Quoting Dean Sas :
> On Sat, Mar 14, 2009 at 22:06, red wrote:
>> To follow on with a thought from Paul.
>>
>> No 10 website has a place where you can put a petition up for the
>> government to read and others can sign it.
>>
>> As the BBC is a publicly funded organization and it is answerable to
Test, please disregard
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On Sat, Mar 14, 2009 at 22:06, red wrote:
> To follow on with a thought from Paul.
>
> No 10 website has a place where you can put a petition up for the
> government to read and others can sign it.
>
> As the BBC is a publicly funded organization and it is answerable to the
> folk of this country
There's 32 items in that default folder,four of which are folders. I
need to identify the specific ones I can and should remove, eventually.
On Sun, 2009-03-15 at 10:24 +, mac wrote:
> Sean Miller wrote:
> > I don't think plug-ins get installed in the home directory, do they?
> >
> > If so, t
Your $USER folder IS /Rowan - $USER is a term for 'your username here'.
.mozilla is a hidden folder ( as is any folder beginning in a . ), so
open up /home/Rowan and press ctrl + H, I think, to show all hidden
folders. Press this key combo again to hide them.
Simon Wears
munkyju...@gmail.com
no, I had to tick "show hidden files" first, I see it now.'
On Sun, 2009-03-15 at 10:24 +, mac wrote:
> Sean Miller wrote:
> > I don't think plug-ins get installed in the home directory, do they?
> >
> > If so, then it presumably would be easy to ditch them... just an "rm
> > -rf .mozilla" or
I don't seem to have a /home/$USER/ folder. There's nothing in /home/
except /Rowan/, and nothing in /Rowan/ except /examples/.
I did see a folder called /Lost & Found/ but it disappeared when I tried
to open it, after telling me I didn't have permission to do so.
On Sun, 2009-03-15 at 10:24 +0
I was talking more generally - not mozilla specific
Kev
Sean Miller wrote:
> On Sun, Mar 15, 2009 at 9:41 AM, Kev wrote:
>> And because I forgot - while complete
>> removal will remove the configuration files as well it doesn;t to my
>> knowledge deal with any personal configs in your home direc
That sounds so straightforward, even I couldn't mess it up :-)
On Sun, 2009-03-15 at 10:24 +, mac wrote:
> Sean Miller wrote:
> > I don't think plug-ins get installed in the home directory, do they?
> >
> > If so, then it presumably would be easy to ditch them... just an "rm
> > -rf .mozilla"
Sean Miller wrote:
> I don't think plug-ins get installed in the home directory, do they?
>
> If so, then it presumably would be easy to ditch them... just an "rm
> -rf .mozilla" or whatever the directory is... next time Firefox starts
> it can re-configure itself back to default.
AFAIK, your who
2009/3/15 Sean Miller :
> On Sun, Mar 15, 2009 at 9:41 AM, Kev wrote:
>> And because I forgot - while complete
>> removal will remove the configuration files as well it doesn;t to my
>> knowledge deal with any personal configs in your home directory
>
> I don't think plug-ins get installed in the
On Sun, Mar 15, 2009 at 9:41 AM, Kev wrote:
> And because I forgot - while complete
> removal will remove the configuration files as well it doesn;t to my
> knowledge deal with any personal configs in your home directory
I don't think plug-ins get installed in the home directory, do they?
If so,
And because I forgot - while complete
removal will remove the configuration files as well it doesn;t to my
knowledge deal with any personal configs in your home directory
Kev
Kev wrote:
> Firefox is a metapackage - whatever the exact description of that
> entails I know not. I just think of metap
Firefox is a metapackage - whatever the exact description of that
entails I know not. I just think of metapackages as boxes with other
'stuff' in - not very technical but it get's me by :) - similarly
ubuntu-desktop (and kubuntu-desktop, xubuntu-desktop) are metapackages.
Firefox-3.0 is actually t
Rowan,
Rowan Berkeley wrote:
> It makes it sound as if I can't be bothered to read the help notes
> before taking up people's time, which is not the case. I was just tired.
> I have read the help notes now, and it seems that solid colour in the
> icon boxes means a package is broken, and that 'co
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