I'm not sure what you mean by critical. I have had to do this with KDE2. I don't have KDE3 (nor do I plan to <G>).
Keith Antoine wrote: > On Wednesday 05 June 2002 09:13 am, Brett I. Holcomb enshrined in prose: >> Probably is KDE. That's another of it's "features". Try the standard >> fix:. In windows the standard fix for anything is to reboot. In KDE >> it's: >> >> 1. rename ~./kde2 (or whatever it's called - kde, kde2, etc.) >> 2. clean out /tmp >> 3. Remove the DCOP files in your home directory - the ones that have >> your host name in them. >> 4. Restart KDE. It will create a new ~./kde2 and hopefully things will >> work. Then you can copy the share/apps and share/config files from your >> saved directory. >> >> If that doesn't work (and I had one time it did not) I had to create a >> new user and copy over various files dealing with dcop, and the >> networking. > > Umm, it seems not to be critical, am unsure here. Is it critical because > there is no way to tell at the moment. > -- Brett I. Holcomb [EMAIL PROTECTED] AKA Grunt <>< Registered Linux User #188143 Remove R777 to email _______________________________________________ Linux-users mailing list - http://linux-sxs.org/mailman/listinfo/linux-users Subscribe/Unsubscribe info, Archives,and Digests are located at the above URL.
