Hi Guys,
looking at the explanations given for this bug I found out that it is caused by the env variable $HOME not yet set when gnome-do starts.
However I tried playing a little bit and I discovered that this is not actually true...
If you place the following script at the beginning of /usr/bin/gnome-do:
xmessage $HOME
And rester your system, you'll see a message box showing your path to home folder. This proves that when gnome-do is started up (even at login), the env variable $HOME has already being properly set.
Hi Guys,
looking at the explanations given for this bug I found out that it is caused by the env variable $HOME not yet set when gnome-do starts.
However I tried playing a little bit and I discovered that this is not actually true...
If you place the following script at the beginning of /usr/bin/gnome-do:
xmessage $HOME
And rester your system, you'll see a message box showing your path to home folder. This proves that when gnome-do is started up (even at login), the env variable $HOME has already being properly set.