Oh by the way: Armelius Cameron wrote: > So maybe a problem with a permission. I then did what I know: open a > terminal, su as root, run system-config-printer, and change the settings > there. You shouldn't have to use su for system-config-printer, PolicyKit authorization should just work there, so you should be able to just use it as a regular user. If it's also broken there, then it's a system-config- printer bug and will need to be fixed there (and that'd also explain why it doesn't work in KDE as KDE's printer settings are also based on system- config-printer). Kevin Kofler