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Cannot open gtk gnutella
Cannot open gtk gnutella









  1. Cannot open gtk gnutella install#
  2. Cannot open gtk gnutella update#
  3. Cannot open gtk gnutella upgrade#
  4. Cannot open gtk gnutella download#

This changed with 9.10, in which wifi Just Worked, and it still works in 10.04.

Cannot open gtk gnutella update#

Every time a major system update installed, I had to reinstall madwifi ( checkinstall didn't work for me).

Cannot open gtk gnutella download#

The only thing that worked for me was to download madwifi and compile from source. Ubuntu 8.10 and 9.04 were a bit painful to get wifi working on an Aspire One. Double-click on the "button_layout" setting on the right side and replace the text with: menu:minimize,maximize,close to restore the previous behaviour.Ī word of warning: if you go into System -> Preferences -> Appearance and change the theme, the window buttons will reset to the left side again. In the tree menu on the left click on Apps -> metacity -> general. After all, I originally chose Ubuntu in part because it seemed to be the easiest transition from a background in Windows. Yet I just don't see a benefit to moving them to the left side that justifies the aggravation of having to unlearn a habit that goes back nearly 20 years. In the first iteration, the buttons were in the order, but in the release version they're in the order with the close button on the very left. In fairness, the window titlebar button positions are less bad than they were when Canonical first proposed moving them to the left side of the window chrome. But as before, you can customize the hell out of your window styles via System -> Preferences -> Appearance. It's just a little too purple and dreary for me. I tried out the new default Ambiance theme and didn't like it. Beyond that, if you've upgraded after already customizing the appearance of 9.10, most of your settings remain intact (with one notable exception, below).

Cannot open gtk gnutella install#

(If you don't have it installed, fire up the Ubuntu Software Centre and install Configuration Editor.) Expand "Apps" in the tree menu on the left, select the "indicator-session" setting on the right side and check "suppress_logout_restart_shutdown" to turn off shutdown confirmations. The easiest way to fix this is to open up a terminal and start gconf-editor. The default behaviour for shutdown is to pop up a confirmation dialog, but like 9.10 you can't right-click on it to access preferences and turn off the dialog. The indicator applet on the panel splits the user menu and shutdown menu into two separate dropdowns, but they still sit right beside each other as if they were a single item. I have only two small gripes with the shutdown process: Shutdown is even nicer: six seconds flat. Now I get command-line messages again, albeit only about eight lines and for only a second or two.

cannot open gtk gnutella

One interesting note: 8.10 and 9.04 displayed long lists of command-line messages during bootup, while 9.10 eliminated that for a splash screen. From the power button through the kernel selection to the login screen runs a cool 35-40 seconds.Īdd another six or seven seconds after logging in to bring up the desktop, and another two or three seconds to auto-connect to the local wifi network.

cannot open gtk gnutella

Startup is visibly faster than 9.10, which didn't really improve much on 9.04.

cannot open gtk gnutella

True to their commitment, the Ubuntu developers have made big strides in shaving as much as they can off startup and shutdown times. This is the most immediate, obvious improvement in 10.04. So far, here's what I think: 1 Boot Time ↑

Cannot open gtk gnutella upgrade#

It took all night to download the upgrade (watching the time remaining on the download status dialog brought me back to the halcyon days of the Windows 95 file-transfer time remaining status) but the upgrade itself was painless. 10.04 is a Long-Term Support (LTS) release, meaning Canonical promises to support the desktop edition for three years and the server edition (which comes without a GUI layer) for five years. Last night I upgraded my Acer Aspire One from Ubuntu 9.10 to 10.04 (I use the regular edition, not the netbook edition). Posted Apin Blog (Last Updated May 01, 2010) Contents 1 I just upgraded my netbook to Ubuntu 10.04.











Cannot open gtk gnutella