Nautilus is an X application and it will start in the allready running
X session, unless you have more than one
On Tue, Nov 24, 2009 at 11:56 PM, Trent Shipley <
tshipley@deru.com> wrote:
> OK. No more night time studying on caffeinated beverages after 6:00PM.
> I'm getting old and can't sleep through the high.
>
>
> Joseph, can I
>
> ctrl-alt-f1
>
> tshipley> nautilus &
>
>
> I'm thinking that wouldn't work because I'm in the wrong shell.
>
>
> It sounds like I need to issue a command in the shell hosting the
> X-server session or in a virtual shell under GNOME, but how would I do
> that with no run prompt? (Maybe alt-f2 will bring up a run prompt?)
>
>
>
> Joseph Sinclair wrote:
>
>> This is normally due to Nautilus crashing. (Just like Windows, Gnome provides the "desktop" via the file manager).
>> Next time it happens, try opening a command prompt and entering "nautilus &". If it restores the desktop stuff, you know the cause. Don't run like that for too long, however, as some of the Gnome system seems to assume that the Nautilus process is parented properly, and will cause weird behavior if it's started from a command line.
>>
>> Trent Shipley wrote:
>>
>>> Occasionally, when I am using out-of-the-box Ubuntu, I wind up on an
>>> empty screen with only the wall paper showing--no system stuff, no icons
>>> on the desktop, nothing but wallpaper. I suspect what I am doing is
>>> getting to a new virtual desktop, but maybe not because in KDE and OS X
>>> a new virtual desktop keeps desktop furniture like toolbars, start
>>> symbols, and icons on the desktop.
>>>
>>>
>>> The big problem is that I can't figure out how to do anything useful
>>> with the empty screen, so I have to shutdown (with the power button) and
>>> restart. (I guess I could look up how to change shells with a key
>>> chord, go to a command line shell and 'sudo shutdown -r now' or startx
>>> with a new shell number.) But what I really want to do is to go back to
>>> where I was (and figure out how to use virtual desktops in GNOME).
>>>
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>>
>>
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--
A mouse trap, placed on top of your alarm clock, will prevent you from
rolling over and going back to sleep after you hit the snooze button.
Stephen
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