Waldo Lemmer wrote:
Chrome violates the HTML5 spec in many ways, and many web developers
only test their sites in Chrome, so some sites occasionally break in Firefox. The situation has improved a lot over the years, though.
Firefox has a channel through which broken sites can be reported: https://support.mozilla.org/en-US/kb/report-breakage-due-blocking
I'm looked into that link. I put my mouse pointer over the thing they
say to check and it shows nothing is detected or blocked. So, I guess
that isn't the problem. This could be a Ebay problem. The way it is supposed to work is when I put in and/or select the items needed, it is supposed to change the button to be clickable. It fails to do that.
Thing is, it could also be Firefox. Firefox works on every website I go
to. I can't recall the last time a site didn't work so I'm kinda
leaning to it being a Ebay problem but I could be wrong. I wasn't
surprised when Seamonkey didn't work. Heck, most sites don't work right
with it anymore. I just know something is wrong since Chrome worked.
Thing is, I don't trust Chrome for much. Even tho I use Gmail, I don't
trust Google much at all either. I use encrypted email for some
things. Keeps their nose out of my business. LOL
I really need to switch to a better email provider. Thing is, I'd like
to set it up so that I have a email program that fetches my emails and
then I just connect locally to read them. After all, Seamonkey stopped fetching emails automatically long ago. Plus, once setup, I could stop
using Seamonkey. Seamonkey needs some serious work. Sad tho, I like
it in a lot of ways.
I may look into other email sites again. I need a really good guide to
get it to work like I need tho. I don't know where to even start.
Dale
:-) :-)
:-) :-)There is Seamonkey documentation, but there are loads of how to's for Mozilla
products. If Seamonkey is mostly the same as Firefox/Thunderbird, you can take look at the Thunderbird resources to find out how to set up Seamonkey to
behave as you want it.
Well, what I'd like to do, install a email program that fetches the
emails and then stores them on my system. Then I can have Thunderbird
or any other email program connect to that and view, create, send or
whatever emails.
Thing is, setting up the first program is complicated.
Well, what I'd like to do, install a email program that fetches the
emails and then stores them on my system. Then I can have Thunderbird
or any other email program connect to that and view, create, send or
whatever emails. Thing is, setting up the first program is
complicated. It is a bit over my head. From what I've read, it is
pretty picky too. It has to be fairly perfect or things don't work.
I'd need a seriously good how to to even get started. It could turn into another long thread like that goofy monitor. :/
On 03/08/2024 18:15, Dale wrote:
Well, what I'd like to do, install a email program that fetches the
emails and then stores them on my system. Then I can have
Thunderbird or any other email program connect to that and view,
create, send or whatever emails. Thing is, setting up the first
program is complicated. It is a bit over my head. From what I've
read, it is pretty picky too. It has to be fairly perfect or things
don't work. I'd need a seriously good how to to even get started. It
could turn into another long thread like that goofy monitor. :/
That's basically fetchmail. Although I gather that's now
abandonware-ish. There is a successor iirc, but I stopped using it
because it broke...
I figure the first step, find a new email provider. Then find out what software works best with it. I so want to get away from gmail.
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