The solution for now is to disable indexing by default. It has not been
enabled in previous releases, and we can address it in kubuntu-default-
settings in a way that users who currently have it enabled will not lose
their settings.

The underlying issue of virtuoso not having a low enough priority still
needs to be addressed, but I'm not as hopeful for an SRU for that bit.

** Also affects: kubuntu-default-settings (Ubuntu)
   Importance: Undecided
       Status: New

** Changed in: kubuntu-default-settings (Ubuntu)
   Importance: Undecided => High

** Changed in: kubuntu-default-settings (Ubuntu)
       Status: New => Triaged

** Changed in: kubuntu-default-settings (Ubuntu Lucid)
   Importance: Undecided => High

** Changed in: kdebase-runtime (Ubuntu)
   Importance: High => Medium

** Changed in: kdebase-runtime (Ubuntu Lucid)
   Importance: High => Medium

** Changed in: kdebase-runtime (Ubuntu Lucid)
     Assignee: Jonathan Thomas (echidnaman) => (unassigned)

** Changed in: kubuntu-default-settings (Ubuntu Lucid)
     Assignee: (unassigned) => Jonathan Thomas (echidnaman)

** Changed in: kdebase-runtime (Ubuntu)
     Assignee: Jonathan Thomas (echidnaman) => (unassigned)

** Changed in: kubuntu-default-settings (Ubuntu)
     Assignee: (unassigned) => Jonathan Thomas (echidnaman)

-- 
virtuoso-t eats my cpu, should be nice
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/578215
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