it only takes a few minutes for me to crank out a firefox build - so why not?... over 25% (est.) of those who downloaded the last iso ended up downloading the firefox pet anyways (unfortunately I would need to rebuild Midori and all of its dependencies, because I'm not quite happy with the last build)
Check out my [url=https://github.com/technosaurus]github repositories[/url]. I may eventually get around to updating my [url=http://bashismal.blogspot.com]blogspot[/url].
My vote is keep working on Midori! Size matters but also speed. Firefox (and also Seamonkey 2) can take eons to start up - I usually end up clicking on it two or three times because it takes so long to start compared to the rest of Puppy software that I think it's broken. With Midori, you wouldn't even need a PuppyBrowser because Midori opens within a second or two anyway.
Claws also has a couple of really cool plugins, an RSS reader, and with vCalendar it can handle Outlook meeting requests.
Seamonkey1 just looks and feels old and unappealing, IMO.
Claws also has a couple of really cool plugins, an RSS reader, and with vCalendar it can handle Outlook meeting requests.
Seamonkey1 just looks and feels old and unappealing, IMO.
I have SM2, Firefox, and Midori on my 4.3.2 V3 frugal. I reckon I use Midori 95% of the time as the exact same fonts at the exact same size are easier to read as rendered in Midori as opposed to the other two browsers. The problems I have found are disappearing scroll bars sometimes, the odd rare crash when using the back button, no 'waiting for' message in the status bar, no notifications of completed downloads (libnotify? compiled without?) and the odd site that just does not work quite right, but hey, all browsers have those. None of these is critical for me.
Start up time is too quick to measure and it does not fill my save file.
Start up time is too quick to measure and it does not fill my save file.
Spup Frugal HD and USB
Root forever!
Root forever!
You're so kind to change that to DELL DUDE. Here's the files. I should have added the -a1 to _44, but I'm sure the sames are obvious enough. Thanks a lot for looking into this. I could only put one at a time, so I plunked them into a single file - I hope that's OK - I contemplated several compression schemes, but I'm sure there's a better way.
Also, at the risk of diluting this response, I too vote for Midori (not specifically, but anything faster than FireFox) - Thanks again, Kurt
Also, at the risk of diluting this response, I too vote for Midori (not specifically, but anything faster than FireFox) - Thanks again, Kurt
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Technosaurus
When using DuDE as the preinstalled desktop, you should update /root/.stardust/db_apps_used and /root/.stardust/trays/Utility(.rc) to reflect what's the default apps in the system.
Also note that pinstall.sh changes the settings of the rox menu. '<Option name="menu_quick">1</Option>' must be set by hand in /root/.config/rox.sourceforge.net/ROX-Filer/Options
Sigmund
Please note the file 'pinstall.sh'. It scans the system for installed browser, wordprocessor.....01micko wrote:DuDE-0.1 was (partially) dependent on SM but DuDE-0.2 is not
When using DuDE as the preinstalled desktop, you should update /root/.stardust/db_apps_used and /root/.stardust/trays/Utility(.rc) to reflect what's the default apps in the system.
Also note that pinstall.sh changes the settings of the rox menu. '<Option name="menu_quick">1</Option>' must be set by hand in /root/.config/rox.sourceforge.net/ROX-Filer/Options
Sigmund
- technosaurus
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@zigbert - thanks, thats exactly what I neeed to know
@dell dude - I'll take a look tonight and see if modules themselves are missing or if something just needs updated. btw you can try my zdrv cutter utility to build a set of drivers for your hardware that you can use on any puplet - it is now integrated into pup'n-go
@dell dude - I'll take a look tonight and see if modules themselves are missing or if something just needs updated. btw you can try my zdrv cutter utility to build a set of drivers for your hardware that you can use on any puplet - it is now integrated into pup'n-go
Check out my [url=https://github.com/technosaurus]github repositories[/url]. I may eventually get around to updating my [url=http://bashismal.blogspot.com]blogspot[/url].
- ttuuxxx
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Well if your using a old version of Seamonkey 1 series and saying the latest version of Firefox doesn't have a small browsers really thats like comparing apples and diamonds, loltechnosaurus wrote: Seamonkey-1.1.19 ~10MB
last of the 1.X legacy, but still a good choice for now
Firefox-3 + Sylpheed ~10.5MB (no small html viewer +~.5MB)
Works on more sites without having to reset the user agent string. No html emails in Sylpheed except as attachments (could be + or - depending on the user ?)
Seamonkey-2.X ~12MB (no small html viewer +~.5MB)
problems with mail attachments
Midori + Clawsmail including gnutls & html viewer plugin ~8MB (including webkit and other dependencies)
downfalls - needs flash9 or additional mozilla libs - previously had problems resolving https, but webkit would provide a future port for the Puppy Browser since vala has good webkit bindings
Opera - good but proprietary and much larger now unless someone got permission to localize it and have unite as a separate package
... It appears that Seamonkey1 is likely the best choice for the 4.4 series, but Midori/webkit may be the way to go in the future, however it only takes a few minutes for me to crank out a firefox build - so why not?... over 25% (est.) of those who downloaded the last iso ended up downloading the firefox pet anyways (unfortunately I would need to rebuild Midori and all of its dependencies, because I'm not quite happy with the last build)
What about Firefox 2.20? its newer than seamonkey 1 series, has more security updates and the small browsers still work with it.
Plus only a small amount of people actually use the small browsers anyways, FF any version can do CUPS, etc. But hey go with your gut feelings
ttuuxxx
Last edited by ttuuxxx on Tue 27 Apr 2010, 14:20, edited 1 time in total.
http://audio.online-convert.com/ <-- excellent site
http://samples.mplayerhq.hu/A-codecs/ <-- Codec Test Files
http://html5games.com/ <-- excellent HTML5 games :)
http://samples.mplayerhq.hu/A-codecs/ <-- Codec Test Files
http://html5games.com/ <-- excellent HTML5 games :)
I think YouTube is now refusing to work on Firefox 2. At least that's what my husband says - he had me upgrade him from FireDog to Firefox 3.6 last week because of it.ttuuxxx wrote:What about Firefox 2.20? its newer than seamonkey 1 series, has more security updates and the small browsers still work with it.
- ttuuxxx
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hmmm about 2 weeks ago I had Firepup running which is based on Firefox 1.5, and when I went to youtube it gave a message that I should upgrade, but then it gave you a option to try it anyways and it still worked just fine. Just a extra nag screen.jemimah wrote:I think YouTube is now refusing to work on Firefox 2. At least that's what my husband says - he had me upgrade him from FireDog to Firefox 3.6 last week because of it.ttuuxxx wrote:What about Firefox 2.20? its newer than seamonkey 1 series, has more security updates and the small browsers still work with it.
ttuuxxx
http://audio.online-convert.com/ <-- excellent site
http://samples.mplayerhq.hu/A-codecs/ <-- Codec Test Files
http://html5games.com/ <-- excellent HTML5 games :)
http://samples.mplayerhq.hu/A-codecs/ <-- Codec Test Files
http://html5games.com/ <-- excellent HTML5 games :)
- ttuuxxx
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Here's the blinky sources you requestedDaveS wrote:Been messin' with 4.4 all evening. It really is astonishingly good. Glad I got into Stardust though or I would have been a little lost at first. Can we have Ttuuxxx's pretty Blinky and Jemimah's pretty Vattery please?
ttuuxxx
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- blinky-0.8-1-nicer.tar.gz
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http://audio.online-convert.com/ <-- excellent site
http://samples.mplayerhq.hu/A-codecs/ <-- Codec Test Files
http://html5games.com/ <-- excellent HTML5 games :)
http://samples.mplayerhq.hu/A-codecs/ <-- Codec Test Files
http://html5games.com/ <-- excellent HTML5 games :)
- technosaurus
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ttuuxxx - I was surprised to notice that blinky will compile against gtk1(at least Barry's 0.8 version - haven't tried this one yet) - it would cut down some resource usage in your 2.x series. The same is probably true for others that use eggtray. Let me know if you'd like a gtk1 build (it cut resource usage by ~10mb)
For the devx there is currently an addon pet for the 4.31 devx in the google code files.
For the devx there is currently an addon pet for the 4.31 devx in the google code files.
Check out my [url=https://github.com/technosaurus]github repositories[/url]. I may eventually get around to updating my [url=http://bashismal.blogspot.com]blogspot[/url].
This contains files like libgthread-2.0.so that I needed.
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- glib_DEV-2.16.6-i486.pet
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- Billwho?
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Trialing 4.20
gxine bug
First, I have only been using 4.4 Alpha 1 for a couple of days but so far it looks very good.
Secondly, there seems to be a problem with gxine (not sure if it is puppy related or just gxine itself).
To get the problem:
Secondly, there seems to be a problem with gxine (not sure if it is puppy related or just gxine itself).
To get the problem:
- Save a video file to a directory. I have so far tried mov, wav, mpg, mp4 and flv files as well as some with no extention.
Navigate to the directory containing the video file you want to watch and click on the file.
When gxine opens click on <view><toolbars><visible(full screen)>
Now click on <view><full screen mode>
gxine will now expand to take up the entire screen as it is supposed to do. But the toolbar is at the top even though it is set to be at the bottom and the directory containing that video file is on top of gxine.
Linux = Learning through doing :shock: :? :D
The learning curve may be steep but there is a light at the end of the tunnel.
You just have to pass the occasional oncoming train to get there.
The learning curve may be steep but there is a light at the end of the tunnel.
You just have to pass the occasional oncoming train to get there.