I am running 11.04. I have Skype running but it does not show up in the notification tray. It was working until I added Skype to auto-start when I log in. Does anyone know how to make it reappear?
5 Answers
You can get skype tray in 11.10 and 12.04 installing package sni-qt:i386
sudo apt-get install sni-qt:i386
OR
You can whitelist systray as well
How do I access and enable more icons to be in the system tray?
OR
If you like how empathy and messaging tray work you can install a third party skype-wrapper package from ppa which enables Skype to indicator-message
You can install it with
sudo add-apt-repository ppa:skype-wrapper/ppa
sudo apt-get update && sudo apt-get install skype-wrapper
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sni-qt:i386 installation on 64bit machine solves the skype tray problem in ubuntu 12.04 too (gnome classic with no effects)– MariuzMay 22, 2012 at 13:49
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skype-wrapper is indeed a very nice thing to have. A shame that it's still a bit buggy. Jul 5, 2012 at 20:30
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Install dconf-tools / sudo apt-get install dconf-tools
.
Then run the conf editor by typing:
dconf-editor
at the command line.
There under Desktop > Unity > Panel
change the line that says:
['JavaEmbeddedFrame', 'Mumble', 'Wine', 'hp-systray', 'scp-dbus-service']`
into this here:
['JavaEmbeddedFrame', 'Mumble', 'Wine', 'hp-systray', 'scp-dbus-service', 'Skype']
You can change it to ['all']
which allows all tray applications to show there icons in the indicator bar (Ah-Duh!). As usual changes will take effect only after reboot or restarting unity by Alt+F2ing
unity --replace &
Make sure you are not experiencing this bug (Launchpad.net)
Sometimes, the Skype indicator is only one green pixel. It's easy to overlook and assume there is no indicator at all.
If this is the case, just quit and restart Skype and it will come back normally. I have this quite often.
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Thanks JE2Tom. I am experience the green pixel in the notification area. But i fail to get a proper icon even after restarting skype. It come up again just as a pixel.– user18708May 27, 2011 at 6:16
I have figured out the cause and the fix, at least in my case.
The problem was that Skype was loading before the systray application. The solution was to delay Skype on start up. Someone else may have a more programmer worthy fix, but my solution was to change my KDE startup options to "start with a blank session" instead of remembering the last session. I then created a file in ~/.kde/Autostart
with the name skype.sh
. Here's the text I put in mine:
#!/bin/dash
sleep 15
/usr/bin/skype
exit
Afterwards I did chmod +x ~/.kde/Autostart/skype.sh
It's working great.
For me in 14.04;
Open
dconf-editor
Search systray (couldn't find in other answers on mine)
On show-icon-on-systray click off the tick then back on again, then click restore default button.