Lo, on Thursday, May 2, Mike Fontenot did write:
>
> Actually, the more I look at the advice to patch up
> mozilla so that it can handle java applets, the less
> I understand the advice:
>
> "unzip jre.xpi -d $MOZILLA_FIVE_HOME/plugins 'jre-image-i386/*'
> ln -s jre-image-i386/plugin/i386/ns60
Mike Fontenot <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Actually, the more I look at the advice to patch up
> mozilla so that it can handle java applets, the less
> I understand the advice:
>
> "unzip jre.xpi -d $MOZILLA_FIVE_HOME/plugins 'jre-image-i386/*'
> ln -s jre-image-i386/plugin/i386/ns600/libjavap
On Thu, 02 May 2002 13:45:18 -0600
"Mike Fontenot" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Actually, the more I look at the advice to patch up
> mozilla so that it can handle java applets, the less
> I understand the advice:
>
> "unzip jre.xpi -d $MOZILLA_FIVE_HOME/plugins 'jre-image-i386/*'
> ln -s jre-i
Actually, the more I look at the advice to patch up
mozilla so that it can handle java applets, the less
I understand the advice:
"unzip jre.xpi -d $MOZILLA_FIVE_HOME/plugins 'jre-image-i386/*'
ln -s jre-image-i386/plugin/i386/ns600/libjavaplugin_oji.so ."
I don't have "unzip" on my potato sys
Mike Fontenot <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Colin Watson [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>
> > Sounds like outdated advice to me ... in the early days of Mozilla I
> > think you had to set MOZILLA_FIVE_HOME, but you don't need to now.
>
> OK, but is the need to patch up Mozilla with jre.xpi also obsole
Colin Watson [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Sounds like outdated advice to me ... in the early days of Mozilla I
> think you had to set MOZILLA_FIVE_HOME, but you don't need to now.
OK, but is the need to patch up Mozilla with jre.xpi also obsolete?
Other articles (re: both potato & woody) seem to s
On Wed, May 01, 2002 at 04:20:16PM -0600, Mike Fontenot wrote:
> I was trying to follow some advice I got from this newsgroup,
> to patch up mozilla so that it would be able to handle java
> applets. The advice was to download jre.xpi, and then to
> execute the commands:
>
> "unzip jre.xpi -d $M
Jamin W. Collins wrote:
> The above items are simply environment variables. They are created when
> Mozilla is started. They are not permanent. The fact that they aren't
> there after a reboot is quite normal, they shouldn't be. What problem are
> you experiencing or more specifically, what ar
No, I don't have any issues with it. But it CAN cause problems in
some cases. Sorry, I do not remember the exact details, and was
most likely due to version differences. So if one is having
problems, it is worth checking out.
Paul
P.S. I no longer use Netscape, all that extra garbage they like t
On Tue Apr 30, 2002 at 06:16:44PM -0500, W. Paul Mills wrote:
>
>
> Old netscape directories including ~your_home/.netscape/
> can cause havoc with mozilla. Also make sure you start
>
What! That seems like an odd thing to say. Am I the only one whose got
both Mozilla & Netscape on the same machi
Reboot! This is Linux, never reboot, except to install
new kernel. ;-)
Mozilla runs from a shell script. The variouse variables
are set by the script so mozilla can find all its parts.
Only programs run by the script will see those variables.
They go away when terminated.
Old netscape directorie
"Jamin W. Collins" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> On Tue, 30 Apr 2002 12:42:25 -0600
> "Mike Fontenot" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > I just installed mozilla from potato. When I first
> > executed it (from my non-root login), it appeared
> > to be setting MOZILLA_FIVE_HOME to /usr/lib/mozilla
On Tue, 30 Apr 2002 12:42:25 -0600
"Mike Fontenot" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I just installed mozilla from potato. When I first
> executed it (from my non-root login), it appeared
> to be setting MOZILLA_FIVE_HOME to /usr/lib/mozilla
> (as well as setting various other environmental
> variable
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