"Seamonkey" (with a lowercase "m") refers to brine shrimp and had been used by Netscape and the Mozilla Foundation as a code name for the never-released Netscape Communicator 5 and later the Mozilla Application Suite itself. After initial speculation by members of the community, a Jannouncement confirmed that SeaMonkey would officially become the name of the Internet suite superseding the Mozilla Application Suite. To avoid confusing organizations that still want to use the original Mozilla Application Suite, the new product needed a new name. The generated code is HTML 4.01 Transitional. Its main user interface features four tabs: Normal (WYSIWYG), HTML tags, HTML code, and browser preview. SeaMonkey Composer is a WYSIWYG HTML editor descended from Mozilla Composer. It shares code with Mozilla Thunderbird both Thunderbird and SeaMonkey are built from Mozilla's comm-central source tree. SeaMonkey Mail is a traditional e-mail client that includes support for multiple accounts, junk mail detection, message filters, HTML message support, and address books, among other features. Mail SeaMonkey Mail & Newsgroups 2.53.17.1 It comes with two skins in the default installation, Modern and Classic. SeaMonkey consists of a web browser, which is a descendant of the Netscape family, an e-mail and news client program (SeaMonkey Mail & Newsgroups, which shares code with Mozilla Thunderbird), an HTML editor (SeaMonkey Composer) and an IRC client ( ChatZilla). This allows the user to extend SeaMonkey by modifying add-ons for Thunderbird or the add-ons that were formerly compatible with Firefox before the latter switched to WebExtensions. Ĭompared to Firefox, the SeaMonkey web browser keeps the more traditional-looking interface of Netscape and the Mozilla Application Suite, most notably the XUL architecture. The new project-leading group is called the SeaMonkey Council. The development of SeaMonkey is community-driven, in contrast to the Mozilla Application Suite, which until its last released version (1.7.13) was governed by the Mozilla Foundation. SeaMonkey was created in 2005 after the Mozilla Foundation decided to focus on the standalone projects Firefox and Thunderbird. It is the continuation of the former Mozilla Application Suite, based on the same source code, which itself grew out of Netscape Communicator and formed the base of Netscape 6 and Netscape 7. SeaMonkey is a free and open-source Internet suite. I'm not too sure why but don't really care.Belarusian, Catalan, Chinese (Simplified), Chinese (Traditional), Czech, Dutch, English (US), English (British), Finnish, French, Galician, German, Hungarian, Italian, Japanese, Lithuanian, Norwegian (Bokmål), Polish, Portuguese (Portugal), Russian, Slovak, Spanish (Argentina), Spanish (Spain), Swedish, Turkish, Ukrainian In my case, it would still fail since the 32 bit version just doesn't run on a 64 bit kernel. mozilla folder (and say goodbye to all your bookmarks, etc.) and then try again. That did not sound like it would be required, but many people have that drastic solution: delete your. I'm glad I did not try to delete things and whatnot. I looked into it and there is a direct access to all the releases available and I went in there to find the 64 bit version instead. That was the 32 bits and it starts just fine up until it tries that XPCOM thingy and fails. The default link to download SeaMonkey actually sent me to the 32 bit version. So upgrading Gnome libraries was not the solution, even if it did sound close to what the problem could be. You could install 3.20 from a PPA, but that's not required. Search with Google, I found several references to this error and read about it.Īfter wasting like 1h looking for a problem with Gnome 3.x, I learned that I have 3.18 on Ubuntu 16.04. Actually, the library loads just file (As far as the ldd and binary code are concerned.) Libgtk-3.so.0: cannot open shared object file: No such file or directoryĪs we can see, it says something about XPCOM and the fact that the mozilla library can't be loaded or something like that. XPCOMGlueLoad error for file /home/alexis/tools/mozilla/seamonkey-2.49.1/libmozgtk.so: Indeed, errors were printed out in my console: So I know that it is likely that it prints out some errors when nothing happens like that, so I went to my console and tried to start seamonkey in my command line window. Bad for me as there were some bugs in 2.48 that banks and such were warning about (oh and WordPress too.)Īnyway. It was out on but I did not check for it any time sooner. Today, I finally upgraded to SeaMonkey 2.49.3.
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