This is installed from wine applications, and yes unfortunately they can create a mess (like making the wine "notepad" the default text editor). You need to delete those mime applications that wine creates under your home folder. Try something like: rm -rf $HOME/.local/share/applications/wine or search and delete the file that you told me (wine-extension-pdf). The previous gnome instructions I told you should have worked though. On Wed, Jul 7, 2010 at 4:25 PM, Helmut Jarausch < jarausch@igpm.rwth-aachen.de> wrote: > On 07/07/10 12:45:05, App Deb wrote: > > Right click on a pdf file, select properties -> open with -> and > > select > > evince instead of acroread. > > > > That it the way to easily change default applications for gnome. > > Unfortunately, not for me (Gnome 2.30) > Before and after the above procedure I have > > gnomevfs-info MyFile.pdf > still shows > MIME type : application/pdf > Default app : wine-extension-pdf.desktop > > I wonder where this 'wine-extension-pdf.desktop' is coming from. > > And Balsa tries to use this when viewing a pdf attachment. > I'm lost, > Helmut. > > > > > On Mon, Jul 5, 2010 at 11:53 AM, Helmut Jarausch < > > jarausch@igpm.rwth-aachen.de> wrote: > > > > > Hi, > > > > > > I've discovered balsa , a great mail client, btw. > > > How can I configure the application which is called for a pdf > > > attachment. > > > > > > I cannot see any configuration item for balsa itself, so I suppose > > > it must be a Gnome setting. > > > > > > Currently it's set to acroread, but I'd like to set it evince. > > > I've checked ~/.mime.types and several files in /usr/share/mime* > > > > > > The only file I've found is > > > /usr/share/mime-info/gnome-vfs.keys > > > > > > Is that the right place? How should I edit it (with a standard text > > > editor?) > > > > > > Many thanks for your help, > > > Helmut. > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > >