It's odd. The value of org-file-apps-defaults-gnu is: ((remote . emacs) (system . mailcap) (t . mailcap)) And I checked my local mime file, which shows google-chrome is the default app to open html files: $ cat ~/.local/share/applications/mimeapps.list [Added Associations] application/epub+zip=FBReader.desktop; application/pdf=pdf.desktop; application/vnd.rn-realmedia=smplayer.desktop; application/x-matroska=smplayer.desktop; application/x-mimearchive=firefox.desktop; application/x-ole-storage=libreoffice-impress.desktop; audio/mpeg=audacious.desktop; text/html=google-chrome.desktop; video/mpeg=gnome-mplayer.desktop; x-scheme-handler/mailto=google-chrome.desktop;KMail2.desktop; [Default Applications] text/html=google-chrome.desktop x-scheme-handler/mailto=google-chrome.desktop Any idea? On Mon, Feb 4, 2013 at 4:29 PM, Bastien wrote: > zhenjiang xu writes: > > > Thanks, Bastien. It's the default value - I've not changed it: > > > > org-file-apps is a variable defined in `org.el'. > > Its value is ((auto-mode . emacs) > > ("\\.mm\\'" . default) > > ("\\.x?html?\\'" . default) > > ("\\.pdf\\'" . default)) > > So you need to check the relevant variable: > > org-file-apps-defaults-gnu > org-file-apps-defaults-macosx > org-file-apps-defaults-windowsnt > > If the relevant variable uses the defaults (as I guess), > you need to configure the mailcap file for your system > > See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mailcap > > HTH, > > -- > Bastien >