On Wednesday 05 June 2002 09:13 am, Brett I. Holcomb enshrined in prose:
> Probably is KDE.  That's another of it's "features".  Try the standard
> fix:.  In windows the standard fix for anything is to reboot.  In KDE it's:
>
> 1.  rename ~./kde2 (or whatever it's called - kde, kde2, etc.)
> 2.  clean out /tmp
> 3.  Remove the DCOP files in your home directory - the ones that have your
> host name in them.
> 4.  Restart KDE.  It will create a new ~./kde2 and hopefully things will
> work.  Then you can copy the share/apps and share/config files from your
> saved directory.
>
> If that doesn't work (and I had one time it did not) I had to create a new
> user and copy over various files dealing with dcop, and the networking.

Umm, it seems not to be critical, am unsure here. Is it critical because 
there is no way to tell at the moment.

-- 
Keith Antoine (GANDALF) aka 'skippy'
18 Arkana St, The Gap, Queensland 4061 Australia PH:61733002161
Retired Geriatric, Sometime Electronics Engineer, Knowall, Brain in storage

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