How can I remove leftover bits of kde-standard?












4















I've been looking into different desktop environments, so I decided I'd give kde a try instead of the normal Unity. I installed kde through:



sudo apt-get install kde-standard 


Re-logged and everything went fine booted into KDE and had a look around. After a while, I wanted to uninstall it so I executed:



sudo apt-get remove --purge kde-standard  


then



sudo apt-get autoremove 


But the default log in screen is still kde.. and I can still boot into it.










share|improve this question

























  • @UriHerrera Actually, that question and answer are quite old. I don't think that works anymore, plus the OP installed kde-standard which is different from kubuntu-desktop which is what that question is about.

    – Seth
    Feb 14 '13 at 18:17











  • @Seth How different?

    – Uri Herrera
    Feb 14 '13 at 18:20











  • @UriHerrera Very different. kubuntu-desktop has waay more packages than kde-standard.

    – Seth
    Feb 14 '13 at 18:21











  • @Seth Wouldn't then removing the packages listed in the other question be an overkill for this one?.

    – Uri Herrera
    Feb 14 '13 at 18:23






  • 1





    @UriHerrera Uhm.. I did have a look about before asking. Please don't assume I am ignorant to searching and then continue post things which don't help at all. No need for the harsh tone. Thanks

    – Sudoscience
    Feb 14 '13 at 18:40


















4















I've been looking into different desktop environments, so I decided I'd give kde a try instead of the normal Unity. I installed kde through:



sudo apt-get install kde-standard 


Re-logged and everything went fine booted into KDE and had a look around. After a while, I wanted to uninstall it so I executed:



sudo apt-get remove --purge kde-standard  


then



sudo apt-get autoremove 


But the default log in screen is still kde.. and I can still boot into it.










share|improve this question

























  • @UriHerrera Actually, that question and answer are quite old. I don't think that works anymore, plus the OP installed kde-standard which is different from kubuntu-desktop which is what that question is about.

    – Seth
    Feb 14 '13 at 18:17











  • @Seth How different?

    – Uri Herrera
    Feb 14 '13 at 18:20











  • @UriHerrera Very different. kubuntu-desktop has waay more packages than kde-standard.

    – Seth
    Feb 14 '13 at 18:21











  • @Seth Wouldn't then removing the packages listed in the other question be an overkill for this one?.

    – Uri Herrera
    Feb 14 '13 at 18:23






  • 1





    @UriHerrera Uhm.. I did have a look about before asking. Please don't assume I am ignorant to searching and then continue post things which don't help at all. No need for the harsh tone. Thanks

    – Sudoscience
    Feb 14 '13 at 18:40
















4












4








4








I've been looking into different desktop environments, so I decided I'd give kde a try instead of the normal Unity. I installed kde through:



sudo apt-get install kde-standard 


Re-logged and everything went fine booted into KDE and had a look around. After a while, I wanted to uninstall it so I executed:



sudo apt-get remove --purge kde-standard  


then



sudo apt-get autoremove 


But the default log in screen is still kde.. and I can still boot into it.










share|improve this question
















I've been looking into different desktop environments, so I decided I'd give kde a try instead of the normal Unity. I installed kde through:



sudo apt-get install kde-standard 


Re-logged and everything went fine booted into KDE and had a look around. After a while, I wanted to uninstall it so I executed:



sudo apt-get remove --purge kde-standard  


then



sudo apt-get autoremove 


But the default log in screen is still kde.. and I can still boot into it.







kde desktop-environments






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited 3 hours ago







Sudoscience

















asked Feb 14 '13 at 18:09









SudoscienceSudoscience

237




237













  • @UriHerrera Actually, that question and answer are quite old. I don't think that works anymore, plus the OP installed kde-standard which is different from kubuntu-desktop which is what that question is about.

    – Seth
    Feb 14 '13 at 18:17











  • @Seth How different?

    – Uri Herrera
    Feb 14 '13 at 18:20











  • @UriHerrera Very different. kubuntu-desktop has waay more packages than kde-standard.

    – Seth
    Feb 14 '13 at 18:21











  • @Seth Wouldn't then removing the packages listed in the other question be an overkill for this one?.

    – Uri Herrera
    Feb 14 '13 at 18:23






  • 1





    @UriHerrera Uhm.. I did have a look about before asking. Please don't assume I am ignorant to searching and then continue post things which don't help at all. No need for the harsh tone. Thanks

    – Sudoscience
    Feb 14 '13 at 18:40





















  • @UriHerrera Actually, that question and answer are quite old. I don't think that works anymore, plus the OP installed kde-standard which is different from kubuntu-desktop which is what that question is about.

    – Seth
    Feb 14 '13 at 18:17











  • @Seth How different?

    – Uri Herrera
    Feb 14 '13 at 18:20











  • @UriHerrera Very different. kubuntu-desktop has waay more packages than kde-standard.

    – Seth
    Feb 14 '13 at 18:21











  • @Seth Wouldn't then removing the packages listed in the other question be an overkill for this one?.

    – Uri Herrera
    Feb 14 '13 at 18:23






  • 1





    @UriHerrera Uhm.. I did have a look about before asking. Please don't assume I am ignorant to searching and then continue post things which don't help at all. No need for the harsh tone. Thanks

    – Sudoscience
    Feb 14 '13 at 18:40



















@UriHerrera Actually, that question and answer are quite old. I don't think that works anymore, plus the OP installed kde-standard which is different from kubuntu-desktop which is what that question is about.

– Seth
Feb 14 '13 at 18:17





@UriHerrera Actually, that question and answer are quite old. I don't think that works anymore, plus the OP installed kde-standard which is different from kubuntu-desktop which is what that question is about.

– Seth
Feb 14 '13 at 18:17













@Seth How different?

– Uri Herrera
Feb 14 '13 at 18:20





@Seth How different?

– Uri Herrera
Feb 14 '13 at 18:20













@UriHerrera Very different. kubuntu-desktop has waay more packages than kde-standard.

– Seth
Feb 14 '13 at 18:21





@UriHerrera Very different. kubuntu-desktop has waay more packages than kde-standard.

– Seth
Feb 14 '13 at 18:21













@Seth Wouldn't then removing the packages listed in the other question be an overkill for this one?.

– Uri Herrera
Feb 14 '13 at 18:23





@Seth Wouldn't then removing the packages listed in the other question be an overkill for this one?.

– Uri Herrera
Feb 14 '13 at 18:23




1




1





@UriHerrera Uhm.. I did have a look about before asking. Please don't assume I am ignorant to searching and then continue post things which don't help at all. No need for the harsh tone. Thanks

– Sudoscience
Feb 14 '13 at 18:40







@UriHerrera Uhm.. I did have a look about before asking. Please don't assume I am ignorant to searching and then continue post things which don't help at all. No need for the harsh tone. Thanks

– Sudoscience
Feb 14 '13 at 18:40












1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes


















1














Yes, when you install then uninstall desktop environments you get a lot of left overs.



Start by running:



sudo apt-get purge   akregator dragonplayer gwenview juk kaddressbook kamera kate kcalc
kde-baseapps kde-baseapps-bin kde-plasma-desktop kde-standard kde-wallpapers
kdeplasma-addons kdm kfind kmail knotes konq-plugins konqueror
konqueror-nsplugins kopete kopete-message-indicator korganizer kscreensaver
kscreensaver-xsavers kwalletmanager kwrite libcalendarsupport4
libeventviews4 libgadu3 libgpgme++2 libgrantlee-core0 libincidenceeditorsng4
libkateinterfaces4 libkdepim4 libkdepimdbusinterfaces4 libkdgantt2
libkexiv2-11 libkexiv2-data libkleo4 libkmanagesieve4 libkonqsidebarplugin4a
libkontactinterface4 libkopete4 libkpgp4 libksieve4 libksieveui4 libktnef4
libmailcommon4 libmailimporter4 libmarblewidget14 libmediastreamer1
libmessagecomposer4 libmessagecore4 libmessagelist4 libmessageviewer4
libmsn0.3 libopenconnect2 libortp8 libotr2 libqgpgme1 libqoauth1 libsrtp0
libtemplateparser4 libtidy-0.99-0 marble-data marble-plugins
plasma-containments-addons plasma-dataengines-addons
plasma-desktopthemes-artwork plasma-runners-addons plasma-wallpapers-addons
plasma-widget-lancelot plasma-widget-networkmanagement plasma-widgets-addons
polkit-kde-1 sweeper xscreensaver-data xscreensaver-gl


If you get any errors, thats usually a good sign.



Then:



sudo apt-get purge svgpart kdepim-kresources kde-plasma-netbook skanlite kleopatra spamassassin
bogofilter spambayes bsfilter crm114 clamav procmail kdeartwork-emoticons
texlive-latex-base libotr2-bin srtp-utils network-manager-vpnc


Then try sudo apt-get autoremove again.



That should remove everything and put your computer pretty much back to the state it was in before you installed kde.






share|improve this answer
























  • Looks like it worked, just running autoremove now. Is the restarting problem I described a common one? I found it strange.

    – Sudoscience
    Feb 14 '13 at 18:29











  • @user132010 Can't tell at this point. It will depend on your hardware.

    – Seth
    Feb 14 '13 at 18:30











  • Just shutdown and it seems fixed. Thanks

    – Sudoscience
    Feb 14 '13 at 18:32











  • @user132010 That's great! If somehow that restarting problem crops back up, you should ask a new question about it :)

    – Seth
    Feb 14 '13 at 18:33






  • 1





    @Seth Not sure, but it would seem logical. If you first do an auto-remove, however, you might also remove packages that because of missing libraries have become obsolete. Can you find out? Can also give your source for your list of packages? Is it from psychocats.net/ubuntu/pureubuntu?

    – don.joey
    Feb 14 '13 at 19:09











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1 Answer
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active

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1














Yes, when you install then uninstall desktop environments you get a lot of left overs.



Start by running:



sudo apt-get purge   akregator dragonplayer gwenview juk kaddressbook kamera kate kcalc
kde-baseapps kde-baseapps-bin kde-plasma-desktop kde-standard kde-wallpapers
kdeplasma-addons kdm kfind kmail knotes konq-plugins konqueror
konqueror-nsplugins kopete kopete-message-indicator korganizer kscreensaver
kscreensaver-xsavers kwalletmanager kwrite libcalendarsupport4
libeventviews4 libgadu3 libgpgme++2 libgrantlee-core0 libincidenceeditorsng4
libkateinterfaces4 libkdepim4 libkdepimdbusinterfaces4 libkdgantt2
libkexiv2-11 libkexiv2-data libkleo4 libkmanagesieve4 libkonqsidebarplugin4a
libkontactinterface4 libkopete4 libkpgp4 libksieve4 libksieveui4 libktnef4
libmailcommon4 libmailimporter4 libmarblewidget14 libmediastreamer1
libmessagecomposer4 libmessagecore4 libmessagelist4 libmessageviewer4
libmsn0.3 libopenconnect2 libortp8 libotr2 libqgpgme1 libqoauth1 libsrtp0
libtemplateparser4 libtidy-0.99-0 marble-data marble-plugins
plasma-containments-addons plasma-dataengines-addons
plasma-desktopthemes-artwork plasma-runners-addons plasma-wallpapers-addons
plasma-widget-lancelot plasma-widget-networkmanagement plasma-widgets-addons
polkit-kde-1 sweeper xscreensaver-data xscreensaver-gl


If you get any errors, thats usually a good sign.



Then:



sudo apt-get purge svgpart kdepim-kresources kde-plasma-netbook skanlite kleopatra spamassassin
bogofilter spambayes bsfilter crm114 clamav procmail kdeartwork-emoticons
texlive-latex-base libotr2-bin srtp-utils network-manager-vpnc


Then try sudo apt-get autoremove again.



That should remove everything and put your computer pretty much back to the state it was in before you installed kde.






share|improve this answer
























  • Looks like it worked, just running autoremove now. Is the restarting problem I described a common one? I found it strange.

    – Sudoscience
    Feb 14 '13 at 18:29











  • @user132010 Can't tell at this point. It will depend on your hardware.

    – Seth
    Feb 14 '13 at 18:30











  • Just shutdown and it seems fixed. Thanks

    – Sudoscience
    Feb 14 '13 at 18:32











  • @user132010 That's great! If somehow that restarting problem crops back up, you should ask a new question about it :)

    – Seth
    Feb 14 '13 at 18:33






  • 1





    @Seth Not sure, but it would seem logical. If you first do an auto-remove, however, you might also remove packages that because of missing libraries have become obsolete. Can you find out? Can also give your source for your list of packages? Is it from psychocats.net/ubuntu/pureubuntu?

    – don.joey
    Feb 14 '13 at 19:09
















1














Yes, when you install then uninstall desktop environments you get a lot of left overs.



Start by running:



sudo apt-get purge   akregator dragonplayer gwenview juk kaddressbook kamera kate kcalc
kde-baseapps kde-baseapps-bin kde-plasma-desktop kde-standard kde-wallpapers
kdeplasma-addons kdm kfind kmail knotes konq-plugins konqueror
konqueror-nsplugins kopete kopete-message-indicator korganizer kscreensaver
kscreensaver-xsavers kwalletmanager kwrite libcalendarsupport4
libeventviews4 libgadu3 libgpgme++2 libgrantlee-core0 libincidenceeditorsng4
libkateinterfaces4 libkdepim4 libkdepimdbusinterfaces4 libkdgantt2
libkexiv2-11 libkexiv2-data libkleo4 libkmanagesieve4 libkonqsidebarplugin4a
libkontactinterface4 libkopete4 libkpgp4 libksieve4 libksieveui4 libktnef4
libmailcommon4 libmailimporter4 libmarblewidget14 libmediastreamer1
libmessagecomposer4 libmessagecore4 libmessagelist4 libmessageviewer4
libmsn0.3 libopenconnect2 libortp8 libotr2 libqgpgme1 libqoauth1 libsrtp0
libtemplateparser4 libtidy-0.99-0 marble-data marble-plugins
plasma-containments-addons plasma-dataengines-addons
plasma-desktopthemes-artwork plasma-runners-addons plasma-wallpapers-addons
plasma-widget-lancelot plasma-widget-networkmanagement plasma-widgets-addons
polkit-kde-1 sweeper xscreensaver-data xscreensaver-gl


If you get any errors, thats usually a good sign.



Then:



sudo apt-get purge svgpart kdepim-kresources kde-plasma-netbook skanlite kleopatra spamassassin
bogofilter spambayes bsfilter crm114 clamav procmail kdeartwork-emoticons
texlive-latex-base libotr2-bin srtp-utils network-manager-vpnc


Then try sudo apt-get autoremove again.



That should remove everything and put your computer pretty much back to the state it was in before you installed kde.






share|improve this answer
























  • Looks like it worked, just running autoremove now. Is the restarting problem I described a common one? I found it strange.

    – Sudoscience
    Feb 14 '13 at 18:29











  • @user132010 Can't tell at this point. It will depend on your hardware.

    – Seth
    Feb 14 '13 at 18:30











  • Just shutdown and it seems fixed. Thanks

    – Sudoscience
    Feb 14 '13 at 18:32











  • @user132010 That's great! If somehow that restarting problem crops back up, you should ask a new question about it :)

    – Seth
    Feb 14 '13 at 18:33






  • 1





    @Seth Not sure, but it would seem logical. If you first do an auto-remove, however, you might also remove packages that because of missing libraries have become obsolete. Can you find out? Can also give your source for your list of packages? Is it from psychocats.net/ubuntu/pureubuntu?

    – don.joey
    Feb 14 '13 at 19:09














1












1








1







Yes, when you install then uninstall desktop environments you get a lot of left overs.



Start by running:



sudo apt-get purge   akregator dragonplayer gwenview juk kaddressbook kamera kate kcalc
kde-baseapps kde-baseapps-bin kde-plasma-desktop kde-standard kde-wallpapers
kdeplasma-addons kdm kfind kmail knotes konq-plugins konqueror
konqueror-nsplugins kopete kopete-message-indicator korganizer kscreensaver
kscreensaver-xsavers kwalletmanager kwrite libcalendarsupport4
libeventviews4 libgadu3 libgpgme++2 libgrantlee-core0 libincidenceeditorsng4
libkateinterfaces4 libkdepim4 libkdepimdbusinterfaces4 libkdgantt2
libkexiv2-11 libkexiv2-data libkleo4 libkmanagesieve4 libkonqsidebarplugin4a
libkontactinterface4 libkopete4 libkpgp4 libksieve4 libksieveui4 libktnef4
libmailcommon4 libmailimporter4 libmarblewidget14 libmediastreamer1
libmessagecomposer4 libmessagecore4 libmessagelist4 libmessageviewer4
libmsn0.3 libopenconnect2 libortp8 libotr2 libqgpgme1 libqoauth1 libsrtp0
libtemplateparser4 libtidy-0.99-0 marble-data marble-plugins
plasma-containments-addons plasma-dataengines-addons
plasma-desktopthemes-artwork plasma-runners-addons plasma-wallpapers-addons
plasma-widget-lancelot plasma-widget-networkmanagement plasma-widgets-addons
polkit-kde-1 sweeper xscreensaver-data xscreensaver-gl


If you get any errors, thats usually a good sign.



Then:



sudo apt-get purge svgpart kdepim-kresources kde-plasma-netbook skanlite kleopatra spamassassin
bogofilter spambayes bsfilter crm114 clamav procmail kdeartwork-emoticons
texlive-latex-base libotr2-bin srtp-utils network-manager-vpnc


Then try sudo apt-get autoremove again.



That should remove everything and put your computer pretty much back to the state it was in before you installed kde.






share|improve this answer













Yes, when you install then uninstall desktop environments you get a lot of left overs.



Start by running:



sudo apt-get purge   akregator dragonplayer gwenview juk kaddressbook kamera kate kcalc
kde-baseapps kde-baseapps-bin kde-plasma-desktop kde-standard kde-wallpapers
kdeplasma-addons kdm kfind kmail knotes konq-plugins konqueror
konqueror-nsplugins kopete kopete-message-indicator korganizer kscreensaver
kscreensaver-xsavers kwalletmanager kwrite libcalendarsupport4
libeventviews4 libgadu3 libgpgme++2 libgrantlee-core0 libincidenceeditorsng4
libkateinterfaces4 libkdepim4 libkdepimdbusinterfaces4 libkdgantt2
libkexiv2-11 libkexiv2-data libkleo4 libkmanagesieve4 libkonqsidebarplugin4a
libkontactinterface4 libkopete4 libkpgp4 libksieve4 libksieveui4 libktnef4
libmailcommon4 libmailimporter4 libmarblewidget14 libmediastreamer1
libmessagecomposer4 libmessagecore4 libmessagelist4 libmessageviewer4
libmsn0.3 libopenconnect2 libortp8 libotr2 libqgpgme1 libqoauth1 libsrtp0
libtemplateparser4 libtidy-0.99-0 marble-data marble-plugins
plasma-containments-addons plasma-dataengines-addons
plasma-desktopthemes-artwork plasma-runners-addons plasma-wallpapers-addons
plasma-widget-lancelot plasma-widget-networkmanagement plasma-widgets-addons
polkit-kde-1 sweeper xscreensaver-data xscreensaver-gl


If you get any errors, thats usually a good sign.



Then:



sudo apt-get purge svgpart kdepim-kresources kde-plasma-netbook skanlite kleopatra spamassassin
bogofilter spambayes bsfilter crm114 clamav procmail kdeartwork-emoticons
texlive-latex-base libotr2-bin srtp-utils network-manager-vpnc


Then try sudo apt-get autoremove again.



That should remove everything and put your computer pretty much back to the state it was in before you installed kde.







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Feb 14 '13 at 18:16









SethSeth

35k27112165




35k27112165













  • Looks like it worked, just running autoremove now. Is the restarting problem I described a common one? I found it strange.

    – Sudoscience
    Feb 14 '13 at 18:29











  • @user132010 Can't tell at this point. It will depend on your hardware.

    – Seth
    Feb 14 '13 at 18:30











  • Just shutdown and it seems fixed. Thanks

    – Sudoscience
    Feb 14 '13 at 18:32











  • @user132010 That's great! If somehow that restarting problem crops back up, you should ask a new question about it :)

    – Seth
    Feb 14 '13 at 18:33






  • 1





    @Seth Not sure, but it would seem logical. If you first do an auto-remove, however, you might also remove packages that because of missing libraries have become obsolete. Can you find out? Can also give your source for your list of packages? Is it from psychocats.net/ubuntu/pureubuntu?

    – don.joey
    Feb 14 '13 at 19:09



















  • Looks like it worked, just running autoremove now. Is the restarting problem I described a common one? I found it strange.

    – Sudoscience
    Feb 14 '13 at 18:29











  • @user132010 Can't tell at this point. It will depend on your hardware.

    – Seth
    Feb 14 '13 at 18:30











  • Just shutdown and it seems fixed. Thanks

    – Sudoscience
    Feb 14 '13 at 18:32











  • @user132010 That's great! If somehow that restarting problem crops back up, you should ask a new question about it :)

    – Seth
    Feb 14 '13 at 18:33






  • 1





    @Seth Not sure, but it would seem logical. If you first do an auto-remove, however, you might also remove packages that because of missing libraries have become obsolete. Can you find out? Can also give your source for your list of packages? Is it from psychocats.net/ubuntu/pureubuntu?

    – don.joey
    Feb 14 '13 at 19:09

















Looks like it worked, just running autoremove now. Is the restarting problem I described a common one? I found it strange.

– Sudoscience
Feb 14 '13 at 18:29





Looks like it worked, just running autoremove now. Is the restarting problem I described a common one? I found it strange.

– Sudoscience
Feb 14 '13 at 18:29













@user132010 Can't tell at this point. It will depend on your hardware.

– Seth
Feb 14 '13 at 18:30





@user132010 Can't tell at this point. It will depend on your hardware.

– Seth
Feb 14 '13 at 18:30













Just shutdown and it seems fixed. Thanks

– Sudoscience
Feb 14 '13 at 18:32





Just shutdown and it seems fixed. Thanks

– Sudoscience
Feb 14 '13 at 18:32













@user132010 That's great! If somehow that restarting problem crops back up, you should ask a new question about it :)

– Seth
Feb 14 '13 at 18:33





@user132010 That's great! If somehow that restarting problem crops back up, you should ask a new question about it :)

– Seth
Feb 14 '13 at 18:33




1




1





@Seth Not sure, but it would seem logical. If you first do an auto-remove, however, you might also remove packages that because of missing libraries have become obsolete. Can you find out? Can also give your source for your list of packages? Is it from psychocats.net/ubuntu/pureubuntu?

– don.joey
Feb 14 '13 at 19:09





@Seth Not sure, but it would seem logical. If you first do an auto-remove, however, you might also remove packages that because of missing libraries have become obsolete. Can you find out? Can also give your source for your list of packages? Is it from psychocats.net/ubuntu/pureubuntu?

– don.joey
Feb 14 '13 at 19:09


















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