I think it was just a matter of changing the line from "testing" to
"unstable" in my /etc/apt/sources.list, i.e.,
deb http://ftp.openoffice.tuxfamily.org/openoffice unstable main contrib
(or the appropriate mirror as listed in
http://www.linux-debian.de/openoffice/mirrors.html)
then
apt-get up
I posted this problem to debian-users and the debian-x lists earlier, but
got no responses, other than "I don't think this has anything to do with
XFree86" from Branden Robinson.
I haven't got any clues elsewhere, so thought I should try the KDE list
again.
I am running Debian testing/sid, with X
I think this has been asked before, but I don't think I saw a response. Why
is Koncd, now an official part of KDE3, not in the experimental KDE3 debs??
Are there some specific dependencies missing??
On the same note, has anyone managed to install Koncd on Debian?? I haven't
had a go at it yet, bu
I'm not sure what the cause of this problem is (or what part, if any, KDE
may play in it), but as I am running the current KDE 3.01 debs, I thought
that someone here might have the same experience. The behaviour below occurs
on two different systems, both running Debian Woody/Sid.
I have whatever
apt-get install cupsys-bsd
is what you want. From what I understand, this package essentially points
any print job made to lp/lpr to cups.
Also, sounds like you've already got it, but for if "cups" doesn't show up
as an option when installing a printer in the "KDE Control Centre, System,
Printin
Not unless it would have been installed with task-kde. I will check.
Thanks,
Bruce
>-Original Message-
>From: Ben Burton [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
>Do you have package klaptopdaemon installed?
>
>Ben.
>
I have KDE 2.1.1 from kde.debian.net running on Debian Potato 2.2r3 w.
kernel 2.4.4, XFree 4.02, on a P!!!-600 HP OmniBook 500 laptop w. 128MB RAM.
Works great, except that there are no laptop power control options in
KControl. I have enabled APM in the bios and in the kernel (as a module),
the mod
Note that "woody" and "unstable" are not the same thing. Use "testing" if
you want woody. If you change "stable" to "unstable", you will be upgrading
to sid.
Currently,
stable = potato
testing = woody
unstable= sid
Both woody and sid have KDE and X, though different versions. sid cur
I have a virtually identical setup; AMD K6-2 450, 192 MB RAM, IDE hard
disks, /home via NFS over 10baseT network, KDE 2.1.1-3 from Debian/SID, on a
(mostly) Debian testing machine, with kernel 2.4.3. I do have similar times
in launching applications, though I haven't actually looked very hard to s
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