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To me it was magic up until now... I tried so many different things and asked so many people and just didn't get it to work.
The answer is as simple as great: nothing! I did absolutely nothing! I just installed my SuSe 9.1 and then, by accident, hit the Win-Key and saw the K-MenĂ¼ pop up...
Finally, FiNaLlY, FINALLY, F-I-N-A-L-L-Y the Win-Key does what I want it to do! I installed SuSe 9.1 with KDE 3.2.1... and when I hit the Win-Key the KDE-Menu pops up in the lower left corner of the screen! I've been trying to make my KDE do exactly that since 2.0 - and now, FINALLY, it works - without me having to do anything! Now all I need is a shop that sells Tux-Keys for black notebook keyboards
Great idea. That would make helping and/or being helped a lot easier for one doesn't have to ask for (or if one seeks for help: post) his basic system configuration over and over again. Apart from that it'd be also interesting to see who is using what
SuSe... for the mascot Well... not /only/ for the mascot. SuSe was my first Linux Distro quite a few years back and it was love at first sight. Today I'm using SuSe because it's easy to install, easy to use, it comes with great documentation, there's a big community and almost everything is available as .rpm which allows me to easily keep track of what I installed etc. So mainly it's for reasons of usability. You can manage almost everything in YaST2. And last, not least, it's a German distribut...
Grip - not a KDE tool but very good anyway
I could fix this by importing all my Windows TrueTypeFonts into OpenOffice (there's a tool called "spadmin" or something like that). HTH.
Sorry, can't help you, but: what Application do you use to get this Apple MacOS-style-like bar at the bottom?
Now that it is actually running it runs, and runs, and runs and keeps running without any problems
It's a pretty cool tool (known from Debian) to install new or update old packages over the internet. It can be found here: http://linux01.gwdg.de/apt4rpm/
Hm... try [code:1]apt-get install kopete[/code:1] -- worked fine here. HTH.
Ever tried to install the RPM package?
You certainly have a small bar at the bottom of your screen... by right-clicking on it you can add some things to this bar -- maybe your missing the so-called "System Tray". It's the part of the bar where tools like simICQ, Kopete, etc usually are to be found.
I once again installed the version from ftp.suse.com and installed the driver the way you pointed out... well, I don't know what to say... it works! Thanks, man! glxgears FPS went up from approx. 2000 (with the old drivers) to approx. 2300! Thanks again. You saved my weekend
Thanks for the offering! I've got a Freeliner XP 2500+ Notebook with an ATI Radeon 9600 mobility (M10) inside, which used to work pretty well with the old drivers. My distro of choice is SuSe 9.0 Pro (and yes, I even tried the driver packages available from ftp.suse.com). The only "error" message is that "binary driver"(?) could taint the kernel - which shouldn't be of any importance.
Since I installed them my graphic card is no longer recognized as "3D capable"... even after reinstalling the old drivers (3.2. the problem persisted...
Just to make sure I understood you right... You want to start a console-based IRC client (just an example!) but you don't want to have to press ALT+F2, to type "konsole" and then to type the name of the start script for your IRC client. Instead you want to creat an icon on your desktop that executes the steps mentioned above automagically whenever you click on it - right?
A whole category for a single application would've been overkill anyway. My guess is that there won't be that much questions about kopete anymore when KDE 3.2 reached the "stable" status.
Try SuSe. I don't know how installations work with the other distros 'cause I haven't tried them for some time now, but SuSE comes with a great installation tool (YaST2: Yet another Setup Tool 2). You can access a list of programs delivered on the CDs/DVD by just opening YaST2 and selecting "Install / Remove Software". You also can install downloaded RPM-Files (somewhat like EXE with Windows) via YaST2 though it's faster to install those packages by the command [code:1]rpm -Uvh $packagename.rpm[...