On 03/01/2010 09:59 PM, Anoop wrote: > Hi Keven, > > On Mon, Mar 1, 2010 at 4:10 PM, Kevin Kofler<kevin.kofler at chello.at> wrote: > >> Anoop wrote: >> >>> Can someone tell me how to make Konqueror work with Gmail? >>> >> Why use a web browser for e-mail? >> > I very much use KMail. But sometimes I do need to use Webmail say if I > am not on my workstation. > > Thanks, > Anoop > > >> The best solution is to use KMail, follow the instructions for IMAP access >> and you can still keep all your messages on the server as with webmail >> (which also means you can still use the webmail on other machines, or even >> the same machine for that matter), but get an actual e-mail client which is >> much nicer to use than some AJAX crap in the browser. >> >> A web browser is not an e-mail client! >> >> That said, Konqueror's default KHTML engine can be persuaded to work with >> GMail by faking browser identifiers or such. And indeed there's also the >> WebKitPart, but that's not that great an idea as it's not the recommended >> HTML renderer in Konqueror (in fact the only reason it works at all is that >> Konqueror can embed any arbitrary KPart). >> >> Kevin Kofler >> >> _______________________________________________ >> kde mailing list >> kde at lists.fedoraproject.org >> https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/kde >> New to KDE4? - get help from http://userbase.kde.org >> >> > _______________________________________________ > kde mailing list > kde at lists.fedoraproject.org > https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/kde > New to KDE4? - get help from http://userbase.kde.org > Worth mentioning to Anoop, if you're not on a webpage in Konqueror, you can't select the rendering engine via View > View Mode. If you're in a file manager session, it will only show you view options for changing the Window display (Icons, List, Details etc...). Alexey mentions installing "webkitpart". I think its probably already installed if you changed the default layout renderer via System Settings (you wouldn't have had the option I don't think). Cheers, Mitch.