ttytter works using oauth. Why not download the ttytter package and
install it, then run it from the command line. Once you see the pin come
up which twitter.com sends you copy it then hit control-z to drop out of
your browser and back into ttytter and type the pin and hit the submit or
authorize button. Your oauth key for ttytter will then be stored on your
disk. Probably same principle applies to the app you've asked about as
well unless google did things differently. I'm surprised you were even
able to unpack any of google's apps when I tried doing that I had a
corrupted file.
On 8 March 2013 03:08, Jude DaShiell <jdashiel@shellworld.net> wrote:
ttytter works using oauth. Why not download the ttytter package and
install it, then run it from the command line. Once you see the pin come
up which twitter.com sends you copy it then hit control-z to drop out of
your browser and back into ttytter and type the pin and hit the submit or
authorize button. Your oauth key for ttytter will then be stored on your
disk. Probably same principle applies to the app you've asked about as
well unless google did things differently. I'm surprised you were even
able to unpack any of google's apps when I tried doing that I had a
corrupted file.I got gcalcli from the wheezy repos, and its available for lenny and squeeze too, and was hoping that someone here had also installed it and used it so knew how to log on with it. But thanks anyway, I'll keep googling.Sharon.--A taste of linux = http://www.sharons.org.uk/taste/index.html
efever = http://www.efever.blogspot.com/
efever = http://sharon04.livejournal.com/
Debian Wheezy, LXDE 2 LibreOffice 3.5.4.2
Registered Linux user 334501