Hello,
I use GnuPG 1.4.3 with Ubuntu 6.10, Seahorse 0.9.5 and
Evolution 2.8.1 and I have this error message :
Because "can't connect to
`/home/marc/.gnome2/seahorse-akXvEN/S.gpg-agent': Aucun fichier ou
répertoire de ce type
gpg: impossible de se connecter à
`/home/marc/.gnome2/seahorse-akXvEN/S
I have a test version of a GnuPG v2.0.2 Mac OS Tiger install available
at
http://www.py-soft.co.uk/~benjamin/download/mac-gpg/mac-gnupg-2.0.2-TEST1.tgz
(Sig available at
http://www.py-soft.co.uk/~benjamin/download/mac-gpg/mac-gnupg-2.0.2-TEST1.tgz.sig)
This is a Universal Binary and /should/ wo
On Thu, Feb 15, 2007 at 04:28:05PM -0500, pete wrote:
> > -BEGIN PGP MESSAGE-
> > Version: PGP Desktop 9.5.2 (Build 4075) - not licensed for commercial use:
> > www.pgp.com
>
> PGP Desktop adds a second line for "www.pgp.com". If I paste the
> message into notepad and delete that line, t
pete wrote the following on 2/15/07 11:28 PM:
[...]
> I played around for a while, and found a fix for this. The top of the
> message looks like this:
>
>> -BEGIN PGP MESSAGE-
>> Version: PGP Desktop 9.5.2 (Build 4075) - not licensed for commercial use:
>> www.pgp.com
>
> PGP Desktop ad
> Maybe you should think things through, or God forbid even run a
> few tests or something before puffing your chest there Robert.
> Especially when you're in the unenviable position of potentialy
> being your own proof of concept.
I don't know why you have such an allergy to being shown wrong. O
I have to communicate via PGP a lot via Windows, and I've been having a
problem for a while that I'm trying to avoid having to go through a
lengthy workaround. I'm running XP, Thunderbird 1.5.0.9 with GnuPG for
Windows 0.7.4 (I know, I know -- I'm downloading an update right now,
but I'm not sure
Robert J. Hansen wrote:
> -BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
> Hash: SHA256
>
> Nomen Nescio wrote:
> > Given that this is an IMAP account it's possible those temp
> > files exist on the IMAP server. :-(
>
> Can you point me to an IMAP client which does this? Or to part of the
Amusing as it is