Alexander Volovics wrote: > I installed the 32 bit 'flash-plugin' rpm from the adobe repository > in Fed15/KDE x86_64 â That's a 64-bit installation. > I found the icon in 'System Settings' in a rather strange category > "Lost and Found". Clicking on the icon produces an error message: > Could not find plugin 'Adobe Flash Player' for application > 'systemsettings' Library "kcm_adobe_flash_player" not found > > 'rpm -ql flash=plugin' shows '/usr/lib/kde4/kcm_adobe_flash_player.so' > installed! â That's a 32-bit KCM (= KDE Configuration Module = System Settings module). It will not load in 64-bit System Settings. > What is happening here? An install gone wrong somewhere? No, breakage in Adobe's packaging. They do not properly support 64-bit installations. 32-bit KCMs cannot be used on a 64-bit system. The fact that their KCM lands under "Lost and Found" is also a bug (another one) in Adobe's setup. (They aren't categorizing their KCM properly.) > NB > I can start 'flash-player-properties' as a command in a terminal > and it seems to work (I did have to install an additional i686 > library first that it complained was missing) Yes, that's the most decent solution. You may want to unhide the menu entry for flash-player-properties with kmenuedit (right-click on the menu button to fire the menu editor up) and delete or ignore the broken System Settings module (the file to delete is the .desktop file somewhere under /usr/share/kde4/services, or less brutally, add Hidden=true or NoDisplay=true to it). Their attempt at supporting KDE is causing more harm than good. Complain to Adobe about all those issues. We cannot do anything about them (except telling you about the above workarounds). Kevin Kofler (who does not use Flash at all) _______________________________________________ kde mailing list kde@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/kde New to KDE4? - get help from http://userbase.kde.org