On Tuesday 03 Jan 2012 14:55:38 Michael Mol wrote:
> Michael Mol wrote:
> > Hinnerk van Bruinehsen wrote:
> >> On 02.01.2012 18:58, Michael Orlitzky wrote:
> >>> On 01/02/12 12:47, Mark Knecht wrote:
> >>>> Again, 'equery depends' will tell you if any package locatable
> >>>> through the @world hierarchy needs the package. No need to
> >>>> uninstall anything to do that level of investigation.
> >>>> revdep-rebuild -I is also useful, although more historically than
> >>>> now.
> >>> 
> >>> This was essentially Michal Mol's suggestion, and I gave an
> >>> example where it would remove something important.
> >>> 
> >>>> Really, the proposal to 'fix --update' doesn't address really
> >>>> knowing what your system is running and why. Get to the root of
> >>>> that and the --update thing becomes the non-issue that many of us
> >>>> think it is.
> >>> 
> >>> This would be a suggestion to travel back in time and document
> >>> something that I have no way of knowing now.
> >> 
> >> You could create your own overlay with "meta"-ebuilds, e. g.
> >> system-maintenance, customer1, customer2.
> >> Inside the ebuilds you define depends on the packages the customer
> >> wants. Doing so you could wipe everything except the "meta"-ebuilds
> >> from world. When a customer quits you can unmerge his or her
> >> "meta"-ebuild and depclean.
> >> If you add everything needed to the respective "meta"-ebuild, you'll
> >> always be on the safe side.
> > 
> > Getting EnigMail set up on a Seamonkey/Win7 box, and Enigmail is
> > complaining that your signature is unverified. I don't know/understand
> > PGP/GPG all that well, but I think this is something you're supposed to
> > be able to fix on your end. If that's not the case, let me know, and
> > I'll get it fixed on my end. :)
> > 
> > gpg command line and output:
> > C:\Program Files (x86)\GNU\GnuPG\gpg.exe
> > gpg: Signature made 01/03/12 09:05:56 using RSA key ID 8D16461C
> > gpg: Can't check signature: public key not found
> 
> Doh...that was supposed to go directly to Hinnerk. "Reply to sender
> only" my hind leg...

Looks like a recently created gpg key.  Assuming the owner has uploaded it to 
a public key server, it seems likely that it has not propagated across the 
public servers yet and your enigmail plugin alerts you about it.
-- 
Regards,
Mick

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