I will tell you if this solved the problem (I am fairly sure it will): r...@thomas-laptop:/home/thomas# dpkg-reconfigure debconf r...@thomas-laptop:/home/thomas# dpkg-reconfigure debconf Configuring debconf -------------------
Packages that use debconf for configuration share a common look and feel. You can select the type of user interface they use. The dialog frontend is a full-screen, character based interface, while the readline frontend uses a more traditional plain text interface, and both the gnome and kde frontends are modern X interfaces, fitting the respective desktops (but may be used in any X environment). The editor frontend lets you configure things using your favorite text editor. The noninteractive frontend never asks you any questions. 1. Dialog 2. Readline 3. Gnome 4. Kde 5. Editor 6. Noninteractive Interface to use: 2 Debconf prioritizes the questions it asks you. Pick the lowest priority of question you want to see: - 'critical' only prompts you if the system might break. Pick it if you are a newbie, or in a hurry. - 'high' is for rather important questions - 'medium' is for normal questions - 'low' is for control freaks who want to see everything Note that no matter what level you pick here, you will be able to see every question if you reconfigure a package with dpkg-reconfigure. 1. critical 2. high 3. medium 4. low Ignore questions with a priority less than: 4 r...@thomas-laptop:/home/thomas# dpkg-reconfigure -au * Disabling power management... [ OK ] * Checking battery state... /dev/sda: setting Advanced Power Management level to 0xfe (254) [ OK ] * Stopping ACPI services... [ OK ] * Stopping Hardware abstraction layer hald [ OK ] * Loading ACPI modules... [ OK ] * Starting ACPI services... [ OK ] * Starting Hardware abstraction layer hald [ OK ] Adduser ------- By default, users' home directories are readable by all users on the system. If you want to increase security and privacy, you might want home directories to be readable only for their owners. But if in doubt, leave this option enabled. This will only affect home directories of users added from now on with the adduser command. Do you want system-wide readable home directories? [...] -- gedit fails to run as root in jaunty https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/311237 You received this bug notification because you are a member of Ubuntu Desktop Bugs, which is a bug assignee. -- desktop-bugs mailing list desktop-bugs@lists.ubuntu.com https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/desktop-bugs