On Tue, Jan 2, 2018 at 10:17 AM, Felipe Ferreira da Silva
wrote:
>> Since Sébastien brought this up.
>>
>> Do we want to advertise hosting space if people are thinking of writing
>> GNOME applications as part of a greater desire to create a more solid
>> GNOME/GTK+
try sudo apt-get install wireless-tools libicu-dev - they are in
ubuntu's repos and should be a new enough version.
On Mon, Dec 24, 2012 at 8:29 AM, Lanoxx lan...@gmx.net wrote:
Hi,
I have already run jhbuild sysdeps --install, and also ran jhbuild build
anjuta, with the first one I get this
IME that means you need to go through and find all of those packages -
my suggestion is to install Synaptic (sudo apt-get install synaptic)
and then search for each of the listed packages and install -
preferring -dev packages when available.
Emily
On Sun, Dec 23, 2012 at 3:53 PM, Lanoxx
On Wed, Nov 21, 2012 at 9:11 AM, Debarshi Ray rishi...@lostca.se wrote:
It won't go in the Settings.
Why not? Why was the forced fallback in Settings instead of the Tweak Tool
in the first place?
+1
Cheers,
Debarshi
--
There are two hard problems in computer science: cache
On Wed, Nov 21, 2012 at 9:56 AM, Matthias Clasen
matthias.cla...@gmail.com wrote:
On Wed, Nov 21, 2012 at 9:50 AM, Emmanuele Bassi eba...@gmail.com wrote:
to be fair, I'd envision this as a completely separate session that
you need to install and select, similar to what Ubuntu does —
I think that's a great point. Being able to type in 'games' or
'internet' or 'office' and seeing a list of applications in that
category would be fantastic.
Emily
On Fri, Nov 16, 2012 at 9:57 AM, Jeremy Bicha jbi...@ubuntu.com wrote:
On 14 November 2012 19:05, Jeremy Bicha jbi...@ubuntu.com
On Mon, Jul 2, 2012 at 4:38 AM, Allan Day allanp...@gmail.com wrote:
Adam Dingle a...@yorba.org wrote:
I realized recently to my surprise and dismay that the compact view has been
removed from Nautilus:
Adam, if you wanted to discuss this change, you could have done so on
the bug or on the
As someone who is just starting to become involved in design development
after many years of using open source free software, I find these
discussions fascinating on multiple levels. For whatever reason I have
always found communities in free/open source software to be rather
intimidating, which
You know, when I first stumbled on zeitgeist running on my system a year or
so ago, I didn't know what in the world it was doing, although it appeared
to be logging... something. And I think I probably forced it to quit out of
pure habit, before going online to figure out what it was actually
I really like web and agree that adding torrent support would be awesome,
but a larger priority for me is more options for privacy/cookie handling.
As it is the only options (at least, that I see) are to accept all cookies,
only those from sites you visit, or none. No options for deleting cookies
Then the design team ought to be more open about what exactly 'their'
vision for gnome is, as well as open to other ideas/concepts. Insisting on
doing things their way, while being extremely vague as to what exactly
their way *is* is not helpful to the rest of the community who is trying to
get
11 matches
Mail list logo