 Alguien sabe una solución para una conexión ssh en workbench, en ubuntu 22
 Hello! I just updated to Jammy. I then went to Software Sources to re-enable my ppa's - but do not have permission!! How can I get into Software Sources? nb sudo is working!
 I can open it from the command line with: sudo /usr/bin/software-properties-kde
  - but how can I get the gui to open in Muon or Discover?
 https://irc-attachments.kde.org/94e29569/file_55803.jpg
 trying to access Software Sources through Muon. : https://irc-attachments.kde.org/94e29569/file_55803.jpg
 Known issue with sudo in jammy (re @Anarchotaoist: )
 Oh! (re @RikMills: Known issue with sudo in jammy)
 Currently investigating to find what debian sudo packaging commit broke it
 nb. There is no pop-up for sudo when installing in Apper either!
 It is one of the changes in: https://tracker.debian.org/news/1237774/accepted-sudo-196-1exp2-source-into-experimental/
 Thanks for the info! Hopefully it gets sorted!
 5
 ZO5S
[10:26] <user|92> Hello All
[10:27] <user|92> I have new laptop in witch installed win10 or 11, I don't know.
[10:27] <sven[eclabsde][m> Since I updated to 2022.04 I discovered that rsa keys are no longer accepted by Kubuntu‘s ssh client but there is a workaround to solve the problem until the server are updated. Some Freifunk Router don‘t support the new signatures yet because of the limited space of these devices
[10:27] <user|92> when I trying to install kubuntu 22.04LTS catching error 141
[10:29] <user|92> Help me please install kubuntu on my new laptop
[10:38] <sven[eclabsde][m> If your home directories are on a separated partition a new installation is the last possibility that  can help. Alternatively do a backup before you  delete and reinstall Kubuntu but my suggestion should be the very last possibility you should try. Perhaps somebody else has a better solution.
[10:47] <sven[eclabsde][m> If you have a Windows installation on your system on a seperated harddisk turn of this disk if your grub is installed on Ubuntu’s harddisk otherwise update wants to install grub on windows harddisk or ssd wich failed in my system
[12:12] <Help_Pls> Hello
[12:12] <Help_Pls> Guys pls help me with one a big issue that I am facing right now
[12:12] <Help_Pls> I don't like kubuntu now
[12:12] <Help_Pls> I want to install windows again
[12:12] <mrkubax10> go ahead lol
[12:12] <Help_Pls> And I have a ISO file of windows
[12:12] <mrkubax10> no one forces you to use linux
[12:13] <Help_Pls> I need to burn the ISO file in USB
[12:13] <Help_Pls> But the problem is that
[12:13] <Help_Pls> only rufus can do that
[12:13] <Help_Pls> But I can't run rufus
[12:13] <Help_Pls> And when I use rufus it don't list my USB
[12:13] <Help_Pls> What should I do?
[12:13] <Help_Pls> Kubuntu is kinda laggy
[12:13] <Help_Pls> Can someone help me with that
[12:14] <Help_Pls> OR maybe can I restore my windows 10 again?
[12:15] <BluesKaj> Hi all
[12:15] <Help_Pls> HEy can you help me
[12:15] <BluesKaj> just ask your question
[12:16] <Help_Pls> I asked
[12:16] <Help_Pls> But noone is answering
[12:17] <BluesKaj> I didn't see it since I joined just now
[12:17] <Help_Pls> Okay
[12:17] <Help_Pls> So I asked
[12:18] <Help_Pls> That my kubuntu isn't running well,  So is it possible that I can restore my windows 10 and all data again?
[12:18] <Help_Pls> Pls help me with thsi
[12:19] <BluesKaj> join the windows chat to figure that out
[12:19] <Help_Pls> where is windows chat?
[12:20] <BluesKaj> ans what do you mean by kubuntu no running well that's not specific enough for any kind of help
[12:20] <Help_Pls> Hmm kubuntu is kinda laggy
[12:22] <BluesKaj> have you updayed and upgraded since you installed kubuntu?
[12:22] <BluesKaj> updated
[12:23] <mrkubax10> you may have wrong graphics drivers installed
[12:24] <Help_Pls> Yes
[12:24] <Help_Pls> NO
[12:24] <Help_Pls> But like I had some important data on my windows
[12:24] <Help_Pls> So Now I want to restore my windows
[12:25] <Help_Pls> Pls help me with that
[12:25] <mrkubax10> did you erase your hard drive during kubuntu installation?
[12:27] <Help_Pls> Hmm
[12:27] <Help_Pls> LIke I selected
[12:27] <Help_Pls> Use entire disk
[12:27] <Help_Pls> So now IDK what happened to it
[12:27] <ravage> its gone. you will not get it back
[12:27] <ravage> reinstall and live with the loss
[12:28] <Help_Pls> Oay
[12:28] <Help_Pls> But now I have a final question
[12:28] <Help_Pls> I have windows 10 ISO
[12:28] <Help_Pls> insalled
[12:29] <Help_Pls> Installed*
[12:29] <Help_Pls> I want to burn the ISO file in my USB
[12:29] <BluesKaj> Help_Pls, click on this, #windows
[12:29] <Help_Pls> BUT IDk how to do that
[12:29] <Help_Pls> Noone is there
[12:29] <mrkubax10> maybe it's ##windows
[12:30] <ravage> do you want to create the USB drive from Ubuntu? https://itsfoss.com/bootable-windows-usb-linux/ if not ##windows
[12:30] <Help_Pls> NO
[12:31] <ravage> have a nice day
[12:31] <Help_Pls> I have a windows 10 ISO Now I have to make the ISO file to be a
[12:31] <Help_Pls> Bootable USB
[12:31] <Help_Pls> No pls don't GO I beg u
[12:31] <Help_Pls> ravage
[12:32] <Help_Pls> Pls I beg y0ou
[12:32] <BluesKaj> this is kubuntu support, not windows support
[12:32] <Help_Pls> Hmm
[12:32] <Help_Pls> I am asking for kubuntu support now
[12:32] <Help_Pls> I want to run a .exe file
[12:32] <Help_Pls> How can I do that
[12:32] <ravage> google wine
[12:32] <Help_Pls> YEs
[12:32] <Help_Pls> WIne
[12:32] <Help_Pls> I have to use rufus to make the ISO into a bootable USb
[12:33] <Help_Pls> But whenever I use rufus with wine
[12:33] <Help_Pls> My USB don't show up there
[12:33] <ravage> dont use wine. use the link i sent
[12:33] <ravage> or any other google result on how to create a bootable USB from linux
[12:34] <ravage> https://www.balena.io/etcher/ works pretty well too
[12:35] <Help_Pls> Balena etcher
[12:35] <Help_Pls> WHen I used t
[12:35] <Help_Pls> it
[12:35] <Help_Pls> It said that to make Windows image into a bootable USB
[12:35] <Help_Pls> You need to use software that are made for these types of special purposes
[12:35] <Help_Pls> lke
[12:35] <Help_Pls> Rufus
[12:35] <Help_Pls> among others
 how to check if my lap support 120 fps in linux
 how to check if my lap support 120 fps in kubuntu
[13:12] <cbreak> IrcsomeBot: what does "xrandr" on the cli say?
[14:41] <Z1> Hello
[14:55] <Z1> Hello Everyone,
[14:55] <Z1> I have a question in regards to "Bluetooth adapter not found" being showed in the Bluetooth manager. What solutions allow for the "Bluetooth Adapter" to be found?
[14:55] <Z1> I have using Kubuntu 22.04lts on a Asus K55N laptop
[14:58] <Z1> I have tried multiple commands and various packages using Synaptic Package Manager. This has been an issue for the last week for me. If anyone has a solution, idea, work-around fix or advice. I would greatly appreciate it.
[15:20] <Renan> Hi, i lost my password.
[15:21] <Renan> do you know how i get it back?
[15:49] <svenfltpsvenfltp> https://askubuntu.com/questions/24006/how-do-i-reset-a-lost-administrative-password
[18:39] <Yeldham> Can someone help me? I borked my upgrade from 21.10 to 22.04.
[18:40] <Yeldham> While the upgrade was happening, I tried copying something from the terminal, but I forgot to press Shift key with Ctrl + C, which means the upgrade completely halted.
[18:41] <Yeldham> I tried continuing it with, but now when it reaches the linux-image package, it errors out: https://pastebin.com/y1vJANWq
[19:18] <ravage> "No space left on device" your boot partition is full
[19:18] <ravage> delete some old kernels manually and retry
 Is there an app like rufus for kubuntu? (re @IrcsomeBot: <ravage> or any other google result on how to create a bootable USB from linux)
[19:43] <arraybolt3> @Oov Try doing a search for "Startup disk creator" in your Application Menu. It should already be installed if I'm not mistaken.
 Can i copy my os into a flash? Or any storage device!
[19:43] <arraybolt3> @Oov The live ISO or an installed system?
 The live
[19:44] <Yeldham> ravage: I ran `sudo apt dist-upgrade` and that appears to have fixed, more or less.
[19:44] <ravage> make sure you have a bootable kernel
[19:45] <arraybolt3> @Oov Technically you *can* save the ISO on any storage device, but there's not a whole lot of point flashing it to anything other than a flash drive or DVD.
 How (re @IrcsomeBot: <ravage> make sure you have a bootable kernel)
[19:45] <ravage> update-grub2
[19:45] <ravage> should show a 5.15 and one older kernel at least
[19:45] <ravage> also check "df -h" if you have some free space in /boot now
[19:46] <arraybolt3> @Oov If Startup Disk Creator doesn't show the drive you want to use, you can also use the "dd" command, which I'm happy to teach you how to use.
 I wanna install kubuntu for my friends (re @IrcsomeBot: <arraybolt3> @Oov Technically you *can* save the ISO on any storage device, but there's not a whole lot of point flashing it to anything other than a flash drive or DVD.)
 Teach me plz (re @IrcsomeBot: <arraybolt3> @Oov If Startup Disk Creator doesn't show the drive you want to use, you can also use the "dd" command, which I'm happy to teach you how to use.)
[19:50] <arraybolt3> @Oov OK. In that instance, what you should do is flash the ISO to any flash drive big enough to hold it, by using Startup Disk Creator. You can then boot each system from that flash drive and then use the OS installer built into the ISO. This will result in a properly installed system, and you can use the same USB flash drive as many times as you want.
[19:51] <arraybolt3> @Oov If you want to use dd, the first thing to do is open a terminal. You can usually do this with Ctrl+Alt+T.
[19:51] <arraybolt3> @Oov Be very careful to not make typos, since you could destroy your data if you make a typo in the wrong spot.
[19:52] <Yeldham> ravage: I ran the commands and everything seems in order. Thanks!
[19:52] <ravage> Yeldham, then you can risk a reboot :)
[19:52] <arraybolt3> @Oov Next, type "lsblk" and press Enter. This will show you all the drives in your system. You should be able to pick out which drive is which based off of drive size.
[19:53] <arraybolt3> @Oov Now, type "cd ~/Downloads" to go to your Downloads folder where the ISO should be. (If the ISO isn't in Downloads, you can tweak this command to go to wherever your ISO actually is.)
[19:53] <arraybolt3> @Oov The next command is the scary command. **DO NOT MAKE A TYPO HERE, OR YOU MAY OVERWRITE THE WRONG DRIVE!!!**
[19:54] <arraybolt3> @Oov sudo dd if=./<ISO file name here> of=/dev/<drive code here> bs=4M
[19:54] <arraybolt3> Replace <ISO file name here> with the name of your ISO file, and <drive code here> with the drive ID you got from lsblk.
[19:55] <arraybolt3> For instance, if "sdb" is your flash drive, and your ISO is named "kubuntu-20.04.2.0-desktop-amd64.iso", you would type this command:
[19:55] <arraybolt3> sudo dd if=./kubuntu-20.04.2.0-desktop-amd64.iso of=/dev/sdb bs=4M
[19:56] <arraybolt3> @Oov When you type the command, you will be asked to type your password. Double-check (and triple-check) that you've not made any typos, then type your password, press Enter, and wait for the ISO to be flashed to the drive you specified. It will likely take a while.
 How can i do that (re @IrcsomeBot: <arraybolt3> @Oov Be very careful to not make typos, since you could destroy your data if you make a typo in the wrong spot.)
[19:58] <arraybolt3> @Oov Type very slowly, and triple-check your command before running it.
 Oh ok if i make amistake what are the risks? (re @IrcsomeBot: <arraybolt3> @Oov Type very slowly, and triple-check your command before running it.)
[19:59] <arraybolt3> @Oov The only spot where a typo is really deadly is in the <drive code here> spot - if you type "sda" when you meant "sdb", whatever drive happens to be "sda" will get clobbered with the contents of your live ISO. If the drive happens to be your main hard drive, you'll lose all the data on that drive.
[20:00] <arraybolt3> And note that "sdb" isn't necessarily the right code - the "lsblk" command will tell you which drive code is the right one.
 Ok ok (re @IrcsomeBot: <arraybolt3> @Oov The next command is the scary command. **DO NOT MAKE A TYPO HERE, OR YOU MAY OVERWRITE THE WRONG DRIVE!!!**)
[20:00] <arraybolt3> Really, dd is only dangerous if you're not paying attention. I pay close attention, and I use it to do all my ISO flashing.
 I'll get the poth from lsblk? (re @IrcsomeBot: <arraybolt3> Replace <ISO file name here> with the name of your ISO file, and <drive code here> with the drive ID you got from lsblk.)
[20:02] <arraybolt3> Yeah. Run "lsblk" and you'll see what I mean. It's not a dangerous command.
[20:03] <arraybolt3> @Oov One last thing, don't flash the ISO to a flash drive that has important data on it, or you'll lose that data. Any spare, blank flash drive should do nicely.
 Ok that is how to copy my operating system into a flash (re @IrcsomeBot: <arraybolt3> @Oov When you type the command, you will be asked to type your password. Double-check (and triple-check) that you've not made any typos, then type your password, press Enter, and wait for the ISO to be flashed to the drive you specified. It will likely take a while.)
[20:04] <arraybolt3> Yep. Once the command finishes, run "sync" to make sure everything got saved properly, then remove the drive and it's bootable!
 Thank you very much
[20:06] <arraybolt3>  👍
 If i got lost i'll ask here
[20:12] <arraybolt3> @Oov That's what we're here for!
 I really wanna learn well and join your team u r so great
 I really wanna learn well and join your team u r so great at what u do
[20:16] <arraybolt3> @Oov The best ways to learn are man pages, forums, and experimentation. (That what I did anyway.) Make sure you always have a backup of your data and an installation flash drive laying around, so that if you try a command and shatter your system, you can recover.
[20:16] <arraybolt3> @Oov I've shattered many a system in my day - it's one of the best ways to learn. (And if you don't want to risk breaking your main system, look into virt-manager. It's awesome.)
[20:17] <arraybolt3> @Oov (virt-manager allows you to run a full Linux OS as if it were an application. You can do whatever you want within the virtual machine, and if you break it, you can reinstall it without risking any of your data. You can even "snapshot" a VM so that if it breaks you can restore it to a known-good state with only a few mouse clicks.)
[20:18] <arraybolt3> @Oov And, of course, asking questions on IRC is a great way to learn. I was very happy to get to help!
 Thank u again 🤍
[20:32] <arraybolt3> @Oov You bet.
 should i format the flash?
[21:39] <arraybolt3> @Oov Nope. The ISO already has everything set up, so flashing it directly to the drive using "dd" will do everything. No format required.
 and how to find the ISO?
[21:40] <arraybolt3> @Oov Did you already download it? It's at https://kubuntu.org/getkubuntu/ if you've not downloaded it yet.
[21:41] <arraybolt3> @Oov If you've already downloaded it, you can use the "cd" command to navigate to it. For instance, if you stored it under a folder called "ISOs" in your home folder, you would do "cd ~/ISOs" to get to it. If it's in your Downloads, do "cd ~/Downloads".
 i'm on kubuntu 20.04
[21:43] <arraybolt3> @Oov You need to have an ISO downloaded to flash it to a drive.
[21:43] <arraybolt3> @Oov You can't flash an existing installation to a drive (ok, well, you can, but it's complicated, probably won't work very well, and you'd need the ISO to do it in the first place.)
 ok  i'll download it first
[21:46] <arraybolt3> @Oov Once it's downloaded, it's generally recommended to check it to ensure that it didn't get corrupted during the download. I'm happy to walk you through how to do that.
 how can i check it?
[21:49] <arraybolt3> @Oov Can you tell me which version you've downloaded/are downloading? You need different files to check it depending on which release you got.
 i'll download 20.04
[21:50] <arraybolt3> OK. So, to get the necessary files to check the ISO, go to https://cdimage.ubuntu.com/kubuntu/releases/20.04/release/ and download the files "SHA256SUMS' and "SHA256SUMS.gpg".
[21:51] <arraybolt3> @Oov Once that's done, make sure that your ISO and both of the verification files you downloaded are all in the same folder (I'll assume they're all in Downloads).
 ok
[21:53] <arraybolt3> @Oov Next, in order to ensure that the file hasn't been corrupted by malware, you'll need to download a PGP signing key. To do that, run this command:
[21:53] <arraybolt3> gpg --keyid-format long --keyserver hkp://keyserver.ubuntu.com --recv-keys 0x843938DF228D22F7B3742BC0D94AA3F0EFE21092
[21:54] <arraybolt3> You can copy-paste it into your terminal - just select it, copy it, go to your terminal, and press "Ctrl+Shift+V", then Enter.
 im trying to download it and i get this (re @IrcsomeBot: <arraybolt3> OK. So, to get the necessary files to check the ISO, go to https://cdimage.ubuntu.com/kubuntu/releases/20.04/release/ and download the files "SHA256SUMS' and "SHA256SUMS.gpg".)
 2ad10694f3348cb05faa7e0e572dd9e5c031c3291a11b64906150d333ec1fb68 *kubuntu-20.04.4-desktop-amd64.iso
[21:55] <arraybolt3> Click the back button in your browser, then right-click the link and click "Save link as...". This works on Firefox.
 im on chrome
[21:56] <arraybolt3> Hmm, hold on, let me see how chrome works...
 i saved it as SHA256SUMS.txt
[21:57] <arraybolt3> I think that should work.
 yeah
[21:57] <arraybolt3> Did you already do the "gpg" command, and is the ISO already downloaded?
 no
 i'll  do it later
 do i have to do it now?
[22:00] <arraybolt3> @Oov Nah, just whenever you have the ISO and verification files downloaded.
 ok what should i do when i get there (re @IrcsomeBot: <arraybolt3> @Oov Nah, just whenever you have the ISO and verification files downloaded.)
[22:02] <arraybolt3> Once those files are downloaded, run the gpg command so that the rest of the commands for verifying the ISO work.
 should i just enter gpg in terminal ?
[22:04] <arraybolt3> @Oov Yes. To avoid typing the big number at the end, you can select it in IRC, copy it with Ctrl+C, then go to your terminal and paste it with Ctrl+Shift+V. (The shift is important for pasting into a terminal.)
 what big number?
[22:06] <arraybolt3> Did you see the "gpg" command I put in the chat earlier?
[22:06] <arraybolt3> gpg --keyid-format long --keyserver hkp://keyserver.ubuntu.com --recv-keys 0x843938DF228D22F7B3742BC0D94AA3F0EFE21092
 i did not try it (re @IrcsomeBot: <arraybolt3> Did you see the "gpg" command I put in the chat earlier?)
 this is it's output? (re @IrcsomeBot: <arraybolt3> gpg --keyid-format long --keyserver hkp://keyserver.ubuntu.com --recv-keys 0x843938DF228D22F7B3742BC0D94AA3F0EFE21092)
[22:07] <arraybolt3> @Oov No, that's the command you paste into your terminal.
[22:08] <arraybolt3> It tells your computer to recognize the Ubuntu ISO signing key so you can verify the ISO is uncorrupted and legitimate.
 is this command the same in my device or i have a another number? (re @IrcsomeBot: <arraybolt3> @Oov No, that's the command you paste into your terminal.)
[22:10] <arraybolt3> @Oov It should be the same on all devices.
 ok
 is there something else i should know?
[22:14] <arraybolt3> @Oov Once you've done that, the next step is to make sure the SHA256SUMS.txt file is legit. To do that, use this command:
[22:14] <arraybolt3> gpg --keyid-format long --verify SHA256SUMS.gpg SHA256SUMS
[22:14] <arraybolt3> @Oov This should output some text that says "Good signature" in it. (It will also have a somewhat scary looking warning at the end - this is normal and can be disregarded so long as you see "Good signature" in the output.)
 🆗
[22:16] <arraybolt3> Oops, I messed up the second "gpg" command I gave you - the part that says "SHA256SUMS" should be "SHA256SUMS.txt". So:
[22:16] <arraybolt3> gpg --keyid-format long --verify SHA256SUMS.gpg SHA256SUMS.txt
[22:17] <arraybolt3> @Oov If the SHA256SUMS file checks good, the next steps it to verify the ISO itself. To do that, use this command:
[22:17] <arraybolt3> sha256sum -c SHA256SUMS.txt 2>&1 | grep OK
[22:18] <arraybolt3> @Oov If this command outputs a line with a big red "OK" in it, you're all set! If it doesn't output anything, something's gone wrong and you need to download the ISO again.
 u forgot  .txt? (re @IrcsomeBot: <arraybolt3> Oops, I messed up the second "gpg" command I gave you - the part that says "SHA256SUMS" should be "SHA256SUMS.txt". So:)
[22:18] <arraybolt3> @Oov Yep.
[22:19] <arraybolt3> @Oov Firefox doesn't add the ".txt" to the end, so the commands I used on my system don't have that bit.
 haaa ok (re @IrcsomeBot: <arraybolt3> @Oov Firefox doesn't add the ".txt" to the end, so the commands I used on my system don't have that bit.)
 u helped me a lot  is there a way i can help u?
[22:23] <arraybolt3> Let me know whenever you're done with the sha256sum command.
[22:23] <arraybolt3> @Oov Is this line highlighted in your chat client?
 ok i will
[22:23] <arraybolt3> And is this line not highlighted?
 non are
[22:25] <arraybolt3> Oov: Bah, great. I just found out a technique I use to ping users on IRC isn't working right... Oh well. Thank you, that will help me do things on IRC correctly.
 i'm very happy to help you
[22:30] <arraybolt3> Oov: Thanks. You just helped everyone I try to help. :-)
 thank you for being nice
[22:32] <arraybolt3> Oov: Of course. Thank you also!
 Guys, how do you set custom window rules for apps without the title bar? Like pulse effects for example