Janina's right of course, just restarting the X server (or logging out!)
should have solved the problem.
It's probably a good idea to log out and back in after replacing a core
component like the at-spi-registry anyway.
best regards,
Bill
Janina Sajka wrote:
Luke Yelavich writes:
On Thu, Dec 08, 2005 at 12:53:12AM EST, Willie Walker wrote:
Yikes - I've seen this before, and if I remember correctly,
it's because the AT-SPI Registry is corrupt. Have you tried
rebooting?
Yes that helped, thanks.
For the record, wouldn't restarting X accomplish the same result? I'm
thinking Ctrl-Alt-Backspace?
I'd hate to see our environment degrade to the primitive resolutions
employed in that other OS ...
--
Luke Yelavich
GPG key: 0xD06320CE
(http://www.themuso.com/themuso-gpg-key.txt)
Email & MSN: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
ICQ: 18444344
_______________________________________________
Gnome-accessibility-devel mailing list
[email protected]
http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/gnome-accessibility-devel
_______________________________________________
Gnome-accessibility-devel mailing list
[email protected]
http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/gnome-accessibility-devel