> On Thu, Aug 6, 2009 at 1:27 PM, Duncan<1i5t5.dun...@cox.net> wrote:
> AFAIK, the only way to do that now would be to show all headers. Of
> course, that's a toggle (view, body pane, show all headers...)
That is for Header pane. Between header and body pane there is a solid
tab which shows "Fro
> On Wed, Aug 5, 2009 at 6:47 PM, Duncan<1i5t5.dun...@cox.net> wrote:
> While 0.14.2 is indeed pan stable, it's effectively abandoned code,
> /years/ outdated now. As such, it'll likely need some serious patching
> in ordered to compile against anything even close to modern gtk/glib/
> glibc, or
I am trying to install latest stable version of PAN 0.14.2 .
"configure" runs fine and I get this error while make:
/glib-2.0 -I/usr/lib/glib-2.0/include -I/usr/include/freetype2
-I/usr/include/libpng12 -pthread -I/usr/include/glib-2.0
-I/usr/lib/glib-2.0/include -I/usr/include/libxml2
> On Thu, Jan 15, 2009 at 6:16 PM, Duncan <1i5t5.dun...@cox.net> wrote:
> ..SNIP...
> based ones figured out and get everything including my then three 17"
> monitors working. Pan was the news app I settled on, KDE was the desktop
> and most other apps were KDE based.)
I also started from KDE an
> On Mon, Jan 12, 2009 at 2:52 PM, Duncan <1i5t5.dun...@cox.net> wrote:
> Next question, CentOS 4.4, what does that correspond to for Red Hat
> version, and if you know, Fedora version? Perhaps we can find you some
> compatible repositories and pan and dependencies can be filled from
> binaries f
> On Fri, Jan 9, 2009 at 10:33 PM, Duncan <1i5t5.dun...@cox.net> wrote:
> The recommendation is therefore to try the latest pan, 0.133.
okay, I thought PAN has 2 branches: stable and testing. I did not know
that 0.14 was obsolete. Web-site did not offer much information on it.
> how old Centos
I am trying to compile latest stable pan but getting make error with
libiconv. Since my system CentOS 4.4 does not have any libiconv RPM,
I have to compile libiconv myself from sources:
http://ftp.gnu.org/pub/gnu/libiconv/libiconv-1.12.tar.gz
then I put that in /usr/locaal and ran ldconfig. /usr/l