You were right.

[localhost:~] aleks% dpkg -l | grep kde
ii  bundle-kde-ssl 3.0.1-1        KDE convenience package (SSL support)
ii  kdeartwork3    3.0.1-2        K Desktop Environment - additional 
artwork
ii  kdebase3-ssl   3.0.1-2        K Desktop Environment - base system
ii  kdebindings3   3.0.1-2        K Desktop Environment - Language 
Bindings
ii  kdeedu3        3.0.1-2        K Desktop Environment - educational 
software
ii  kdegames3      3.0.1-2        K Desktop Environment - games
ii  kdegraphics3   3.0.1-2        K Desktop Environment - graphics
ii  kdelibs3-ssl   3.0.1-1        K Desktop Environment - libraries
ii  kdenetwork3    3.0.1-2        K Desktop Environment - networking
ii  kdetoys3       3.0.1-2        K Desktop Environment - Toys
ii  kdeutils3      3.0.1-2        K Desktop Environment - Misc. utilities
ii  kdevelop       2.1.1-2        K Desktop Environment - Development IDE

I did another apt-get update/upgrade and it updated bundle-kde-ssl. Now 
it's all good.

Thanks to you and others who responded.

Aleks



On Sunday, June 9, 2002, at 08:40 , Benjamin Reed wrote:

>
> My guess is that your upgrade really didn't happen properly.  Try 
> doing a
> "dpkg -l | grep kde" and look for packages that don't end in -2 as their
> release number.
>
> If not, then perhaps you have some other library that uses X and linked
> against the 4.2.0-5 xfree86 that needs to be rebuilt.
>



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