I've been struggling on and off for ages with trying to get a catch-all rule to work with my Ubuntu installation of Exim4. I already use the aliases file (/etc/aliases) to route mail with various e-mail addresses to local users and had the entry "*: rainydayz" with the intention of catching mis-spelt addresses and delivering them to a single user who could then manually deliver the mail to it's intended recipient.
There's no 64-bit download for SeaMonkey on the official Mozilla site. I've built versions for x86_64 on Ubuntu 9.10.
Also available is the OpenPGP extension.
It's possible to run SeaMonkey from Ubuntu side-by-side with SeaMonkey2 by following these steps :
# sudo tar xvjf seamonkey-2.0.2.en-US.linux-x86_64.tar.bz2 -C /usr/local/lib
My daughter got a Lenovo netbook for school use, and I realised that there were no instructions on how best to keep it updated and secure, so I wrote this for other parents.
Of course it's pretty much general advice on how to keep a Windows machine updated, so applies to pretty much everybody.
It's also available as a downloadable pdf, download it here.
I hope this is of some use.
Daniele Raffo has produced a superb handbook for users of Enigmail. Rainydayz are pleased to announce that an online version is now available on our site.
Whilst all attempts at maintaining consistency have been made, in cases of inconsistency between the pdf and the online versions it is the pdf version that is the definitive version.
After a traumatic journey - which involved one of the cats escaping at a rest stop in Denmark, a blowout on the German autobahn and French customs officials being dissatisfied with the pet passports at Boulogne - we (myself, my wife and my daughter) finally arrived back in the UK just before midnight on 4th August.
We set off to continue our journey to Bristol, but we were very tired so decided to heed the "Don't Drive Tired" signs and take a break at the motorway services. We stopped at the MOTO services at Reading West.