Hello everyone!
I'm new to this forum but i have a basic knowledge of linux.
I was once an happy ubuntu user (and still i am on my Desktop PC) but, since i last run apt-get upgrade on my netbook, i found myself disgusted by the TERRIFIC "UNE" Desktop environment.
I tried then to follow instructions HERE in order to try to restore gnome's "normal" functions but something went wrong and my ubuntu kept crashing when starting gnome and all i was left with was the command line when running linux as root AND in recovery mode.
- I thought it would have been a good idea to give KDE a try -
so i logged in as root and gave this command:
apt-get downloaded everything and installed almost all packages, but all of a sudden i got an an error message i didn't write down, mentioning that a certain package size (it was named "cryptoSOMETHING") didn't match the repo's one.
As suggested by apt-get, i run
And everything went smooth.
Finally the netbook rebooted and i was prompted with kubuntu's grub blue screen.
First time it crashed once again, second time it started and KDE login screen appeared!
But here things got worse.
As i login with my user, nothing appears on screen, nothing but the wallpaper and a terminal window where i run programs from.
I'm not allowed to switch from a window to another and this way i can just use one program at a time, i can't change windows dimentions nor move them.
The few things i can see about KDE graphics -just the scroll bars- are very poor and look like the (not so)good-old windows98 theme.
No start panel, no nothing.
I think that something went wrong when switching from gnome/UNE to KDE and probabily there are some conflicts somewhere. I think maximus (that program witch makes gnome windows more suitable for small netbook screens by removing that bar there is on top of them -that bar you use to maximize/unmaximize windows-) wasn't deactivated and this makes me impossible to move/resize/switch windows, exactly as it was with UNE.
Please avoid answers like "format and re-install everything" because this is not the kind of approach i like to have towards linux - that would be more a Windows-lazy-user-who-doesn't-understand-what-is-happening-on-his-pc-like approach -
Thanks everyone
Baareem
I'm new to this forum but i have a basic knowledge of linux.
I was once an happy ubuntu user (and still i am on my Desktop PC) but, since i last run apt-get upgrade on my netbook, i found myself disgusted by the TERRIFIC "UNE" Desktop environment.
I tried then to follow instructions HERE in order to try to restore gnome's "normal" functions but something went wrong and my ubuntu kept crashing when starting gnome and all i was left with was the command line when running linux as root AND in recovery mode.
- I thought it would have been a good idea to give KDE a try -
so i logged in as root and gave this command:
apt-get install kubuntu-desktop
As suggested by apt-get, i run
apt-get update && apt-get autoremove && apt-get install kubuntu-desktop --fix-SOMETHING_I_DON'T_REMEMBER_XD
reboot
First time it crashed once again, second time it started and KDE login screen appeared!
But here things got worse.
As i login with my user, nothing appears on screen, nothing but the wallpaper and a terminal window where i run programs from.
I'm not allowed to switch from a window to another and this way i can just use one program at a time, i can't change windows dimentions nor move them.
The few things i can see about KDE graphics -just the scroll bars- are very poor and look like the (not so)good-old windows98 theme.
No start panel, no nothing.
I think that something went wrong when switching from gnome/UNE to KDE and probabily there are some conflicts somewhere. I think maximus (that program witch makes gnome windows more suitable for small netbook screens by removing that bar there is on top of them -that bar you use to maximize/unmaximize windows-) wasn't deactivated and this makes me impossible to move/resize/switch windows, exactly as it was with UNE.
Please avoid answers like "format and re-install everything" because this is not the kind of approach i like to have towards linux - that would be more a Windows-lazy-user-who-doesn't-understand-what-is-happening-on-his-pc-like approach -
Thanks everyone
Baareem
Comment