On Thu, 25 Jun 2009 09:24:43 +0100, Anne Wilson cannewilson@googlemail.com wrote:
On Thursday 25 June 2009 08:54:02 Anne Wilson wrote:
On Thursday 25 June 2009 08:18:39 Patrick Boutilier wrote:
Now I just want to know how to deal with the remaining 15 f10 packages.
Maybe there isn't any f11 equivalent for them?
That did occur to me. If they are unused I don't suppose that they matter. If they are (correctly) being used, that's fine. However there are
some
on the list that surely don't come into those categories - iptables, sudo and libtar, for instance. This is the list
google-gadgets-0.10.5-7 libdcp4client-4.0.0-35 neon-0.28.4-1.1 iptables-ipv6-1.4.3.2-1 ca-certificates-2009-1 kbackup-0.5.4-1 GeoIP-1.4.6-2 libtalloc-1.2.0-31 compat-db45-4.5.20 sudo-1.7.1-2 kompose-0.5.3-13 iptables-1.4.3.2-1 google-gadgets-qt-0.10.5-7 libtar-1.2.11-11 kipi-plugins-0.3.0-1
I now find that neither dolphin nor konqueror will run, so I've runout
of
patience. Later today I'll be backing up and doing a clean install - although without a file manager selecting files for backup will not be easy.
Erm, do you really need a X filemanager for that or did I miss something? :)
What about mc?
[eelko@eb Documents]$ yum info mc Loaded plugins: presto, refresh-packagekit Installed Packages Name : mc Arch : i586 Epoch : 1 Version : 4.6.2 Release : 10.fc11 Size : 5.3 M Repo : installed
From repo : updates
Summary : User-friendly text console file manager and visual shell URL : http://www.midnight-commander.org/ License : GPLv2 Description: Midnight Commander is a visual shell much like a file manager, only : with many more features. It is a text mode application, but it also : includes mouse support. Midnight Commander's best features are its : ability to FTP, view tar and zip files, and to poke into RPMs for : specific files.
Anne