Adventures in Wonderland
Posted: Tue 13 Aug 2013, 10:11
Right-clicking an item in the menu pops up a button labled "Add to Desktop". This is a great feature but unfortunately, it does nothing as far as I can see. Except that, after clicking the button, it vanishes and then left-clicking the desktop no longer banishes the menu. Only after the main menu is moused-over will such clicking make the menu disappear.
I inadvertently deleted all occurrences of osmo.desktop. I dragged the file from /usr/aplications to the desktop to get desktop icon. Later I found osmo in the menu, under"Office", so decided to delete my new icon. Now pfind reports it's gone completely. What went wrong?
I got the .desktop file back by booting a saved savefile and copying it to the Windows filesystem. Is there a way to get such things back without a reboot? It wasn't in the trash can, presumably because the file was only blacklisted, not really deleted. Is that a bug? Then I tried to unpack initrd and look for it. However, although clicking on initrd does open a directory in /tmp, with a puppy-looking file directory under it, there are hardly any files in it?? (Would trying to open a huge initrd in a small savefile have this effect? I currently have 132 MB spare.)
How do I make the Osmo tray icon persist between bootups? Shouldn't that be the default when "Enable system tray" is ticked under Options/General? (the default). I hope I don't need to modify a start-up script manually, not that that's too hard but it's rather inelegant.
I inadvertently deleted all occurrences of osmo.desktop. I dragged the file from /usr/aplications to the desktop to get desktop icon. Later I found osmo in the menu, under"Office", so decided to delete my new icon. Now pfind reports it's gone completely. What went wrong?
I got the .desktop file back by booting a saved savefile and copying it to the Windows filesystem. Is there a way to get such things back without a reboot? It wasn't in the trash can, presumably because the file was only blacklisted, not really deleted. Is that a bug? Then I tried to unpack initrd and look for it. However, although clicking on initrd does open a directory in /tmp, with a puppy-looking file directory under it, there are hardly any files in it?? (Would trying to open a huge initrd in a small savefile have this effect? I currently have 132 MB spare.)
How do I make the Osmo tray icon persist between bootups? Shouldn't that be the default when "Enable system tray" is ticked under Options/General? (the default). I hope I don't need to modify a start-up script manually, not that that's too hard but it's rather inelegant.