On Wednesday 13 October 2004 07:50, Brandon Rife wrote:
Hi,
I'm using 10.1 CE. After having used KDE for a while I decided that
I would give Gnome a try. All was going well until this morning when
I launched gnome - I had no panels. I tried deleting all gnome
config directories in my home
Hoyt Bailey wrote:
On Wednesday 13 October 2004 07:50, Brandon Rife wrote:
Hi,
I'm using 10.1 CE. After having used KDE for a while I decided that
I would give Gnome a try. All was going well until this morning when
I launched gnome - I had no panels. I tried deleting all gnome
config
On Wednesday 13 October 2004 12:50, Brandon Rife wrote:
Hoyt Bailey wrote:
On Wednesday 13 October 2004 07:50, Brandon Rife wrote:
Hi,
I'm using 10.1 CE. After having used KDE for a while I decided
that I would give Gnome a try. All was going well until this
morning when I launched
On Wed, 2004-10-13 at 22:50, Brandon Rife wrote:
Hi,
I'm using 10.1 CE. After having used KDE for a while I decided that I
would give Gnome a try. All was going well until this morning when I
launched gnome - I had no panels. I tried deleting all gnome config
directories in my home
Stephen Kühn wrote:
On Wed, 2004-10-13 at 22:50, Brandon Rife wrote:
Hi,
I'm using 10.1 CE. After having used KDE for a while I decided that I
would give Gnome a try. All was going well until this morning when I
launched gnome - I had no panels. I tried deleting all gnome config
On Thu, 2004-10-14 at 07:09, Brandon Rife wrote:
Nope, I was starting from run level 3. I created a .xinitrc file in ~ to
launch Gnome.
Install Xtart and don't muck around with your .xinitrc unless you truly
know what you're doing - at least it allows you to run any number of
installed window
Stephen Kühn wrote:
On Thu, 2004-10-14 at 07:09, Brandon Rife wrote:
Nope, I was starting from run level 3. I created a .xinitrc file in ~ to
launch Gnome.
Install Xtart and don't muck around with your .xinitrc unless you truly
know what you're doing - at least it allows you to run any