

- WHICH DEVICES USES SEAMONKEY BROWSER HOW TO
- WHICH DEVICES USES SEAMONKEY BROWSER ARCHIVE
- WHICH DEVICES USES SEAMONKEY BROWSER PORTABLE
- WHICH DEVICES USES SEAMONKEY BROWSER CODE
One has to inspect the single archive folders and stumble across a "zip" e.g. but without this clear info, it's really very hard to figure out!
WHICH DEVICES USES SEAMONKEY BROWSER PORTABLE
Quote JohnHell It is portable!!! For the very first version it always has been portable, or has had got a portable option, as you prefer:
WHICH DEVICES USES SEAMONKEY BROWSER HOW TO
Meanwhile I can finally find the archived dates and URLs myself, without JS (thanks to url-parameters and cdx), but how to find specific answers to KM-problems inside this pile of URLs?Įdited 1 time(s). But how long yet, if Seamonkey now dies too.īy the way mozillazine must also close, after some 20 years, another extremely valuable resource.īut at least its admin plans to keep the site public, as a static, frozen archive.Īnd whenever a site goes down everyone places all hopes in the wayback archive, but have lately realized: without a powerful search engine that's rather useless too! At least for sites like this forum here. Those of the FF addons which were also compatible with Seamonkey or Thunderbird, were not deleted by Mozilla, they are still there. What's additionally worrying me about this is the addons archive on AMO. The posting above sounds hopeful, but on the other hand have recently read that it's more and more dying too, due to losing devs (always were just a few, in spare time, and meanwhile almost just 1 left), and also due to Mozilla's removal of all the engine bridges for forks. Regarding Seamonkey, have not much hope either. Browser, Operating System, Search engine, Videos, Mail and Doc services, cloud hosting etc., no escape. They have become absolutely almighty by now, and in various fields. Today the situation is much worse as in days of IE6, nothing will be able to replace Google anymore. the graveyard keeps filling, and the downhill path will not end anytime soon For now, enjoy SeaMonkey in Windows, Mac, Linux, and even Solaris.Doom, gloom. Hopefully this is a harbinger of more user-friendly installs in Linux-land for a variety of software. Just like Windows/Mac for those of us who don't see the command line interface as Linux' strongest feature. Double-click on the appropriate shell script and you're in business. One of the most noteworthy features I discovered, though, was its installation under Ubuntu. Students will probably bump up against its limitations fairly early in a web design class, but average staff as well as students who simply need to generate content for non-computing classes will find that it is quite sufficient. It also produces fairly clean code, at least by the standards of Word or FrontPage, so provides an easy platform for experimentation. They can use the same Firefox-ish interface for browsing as well as writing web pages and the WYSIWYG editor is very easy to use. In particular, Composer is an outstanding tool for introducing HTML to students and staff who want to post course content online. While none of these are terribly exciting in and of themselves, the interface is pretty clean and is much faster than some of the older Mozilla products.

Users have a choice of web browser (Navigator), Mail/Newsgroup client, an HTML editor (Composer), Address Book, and an IRC chat client, all through a single interface. If you have ever used Netscape Navigator or any of the non-Firefox web browsers from Mozilla, SeaMonkey is going to look very familiar. Whereas the main focus of the Mozilla Foundation is on Mozilla Firefox and Mozilla Thunderbird, our group of dedicated volunteers works to ensure that you can have "everything but the kitchen sink" - and have it stable enough for corporate use.
WHICH DEVICES USES SEAMONKEY BROWSER CODE
The SeaMonkey project is a community effort to deliver production-quality releases of code derived from the application formerly known as "Mozilla Application Suite". SeaMonkey is actually best described by its creators, a splinter group of the Mozilla Foundation:
