On Wed, 25 Nov 2020 15:03:46 +0000 Dave Howorth <dave@howorth.org.uk> wrote:
On Wed, 25 Nov 2020 14:51:27 +0100 Bengt Gördén <bengan@bag.org> wrote:
On 2020-11-25 13:34, Carlos E. R. wrote:
new "skin"
There seems to be some references to themes in the code.
Especially here. https://gitlab.com/mailman/hyperkitty/-/blob/master/doc/conf.py
And of course in the css files. https://gitlab.com/mailman/hyperkitty/-/tree/master/hyperkitty/static/hyperk...
For those that don't like the default, dig in and make a pull request.
That's assuming hyperkitty's problems can be fixed by (re)skinning the cat. :)
I think most people have opinions more like mine which is that hyperkitty is gross, over the top nonsense.
marc seems reasonable https://marc.info/?l=opensuse&m=160631326501425&w=2
and so does nabble but it seems to be some years out of date :( http://opensuse.14.x6.nabble.com/openSUSE-community-f2987756.html
Here's another couple of possible candidates: the Mail Archive seems to already index some opensuse lists, so could presumably be subscribed to this list and the support list as well: https://www.mail-archive.com/search?l=all&q=opensuse&e=listname https://www.mail-archive.com/opensuse-commit@opensuse.org/msg212380.html W3C has a mail archive system that is available, based on hypermail (which was written in 1994 but still has some activity and is under GPL on github) https://www.w3.org/Search/Mail/Devel/ I don't know what opinions others have about whether these possibilities are better than hyperkitty, or even just valuable as an additional alternative?