Opera Version
everything appeared as it should in dual languages.
I noticed that in the International fonts (Tools Options) missing are the many
font options in Opera 10.10. It appears that the 10.60 needs some sort of tweek
to get it displaying Hebrew email subject listings as it should
Opera Version
everything appeared as it should in dual languages.
I noticed that in the International fonts (Tools Options) missing are the many
font options in Opera 10.10. It appears that the 10.60 needs some sort of tweek
to get it displaying Hebrew email subject listings as it should
Hi,
I just tried my Yahoo mail with Opera 10.60 on Fedora 13. I sent a hebrew
message to my yahoo account and thats how it looks:
http://picasaweb.google.com/lh/photo/BTeV2oeaVuzomkC7ixdZPg?feat=directlink
Thanks,
Hetz
2010/7/3
> When I enter my yahoo.com box I see in the message list
When I enter my yahoo.com box I see in the message listing [][][][][][][][][]
This error does not happen with Opera 10.10.
I entered the view menu tried different Encoding settings UT8 Hebrew 1255 etc
no go.
I tried the Preferences - International Fonts. It keeps jumping back to Arabic
When I enter my yahoo.com box I see in the message listing [][][][][][][][][]
This error does not happen with Opera 10.10.
I entered the view menu tried different Encoding settings UT8 Hebrew 1255 etc
no go.
I tried the Preferences - International Fonts. It keeps jumping back to Arabic
e program association with many KDE applications, two
sets of favosites and the user will be confused about the historial or
what he did with which browser. In fact, the simplest users( in this
case my sister) just want to click a link or open an url and see the
page and its functionality properly
On 20/09/06, Tzafrir Cohen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On Tue, Sep 19, 2006 at 12:19:54PM +0300, Julian Daich wrote:
> 1) frequent security patches,
Frequent? Not that bad. You just install the package from your package
manager and forget about it.
Why maintain a separate FireFox installation?
I trying to
> help) and
The proper extension, once set up, will help even a non-technical
user...
You naturally don't have to install the whole collection.
>
> 3) the integration with other no- KDE applications, I will not
> recommend to her to install neither Firefox or Opera.
ches, 2) its extensions( they are very useful in fact, but not for
> somebody who is not technically skilled as the person that I trying to
> help) and 3) the integration with other no- KDE applications, I will not
> recommend to her to install neither Firefox or Opera.
Opera 8 used to have very
Thank you Avraham and Oded.
El mar, 19-09-2006 a las 02:21 +0300, Oded Arbel escribió:
> On Mon, 2006-09-18 at 21:13 +0300, Julian Daich wrote:
> > Hi all,
> > A pooling question. Do you have any experience on Opera?
>
> I'm using Opera 9 from time to time. I have us
On Mon, Sep 18, 2006 at 09:13:03PM +0300, Julian Daich wrote:
> Hi all,
> A pooling question. Do you have any experience on Opera?
> It does improve the surfing performance at the Israeli websites? It
> haves any advantage over Konqueror?
> It is not for me but for a newbie who is
On Mon, 2006-09-18 at 21:13 +0300, Julian Daich wrote:
> Hi all,
> A pooling question. Do you have any experience on Opera?
I'm using Opera 9 from time to time. I have used older versions of Opera
browser in the past.
> It does improve the surfing performance at the Israeli websit
Hi all,
A pooling question. Do you have any experience on Opera?
It does improve the surfing performance at the Israeli websites? It
haves any advantage over Konqueror?
It is not for me but for a newbie who is suffering from the Israeli
Websites´ Microsoft Disease. I´m thinking to suggest trying
At 02:06 04.09.2003 +0300, Vasiliev Michael wrote:
Out of sheer curiosity, has anyone but me noticed that the new linux version
of Opera browser (7.20b7) for linux now has a long-awaited support for
Hebrew BiDi? Though it isn't an open-source application but quite a nice
browser anyway.
Y
Out of sheer curiosity, has anyone but me noticed that the new linux version
of Opera browser (7.20b7) for linux now has a long-awaited support for
Hebrew BiDi? Though it isn't an open-source application but quite a nice
browser anyway.
More details: http://www.opera.com/linux/chang
On Sunday 03 March 2002 17:42, Tzafrir Cohen wrote:
> Use biditext :-(
reverses each word, but not per line, I mean you see (sorry for the logical
hebrew):
áñãø äëì, òåìí ùìåí?
usable but not that much. I tried opera6 beta1 last weekend, and it renderes
walla! the best of every other linux brows
> My point was not related to bidi at all: I remember that opera 4 (I
> believe that even opera 5) does not allow you to set a different font for
> different charsets. It only allows you to set a different font for
> different HTML elements (IIRC). This meant that originally using
> Does opera finaly have support for a "hebrew charset", e.g: allowing me to
> set the font for ISO-8859-8/windows-1255 pages?
Not at 6.0 version - only newer version which will be based on QT-3.0
(current one uses QT 2.x) - so probably Opera 7 - thats according to their
tec
On Sun, 3 Mar 2002, Shai Bentin wrote:
> I have downloaded opera 6, just to have a look.
>
> Its a very nice looking browser. However I couldn't get it to show
> hewbrew correctly, the closest I got wasto show hebrew inverted.
>
> Any Ideas?
Use biditext :-(
Does opera
I have downloaded opera 6, just to have a look.
Its a very nice looking browser. However I couldn't get it to show
hewbrew correctly, the closest I got was to show hebrew inverted.
Any Ideas?
Shai
=
To unsubscribe, send
20 matches
Mail list logo