(I posted on the bottom, below)

On 4/30/20 4:50 PM, Fritz Hudnut wrote:
AG:

OK, well, that might be "exclusive," as in my lxde desktop session I have a visual listing of it . . . .  Did you run another "apt update/dist-upgrade" subsequently to your install?

On Thu, Apr 30, 2020 at 2:48 PM Aere Greenway <a...@dvorak-keyboards.com <mailto:a...@dvorak-keyboards.com>> wrote:

    On 4/30/20 12:15 PM, Fritz Hudnut wrote:
    Aere:

    I was running Lu 20.04 up until it was released and now I'm in
    20.10 . . . I have Chromium browser installed and it is plainly
    in view in the "internet" menu . . .also in the drop down is
    "chrome apps" . . . .  It's been so long since I did the
    install,possibly through synaptics . . . it should be there, I
    might think that whether in LXQT or LXDE if it's installed, it's
    "installed."

    All I can think of is perhaps you did something "wrong."????   :
    - )))))))))

    F

    It does appear in the menu when using the Lubuntu, or lxqt
    desktop.  It just doesn't appear in the menu when using the lxde
    desktop.

-- Sincerely,
    Aere



I originally installed Lubuntu as a test system, and I kept updating it to the latest version.  I'm not sure which level I started with.

When I upgraded to Lubuntu 20.04 (in a terminal session, using "sudo do-release-upgrade -d"), things seemed to be working well, and I was able to install my Eclipse Java development environment, and things were working well.

My Ubuntu 20.04 upgrade (which I was thinking of switching to), didn't end up with a working Eclipse development environment.

Using the LXDE desktop on Lubuntu 20.04, I was able to even use my strange color scheme, which I like a lot, and things were working in Eclipse.

So I restored my production files from 16.04 to the 20.04 system, and started working with that.

That process proceeded without many problems, so I 'transferred my flag' to the new system.

I'm just now cleaning up the last few 'rough edges'.

The thing I like most about the new system, is that Rosegarden now loads channel recording filters (which it didn't on 16.04, and LibreOffice Writer, once again allows you to produce HTML files where graphics images are linked-to in the HTML file, rather than forcing you to embed them as data within the HTML file.

I've been using an old copy of openSUSE Linux for editing HTML web-pages, because of the need to keep the graphics images separate.  But now, I can use my production system to do it once again.

--
Sincerely,
Aere

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