Media Folder popping up in Nautilus

This just started and I have no idea why.

It’s really simple, I close Nautilus and it pops open again and always to the folder “media”.

The only thing I had in the media was a CDROM, which I unmounted and that made no difference. I then removed the CD from the CDROM drive and that made no difference.

Any ideas why opensuse 11.2 would insist on keeping a Nautilus window open all the time – defaulting the “/media” folder on initial opening?

On 2010-07-15 08:16 GMT Reg gie wrote:

>
> This just started and I have no idea why.
>
> It’s really simple, I close Nautilus and it pops open again and always
> to the folder “media”.

> Any ideas why opensuse 11.2 would insist on keeping a Nautilus window
> open all the time – defaulting the “/media” folder on initial
> opening?

Try killing it.

Not close, kill. Notice that this will also “kill” part of your
desktop, like no icons - so then restart manually nautilus, and see
what happens. Alternatively, log out, ensure there is no nautilus
running (ps afxu | less -S in a VT), and log in again.


Cheers / Saludos,

Carlos E. R.
(from 11.2 x86_64 “Emerald” GM (Minas Tirith))

If I kill nautilus sure enough my icons dissappear, however, it also restarts itself. The folder that pops up does too. This leads me to believe that somehow, whatever the mechanism that restarts services might have also somehow got an instruction to restart nautilus with the media folder in addition to just restart nautilus normally.

However, I am unsure where that would be except probably somewhere under the etc folder.

Hi
Go into the Control Center -> File management preferences, on th tab
media I would uncheck the box ‘Browse media when inserted’ and maybe
play with the other settings.


Cheers Malcolm °¿° (Linux Counter #276890)
SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop 11 (x86_64) Kernel 2.6.32.13-0.4-default
up 23:20, 2 users, load average: 0.08, 0.08, 0.08
GPU GeForce 8600 GTS Silent - Driver Version: 256.35

That worked, thanks.

That actually didn’t keep working however I did find a solution just today. I removed the file with the word “nautilus” in it from
~/.config/session-state/

Restarted my desktop and finally it’s gone.