![]() If you see a # prompt, you are already root.įrom time to time you also need to update your local view of the available packages, you do this with $ sudo apt-get update Note the sudo, because I need root (superuser) permissions to install something, and the $ prompt indicates I am a normal user, but I've set up sudo to give me root permissions if I need them. Libappindicator1 - allow applications to export a menu into the panelĪnd then I'd install it $ sudo apt-get install libappindicator1 So if I wanted to install libappindicator1, I'd first search for it: $ apt-cache search libappindicator1 I personally use apt-get, because it was the first one, and occasionaly aptitude if I need a UI. ![]() ![]() You can easily read up on this on the Internet. If you've Debian, you have the choice between several package managers. ![]() deb file for you, and be able to resolve dependencies. So instead of downloading the deb, use the package manager of whatever distro you installed on your Chromebook ( apt is a good guess) to select and install the package you want. Your package manager will download libappindicator1 by itself, but the problem is a different one: If you downloaded a deb file from somewhere, it will likely have the wrong dependencies, which causes the Depends: libappindicator1 but it is not installableĮrror.
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