The mozilla-browser dependency is very annoying since a system for end users should not have more than one web browser available for the user.
The Ubuntu people have linked against Firefox. I know it's not the main Mozilla development platform, but it has become the de-facto mozilla default browser. There's something else to considere here: Yelp is a package most interesting to people running GNOME, and gnome-desktop-environment depends on one of three browsers (epiphany-browser, galeon or mozilla-firefox-gnome-support), of these three browsers two already depend on mozilla-browser (epiphany-browser and galeon), so the only sane option for a user that does not like to have galeon | epiphany + mozilla-browser is to go for mozilla-firefox. But Yelp then depends on mozilla-browser, this is kind of a dead-end, there's no way to have a GNOME system with only one web browser. A solution that comes to my mind, which may be stupid is to have a yelp-mozilla and yelp-firefox packages. But of course the intelligent solution is to crack mozilla-browser's maintainer brain to force him to voluntary comply with the requirement to separate the libraries and the browser. Of course it's somehow difficult to force someone to voluntary do anything. -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]

