Hello, list. Well, after some detective work, I've managed to track all my problems down to: libbonoboui libgnomeui Those two libraries had 2 versions installed: the 32-bit and the 64-bit, and they were even different versions. So I removed (rpm -e) all the 32-bits ones, and then I tried to install one of the programs that started all this problem (rpm -ivh). I got "Failed dependencies: libbonoboui-2.so.0 and libgnomeui-2.so.0 are needed". So I reinstalled both packages, but in 64-bit versions and matching the ones installed (rpm -ivh --replacepkgs), and now I have just one version of each, and the correct one (64-bits). The problem is that I still get the "Failed dependencies" on the package installation. I tried with symbolic links from /usr/lib to the real location (/usr/lib64), to no avail. I also tried (removing links first) to run ldconfig, to no avail also. Any other ideas of how can I "trick" the program to actually see both (already) installed libraries? I know that the "Microsoft approach" (reinstall operating system, all apps, and all the rest) would work, but I prefer to think that Linux is smarter than that, isn't it? Thanks to all in advance, -- Mariano López Reta <mlreta@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> Tortuguitas, Buenos Aires, Argentina Registered Linux user #412032 Count yourself at http://counter.li.org