That who knows if it actually cares about the email business, or if it is one of those outfits that buy companies that are going concerns to sell them for parts. (1) “Verizon” is now AOL, but AOL, who used to be part of Verizon - and after it was so bought, Verizon gave it the job of taking care of the Verizon emails - is now no longer part of Verizon, as Verizon sold it to some finance company. Maybe this could be of help, probably not: If I go to “preferences: passwords” the Verizon account is missing! If i attempt to collect new mail the error screen comes up and asks for current password, which is then refused. One thing I just noticed: If I go to “Account settings” there is an entry for the account. Why should it work on the AOL email website and not not in the email clients? If you have multiple Profiles, do this for each.Īny further thoughts appreciated. They are correct and unchanged for when everything was working perfectly.Ĥ – What is the precise error message number(?) and text?Ĭoncern about losing Thunderbird emails –ĥ – Copy to elsewhere the entire contents ofĬ:\Users\ your-user-logon\AppData\Roaming\Thunderbird\Profiles\ profile-name\Mail See attached TB_dropdown.pngģ – Verify that the server definitions (security, etc.) are correct. In my version of TB ( 91.0.3) There is no “Options” choice. I’ve been entering passwords for 40 years.Ģ – In TB: Tools > Options > Privacy & Security > Passwords. None of these things make any difference. Is it as simple as lower-case ‘L’ vs ‘one or ‘oh’ vs zero, or an (or more?) embedded or trailing space or some other non-letter character? Don’t know if a is valid, could be changed(?) into a curly-quote. Here are my results:ġ – Try changing the font that you use to be sure that what you see is what there is. Or check your user and its groups by running id).First of all, thanks for your reply. Use the ones that appear for almost everything you have inside your home, when running ls -al ~.
bob:bob (or use the environment variable $USER). (replace and with whatever are your user and group. To solve this I just changed the owner of my snap directory (and everything that was inside) with sudo chown : -R ~/snap (You can check the permissions, the user owner and the group of that directory with ls -al ~ | grep snap and similarly for what's inside with ls -al ~/snap) During the copying process, that directory got copied as owned by the root user. This was happening because when I installed a fresh Ubuntu 20, I copied data from a backup of my previous system (CentOS), which had a snap directory inside my user's home directory. Mkdir /home//snap/snap-store: permission denied When I tried to run it I got a permission denied error: WARNING: cannot create user data directory:Ĭannot create "/home//snap/snap-store/454": If snap-store is the one that is not working, I can tell you what was my problem (maybe you have a similar one).
#Waterfox not responding install
Sudo apt autoremove gnome-software & sudo apt install gnome-software
#Waterfox not responding software
If if gnome-software is the one that doesn't work, you may try to follow karel instructions: sudo apt clean # clean list of cached packages so Ubuntu Software can read them Then, google again with the new information that you got. Open a terminal ( Ctrl + Alt + t, or windowsKey and then search forterminal, or click on show applications on your dock/taskbar and then search forterminal`) To find out more information about why either of the 2 is failing, try to open them from a terminal: (the tooltip for this is Ubuntu Software). I didn't have this one docked to my taskbar on a fresh Ubuntu 20 installation.) (If you hover your mouse over this on your dock/taskbar you get the tooltop Software.