Panel doesn't show at startup at Ubuntu 10.04
Hey guys, i recently installed Ubuntu 10.04 in a rather old computer, a Compaq Presario 5300. Everything went fine, the OS had no problem in the process. But when i started the computer again, the panel didn't show up. I restarted it again and again, but the problem kept on going. I've used gconftool to force it to load, but i would like to have a permanent solution to that problem.
ubuntu-10.04 gnome-panel
add a comment |
Hey guys, i recently installed Ubuntu 10.04 in a rather old computer, a Compaq Presario 5300. Everything went fine, the OS had no problem in the process. But when i started the computer again, the panel didn't show up. I restarted it again and again, but the problem kept on going. I've used gconftool to force it to load, but i would like to have a permanent solution to that problem.
ubuntu-10.04 gnome-panel
DoesAlt + F2
bring up aRun
dialog? If yes, please start theTerminal
from there, and rungnome-panel
. If the panel isn't coming up, please post the output of the command here.
– Bobby
Nov 15 '10 at 11:04
add a comment |
Hey guys, i recently installed Ubuntu 10.04 in a rather old computer, a Compaq Presario 5300. Everything went fine, the OS had no problem in the process. But when i started the computer again, the panel didn't show up. I restarted it again and again, but the problem kept on going. I've used gconftool to force it to load, but i would like to have a permanent solution to that problem.
ubuntu-10.04 gnome-panel
Hey guys, i recently installed Ubuntu 10.04 in a rather old computer, a Compaq Presario 5300. Everything went fine, the OS had no problem in the process. But when i started the computer again, the panel didn't show up. I restarted it again and again, but the problem kept on going. I've used gconftool to force it to load, but i would like to have a permanent solution to that problem.
ubuntu-10.04 gnome-panel
ubuntu-10.04 gnome-panel
edited Nov 15 '10 at 11:03
Bobby
8,01133042
8,01133042
asked Sep 30 '10 at 21:26
ChristianChristian
111
111
DoesAlt + F2
bring up aRun
dialog? If yes, please start theTerminal
from there, and rungnome-panel
. If the panel isn't coming up, please post the output of the command here.
– Bobby
Nov 15 '10 at 11:04
add a comment |
DoesAlt + F2
bring up aRun
dialog? If yes, please start theTerminal
from there, and rungnome-panel
. If the panel isn't coming up, please post the output of the command here.
– Bobby
Nov 15 '10 at 11:04
Does
Alt + F2
bring up a Run
dialog? If yes, please start the Terminal
from there, and run gnome-panel
. If the panel isn't coming up, please post the output of the command here.– Bobby
Nov 15 '10 at 11:04
Does
Alt + F2
bring up a Run
dialog? If yes, please start the Terminal
from there, and run gnome-panel
. If the panel isn't coming up, please post the output of the command here.– Bobby
Nov 15 '10 at 11:04
add a comment |
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
Remove your .gconf and .gconfd folders to force a complete reset all your gnome settings to the defaults. I don't know if this will help, and it will mean that you will lose any configuration changes you have made since you installed Ubuntu. For this reason, the first part of the following command only renames the folder, rather than deleting it, so you can revert the changes if necessary.
mv ~/.gconf ~/.gconf.old && rm -rf ~/.gconfd && gconftool-2 --shutdown && pkill gnome-panel
add a comment |
Had a similar problem with Maverick release (10.10). After a couple of hours of google-ing (hotkeying Firefox is never a bad ideea), it seemed that reinstalling the gnome panel did the trick.
Access the terminal (Ctrl+Alt+F1) and log in.
sudo apt-get --purge remove gnome-panel*
and
sudo apt-get install gnome-panel*
After the deed is done switch back to X console (Ctrl+Alt+F7) and restart X server (Ctrl+Alt+BackSpace).
Hope that proved usefull.
add a comment |
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2 Answers
2
active
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2 Answers
2
active
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active
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active
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votes
Remove your .gconf and .gconfd folders to force a complete reset all your gnome settings to the defaults. I don't know if this will help, and it will mean that you will lose any configuration changes you have made since you installed Ubuntu. For this reason, the first part of the following command only renames the folder, rather than deleting it, so you can revert the changes if necessary.
mv ~/.gconf ~/.gconf.old && rm -rf ~/.gconfd && gconftool-2 --shutdown && pkill gnome-panel
add a comment |
Remove your .gconf and .gconfd folders to force a complete reset all your gnome settings to the defaults. I don't know if this will help, and it will mean that you will lose any configuration changes you have made since you installed Ubuntu. For this reason, the first part of the following command only renames the folder, rather than deleting it, so you can revert the changes if necessary.
mv ~/.gconf ~/.gconf.old && rm -rf ~/.gconfd && gconftool-2 --shutdown && pkill gnome-panel
add a comment |
Remove your .gconf and .gconfd folders to force a complete reset all your gnome settings to the defaults. I don't know if this will help, and it will mean that you will lose any configuration changes you have made since you installed Ubuntu. For this reason, the first part of the following command only renames the folder, rather than deleting it, so you can revert the changes if necessary.
mv ~/.gconf ~/.gconf.old && rm -rf ~/.gconfd && gconftool-2 --shutdown && pkill gnome-panel
Remove your .gconf and .gconfd folders to force a complete reset all your gnome settings to the defaults. I don't know if this will help, and it will mean that you will lose any configuration changes you have made since you installed Ubuntu. For this reason, the first part of the following command only renames the folder, rather than deleting it, so you can revert the changes if necessary.
mv ~/.gconf ~/.gconf.old && rm -rf ~/.gconfd && gconftool-2 --shutdown && pkill gnome-panel
answered Sep 30 '10 at 21:32
Sandeep BansalSandeep Bansal
5,85812032
5,85812032
add a comment |
add a comment |
Had a similar problem with Maverick release (10.10). After a couple of hours of google-ing (hotkeying Firefox is never a bad ideea), it seemed that reinstalling the gnome panel did the trick.
Access the terminal (Ctrl+Alt+F1) and log in.
sudo apt-get --purge remove gnome-panel*
and
sudo apt-get install gnome-panel*
After the deed is done switch back to X console (Ctrl+Alt+F7) and restart X server (Ctrl+Alt+BackSpace).
Hope that proved usefull.
add a comment |
Had a similar problem with Maverick release (10.10). After a couple of hours of google-ing (hotkeying Firefox is never a bad ideea), it seemed that reinstalling the gnome panel did the trick.
Access the terminal (Ctrl+Alt+F1) and log in.
sudo apt-get --purge remove gnome-panel*
and
sudo apt-get install gnome-panel*
After the deed is done switch back to X console (Ctrl+Alt+F7) and restart X server (Ctrl+Alt+BackSpace).
Hope that proved usefull.
add a comment |
Had a similar problem with Maverick release (10.10). After a couple of hours of google-ing (hotkeying Firefox is never a bad ideea), it seemed that reinstalling the gnome panel did the trick.
Access the terminal (Ctrl+Alt+F1) and log in.
sudo apt-get --purge remove gnome-panel*
and
sudo apt-get install gnome-panel*
After the deed is done switch back to X console (Ctrl+Alt+F7) and restart X server (Ctrl+Alt+BackSpace).
Hope that proved usefull.
Had a similar problem with Maverick release (10.10). After a couple of hours of google-ing (hotkeying Firefox is never a bad ideea), it seemed that reinstalling the gnome panel did the trick.
Access the terminal (Ctrl+Alt+F1) and log in.
sudo apt-get --purge remove gnome-panel*
and
sudo apt-get install gnome-panel*
After the deed is done switch back to X console (Ctrl+Alt+F7) and restart X server (Ctrl+Alt+BackSpace).
Hope that proved usefull.
edited Dec 7 '12 at 10:42
bytebuster
5591921
5591921
answered Nov 15 '10 at 10:49
AndreiAndrei
11
11
add a comment |
add a comment |
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Does
Alt + F2
bring up aRun
dialog? If yes, please start theTerminal
from there, and rungnome-panel
. If the panel isn't coming up, please post the output of the command here.– Bobby
Nov 15 '10 at 11:04