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Just put an icon on your panel bar called Root Nautilus and make the command = "gksudo nautilus"<BR>
You can then launch this with one click and no error messages.<BR>
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On Wed, 2005-07-20 at 20:40 +0200, Vincent Trouilliez wrote:
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<FONT COLOR="#000000">> How can I run Nautilus without facing any file owner restrictions?</FONT>
<FONT COLOR="#000000">> If I do in the shell ($ sudo nautilus) there are a lot of Error messages, </FONT>
<FONT COLOR="#000000">> eventhough Nautilus itself shows up and seems to work.</FONT>
<FONT COLOR="#000000">'Sudo nautilus' is the way to do it, and I have never had problems with</FONT>
<FONT COLOR="#000000">it. Maybe you should show us exactly (copy/paste) the error messages you</FONT>
<FONT COLOR="#000000">get, just in case there is something important that needs taken care of.</FONT>
<FONT COLOR="#000000">But I bet they are just harmless Gtk related messages, nothing to worry</FONT>
<FONT COLOR="#000000">about.</FONT>
<FONT COLOR="#000000">--</FONT>
<FONT COLOR="#000000">Vince</FONT>
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Kind Regards Russell<BR>
==================<BR>
www.windsorcycles.com.au<BR>
bikes.no-ip.info<BR>
Linux user #369094<BR>
================== <BR>
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