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Seamonkey internet suite
Seamonkey internet suite








seamonkey internet suite
  1. SEAMONKEY INTERNET SUITE INSTALL
  2. SEAMONKEY INTERNET SUITE UPDATE

This is marked improvement over my experiences with the Mozilla and Netscape suites years ago, when the suite’s stability was less than optimal. Other than that one-time glitch, I didn’t find any bugs or stability problems with SeaMonkey. That’s convenient for users who switch between machines regularly. You can choose to store a combination of bookmarks, address book, cookies, passwords, browsing history, and much more. SeaMonkey, like the Mozilla suite, supports storing a profile on a “Roaming Access” server. One feature that might be compelling for users is the Roaming Profile support in SeaMonkey.

SEAMONKEY INTERNET SUITE UPDATE

I didn’t really see any major difference between ChatZilla in SeaMonkey and the ChatZilla extension, except that SeaMonkey’s version of ChatZilla is a bit behind the Firefox extension SeaMonkey includes version 0.9.67, whereas the most recent update in Firefox is 0.9.75. I was running the Linux build on my Ubuntu AMD64 system. This happened only once and went away after I restarted SeaMonkey. When composing a new mail message, I was unable to type any text for the body of the message - the composer window simply wouldn’t accept input in the body field. I ran into one weird glitch with SeaMonkey’s email client. SeaMonkey Navigator was also stable while I was testing it on my Ubuntu system. I was a bit concerned that Gmail wouldn’t be available, or that stuff like digg spy might not work properly, but everything worked just fine. SeaMonkey seems to be on par with Firefox for speed and quality - I didn’t have any problems with sites not rendering properly or AJAXified sites not working properly. I spent a few days using SeaMonkey as my primary application for browsing, email, and IRC. Having all the apps bundled in one suite takes care of that problem.

seamonkey internet suite

Depending on the distro you use, it can be a chore to get mailto links to open in Thunderbird from Firefox, and to get URLs to open in Firefox from Thunderbird. One complaints I’ve heard is that Firefox and Thunderbird don’t play together nicely in Linux.

SEAMONKEY INTERNET SUITE INSTALL

To get all the functionality of SeaMonkey using the separate Mozilla apps, you’d have to install Firefox, Thunderbird, the ChatZilla extension for Firefox, and a separate HTML editor such as Nvu (which is built using the Composer codebase). It includes the Navigator browser, the ChatZilla IRC client, the Composer HTML editor, a mail and newsgroup client, and an address book component all bundled into one big application. SeaMonkey still uses the “kitchen sink” approach. The suite holds up well, but it’s losing ground rapidly to Firefox and Thunderbird.

seamonkey internet suite

SeaMonkey 1.0.4 was released recently, so I decided this would be a good time to check in on SeaMonkey to see where it stands. However, rather than abandoning the project entirely, the Mozilla Project provided the infrastructure to allow the community to continue development of the Mozilla Suite as SeaMonkey. The Mozilla project scuttled development for the legacy Mozilla Suite in 2005 after shifting focus to work on Firefox and Thunderbird.










Seamonkey internet suite