Hi Jörg,
the error was caused because the old Gnome 3 Versions didn't have a
check implemented for multiple monitors and just produced a menu for
each monitor it found. It shouldn't happen anymore with the latest
versions of Gnome 3 and gdm.
So to fix the problem I would recommend:
Update y
Hi Felix,
found your post because i have the identical problem. Maybe you found a
solution meanwhile?
Best regards
Jörg
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Felix Winterhalter, 19.01.2013:
> Hey there everyone,
>
> I just installed debian wheezy and I get the following problem with
> gdm3: Every time I login the menu items are added again (to the
> already existing items) and the clock is added and the logout menu
> is also added as is the workspace s
On Sat, 19 Jan 2013 20:11:45 +0100, Ralf Mardorf
wrote:
On Sat, 19 Jan 2013 19:33:40 +0100, Felix Winterhalter
wrote:
Screenshot: http://i.imgur.com/PfWgl0f.png
It's good that you did add the screenshot, since it's the GNOME3 panel
and not GDM, GNOME's display manager.
I'm not using GN
On Sat, 19 Jan 2013 19:33:40 +0100, Felix Winterhalter
wrote:
Screenshot: http://i.imgur.com/PfWgl0f.png
It's good that you did add the screenshot, since it's the GNOME3 panel and
not GDM, GNOME's display manager.
I'm not using GNOME3, but IIRC to access the panel settings, you have to
pu
Hey there everyone,
I just installed debian wheezy and I get the following problem with
gdm3: Every time I login the menu items are added again (to the already
existing items) and the clock is added and the logout menu is also added
as is the workspace switcher and the taskbar ... So after 3 l
Hello Peter.
Please answer directly to the list, your Thunderbird is able[0] to do so.
Peter Easthope, 01.10.2006 20:40:
> m> Really on the desktop or only in the panel? There is no panel. Just
> the bare desktop with icons
> for the terminal viewer and the Skype. How shall I configure so that
s. keeling writes:
> ...the NTP server defined in /etc/chrony/chrony.conf doesn't appear to be
> accessible anymore.
I assume you use Woody? /etc/chrony/chrony.conf contains pool.ntp.org as
the default server in Sid and Sarge.
> googling for ntp servers produces a couple of lists of stratum-1 an
If you just want to stop debian from touching the HW clock, you can add
HWCLOCKACCESS=no
to /etc/default/rcS.
Though, i think your best bet is to just sync your time with an NTP server.
On Mon, 16 Aug 2004 21:06:01 +0530, P V Mathew <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hello All,
>
>Why does my
Incoming from Johann Spies:
> On Mon, Aug 23, 2004 at 08:50:28PM +0200, Lourens Steenkamp wrote:
> > Lourens replying to P V Mathew <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > Try chrony.
> >
> > "It consists of a pair of programs :
> > `chronyd'. This is a daemon which runs in background on the system.
>
On Mon, Aug 23, 2004 at 08:50:28PM +0200, Lourens Steenkamp wrote:
> Lourens replying to P V Mathew <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Try chrony.
>
> "It consists of a pair of programs :
> `chronyd'. This is a daemon which runs in background on the system.
> It obtains measurements (e.g. via the net
Lourens replying to P V Mathew <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
[big snip]
> >
> >
> >
> How ever The system I am using has only a dial up connection
> to the net. And that connection is used rarely only. In short it
> is a stand alone desktop. Also I am a bit curious about the
> questions I h
On Tue, Aug 17, 2004 at 06:04:32PM +0530, P V Mathew wrote:
> Date: Tue, 17 Aug 2004 18:04:32 +0530
> From: P V Mathew <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject: Re: System & Hardware clocks
>
>>
> >> Why does my hardware clock g
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Hash: SHA1
On Mon, 16 Aug 2004, P V Mathew wrote:
> Also the time maintained by the system should be more
> accurate than the hard ware clock. In my case why is it not so?
You should be using an NTP server. Network time is the solution to most
timing probl
Zachary Rizer wrote:
--- P V Mathew <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Hello All,
Why does my hardware clock go slow after every
time I run Linux?
Evidently Debian resets the hardware clock to
the system clock
every time it shuts down. How ever the system loads
the time from
the hard ware clock
--- P V Mathew <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hello All,
>
> Why does my hardware clock go slow after every
> time I run Linux?
>
> Evidently Debian resets the hardware clock to
> the system clock
> every time it shuts down. How ever the system loads
> the time from
> the hard ware clock
Hello All,
Why does my hardware clock go slow after every time I run Linux?
Evidently Debian resets the hardware clock to the system clock
every time it shuts down. How ever the system loads the time from
the hard ware clock when Debian boots up. If it can rely on the
hard ware clock at sta
On Fri, Mar 16, 2001 at 12:52:12PM -0800, Nick wrote:
> Hello List
>
> I have win2000 loaded on one partition and linux on another.
> I am using lilo as the boot loader.
>
> My windows os is set to PST which seem to keep the correct time. But the
> linux os is 8 hours behind. The timezone is s
Hello List
I have win2000 loaded on one partition and linux on another.
I am using lilo as the boot loader.
My windows os is set to PST which seem to keep the correct time. But the
linux os is 8 hours behind. The timezone is set to PST in linux as well
Using the 2.2.18pre-idepci kernel w/
Subject: clocks
Date: Thu, Jun 17, 1999 at 03:35:09AM -0500
In reply to:Aaron Solochek
Quoting Aaron Solochek([EMAIL PROTECTED]):
> Ok, I've read man pages, and I'm still confused. What different types
> of clocks are there? I know of the system and hardw
uot;
If the above was not your problem perhaps you can be more specific.
Aaron Solochek wrote:
> Ok, I've read man pages, and I'm still confused. What different types
> of clocks are there? I know of the system and hardware, but I'm not
> sure which is responsible fo
On Thu, Jun 17, 1999 at 03:35:09AM -0500, Aaron Solochek wrote:
> Ok, I've read man pages, and I'm still confused. What different types
> of clocks are there? I know of the system and hardware, but I'm not
> sure which is responsible for what. I also would like to know
Ok, I've read man pages, and I'm still confused. What different types
of clocks are there? I know of the system and hardware, but I'm not
sure which is responsible for what. I also would like to know how to
set everything because I think my system time and/or date is wrong.
Can anyone tell me where the (crontab?) script is that resets the system
clock? I had my system set for the wrong timezone, fixed it via
tzconfig, did clock -s, and it's got the time fine. But every morning,
it's off by 5 hours again (as if it's reset the timezone again or
something). I can f
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