![]() ![]() Click on the tab labelled ‘Desktop Entry’ and replace the text in the box labelled ‘Command:’ from ‘dropbox start -i’ to ‘dbus-launch dropbox start’. You’ll be asked for your password, then a window will open up. In the system tray on the bottom right hand side there’s a white squre as a placeholder, and no menu appears when you click it.Ĥ: To fix the icon,open the terminal and run: sudo lxshortcut -i /usr/share/applications/sktop Hereon, whenever there’s an update, Dropbox should upgrade automatically.ģ: So far so good, but there’s a problem with the icon. This will bring up a ‘Download Dropbox’ dialogue follow the instructions to download and install the proprietary app, and then sign in to your account. ![]() Then click on the Dropbox icon in the submenu. And note that it is not the actual Dropbox app but a helper program.Ģ: Once installed, go to ‘Internet’ on the Lubuntu application menu in the bottom left hand corner of the screen. ![]() Note that it is the nautilus package, even though Lubuntu uses a different file manager, PCManFm. This will also install various dependencies, mainly Python 2.7 packages. So here are clear, step-by-step instructions for getting it working.ġ: Install the package ‘nautilus-dropbox’ via your prefered package manager (Lubuntu comes with Synaptic and Software Updater, both under ‘System Tools’ in the menu), or through the command line via: sudo apt-get install nautilus-dropbox Another is that after installing, the toolbar icon is broken. For starters, there are a number of dropbox apps in Ubuntu’s repositories and it is not clear which should be used. One of these is installing the popular file back up and sharing app Dropbox, which isn’t quite as easy as it should be. It’s generally a very smooth, intuitive experience and does what I want, but there are a few rough edges requiring attention. As I mainly use my linux laptop for writing and running fairly intensive text-processing scripts, I need something that doesn’t have extra bells and whistles and their corresponding overheads. ![]() My prefered Linux distribution these days is the lightweight Ubuntu variant Lubuntu. ![]()
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