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Check the accessibility options in the Control Center.
Try installing packages called glibc-devel and libstdc++-devel.
No, I also get such errors.
Try installing a package called zlib-devel (or with a similar name).
In such case, try installing xorg-x11-devel package.
Quoted Originally posted by mut i checked my path which contains /usr/x11r6/bin This should be rather /usr/X11R6/include. Which OS do you use?
Maybe you could cut out such tile from this screenshot?
Could you post a link to that "clock"?
Right-click on it --- a menu will open with a "Configure clock" (or similar) entry.
Quoted Originally posted by serega Where can I find that package Jacek? What system do you use? Quoted Below is the part of "configure" that checks for ImageMagick. As I understand it checks for $MAGICK_CONFIG and if it is not defined it searches for Magick-config? Am I right? Yes, this program should tell the configure script where ImageMagick libraries are located. It looks like that krita program uses ImageMagick libraries, not the tools.
Probably you need development package for ImageMagick (on my system that package is called ImageMagick-devel).
Quoted Originally posted by inq_ah "Makefile: 18: ***Linux Kernel source tree not found. Stop". Try installing package called kernel-source (or similar).
There are two ways: either click on your login name in one of the posts and then "Search" on the bottom or click "Search" on the left and enter your username in the "Search for Username". http://www.kde-forum.org/search.php?searchid=103949&sid=
Quoted Originally posted by inq_ah 1) where do I find the way how I need to establish/setup my Internet connection? How do you connect your computer to that modem? Through Ethernet? USB? Quoted 2) During the install phase I selected password for a GRUB, but it actually doesn't prompt for password at all. How do I setup this? I don't use grub, but AFAIR it will prompt you for that password when you will try to change its configuration. You should find a forum focused on Red Hat, this way you wil...
Do you have X libs headers installed? What system do you use? If you use RPM based Linux distribution, try installing RPM package named "X11-devel" or something similar.
Quoted Originally posted by inq_ah Pretty much afraid on formatting and re-formatting my hd by myself The worst thing that may happen is that you will loose all data from windows partition, so just do make backup earlier.
Quoted Originally posted by inq_ah 2) This is actually wrong forum. Better try http://www.linuxquestions.org Quoted I'm very much basic Linux user (using KDE at work). I'd like to install Linux at home on my PC that is running Windows XP. I have one HD - C: drive. Well... First of all you will have to repartition your hard drive --- you need one partition ("drive") for windows and two for Linux (one big for the system and a small one for swap). I'm not sure if you can shrink the windows partiti...
Quoted Originally posted by carpark When I try to log into a KDE session I get the error message; "The following installation problem was detected while trying to start KDE - No write access to "/home/adunkin/.ICE authority" KDE is unable to start" I have checked file permissions for /home/adunkin. They are read, write and execute for owner. Have you checked that .ICEauthority file? Who owns it and what permissions are set?
Quoted Originally posted by daldred What is Configure looking for, why can't it find it, and how can I make it find it? You only have the library itself, but you are missing header files --- install proper development package (on my system it's called X11-devel and it should have similar name in Mandriva).
Did you install or upgrade anything?