Public bug reported:
Binary package hint: evolution
Ubuntu 8.10
In Evolution, when I create a task the start and end date fields work
correctly for me (in New Zealand), displaying the date in the format
dd/mm/yy (so today is 28/01/09).
However, after creating the task, when I click on it and
This bug is NOT a duplicate of #316337:
https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/rhythmbox/+bug/316337
** This bug is no longer a duplicate of bug 316337
Generated m4a files for mtp device don't play on device
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Evolution Date Format Inconsistent.
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/321992
You
Confirmed:
On Intrepid - 8.10
I'm in New Zealand, so using English - but have the date format issue:
When creating a task, I specify the date in dd/mm/yy format, which works - but
when viewing tasks, the dates are displayed as mm/dd/yy - this is very
confusing.
--
Non-i18n date formatting in
Status has been changed to 'fix released' what package version carries
the fix?
Thanks
--
Brasero - wrongly reports insufficient space on media
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/303536
You received this bug notification because you are a member of Ubuntu
Desktop Bugs, which is a bug assignee.
--
Public bug reported:
Binary package hint: brasero
First noticed this bug on 8.04, still present in 8.10.
Brasero reports:
Insufficient space on media (0 available for 357796).
The log is attached.
This bug occurs consistently when attempting to burn audio CD's, but in
the latest instance, I
** Attachment added: brasero-session.log
http://launchpadlibrarian.net/20059833/brasero-session.log
--
Brasero - wrongly reports insufficient space on media
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/303536
You received this bug notification because you are a member of Ubuntu
Desktop Bugs, which is
You have been subscribed to a public bug:
When I run a script from the desktop, it thinks it's running in
/home/user rather than /home/user/Desktop
For example the following:
#!/bin/bash
zenity --info --text=$PWD
exit
in a file /home/musther/Desktop/test
executed graphically (double click) on
Sorry, perhaps I didn't explain it clearly enough. This only happens in
~/Desktop, if you copy the same test script to ~/Desktop/test and run
it, you'll get the expected output - '/home/user/Desktop/test'.
I don't know why it only happens on the desktop (ie in the Desktop
folder), but it does.