It might be using the files in ~/.gnome/gnome-pilot.d

If you're not using gnome-pilot (Evolution conduits, gnome-pim
conduits), you can just rename (or, if you prefer to live dangerously,
remove) this directory.

The alternative would be to reinstall the Evolution conduits in order
use the GUI to disable them, but that's probably overkill in your case.

You'll probably also need to kill gpilotd if it's still running.

-Mark Gordon

On Tue, 2002-11-19 at 08:37, Arthur S. Alexion wrote:
> Mark and Eric,
> 
> Thanks for the help.  I followed a combination of your advices.  I 
> followed Eric's advice to let Red Carpet do the uninstall.  (Easy once 
> you figure it out, but not very intuitive to find.)  And I followed 
> Mark's advice to uninstall pilot-link.ximian and gnome-pilot (couldn't 
> find evolution-pilot in Red Carpet).
> 
> Doing so allowed me to reinstall j-pilot and the non-ximian pilot-link, 
> and allowing me to use Evolution as an MUA with jpilot as my PIM, but I 
> still have a problem.  It may be related to evolution-pilot, but I 
> don't think so.
> 
> As hoped, neither the Evolution install, nor the partial uninstall, 
> affected the configuration files in my home directory.  Jpilot displays 
> my palm data from the last sync and other preferences.   That's the 
> good news.  The bad news is that some of the evolution syncing 
> configuration files also remain, preventing me from doing a sync.  You 
> see jpilot/pilot-link are trying to use the now removed evolution 
> conduits instead of their own.
> 
> Can either of you (or anyone else on the list) help me with finding and 
> repairing this configuration setting?
> 
> Thanks for the continuing help.
> 
> Art
> 
> On Thursday 14 November 2002 04:14 pm, Mark Gordon wrote:
> > At this point, reinstalling (e.g.) jpilot should only require removal
> > of evolution-pilot (and newer pilot-link and gnome-pilot) rather than
> > evolution.  This means you can have jpilot (built against older
> > pilot-link) and evolution (albeit without conduits) installed on the
> > same system.
> >
> > -Mark Gordon
> >
> > On Wed, 2002-11-13 at 13:25, Eric Lambart wrote:
> > > In Red Carpet, first select the channel that contains the package
> > > you want to remove (i.e. Ximian Desktop, or wherever Evolution is).
> > >  Then click on the "Remove" button on the upper-right (the icon is
> > > a box with an arrow going UP).  From there you can see a list of
> > > your installed packages and choose those you wish to remove.
> > >
> > > Also, I'll bet you could simply choose to re-install (using Red
> > > Carpet) jpilot etc., and just like when you installed Evolution in
> > > the first place, it would warn you that certain packages need to be
> > > removed.  Just tell it to go ahead, and it should remove Evolution
> > > et al.
> > >
> > > On Wed, 2002-11-13 at 07:19, Arthur S. Alexion wrote:
> > > > I thought I'd give evolution a try, being unsatisfied with balsa.
> > > > Seems that I need the software that it removed (jpilot & pilot
> > > > link) more than I need evolution.
> > > >
> > > > I haven't been able to find uninstall instructions.  I have a Red
> > > > Hat RPM system and Red Carpet seems to have been installed.  Can
> > > > anyone point me to uninstall instructions, please?


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