On Sun, Sep 28, 2008 at 05:35:13PM -0400, Eric wrote: > At 05:21 PM 9/28/2008, Dave Feustel wrote: > > >>>>> >> I'm running F9 and I would like to switch from gnome to kde, >> but I have not figured out how that is done. Can someone >> explain how? > <<<<< > > Good evening, Dave. > > First of all, you need to have KDE installed, if it is not already > installed. It isn't installed by default, in an initial F9 > installation. So, you need to log on as root, open up a terminal > window, and say "yum groupinstall "KDE Softwarre Development"" ("yum > groupinstall KDE" may also work but I didn't try that). > > Then, you have one of two ways: switchdesk, or selecting it in a little > box on login. > > switchdesk is a command-line utility where you log on as yourself, open > up a terminal window, and say "switchdesk KDE". If you try that and KDE > isn't installed, it will tell you that you need to use "yum groupinstall > "KDE Software Development"" to install KDE. > > If switchdesk isn't installed, you have to log on as root and say "yum > install switchdesk" first. > > The other way is, when you click on your userID in the login screen but > before you type in the password, a small pulldown box will appear at the > bottom center of the screen, containing all of the desktops you have > installed. Click on the arrow and select "KDE" from that box, and from > then on, until you change it, all of your logins will be to KDE (again, > as long as you have KDE installed). > > Note that you could use the graphical "Add/Remove Software" to do all > the KDE installation (and installation of other things like switchdesk), > but I have had that crash on me once too many times, in the middle of a > software install session, leaving things in an indeterminate state. So, > I use "Add/Remove Software" to get a list of everything I need to add, > then I use the command line "yum install..." or "yum groupinstall..." to > do the actual installation. > > Hope this helps... Thanks for the explanation. I managed to get kde installed via add/remove..., and then selected kde prior to login. But kde is even worse than gnome since it has nothing at all on the desktop and I can't install icons either on the desktop or on the system panel in either gnome or kde4 as I could in kde3. So I went back to gnome. -- fedora-list mailing list fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list Guidelines: http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Communicate/MailingListGuidelines