I have just upgraded my Dell Inspiron 1545 laptop from Ubuntu 12.04 to 13.04. Unfortunately the top bar now has a little red circle with a minus sign in it. When I click it, it opens a box with the following message in it:
An error occurred, please run Package Manager from the right-click from the right click window or apt-get in a terminal to see what is wrong. The error message was: 'Unknown Error:''(E:The package google-chrome-stable needs to be reinstalled, but I can't find an archive for it.)'This usually means that you have >installed packages with unmet dependencies
I don't have a lot of experience using ubuntu, or linux in general, and I don't know what this means. It sounded to me like some kind of google chrome error. I had downloaded and installed google chrome only a few minutes before. I ran apt-get in the terminal but it didn't do anything, and I had no idea what run the Package Manager from the right click window meant. Google chrome and the geany ide are the only sofware I have installed since installing linux. The computer seems to be running perfectly fine. Do you have any suggestions on what I should do?
The results from: sudo apt-get -f install are:
E: The package google-chrome-stable needs to be reinstalled, but I can't find an archive for it.
It seems that google-chrome-stable have broke your system for some reason. Try this: Open your terminal window
Then right there type commands (after each command type enter and respond yes to questions)
Then update the system via
Let apt-get run and if there is any error post as comment here and I will help (or anyone available)
If the Commands fails you can try these ones: Update Packages
clean the downloaded packages (where there might be broken ones)
Remove unneeded packages (careful! If it might list something that is needed but its dependency or such have been removed and left it orphan)
Reconfigure all packages
Fix broken packages
Removing the packages list and updating solved the issue for me
Open the terminal: Ctrl+Alt+T
Remove the package list:
-v, --verbose
explain what is being done-f, --force
ignore nonexistent files and arguments, never promptUpdate the packages:
Fixing the problem with Software Center
When I encountered the same problem (not sure which application caused the problem), running Software Center gave me the option to repair dependencies (in fact it forced me to do so because it would be 'unable to install other software until the problem was fixed'). It worked without problems, and the error sign in the notification area disappeared.