At one time gnome and kde did not interoperate well because of
different conventions for some GUI stuff like the clipboard but those were harmonized long
ago.
You don't need all of kde, just the dependencies.
Your problem may be that you are exceeding the maximum length for an absolute pathname on
Windows. On UNIX-like systems that length is given by the MAXPATH macro in some C header
file. I think the POSIX MAXPATH is 1024, but I would expect the Windows maximum to be
less.
If Windows does have such a maximum path length, the msdn website should tell you what it
is.
The ISO 9660 format is quite primitive, as the low-level storage only allows for what you
could store on media filesystems. If you don't think the path length is the culprit,
give UDF a try.
Sent from my iPhone
On Nov 4, 2011, at 8:36 PM, Paul Allen Newell<pnewell(a)cs.cmu.edu> wrote:
> On 11/4/2011 8:26 PM, fred smith wrote:
>> On Fri, Nov 04, 2011 at 08:24:39PM -0700, Paul Allen Newell wrote:
>>> On 11/4/2011 8:22 PM, fred smith wrote:
>>>> You CAN do "yum install k3b" and it'll install the
necessary KDE
>>>> bits along with k3b. that's the way I always do it.
>>>>
>>> Fred:
>>>
>>> I was unaware that kde packages could operate under gnome and vice
>>> versa? No conflicts in doing such?
>> I wouldn't expect any, though I'm no guru. I just always do it as
>> above and it works, as if by magic! :)
>>
> I was googling k3b and gnome when your email came in ... it sure looks
> like it should work. Alright, another package to try.
>
> My thanks to Poc and Fred for pointing me in this direction (finger
> crossed that it works),
> Paul
>
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I am trying to clean up my directory structure and file length to
understand exactly what the problem is
Thanks for the help, I may get back to you on this if it appears your
suggestions are within the range of possibilities.
Paul