Well, as Dan said, never run wine as root. When you open a terminal window, its "working directory" will be your home directory (that is, /home/your_username) and the prompt should end in a $. This is where you want to run wine. Any programs installed with wine end up in a subdirectory within ~/.wine/drive_c by default. This translates to '/home/your_username/.wine/drive_c'. The dot before wine is intentional there; it makes the directory hidden. If you are browsing your home folder with a graphical file manager (Konqueror or Nautilus, for example), you will not see it. There is usually an option to view hidden files and folders. In Konqueror (if you use KDE), go to View -> Show Hidden Files. I can't remember the exact menu for Nautilus... Once that is done, you will see all the dot files and folders. Keep in mind that if you only ran wine as root, there will be no .wine directory yet -- there probably is, however, a /root/.wine directory since you ran it as root, but that is irrelevant now. In your terminal window (not as root!), run: wine --version to make sure wine is installed. It should print out the version number. If that works, try running wineprefixcreate. If you had never run wine with your regular user account, running wineprefixcreate will automatically create the .wine folder for you. You can now browse to the .wine folder as I described above and view its contents. At this point, you should be able to follow the instructions I gave you, from step 1, to install Radio Mobile. Let me know if you have any problems or questions along the way, or if something isn't totally clear. With all this said, I recommend browsing through the FAQ: http://wiki.winehq.org/FAQ. The information there is much more concise and thorough than my explanations. > > I could have sworn the first time I ran the program under wine, > it took some time to load. Now it starts up right away. Is there > some step using wine that only happens the first time a program is run? > The reason is that wine has to create and populate the ~/.wine directory when it is run for the first time. It creates all the necessary registry files, a basic Windows directory structure, config files, etc., on the first run. Subsequent runs are much faster.