is it possible to print a webpage from dillo? many thanks and best wishes!
__________________________________________________
Do You Yahoo!?
Tired of spam? Yahoo! Mail has the best spam protection around
http://mail.yahoo.com
Yes, I know that I'm a few weeks late to comment on this, but I
genuinely HATE HATE HATE these unsubscribe requests.
So here's a quick thing on how to unsubscribe:
<http://www.things.org/~jym/fqa/unsubscribe.html>
How To Unsubscribe From Any Email List
By Jym Dyer
I'm on a lot of electronic mailing lists. A deluge of
"unsubscribe" and "take me off this list" messages on multiple
lists inspired the following, which I send out whenever it's
needed. The feedback I get tells me it's useful.
When you send "unsubscribe" requests to an email list, it lands
in the mailboxes of hundreds of people who can't unsubscribe
you.
I can't unsubscribe you. Try the stuff below. Clip 'n' save
these instructions for future reference.
=============8<=============Cut-Here=============8<=============
How To Unsubscribe From Any Email List
1. Look at the messages you've been getting on the list. Do
they have "how to unsubscribe" messages near the end, or an
email address to use in a "List-Unsubscribe:" header at the
top? If so, follow those instructions.
2. Most lists these days, including all lists hosted by the big
two (Yahoo! Groups and Topica), have an "-unsubscribe" alias
for this purpose. For example, if you're on the WHATEVER
list, either WHATEVER-unsubscribe(a)yahoogroups.com or
WHATEVER-unsubscribe(a)topica.com would be the right address
to use.
(For the rest of this memo, let's assume that the WHATEVER list
is at example.com -- that is, the alias is WHATEVER(a)example.com.
If the list has a name like "WHATEVER-L", you might try steps 6
and 7 first.)
3. Otherwise, first send a request to the "-request" alias. For
our example, that would be WHATEVER-request(a)example.com.
This is often read by a human being, so write accordingly.
In theory, all email lists are supposed to implement this
address (though Yahoo! Groups does not).
4. If you get no response from the above, send mail to the
"majordomo" alias. That's majordomo(a)example.com for our
example. If the list is administered by the majordomo
software, you'll get instructions for unsubscribing mailed
back to you.
5. If you get no response, send mail to the "owner-" alias. For
our example, owner-WHATEVER(a)example.com. This should go to
the human who administers the list.
6. If you get no response, send mail to "LISTSERV". For our
example, that address would be LISTSERV(a)example.com. The
text of your message should be "SIGNOFF WHATEVER".
7. If you get no response, send mail to the "listproc" alias.
For our example, that address would be listproc(a)example.com.
The text of your message should be "unsubscribe WHATEVER".
8. If you get no response, send mail to the site "postmaster".
For our example, that address is postmaster(a)example.com.
Mention that you tried the previous five steps, to no avail.
9. If you get no response, send mail to "root". Our example
address is root(a)example.com. Mention that you tried the
previous six steps, to no avail.
10. If -- and only if -- all the above fail, send a message to
the list itself. Make it courteous, particularly since the
vast majority of the people reading it can't do a thing
about it. The message should say something like, "How do I
get off this list?", not "UNSUBSCRIBE." Try to avoid setting
off a bunch of "me too" messages by saying something like,
"Please don't chime in with a bunch of 'I want to
unsubscribe too' messages."
It's ridiculous that there are so many different ways to do
this, and consequentially, so many email lists cluttered up with
"UNSUBSCRIBE/ME TOO" messages. You'd think there'd be a standard
of sorts, and there is: the "-request" alias dates back to the
early days of the Internet.
Smart systems like majordomo actually (1) handle messages that
were sent to the "-request" alias and (2) filter out the
"UNSUBSCRIBE/ME TOO" messages. It's a shame that newer stuff has
come along that doesn't do either of these things, but since
it's on the web, people seem excited about it (gee whiz!) even
though it's a huge step backwards in technology.
The "-unsubscribe" alias is a newer standard that's starting to
gain ground, but that's no help for many of the older lists that
haven't gotten around to implementing new features.