On Sun, Sep 14, 2008 at 4:51 PM, Lanny Marcus <lmmailinglists at gmail.com> wrote: > > If I install it, where should I install it?. (I think there were > SeaMonkey RPMs, but for CentOS 3 > and CentOS4). > The installer puts it in /usr/local/seamonkey by default, then makes a link (symbolic?) to there from /usr/bin/seamonkey. >> I should also point out that I've had a lot of trouble with the last >> two versions of Seamonkey. It has a tendency to crash whenever a >> local file is supposed to be accessed, usually when attempting to save >> or download a file or web page. > > Not good. Is that on 64 bit CentOS or 32 bit? (Probably, it doesn't make > a difference). > Both. >> (Funny thing is, I haven't had that problem with the 64-bit >> pre-release version of 2.0pre1a, although I can't get the pdf and swf >> plugins to work with that....) > > I'm interested in the Composer part of SeaMonkey. Thank you, for your > input! I'd recommend getting Kompozer (http://www.kompozer.net/) - it's a LOT like Seamonkey's Composer, but it does a much better job with the html, it has a nicer editor, especially for the html source (with colors and all), and it has a slightly more flexible interface (in most ways - I found an exception last night!). And, if your Seamonkey crashes, which it does a lot on all my machines, it won't take Kompozer with it! HTH mhr