You were right. [localhost:~] aleks% dpkg -l | grep kde ii bundle-kde-ssl 3.0.1-1 KDE convenience package (SSL support) ii kdeartwork3 3.0.1-2 K Desktop Environment - additional artwork ii kdebase3-ssl 3.0.1-2 K Desktop Environment - base system ii kdebindings3 3.0.1-2 K Desktop Environment - Language Bindings ii kdeedu3 3.0.1-2 K Desktop Environment - educational software ii kdegames3 3.0.1-2 K Desktop Environment - games ii kdegraphics3 3.0.1-2 K Desktop Environment - graphics ii kdelibs3-ssl 3.0.1-1 K Desktop Environment - libraries ii kdenetwork3 3.0.1-2 K Desktop Environment - networking ii kdetoys3 3.0.1-2 K Desktop Environment - Toys ii kdeutils3 3.0.1-2 K Desktop Environment - Misc. utilities ii kdevelop 2.1.1-2 K Desktop Environment - Development IDE
I did another apt-get update/upgrade and it updated bundle-kde-ssl. Now it's all good. Thanks to you and others who responded. Aleks On Sunday, June 9, 2002, at 08:40 , Benjamin Reed wrote: > > My guess is that your upgrade really didn't happen properly. Try > doing a > "dpkg -l | grep kde" and look for packages that don't end in -2 as their > release number. > > If not, then perhaps you have some other library that uses X and linked > against the 4.2.0-5 xfree86 that needs to be rebuilt. > ------------------------------------------------------- This sf.net email is sponsored by:ThinkGeek No, I will not fix your computer. http://thinkgeek.com/sf _______________________________________________ Fink-users mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/fink-users
