Hi Dave,
Your instructions worked, thank you.
Well when I said that falling back to gnome-panel would fix problems I
meant that I would no longer experience the problems...
I think the specific TB issue I'm referring to is specific to running
Unity and indeed it seems to be fixed although I'll give it some time to
see if it reappears.
I thought the issue with Orca reading notifications would be solved by
reverting to gnome-panel though and gutted that it isn't.
Thanks again.
Paul
On 13/01/12 22:57, Dave Hunt wrote:
Falling back to gnome panel will not fix the issues with unity or
t-bird, just be a work-around, allowing you to avoid them.
Furthermore, the issues around thunderbird not reading the correct
message summary, trouble cursoring in the message body, and so on, are
not specific to gnome panel. All that said, Here's how I revert to
gnome panel.
sudo apt-get install gnome-session-fallback
sudo add-apt-repository ppa:jconti/gnome3
sudo apt-get update
nano /var/lib/AccountsService/users/dave
I look for the line containing 'XSession=', and replace 'ubuntu-2d'
with 'gnome-fallback', then reboot. The sessions, when I'm logged in
as dave, are gnome panel.
Your username will be something else. The jconti ppa has gnome panel
applets ported to gnome 3.
YMMV,
Dave
On 01/13/2012 05:48 PM, Paul Hunt wrote:
Hi,
Piecing together what I read from a couple of emails on this subject
from a while back...
I tried the following commands to revert to classic gnome-panel
sudo apt-get install gnome-session-fallback
dbus-send --type=method_call --system --reply-timeout=1000
--dest=org.freedesktop.Accounts /org/freedesktop/Accounts/User1000
org.freedesktop.Accounts.User.SetXSession string:gnome-fallback
The packages were installed and the dbus command seemed to work (at
least, I got no errors) but no change to the launcher.
Is there something else I need to do?
There are multiple issues with unity-2d such as the Thunderbird message
reading problem, notifications not being read by Orca and menus not
always working properly which I believe can all be solved by reverting
back to gnome-panel.
Not to mention the fact it's just easier to find your applications with
gnome-panel.
Thanks.
Paul
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